Excerpt:
What a disappointment – and yet nothing could have been less surprising. The first season of the Golden Globe-nominated, Showtime series Homeland came to a close last Sunday in a finale that drew mixed reactions from fans and set a record for the highest-rated finale for a freshman series in Showtime's history. But more importantly, it confirmed that Hollywood is still not ready to take an unequivocal, pro-American stand against our jihadist enemy.
(Warning: MAJOR SPOILERS ahead)
For those who haven't been following, the show centers on a Marine named Brody (actor Damian Lewis), missing and presumed dead in Iraq since 2003, who is discovered alive, rescued and brought home to suburban Washington D.C. to a lot of CIA self-congratulation and media fanfare. Not only does he become "a poster boy for the war," as skeptical counterterrorism analyst Carrie (actress Claire Danes) calls him, he's even urged by the Vice President to run for political office. But Carrie has reason to believe that Brody has been "turned" traitor and is a sleeper agent involved in an imminent terrorist attack.