Sex, Corruption and Murder! Jennifer Lopez and Ray Liotta return for a sizzling Season 2 of ‘Shades of Blue’

Oh, snap! Yep, that’s exactly what New York City cop Harlee Santos did to her baby daddy’s neck in last spring’s shocking season finale of Shades of Blue. He was a brute, an abuser, a total psycho—and he definitely had it coming. But no way can she ever confess to killing him. When the hit NBC thriller returns this week, only a few moments have passed since the slaying, but Harlee (played by superstar Jennifer Lopez) is already in survival mode. Where will she stash the corpse? How will she keep her daughter from finding out? Things will take an even darker turn when Harlee buries the body in the dead of night—but not before jumping down into the grave, straddling the cadaver and smashing out the teeth with a hammer and chisel to prevent identification. Clearly, Harlee has balls to spare. Lopez? Not so much.

“I felt sick when I first read that burial scene,” Lopez admits. “All I could think was, ‘I can’t do this! How can I possibly go there?’ But that’s the difference between Harlee and me. My life is crazy. Her life’s insane. And she will do what it takes to make it through another day.”

Viewers knew Harlee was a dirty cop from the first scene of the first episode, when rookie detective Michael Loman (Dayo Okeniyi) accidentally killed an unarmed perp during a drug raid and she taught him how to cover up the crime. Harlee is also not above planting evidence or pocketing payola. But here’s the dicey conceit of the series: She’s no villain. Harlee is actually a warm, caring woman who does all this to give her kid, Cristina (Sarah Jeffery), a better life. And she has the full backup of her even more crooked boss and mentor, Lt. Matt Wozniak (Ray Liotta), who loves Cristina as if she’s his own child.

 

Read Michael Logan’s full story (including the five best cop shows ever on TV) on newsstands now!

 

Also in this issue:

Bull: TV Guide goes on set of the CBS drama starring Michael Weatherly, everywhere from the courtrooms to the designated punching bag area and the leisure spot known as the “Pod Room”.

When We Rise: ABC revives the multi-night miniseries format with this urgent drama chronicling the decades-long gay right movement, created by Dustin Lance Black (Milk) and featuring an all-star cast, including Guy Pearce, Mary-Louise Parker, Rachel Griffiths, and Whoopi Goldberg.

Chicago Justice: Dick Wolf’s Windy City dramas keep on comin’! We go into his Chi-town latest for NBC—a new legal thriller featuring Philip Winchester and Jon Seda, sure to please the palette of Law & Order devotees.

Luke Perry: The Beverly Hills, 90210 heartthrob has grown up, and now he plays a papa in The CW’s breakout teen sensation Riverdale. He looks back at his storied career on TV, from 90210‘s Dylan McKay to his, ummm, revealing turn on Oz to the sadly underseen HBO curiosity John From Cincinnati.

Plus: A deep dive into why FX’s Feud proves Ryan Murphy always hits the zeitgeist, a first look at the Bones series finale, Michael Jackson’s daughter Paris makes her debut on Fox’s Star, Six‘s technical advisor keeps his eye on the cast, and the best of movies, streaming, sports and more.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Matt Lauer Celebrates 20 Years on ‘Today’: Exclusive interview including what’s to come

During a break between the 9am Today show sign-off and the 10am West Coast news update, Matt Lauer settles into his office in New York’s Rockefeller Center, where photos of Muhammad Ali and Bruce Springsteen share space with family portraits. It’s a few days after the lavish on-air toasts to the morning show’s 65th anniversary and Lauer’s 20th as a coanchor. That’s not all there is to celebrate: Today just scored its 57th week as the No. 1 morning show among viewers 25–54 and its largest lead over Good Morning America in more than five years in that coveted demo.

As for 59-year-old Lauer, he still beams as he talks about landing his “dream job.” He speaks of his team over the years as “a family,” recalling the time he and Al Roker “trekked through a blizzard” to visit coanchor Katie Couric when she gave birth to her second daughter, and doing the same—minus the snow—for current cohost Savannah Guthrie. “The most surprising thing viewers don’t know is how loyal a friend he is,” says Roker.

Read the full story on newsstands now.

Also in this issue:

A Farewell to Mary Tyler Moore: Our senior critic Matt Roush looks back on the iconic actress and her TV history. Plus: A look back at Moore’s TV GUIDE covers.

Big Little Lies: Reese Witherspoon, Nicole Kidman, Shailene Woodley and Laura Dern star in HBO’s much-awaited series adapatation of Liane Moriarty’s bestselling novel.

Blacklist: Redemption: Everything you need to know about the Blacklist spinoff, featuring Famke Janssen as a covert boss.

The Good Fight: Christine Baranski dishes on the sexy, long-awaited new Good Wife spinoff, the first primetime drama for streaming service CBS All Access.

Doubt: Katherine Heigl (Grey’s Anatomy) returns to TV drama, in a new legal show costarring Orange is the New Black‘s Laverne Cox.

Plus: The Detour plans a new move, Matthew Rhys puts in a memorable guest-starring bid on Girls, black-ish scene stealer Miles Brown, Lifetime offers up a Britney Spears biopic, the Spectra clan returns to The Bold and the Beautiful, NASCAR’s comeback and the best of movies, streaming, sports and more.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

’24: Legacy’: Everything you need to know about the new spinoff series!

Actor Corey Hawkins stares intently at a video monitor, riveted as his costars Jimmy Smits and Miranda Otto film a charged exchange for an upcoming episode of Fox’s 24: Legacy. Hawkins (Straight Outta Compton) has finished his scenes for the day, but he’s transfixed by the sequence being shot on the show’s Atlanta set. When the actors nail the intended emotion, the star pumps his fist excitedly, expressing his joy to the crew.

Soon all eyes will be on Hawkins. After eight seasons, a TV movie and an event series, Legacy is the first version of 24 without Kiefer Sutherland’s Jack Bauer (last seen being escorted to a Russian prison in 2014’s 24: Live Another Day). Legacy follows Eric Carter (Hawkins), a former Army Ranger who participated in a deadly raid—spearheaded by Counter Terrorism Unit Director Rebecca Ingram (Otto)—that took out terrorist leader Ibrahim Bin-Khalid. Once home, Eric attempts to move on with his life; six months later, he learns that most of the Rangers on his team have been murdered, and a loose thread from the mission could endanger people around the world.

Also in this issue:

Santa Clarita Diet: Drew Barrymore plays a real-estate agent whose hunger for life takes on a whole new life in this new Netflix series co-starring Justified‘s Timothy Olyphant.

The Young and the Restless: Y&R star Eric Braeden previews his startling new memoir, in which he reveals a shocking family secret and meeting feisty soap opera Jeanne Cooper.

The Path: The second season of Hulu’s mysterious cult drama starring Breaking Bad‘s Aaron Paul gets even darker.

Superior Donuts: Comedian Jermaine Fowler grills his Donuts costar Judd Hirsch on his comedy idols, his Taxi days and much more.

Plus: Bill Paxton in Training Day, Quantico scene stealer Russell Tovey, the incoming brood of MasterChef Junior, Dan Stevens goes full Legion, football hero Troy Aikman pens a very special Super Bowl-centric guest column, and the best of movies, streaming, sports and more.

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

A sneak peek at Mariska Hargitay and Co. in Law & Order: SVU‘s 400th episode! (EXCLUSIVE!)

In the fall of 1999, Hurricane Floyd swept through the Southeast, Donald J. Trump announced his run for POTUS—on the Reform Party ticket—and Dick Wolf launched his first Law & Order spin-off,  Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.  Eighteen years later Trump has finally won that coveted job, and SVU is now the third-longest-running, live-action scripted show in television history after its progenitor and Gunsmoke, both tied at 20 seasons. On February 8, the sex crimes procedural will air its 400th episode as it inches closer to Law & Order’s 452. (Gunsmoke’s record 635 episodes seems unbreakable.)

Not bad for a show whose weekly intro touts a focus on “especially heinous sexual crimes” and whose opening reviews ranged from—“gripping hit” to “crimes that will have the cops and viewers holding their stomachs.”

Delicate constitutions aside, SVU’s longevity and continued sturdy ratings—currently NBC’s third-highest rated scripted show—have been propelled by viewer-friendly stand-alone episodes and what Ice T, who’s been playing Det. Fin Tutuola since season 2, cites as “a whodunit format that offers a chance for fans to play detective each week.”

Read the full story on newsstands everywhere now.

Also in this issue:

Star: Queen Latifah sings the praises of her brazen beauty parlor owner character in Fox’s sassy, sexy new drama.

Scandal: Season 6 shakes things up with the possibility of a female POTUS and more White House heat. Read here for more on why the creators opted for a premiere schedule bump.

Six: Meet the military muscle behind History’s new series, about a Navy SEAL squad, starring Justified and Vice Principals star Walton Goggins..

Beaches: Grab a hankie (or two!) The 1988 Bette Midler film gets a reboot courtesy of Lifetime, starring Nia Long and Idina Menzel.

Plus: Timeless meets Harry Houdini, Mercy Street, Grey’s Anatomy‘s Jessica Capshaw, Suits re-tailors its focus, Lily Tomlin looks back on her storied career in a new guest column, Matt Roush on the late Carrie Fisher and M*A*S*H star William Christopher, TCM remembers Debbie Reynolds, and the best of movies, streaming, sports and more.