Fortunately for White Collar, DeKay and the rest of the cast bring more to the table for this episode than a few snappy one-liners. Look for my full interview with Bomer later this week."Tap me like a geyser," are five words that never need to pass through Tim DeKay's lips onscreen again especially when they are spoken to his boss. Check out what Bomer had to say below which includes more on White Collar. While I was I had better news for the White Collar fans and could say they are getting ready to shoot something soon, it sounds like they are still trying to get it off the ground. But I don’t have any official word on anything.” “Hopefully I’ll be back in Atlanta in the new year and we’ll be working on Season 3. I don’t know if that’s interesting to people. I don’t know commercially how that fits in the paradigm in this day and age. Whatever it is to tell just one storyline and just to see how it goes. “That was my pitch…was to do a two-hour movie and see how it goes. I thought doing a two-hour movie would be the way to go so they could see how much interest they’d get from the fans and make it a special event. One of the things I was curious about regarding the future of White Collar is if it would be another full season, or if they were thinking about doing a TV movie. Towards the end of the interview, I brought up the White Collar revival and Doom Patrol Season 3. With the Netflix movie The Boys in the Band streaming this week, I recently landed an extended video interview with Matt Bomer to talk about the film. White Collar also starred Tim DeKay (Peter Burke), Willie Garson (Mozzie), Tiffani Thiessen (Elizabeth Burke), Sharif Atkins (Clinton Jones), Willie Garson (Mozzie), Marsha Thomason (Diana Berrigan), and Hilarie Burton (Sara Ellis). Loaded with fun characters, witty dialogue, and fantastic chemistry between all the leads, the series was an integral part of USA Network’s era of “blue sky” shows. Each episode featured Bomer’s character, Neal Caffrey, using his con artist skills to help catch counterfeiters, other conmen, and many other long-sought criminals. If you’ve never seen series, the show ran for six seasons beginning in 2009 and focused on a former white-collar criminal ( Matt Bomer) that agreed to help the FBI as part of a work-release program. A few months ago, White Collar creator Jeff Eastin revealed he was working to bring the popular USA Network series back in some form.
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