'Reaper' Revived on The CW

Zap2It.com | May 13, 2008
Tyler Labine and Bret Harrison of 'Reaper'
Tyler Labine and Bret Harrison of 'Reaper'
Discuss this story now

Show will get 13 more episodes in its second season

A few more souls are in danger at The CW.

The network has finally picked up "Reaper" for a 13-episode second season after the freshman supernatural dramedy has been living in limbo just before the upfront presentation on Tuesday (May 13), according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"Reaper" will likely return as a midseason replacement for "Smallville" when it concludes its run, paired up with "Supernatural."

The show has a cult following, but has struggled with the ratings. Although the show received critical praise out the gate with a pilot directed by Kevin Smith, it started to lose steam with its predictable "soul of the week" episodes. Once the writers' strike concluded, however, fans have been drawn to the more serialized storylines and edgier wit.

"Reaper" stars Bret Harrison as Sam, a guy who roped into service as the devil's (Ray Wise) bounty hunter for souls escaped from hell. He's aided by his friends Sock (Tyler Labine) and Ben (Rick Gonzalez) and distracted by his crush/budding relationship with Andi (Missy Peregrym).

With the show on the bubble, some diehard fans sent The CW socks, playing off of Labine's character's name.

Fall TV

What's new, what's coming back and what to watch.


Emmy Awards

Find everything you need to know about the 2008 Primetime Emmy Awards.


Pick your favorite channels

Customize our TV listings to show only the channels you care about.


Get Zap2it delivered

Sign up for our new daily e-mail newsletter so you'll always know what to watch and where to watch it.

Find it fast

What's On Tonight
'Burn Notice' (USA) 'Burn Notice' (USA)

Michael looks to an elite member of the Miami crime world for help. 10 p.m. ET.

TV Listings Guide

All Times Eastern

View Complete Guide to TV Listings






Too lazy to read our stories? Let News at Seven, a virtual broadcast created by Northwestern University's InfoLab, do it for you. It's not your average newscast.

Watch News at Seven now »
Let us know what you think »