![]() The kidnapping episode from a few weeks ago (which aired while I was otherwise occupied at press tour) had a pair of actors I like in Yancey Arias and Steven Culp, but what made it work was the spotlight on Fiona. The guest star thing isn’t a hard-and-fast rule. I don’t think it was a coincidence that the one successful mini-arc of season three was the Strickler one, where Ben Shenkman lived up to the menace and charm that the writers clearly intended for the character. Michael having to deal with a cop who keeps noticing all the laws he breaks had a lot of potential, but Moon Bloodgood was a dud as the cop. In hindsight, though, the problem wasn’t with the arcs themselves – which were no more or less nonsensical than this chain of missions that Michael has taken on behalf of his agreement with Vaughn – but with the guest stars involved in them. I spent a lot of last season wondering if the show had perhaps outlived the need for the story arcs. – the overall story felt limp and left me impatient waiting for Michael to get back to Simon, even as I knew the show’s format meant we wouldn’t get that until around the 55-minute mark. So even though the prison scenes had some nifty Westen-isms – book covers as body armor, blowing up the infirmary, etc. So we had opening and closing scenes featuring the wonderful Robert Wisdom and Garret Dillahunt, and then a vast chunk of time where Jeffrey Donovan was hanging out with the extremely forgettable Juan and Cruz. “Hard Time” followed the traditional “Burn Notice” structure, opening and closing with Michael dealing with the season-long story arc, and devoting most of the middle to the client of the week. I hadn’t intended for this review to be a follow-up to the thesis in my “Covert Affairs” review about procedural shows like the ones USA does being extra-dependent on the guest-casting, but the more I think about “Hard Time,” the more I keep looping back to that. I’m sorry." The heartthrob then addressed his female fans, “If you’re hot and bothered bec you fell in love with a fictional straight man played by a real gay one… That’s your work.A quick review of last night’s “Burn Notice” coming up just as soon as I’m murdered over a parrot… “If you were a fan of the show, hoping for additional seasons… I understand this is disappointing. No more Michael,” Miller continued in his post. According to the Gay Times, he wrote, “So. Miller came out as gay in 2013 and announced on Instagram that Prison Break was a wrap for him in 2017. ![]() ![]() "I waited until my family went away for the weekend, and, I was alone in the house," reports Daily Star. ![]() It's a battle that's cost me time, opportunities, relationships, and a thousand sleepless nights." Miller explained that he was 15 years old when he made his first suicide attempt. I've struggled with depression since childhood. And the voices in my head urged me down the path to self-destruction. Ashamed and in pain, I considered myself damaged goods. He took to social media, "In 2010, semi-retired from acting, I was keeping a low profile for several reasons. The then 43-year-old actor awakened to a picture of his overweight physique juxtaposed with a previous and slender him. Part of rejecting straight characters in film and tv is attached to Miller's mental health.
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