content top

Rachelle Lefevre nabs her first post-Twilight gig, will star in new TV series

Rachelle Lefevre nabs her first post-Twilight gig, will star in new TV series
Rachelle Lefevre

Rachelle Lefevre

Rachelle Lefevre will be gracing the small screen soon enough in a a new television show called “Off the Map.” Co-starring with her will be Martin Henderson, as well as Mamie Gummer (Meryl Streep’s daughter).

The new show will be produced by Shonda Rhimes. The creators of the series also happen to be the same people behind Grey’s Anatomy, ABC’s enormously successful doctor drama.

For now, all that is known is that Rachelle will star as a “hippie doctor” in the new series. Fans are expressing their excitement for Lefevre in blogs and community message boards all over the web.

Movie goers will remember her from her role as Victoria, a vampire villainess in the first two Twilight movies. Her part was left out of the third installment to the franchise.

Read More

‘Lost’ airs final episode, offers spiritual message

‘Lost’ airs final episode, offers spiritual message
Lost Moving Truck

LeeUber / Picasa Web

After six remarkably successful seasons on the air, the hit television show ‘Lost’ has aired its final episode. The series finale aired last night, May 23, 2010.

Reactions to the finale have been mixed, as is to be expected given the nature of the series itself. Many people have especially taken interest in discussing the spiritual nature of the episode.

David West, a blogger in West Virginia, has followed the show since its first season, and has long claimed ‘Lost’ was always meant to be a spiritual message.

“If you look at the way the show ended, you can’t argue that the writers and producers were making blatant references to what we refer to as Heaven and Hell,” he said. “People are telling me the finale only confused them even more; they don’t know where the “spiritual stuff” came from.”

“The thing I’ve been pointing out to those people is the episode in which Jacob described the island as a cork that holds back the evil forces of malevolence and hell,” explained West. “’Lost’ has always been a spiritual conversation-starter.”

Regardless of what the ‘Lost’ producers were trying to convey to us, the Internet debate has already begun over the controversial episode amongst avid fans.

Ratings for the finale were decent, but some could have expected higher. The show pulled in an average of 13.5 million viewers over its 2 ½ hour duration, according to Nielsen.

Read More
content top