Despite the fact this hit teen drama was adapted from Sara Shepard's best-selling book series of the same name, showrunner Marlene King took liberties with the TV version and switched up the outcomes of the books' plotlines to keep hardcore PLL fans on their toes. For the first six seasons, fans pieced together every little clue to try to determine the identity of big "A", the person who made the Liars' lives a living hell throughout high school. The theories got so crazy that there was evidence proving every single character could be "A".
But by the end of the sixth season, we find out big "A" was CeCe Drake (Vanessa Ray), who was born Charles but later transitioned into Charlotte DiLaurentis. And to frustrate fans even more, there's still the mystery of who "Big Bad" is to be solved by the time the series ends its seven-season run this spring.
Gladiators' Twitter fingers had never been more on fire when President Fitzgerald Grant (Tony Goldwyn) got shot while walking into his own birthday gala in season two. It was the biggest "WTF" moment on the series to date, and fans went crazy trying to figure out #WhoShotFitz. Was it Texas lobbyiest Hollis Doyle (Gregg Henry) who had a history of putting hits out on people he didn't like? Perhaps Vice President Sally Langston (Kate Burton) who wanted the power? Wrong.
Technically, our troubled teddy bear Huck (Guillermo Diaz) was the one who pulled the trigger, but it was Supreme Court Justice Verna Thornton (Debra Mooney) who ordered the shot. But she didn't get away with murder, as Fitz later suffocated her on her deathbed. You know, normal Washington politics stuff.
Welcome back, Upper Eastsiders. It's been almost five years since the identity of blogger Gossip Girl was revealed to be Lonely Boy himself, Dan Humphrey (Penn Badgley). But in the six seasons leading up to that moment, fans were constantly questioning whether the snitch was one of their own like Serena (Blake Lively) or Blair (Leighton Meester) or a complete outsider that we never met.
The show's writers landed somewhere in the middle with Dan, who was an "outsider" from Brooklyn in the pilot, but quickly made his way into Manhattan's elite, with many thanks to his first love Serena. If you were left confused and frustrated with that big reveal, you aren't alone. Badgley was just as puzzled as you.
Bravo's newest scripted series doesn't even premiere until February 7th, but Imposters already has us raising a myriad of questions. Mainly, who is she? The "she" being Maddie (Inbar Lavi), a gorgeous yet dangerous con artist who gets men and women to fall in love with her - then promptly robs them of everything they have. Three of her victims band together to track her down, but the problem is that they have no idea about her true identity. They've got 99 Problems and Maddie is literally all of them.
In the first season of the crime drama, we were transported into gloomy Seattle, where detectives Sarah Linden (Mireille Enos) and Stephen Holder (Joel Kinnaman) exhausted all their resources to find out who killed local teenager Rosie Larsen. Although the investigation takes place over the course of two weeks, fans hoping to get an answer by the end of the 13-episode season had to wait even longer, since it wasn't revealed until the end of season two that it was Rosie's aunt Terry (Jamie Anne Allman) who unknowingly sent the car Rosie was trapped in into a lake. Always check the trunk before putting vehicles into bodies of water, kids.
In Shondaland, there's not shortage of drama, and in How to Get Away With Murder, there's no shortage of mysteries. The most recent conundrum plagued fans for the first half of the current third season, with fans hoping their fave from The Keating Five wasn't #UnderTheSheet. We find out that the dead body rolled out of Annalise's (Viola Davis) burning house was that of Wait List aka Wes (Alfie Enoch), leaving viewers stunned and of course, wanting more answers.
Luckily, Wes isn't gone forever, since the second half of the season will include flashbacks and insight into who killed Wes. But let's be honest, we'll never be ready to say goodbye.
The first season of HBO's addictive drama spawned a slew of more detectives, albeit the at-home ones who were using their own notes to figure out the identity of killer "The Yellow King". It took Louisiana homicide detectives Rust Cohle (Matthew McConaughey) and Marty Hart (Woody Harrelson) 17 years to finally solve the mystery, but fans discovered who the murderer was in just eight episodes. In the nail-biting season finale, we find out the lawnmower man aka Errol Childress was the culprit with the creepy cave.
The entire premise of the popular sitcom was to find out who narrator Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor) has children with after a long string of failed relationships. After eight long seasons, viewers finally got to see and hear The Mother/Tracy McConnell's (Cristin Milioti) for the first time, giving everyone hope for a fairy tale ending.
Over the course of the ninth and final season, we get to see how Ted and Tracy fell in love, but it all came to a screeching halt in the series finale when we find out that she dies from a terminal illness, and future Ted is basically telling his kids the story of how he met their mother to admit he still has feelings for their aunt Robin (Cobie Smulders). The polarizing episode answered the question posed in the show's pilot, but it ultimately only lead to one more - will we ever be over being angry at this series finale?