Honestly, 'Wakefield' was too smart for its own good. It demanded your full attention—no scrolling through TikTok while watching. That’s probably why it got canned. Networks want easily digestible content, and this show was more like a puzzle you had to piece together. The symbolism, the unreliable narration… it was art. But art doesn’t always pay the bills.
I heard rumors about budget issues too. Those Australian forest locations couldn’t have been cheap. Still, I’d trade a dozen generic procedurals for one more season of this. The silver lining? At least it didn’t overstay its welcome. Some shows ruin their legacy by dragging on (cough 'Supernatural). 'Wakefield' left us craving more, and there’s beauty in that.
I was just as shocked as everyone else when 'Wakefield' got the axe. The show had this eerie, psychological depth that hooked me from the first episode—think 'The Leftovers' meets 'Twin Peaks' vibes. Rudi’s breakdowns felt painfully real, and the way the series blurred sanity and delusion was masterful. But from what I gathered, the ratings just weren’t there. ABC kept it on a tight leash with minimal promotion, and it got lost in the shuffle of bigger dramas. Critics adored it, but that cult following never materialized in time. Such a shame—it deserved at least another season to unravel its mysteries.
What really stung was how it ended on a cliffhanger. That final shot of Rudi staring into the distance? Pure chills. I’ve rewatched the series twice now, picking up new details each time. Maybe it’ll find its audience on streaming someday. Shows like 'Firefly' and 'Freaks and Geeks' did, after all. Fingers crossed for a revival or even a novel adaptation to wrap things up.
Ugh, 'Wakefield'’s cancellation still stings. It was one of those rare shows that treated mental health with nuance instead of melodrama. The writing was sharp—no cheap twists, just slow-burn tension. But here’s the thing: it aired during peak TV overload. Between 'Succession' and 'Yellowjackets', a quieter show like this struggled to grab attention. I blame the algorithm-driven hype cycles; anything without instant meme potential gets sidelined.
Also, the pacing might’ve been its downfall. Some friends I recommended it to called it 'too slow,' but that deliberate unraveling was its strength. The way it mirrored Rudi’s fractured psyche? Brilliant. Maybe if it had dropped all at once on Netflix, it’d have thrived. Now it’s just another 'what could’ve been' in my book—alongside 'Mindhunter' and 'The OA.' At least the fan theories on Reddit are still wild.
2026-07-11 21:05:06
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Rejected
Ellie Scott
9.7
316.7K
"I reject you, Alpha! I reject you!".
Elizabeth is an Omega ranked wolf; however, she does not realize she is an Alpha by birth. She has been rejected by her family, and her Pack, having suffered years of abuse from them. She is about to be given to the Pack Beta as his chosen mate when her fated mate finds her. Will her fated mate reject her as well?
WOLFBANE SERIES BOOK 2 ***It is highly recommended you read book 1, Wolfbane, before starting this one for context and to avoid spoilers.***
*TALIA*
You'd think being raised in a brothel would prepare me for anything. You'd be wrong.
I never expected to find my mother murdered in cold blood. I never predicted I'd hunt down the killer and take his life in exchange. And I sure didn't imagine the son of my mother's murderer would turn out to be my mate.
But I guess this is my life now.
Being a werewolf in hiding was no piece of cake, but being a werewolf on the run is even worse…
*ALEX*
I don't think I made a very good first impression.
But to be fair, who meets their mate at their father's murder scene? A murder where she, evidently, is the number one and only suspect.
It's disturbing. It's gruesome. But it's fate.
And I'll do anything to see the mysterious woman with distinctive blue eyes again…
*Content warning: This is a paranormal romance novel with dark themes containing mature adult content, offensive language, and graphic violence, and may not be suitable for young readers.*
Lots of people are asking so here it is:
Branston high series order - Jake, Nathan, Shane, Luke, Billy
Thank you all so much for reading!
~~~~~
Jake has one goal in life - protect his brothers and keep his family together. He has to find a job, earn his keep. He doesn't have time for trivial things like friends and girlfriends.
Kim wants freedom, adventure and excitement. She's not interested in living a life of regrets or what if's.
A chance encounter with the stoic and mysterious new guy in school, has Kim adamant to bring a little joy to his life, even if he doesn't think he wants it.
Wrenley moves to Waindale, the place where her mother grew up and where her grandmother still lives. Between the pine trees and above the wet ground, she soon realizes that Waindale is anything but the perfect place she remembers it as. Dark things stalk the woods. Dark things are pulling her in.
"I turn on the lamp that's sat on top of my dresser. The pink lampshade makes my room glow with a feminine warmth, and it shines through the glass of my window; a signal so he can find his way home. It's dark out there, so bone-chillingly dark that I nearly fear for him before realizing that he is the greatest danger in those woods."
At Blackwood Academy, the best way for the weak to survive is to be invisible. Gwendolyn lived like that—hiding behind thick glasses, an outdated hairstyle, and oversized uniforms to conceal her true beauty. She accepted being ridiculed as a clumsy nerd for peace. No one knew she was actually the heiress of a top-tier powerful conglomerate.
However, endurance could not shield her from the cruelty of high society. A merciless romantic bet exposed, her sincerity turned into a joke, and a cold rejection from her family drove her into a fateful rainy night. Falling into the abyss, Gwen thought death would end it all. But she didn't die; she only awakened.
After the summer break, Gwen returned with a sharp, layered haircut, a refined style, and a cold, independent aura. She didn't care about revenge because those who once trampled on her were no longer in her league. She only wanted peace.
Yet, the tree wishes to be still, but the wind will not subside. The instigator of the bet grows restless; the boy who once ignored her now begs for her gaze; and the elite try to corner her again. They forget that the line between a lamb and an alpha White Wolf is paper-thin.
If any fool dares to cross the line, Gwen will use her terrifying capability and family backing to crush their pride under her heels. The chessboard has flipped. Do not anger a wealthy heiress seeking peace, and absolutely... Do not wake the White Wolf!
I’d just left a creative meeting when a TikTok video popped up on my feed, slamming my company.
The title: "Stay Away! This Austin startup is incredibly cheap. The perks are a joke."
The video showed off the pour-over coffee from Austin's hottest independent cafe and pastries from a top-tier French bakery. The same ones I’d just had my assistant, Sam, hand out.
I frowned.
In the company's Slack channel, I tagged everyone.
"@here Any suggestions for this afternoon's Happy Hour?"
Leo, the new Gen-Z intern, replied instantly with a voice note.
“Asher, with all due respect, these snacks with gluten and dairy are so unhealthy.”
“A truly visionary company would hire a private chef to customize raw, vegan bites for everyone's dietary needs. That's what respect looks like.”
I laughed. It was an angry laugh.
The company's daily snack budget was $25 per person. For an Austin startup, that was top of the line.
I typed back:
"Since it's impossible to please everyone, the snack perk is canceled. I'll convert the budget into a cash bonus for all of you."
Less than five minutes later, the TikTok caption was updated.
"UPDATE: Y'all, I can't make this up. I made a suggestion about dietary inclusivity, and my toxic boss just canceled all the perks! This is how toxic bosses act. Can't handle a single piece of feedback!"
I stumbled upon 'Wakefield' a while ago, and it totally threw me for a loop! At first glance, it feels like one of those eerie urban legends—you know, the kind where a guy just vanishes into his own attic to spy on his family. But nope, it’s actually based on a short story by E.L. Doctorow, which later got adapted into a film starring Bryan Cranston. The premise is wild: a guy fakes his disappearance while secretly living in his garage attic, watching his family grieve. It’s fiction, but it taps into that universal fear of being replaced or forgotten. Doctorow’s writing always has this unsettling realism, though, so it’s easy to see why people wonder if it’s true. The film amps up the psychological tension, making it feel even more plausible. But nah, no records of anyone actually pulling off this bizarre stunt—thankfully! Still, it’s the kind of story that lingers, making you side-eye your own attic for days.
What’s fascinating is how the narrative plays with the idea of voluntary exile. It’s not about physical escape but emotional detachment, and that’s where the story feels uncomfortably real. We’ve all had moments where we fantasize about disappearing, even if just for a day. 'Wakefield' takes that fleeting thought and stretches it into a full-blown existential crisis. The lack of a true-story backbone somehow makes it more relatable—it’s a metaphor for the parts of ourselves we hide, even from those we love. The film’s claustrophobic vibe and Cranston’s manic performance seal the deal. Definitely a story that sticks with you, even if it’s pure fiction.
The ending of 'Wakefield' always leaves me with this eerie, unresolved feeling—like stepping off a curb and realizing there's no ground. The short story by E.L. Doctorow (based on Hawthorne's original) follows Howard Wakefield, a man who, on a whim, hides in his attic for months, watching his family grieve his disappearance. The brilliance is in the ambiguity: he never explains why he does it. One day, he just... steps back into his life, as if nothing happened. The family barely reacts. It's like a dark joke about how replaceable we all are.
What haunts me is the lack of closure. Did he learn anything? Was it a midlife crisis gone surreal? The story mirrors those moments when we fantasize about vanishing—but Wakefield actually does it, and the world moves on without him. It's not about the 'why,' but the 'what now?' That final image of him slipping back into his house, unremarked upon, sticks with me for days. Makes you wonder how thin the line is between being seen and being a ghost in your own life.
I recently went on a deep dive to find 'Wakefield' after hearing so much buzz about its psychological twists. The most straightforward option is Hulu—it’s got the series available for streaming with a subscription. What’s cool about Hulu is that they often bundle it with Disney+ and ESPN+, so if you’re already into those platforms, it’s a no-brainer.
For those who prefer renting or buying, Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV have it available in HD. I’ve noticed the rental prices fluctuate, so it’s worth checking both for deals. Sometimes YouTube Movies surprises with lower rates too. The series is niche enough that it doesn’t pop up on free ad-supported platforms like Tubi, but keep an eye out—rights do shift around.