The Spoiler Roundup 09.10.09

September 10th, 2009 | 0 Comments | Email | Share | Tweet

Welcome to the Spoiler Roundup, the most comprehensive weekly spoiler wrapup on the internet. We scour the web for all the best spoilers on some of the most popular shows on the air.

This Week: 90210, Brothers and Sisters, Chuck, CSI: Miami, Dark Blue, Desperate Housewives, Dexter, Gossip Girl, Grey’s Anatomy, House, Numbers, Parks and Recreation, Private Practice, Smallville, Sons of Anarchy, Supernatural and The Office.

90210

Navid will have his hands full working on a blockbuster story for the West Beverly Blaze when a student overdoses, and Annie’s new boyfriend is implicated. (TV Guide)

Brothers and Sisters

Saul takes Ryan under his wing at Ojai this season, but a dark cloud looms over their relationship. “Saul has a secret, which is that he was there the night before Ryan’s mother committed suicide, not William,” explains exec producer Alison Schapker. “So that’ll be interesting when that comes out.” (Michael Ausiello)

Chuck

Bonita Friedericy will be returning as General Beckman in the third season. (Michael Ausiello)

CSI: Miami

Adam Rodriguez is only committed to doing seven episodes this season. (Michael Ausiello)

Dark Blue

The September 16 finale dives deeper into Ty and Jaime’s battles with balancing home life with work, and one doozy of a secret about Carter slips out. (TV Guide)

Desperate Housewives

Remember how cute it was when Tom said he wanted to go back to college to study Mandarin and international marketing? Well, Lynette doesn’t think it’s so cute when she catches him cheating on campus. (TV Guide)

Dexter

Deb spends her time out of bed with informant-turned-boyfriend Anton tracking down women from her father’s past. Quinn develops eyes for an aggressive reporter he meets at a crime scene, while LaGuerta gets involved in a relationship of her own. And it’s with someone at the office. (TV Guide)

Gossip Girl

Blair and Serena will start out loving each other, but by November, the hate is on! What triggers the war? Blair puts a guy before her friends. (Michael Ausiello)

Grey’s Anatomy

Owen and Cristina have a really moving hand-holding scene in the season premiere. (Michael Ausiello)

If you were among those fans who thought their Post-It note wedding was some kind of bad joke, there’s a scene at George’s funeral that should put a smile on your face. (Michael Ausiello)

While pretty much everyone at Seattle Grace is shaken by George’s departure, Derek somehow keeps it together. That might be because he’s got something bigger on his mind: the promise of becoming the next chief of surgery. (TV Guide)

House

House, Wilson, and Cuddy go on a business trip in episode 7 and Lucas (Michael Weston) is tagging along. (Michael Ausiello)

Numbers

Budget cuts forced producers to trim Peter MacNicol’s episode order for the season. (Michael Ausiello)

Parks and Recreation

Leslie will become an unlikely spokesperson for gay marriage. (TV Guide)

Private Practice

The October 1 premiere includes a funeral. Also, Violet is in very bad shape and her baby boy is missing. (TV Guide)

We’re going to be seeing less of Dell this season. Chris Lowell’s episode order has been reduced from 22 to a minimum of 13. Technically, he still remains a series regular though. (Michael Ausiello)

The premiere flashes back to Oceanside’s pre-Addison days to show how Pete, Violet and the gang first met. The episode also features a funeral (not Violet’s), two harrowing surgeries, and addresses why Chris Lowell’s Dell will be appearing in fewer episodes this season. (Michael Ausiello)

Smallville

Clark wears the “S” symbol on his chest, the sign of the House of El, as a means of establishing a “call sign” for himself. He’s no longer the red-blue blur, just the Blur. In episode two, through a complicated set of circumstances caused by “interesting lighting”, Lois gets a good look at the symbol on Clark’s chest, but doesn’t see his face. Clark has an opportunity to step forward and show her his face, but chooses not to. (TV Guide Magazine)

Sons of Anarchy

The way Jax chooses to dispose of the Mayan that Opie killed in the premiere rubs Clay the wrong way and also backfires in potentially lethal ways Jax doesn’t expect. (TV Guide)

Creator Kurt Sutter talking about this season: “The number one thing to know about this season is that the father-and-son dynamic is very important. This conflict with Jax and Clay will really play out and ultimately come to a head toward the end of the season. And the events that impacted Gemma, that all eventually comes together, too.” (Watch With Kristin)

Gemma doesn’t tell Jax or Clay about what happened to her. She does, however, confide in two very unexpected allies. (Watch With Kristin)

The girl who tempted Gemma into the van is Polly, the daughter of Alan Arkin’s Ethan Zoebelle. (Watch With Kristin)

Ron Perlman talking about this season: “The entire second season is a kind of ‘come to Jesus’ for Clay and the way he goes about taking care of business. There’s a palpable tension between Clay and Jax.” (Watch With Kristin)

Charlie Hunnam talking about getting revenge on Clay for Donna: “I start slowly and subtly with Clay because I think that there’s going to be a smarter way to do it, and that I’m going to manipulate him and outwit him and expose him for what he is, but it turns out he’s been doing this a long time, and he’s got a few tricks of his own, so that manipulation doesn’t fully work and that results in great frustration for me, so the more futile my efforts become, the more brazen they become.” (Watch With Kristin)

Eventually, the conflict gets physical. Charlie Hunnam talks about if Jax would ever just punch Clay in the face: “Yeah. Several, several times. We get into it nice. However, I have to say, it doesn’t go well for me. On the day we shot that, I ended up getting a tooth knocked out. Bam, slammed face first into metal bars.” (Watch With Kristin)

Maggie Siff talking about Jax and Tara’s relationship this season: “This season is about the education of Tara Knowles . . . The decision to commit herself to this has been made in a lot of small ways and in a couple of big ways, and now she’s there. She’s like, all right, I’ve got to figure this out.” (Watch With Kristin)

Charlie Hunnam says Tara doesn’t hold back once she throws herself into the world of Sam Crow: “Some of those reservations Tara has about this lifestyle are dissipating a little, and she’s learning to be badass. She throws down a little this season. I’m proud of her. Very proud.” (Watch With Kristin)

As Maggie Siff puts it: “Tara’s not deeply involved in the criminal element, but she’s got all her fingers and toes in—I’ll say that!” (Watch With Kristin)

Supernatural

According to series creator Eric Kripke, this season is all about “building Sam and Dean back up in a way that makes them older, sadder, wiser, and, ultimately, stronger. It’s funny, we’ve been feeling in many ways that this is the most optimistic season of Supernatural we’ve ever done. Because even though the exterior circumstances are a mess, internally, the boys aren’t tearing each other apart every episode. It’s more like, ‘Hey, maybe we’ll lose, but, dammit, let’s go down swinging.’” (Michael Ausiello)

The Office

Andy finds himself wrestling with the very real possibility that he likes both girls and boys. (Michael Ausiello)

The season premiere features one of the most unique and funny pregnancy reveals ever seen on TV. (Michael Ausiello)

Erin, Dunder Mifflin’s new receptionist, will find love this season. (TV Guide)

The hilarious season premiere, which is about gossip, reveals that at least one employee is pregnant, one is cheating on his or her partner, and one is questioning his or her sexuality. (TV Guide)

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