“The Terror: Infamy” didn’t need ghosts to be frightening. Alexander Woo and Max Borenstein’s new iteration of the “Terror” series, both thanks to its subject ma…
“The Terror: Infamy” didn’t need ghosts to be frightening. Alexander Woo and Max Borenstein’s new iteration of the “Terror” series, both thanks to its subject matter and supernatural apparitions lurking at the edges, is permeated by an ever-creeping sense of dread that proves undeniable. Tracing the needless devastation of Japanese-American internment during World War II, [...
“Bluff City Law” is going to have more episodes in its freshman season than first expected. NBC had originally ordered the legal drama for a 13-episode debut season, but has now asked for six more scripts from Dean Georgaris and the other writers on the show. More Reviews TV Review: 'Why Women Kill' TV Review: [...]It’s one of the curiosities of this peak TV era: Most series now contain fewer episodes, yet often take longer to produce — with lengthier breaks between seasons.
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‘The Terror: Infamy’ Review: Facing the Enemy WithinSeason Two of the anthology series ‘The Terror’ shifts the action to the U.S. in December, 1941 — and depicts a world that looks eerily similar to the one we live in today. Read Alan Sepinwall's review
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New season of 'The Terror' brings horror of Japanese American internment to life“It’s a story of Japanese Americans, but it speaks to anyone who is a part of an immigrant family or has been touched by the immigrant experience,' showrunner Alexander Woo says.
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Why domestic terror designation in El Paso shooting likely won't result in terrorism chargesFederal authorities said they're treating Saturday’s mass shooting in El Paso, Texas, as a domestic terrorism case and weighing hate crime charges, but the suspect is unlikely to be charged as a terrorist because there isn't an actual 'domestic terrorism' law on the books, experts told
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Why domestic terror designation in El Paso shooting likely won't result in chargesFederal authorities say they're treating the mass shooting in El Paso as a domestic terrorism case, but the suspect is unlikely to be charged as a terrorist because there isn't an actual 'domestic terrorism' law on the books, experts told ABC News.
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Terror attacks like El Paso aim to topple the government, experts say“What the white power movement is looking for is not just a single act of mass violence, but to use these acts of violence to bring people to the movement — and to eventually wage war against the federal government and racial enemies'
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