
I wish it would’ve stayed on air a little bit longer, but we all can’t get what we wish for.
#WHITE COLLAR SEASON ONE TARMAC BOMER TV#
White Collar was my favorite tv show, and it always will be.
#WHITE COLLAR SEASON ONE TARMAC BOMER SERIES#
So if Eastin ended the series like that I still wouldn’t be satisfied. No matter how much he loves Peter and looks up to him as a father figure, he still couldn’t change who he is. So for Neal to make a complete 360 and lead a life of good and to work solely for the FBI would be unrealistic. Neal’s a conman, and like he’s said many times throughout the series, conmen do not change. However, would that even be true to Neal’s character? The show should’ve have ended with them all together. Now I know that the queen of hearts card Peter found in the storage container represents that Mozzie is joining Neal, but for a whole year he let his loved ones suffer, something that goes against Neal’s character. Now Neal’s gone in France, by himself, without his family, Peter, Elizabeth, Mozzie, June, Jones, Diana, and everyone else he cares about. But Eastin totally disregarded Neal’s feelings on how he wanted things to end. He said he wouldn’t mind working with Peter and the FBI permanently after he served his sentence while doing side things with Mozzie. Neal said at the end of season 3 and the start of season 4 that he wanted to be free, truly free, in New York City. However, I didn’t like how justice wasn’t served to the characters of the show. I love that Peter named his son Neal, I loved that Peter and Neal got to work on one last case together, and I loved that justice was served to the Pink Panthers. I know it never would’ve ended how I pictured it, but it certainly didn’t come close. I didn’t hate it, but I sure didn’t love it. I’m not sure what to say about the final episode. I’m sorry I didn’t comment sooner on the final episode, but it was honestly just too painful to type my feelings into a post. I truly feel like I’m losing some close friends that I’ve made over the past couple of years. It’s weird not going to experience that special feeling again while waiting for the next episode to air, or that burning curiosity of how Neal and Peter are going to solve the case. And after the first episode, I was hooked, and I’ve been hooked ever since. I remember watching a white collar promo from the first season and I knew after the short clip was over that I needed to watch the show. For some, they may think it’s just a TV show, but it’s not it’s more to me and the fans. I’m not going to lie, but I cried like a baby after the final episode aired. Watch by Hamilton.Wow! This is it no more white collar. Cary Grant would approve.Ĭotton henley, $675, and cords, $750, by Michael Bastian. "My favorite actors are the ones who show up and do their job," he says, sidestepping the issue. (He was once set to play Superman in a Brett Ratner reboot of the franchise.) With the spotlight came the inevitable gossip about his private life, which Bomer shrugs off with a smart don't-ask-don't- tell defense. The show just wrapped its second season on USA, officially signifying the end of Bomer's soap-opera obscurity and Hollywood near misses.

"I always thought of the character as somebody who cobbled his identity together out of a lot of icons," says the Texas-born actor, who studied Cary Grant in To Catch a Thief.

In preparation for the role, Bomer, who turns 33 this month, pored over the life of Frank Abagnale-the subject of Catch Me If You Can-and embraced the tie bars and pocket squares that made up his Rat Pack look. The public was primed for Matt Bomer's spot-on performance as a con artist turned FBI crime consultant, a guy whose sly charm bagged crooks (and more than 5 million viewers). The economy had collapsed, and behind the smoking rubble stood Bernie Madoff types whose high-life tastes fascinated and infuriated us all. When White Collar debuted in the fall of 2009, the timing couldn't have been better.
