Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) travel across the country battling demons, vampires, ghosts and more. Now in its 14th season, the fantasy series follows the brothers as they save innocent people, just like their father before them.
No one seems to know (apart from Engstrom herself, presumably), and we have to remember that the story played out in a very different era for the news business.
Engstrom enjoyed a brief but prolific acting career, appearing in 25 different titles over just five years in the early 1960s. Her final screen appearance came in 1964, when she was just 22.
Still grieving the tragic loss of her boyfriend, Bethenny is conflicted when she unexpectedly meets someone new in this new episode. As always, she and her friends lean on each other as they juggle careers and home lives.
Now that Rio (Lake Bell) and Mike (Dax Shepard) have traded in skyscrapers for farmland, they discover that being farmers isn't as easy as they thought in this new comedy. They struggle as they face the challenges of rural life in Nebraska.
The good news in this ugly story -- if there is "good" news to be found -- is that "When Calls the Heart" will survive.
Producer Brian Bird announced the news on the show's official Instagram page, saying, "With the full support of the network, we have gone on a creative hiatus to do some retooling on the remaining Season 6 episodes ... Hope Valley will return to your screens as soon as we can bring the episodes to you."
Suranne Jones stars as Anne Lister, a landowner and industrialist who sets out to restore the glory of her ancestral home in this period drama. Set in 1832, the series is based on Lister's real-life diaries.
Brett Dier, AJ Michalka, Tim Meadows and Bryan Callen star in "Schooled"
While revisiting one's high school days may not be everyone's cup of tea, reliving the glory of days gone by can be lots of fun. Time travel may not be possible (yet!), but one TV show has been transporting viewers back to the grunge era, and people are beginning to take notice.
Suranne Jones stars in "Gentleman Jack"
Over the weekend, J.K. Rowling revealed that Dumbledore had an "intense sexual relationship" with Grindelwald. You can read all about it in her next book, "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Too Much Information."
Later this year, the creators of "Game of Thrones" are going to start shooting some new Star Wars films. It's very exciting for fans who love the Star Wars movies but always thought they could use more incest.
When she receives a $100 bill stained with dye in an unmarked envelope, Det. Erin Bell (Kidman) is convinced that it portends the return of Silas (Kebbell), a notorious gang leader who disappeared years ago when a bank heist went off the rails. One by one, she tracks down and interrogates Silas's former associates, following a trail of breadcrumbs that she hopes will eventually lead her to the man himself, but her own past as an undercover detective refuses to stay buried, and her memories from that time haunt her.
Six strangers from different walks of life all receive invitations to visit a new escape room with the promise of $10,000 if they can make it out successfully. After meeting each other and settling into the waiting room, they discover that the game has already begun, and that the waiting room is itself an escape room -- and horrifyingly, the room is also designed to kill them if they don't escape. It soon becomes clear that there are multiple rooms they must make their way through, and they must solve clues and puzzles in each one to unlock the door to the next room. Failing to make it out of any of the rooms in time has deadly consequences.
Forty years after she exacted revenge upon those who had brutally assaulted her, successful writer Jennifer Hills (Keaton) is targeted by the families of her assaulters who kidnap both her and her daughter. With not only her own life on the line but also that of her daughter, Jennifer proves again that she'll do whatever it takes to get revenge.