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Michael C. Hall Divorce

December 7, 2011 by · Comments Off on Michael C. Hall Divorce 

Michael C. Hall Divorce, Back in August of 2010, Dexter’s Michael C. Hall and Jennifer Carpenter announced they were calling it quits. A scant four months later, Carpenter officially filed for divorce. What followed was a lengthy, quiet separation that lasted over a year. If any optimistic person out there was hoping the two celebrities would have a change of heart, now is the time to give up on those dreams.

The proceedings surrounding the divorce were so quiet, they might have happened without the press ever knowing had some savvy reporter over at E! never gotten her mitts wet. Although, Hall and Carpenter’s divorce was finally granted on Friday, December 2, according to E! Online, the news of the divorce finalization broke today. The couple have reached an unpublished agreement on spousal support and community property. On the bright side of things, they don’t have to divide up a couple of children. Hopefully, they don’t have a dog.

Hall and Carpenter initially married in December of 2008. The two had dated without being in the spotlight for a year and a half prior. The wedding itself was also a covert affair, without even family or friends present. It’s only fitting the ex-couple’s divorce would be equally private. Here’s to hoping Hall and Carpenter manage to maintain a professional relationship into the future. With two more seasons of Dexter on the forefront, it’s looking like they will need some fingers crossed, after all.

Michael C. Hall

December 7, 2011 by · Comments Off on Michael C. Hall 

Michael C. Hall, Back in August of 2010, Dexter’s Michael C. Hall and Jennifer Carpenter announced they were calling it quits. A scant four months later, Carpenter officially filed for divorce. What followed was a lengthy, quiet separation that lasted over a year. If any optimistic person out there was hoping the two celebrities would have a change of heart, now is the time to give up on those dreams.

The proceedings surrounding the divorce were so quiet, they might have happened without the press ever knowing had some savvy reporter over at E! never gotten her mitts wet. Although, Hall and Carpenter’s divorce was finally granted on Friday, December 2, according to E! Online, the news of the divorce finalization broke today. The couple have reached an unpublished agreement on spousal support and community property. On the bright side of things, they don’t have to divide up a couple of children. Hopefully, they don’t have a dog.

Hall and Carpenter initially married in December of 2008. The two had dated without being in the spotlight for a year and a half prior. The wedding itself was also a covert affair, without even family or friends present. It’s only fitting the ex-couple’s divorce would be equally private. Here’s to hoping Hall and Carpenter manage to maintain a professional relationship into the future. With two more seasons of Dexter on the forefront, it’s looking like they will need some fingers crossed, after all.

Amy Spanger

December 14, 2010 by · Comments Off on Amy Spanger 

Amy Spanger, It has not been an easy year for the actor Michael C. Hall who plays Dexter in the TV series of the same name.

Earlier this year it emerged that the actor battled a severe cancer, and now he announces that he is separating from his wife, actress Jennifer Carpenter. They have not even been married for two years.

After being separated for a while, the couple opted for a divorce, say the couple’s representatives in a joint statement.

The couple met through the TV series, where Jennifer Carpenter plays the sympathetic serial killer Dexter adoptivsøster. They were married on 31 December 2008, but were then separated out again earlier this year.

It is the 39-year-old Michael C. Hall’s second marriage. From 2002 to 2006 he was married to actress Amy Spanger.

But he has not had it easy with women, so has Michael C. Hall in turn had great success with his role as Dexter. The TV series has just announced its sixth season, which will be shown in the U.S. next year

Jennifer Carpenter

December 14, 2010 by · Comments Off on Jennifer Carpenter 

Jennifer Carpenter, Deb (Jennifer Carpenter) feelings of Dexter (Michael C. Hall) mid-term outcome of this season not only served as a perfect harbinger of what must surely between the brothers and sisters in the future, but also as a summary of all of season 5. Just when I thought I really got to know Dexter season after last year’s epic, it appears that I may have idealized my favorite serial killer too. As Lumen (Julia Stiles), my black passenger seems to have suddenly taken a back seat.

He often felt at times this year that I was not even watching the same show. Subplots seemed to disappear into the air. Character motives seemed questionable at best. And there was a tangible lack of chemistry through that was hard to put a finger on. Prepared to make its final ruling in the finale, The Big One only confirms the worst traits of the season, leaving me a bit like Dexter at the end of the episode rather dead inside.

It was perhaps biggest flaw of the night. All that growth, all these changes and atonement in one cast away, the last line. It is a shame … and an error. Asking us to continue on this scale of change possible throughout the season (each season) without giving us any kind of payment emotional, like sex without orgasm: it feels great when you’re in the middle of this, but the end you re so frustrated that you could just kill somebody (or what I heard). Dexter deserves better. We.

For one thing, if we know Dexter can not change, the show is over. Contrast how the five seasons ended with the marriage of Rita at the end of Season 3. We wanted to see how the hell would ever manage Dexter married life because we wanted to see him succeed. But now it seems as if the show itself backed into a corner. If Dexter has dropped, so why not us?

Like childhood wishes never true, I had my own desires for “The Big One”. I hope that an enemy would be released to be on the table Dexter. I wanted Deb would have discovered something about Dexter leave us hanging for season six. But mostly I wanted that we had not spent a season pass to watch Dexter perhaps its greatest transformation but only to return to the same place we visited so many times before.

You can paint by numbers for so long before starting to forget that you are trying to make art. If last season was Van Gogh, this season was a coloring book that did not go outside the lines. In some ways, it is the fault of the show to give us such excellence in the past. The irony is that while Dexter seems clearer than ever about whom he really is, can not be said for the show itself. At least not until the sixth season.

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