'The Leftovers' brings conventional morality back to cable

Seen HBO's The Leftovers, and want to chat about how it compares to Tom Perrotta's original novel? You're in luck—so do EW's Hillary Busis and Neil Janowitz. Their spoiler-heavy conversation—filled with thoughts on 

HBO's new drama series The Leftovers got off to a fair start Sunday night, though reception was more rapturous for its True Blood lead-in. The post-apocalyptic-ish suburban malaise series from Lost co-creator Damon Lindelof 

HBO's new series “The Leftovers,” as you may have heard, is quite the bleak drama. The premiere picks up three years after 2 percent of the world's population — 140 million people — evaporated into thin air for no rhyme or reason. The show begins to

“The Leftovers,” HBO's adaptation of Tom Perrotta's novel about the people left behind when two percent of the world's population disappears on an otherwise ordinary Oct. 14, is easy to describe as bleak, overpowering and grief-stricken. Justin Theroux

The 140 million people who disappear without a trace in HBO's Rapture-themed drama The Leftovers include a hilariously random assortment of celebrities: Pope Benedict XVI, Condoleezza Rice, J.Lo, Anthony Bourdain, Bonnie Raitt, “Satanic Verses” author