Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The episode was up slightly from the previous season finale, but less than Fringe ' s fourth-season premiere rating of 1.5. [42] [43] Fringe reached its lowest ratings ever with the episode "The Boy Must Live" which first aired in the United States on January 11, 2013 on Fox to an estimated 2.44 million viewers, and earned a ratings share of 0. ...
Continuing to review the tape, they find that in the past, Walter has recovered the young Observer-like boy (as seen in "Inner Child"), and used the pocket universe to stow the child away in the designated room. The group finds the room, but it is empty, save a radio that is fused to a certain frequency, something that Walter did not give the ...
"In Absentia" is the second episode of the fifth and final season of the American Fox science fiction/drama television series Fringe, and the show's 89th episode overall. The episode aired in the United States on October 5, 2012. [1] It was co-written by J.H. Wyman and David Fury, while being directed by Jeannot Szwarc.
The New York Times named Fringe one of the top 10 television shows in 2010, [88] while Television Without Pity, previously dismissive of the show, listed it amongst their 2010 "Most Memorable TV Moments", stating "there were so many great Fringe moments this year" and "we were treated to some of the best sci-fi on television this past fall". [89]
"An Enemy of Fate" is the series finale of the American Fox science fiction/drama television series Fringe. It is episode 13 of season 5 and the 100th episode overall. It aired, along with the penultimate episode, "Liberty", in the United States on January 18, 2013.
The finale helped propel Fringe onto a number of 2010 "best of television" lists, including Digital Spy, [114] Entertainment Weekly, [115] the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, [116] The Daily Beast, [117] The New York Times, [118] TV Squad, [119] the New York Post, [120] and IGN; the last of these named Fringe the best sci-fi series of 2010, beating ...
Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in Season 5 of "Yellowstone." Beth, however, is ecstatic at her father's new position and the perks that result from it (being cruel to ...
Zap2It's Carina Adly MacKenzie believed that with the season premiere, "Fringe completely reinvented itself," citing as evidence the lack of pressure to attract new viewers and instead the desire to please longtime fans. She called Haig a "revelation" and noted her resemblance to Torv, who Adly MacKenzie asserted was "per usual, heartbreakingly ...