All we’re missing is the 1880s version of Ryan Seacrest and Giuliana Rancic reporting live from in front of the house
All we’re missing is the 1880s version of Ryan Seacrest and Giuliana Rancic reporting live from in front of the house
Bertha can pack every dress and hat in the house, but she can't prevent being dumped out with the chickens.
Edison turns on the lights, throwing The Gilded Age's biggest issue into sharp relief
An impromptu meeting between the Old and New Guard? “Heads Have Rolled For Less” on The Gilded Age.
In “Charity Has Two Functions,” New York's pecking order is rearranged once more—guess where Bertha Russell ends up.
“A Long Ladder” reveals more about Peggy's background, and how Marian is becoming the show's Achilles heel.
The 19th century goes STONK wild and it's Old Money who ends up on the tracks
As the Old Money and New Money factions squabble, Carrie Coon's Bertha Russell easily wins New York's best-dressed.
The opening to The Gilded Age plays like Downton Abbey almost beat for beat.
A decade of bonding, an unwanted visitor, and more
“One shock at a time.”
“This is the god-killer. It doesn’t exactly come with an instruction manual.”
“I guess you’d call it a pansexual adventure love-in where you can get your kinky boots on.”
“So what? I’m supposed to go back to business as usual, knowing gods walk among us? I can’t do that any more than…
“Why am I not surprised the Buckeye state has a freaky Norse underbelly?”
“The journey to spiritual awakening is better with french fries.”
“That’s for lynching me, peckerwood.”
“Do the words ‘Rest in Peace’ mean nothing to you people?”
“Half the art of war is knowing when to switch sides.”
“You can be your own man until destiny kicks in”