

Specifically, she talked about Whedon's allegedly abusive behavior toward her when she became pregnant while working on "Angel," such as fat-shaming her during her pregnancy and demanding she report to work in the middle of the night when she was 6 months pregnant. In February 2021 - spurred by claims made by Ray Fisher the previous year about Joss Whedon's treatment of the cast of "Justice League" - Carpenter went public with what she called the "hostile and toxic work environments" Whedon allegedly created years earlier.
#Cast og once more with feeling episode series#
She's also landed one-off and recurring roles in series like "Supernatural," "Lucifer," and "Sons of Anarchy." She went on to play trophy wife Kendall Casablancas on Season 2 of "Veronica Mars" and Lacy Christmas - longtime girlfriend of Jason Statham's character - in the first two entries in "The Expendables" film series. Keep reading if you'd like to know what happened to the cast of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."Īfter "Buffy" Season 3, Charisma Carpenter jumped ship with David Boreanaz on the spin-off "Angel," though she was fired after Season 4, appearing only briefly in the fifth and final season. Still, even though they no longer have their demon-slaying tools, their prosthetics, or their fake fangs, the actors who brought the story of Buffy Summers and the monster magnet of Sunnydale to life are still around. Since then, no live action media from the Buffyverse has seen the light of day. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" concluded in 2003 with its 7th season and a year later the spin-off series "Angel" was canceled.
#Cast og once more with feeling episode serial#
It helped make serial storytelling more popular on primetime TV, upped audience expectations for clever, snarky dialogue, helped herald in the age of geek chic, and made us all realize that a word like "apocalypse" could - somehow - have a plural form. Pop culture was never the same after Buffy Summers (Sarah Michelle Gellar) started turning the undead into piles of dust in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." Along with delivering messages of female empowerment, the series' singular blend of horror, teen drama, action, and humor changed what was possible in popular media.
