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Dean Boland General Overview Born Male Also known as Dark brown Occupation Employee of Wheel Deal (Formerly) Co-Owner of Boland Motors Employee of Wheel Deal Status Alive Affiliates and Family Family (Father; Deceased) Judith Boland (Mother) Beth Boland (Ex-Wife) Kenny Boland (Son) Emma Boland (Daughter) Danny Boland (Son) Jane Boland (Daughter) Annie Marks (Ex-Sister-in-Law) Sadie Marks (Ex-Nephew-by-Marriage) John BolandJudith Boland Series Information First Pilot Portrayed By Matthew Lillard Dean Boland is a car salesman and co-owner of Boland Motors. He is the ex-husband of Beth Boland, good friend of Stan Hill, the ex-fling of Amber Dooley and the patriarch of the Boland Family. After spending all of the family’s money on lingerie for Amber, Beth discovered Dean’s affair and kicked him out of the house.
After discovering her association with Rio, Dean is shot by him shortly after, just surviving. Biography TBA Personality TBA Relationships Beth Boland- Beth is Dean’s wife and mother of their 4 kids. In episode 1, she caught him cheating on her with his assistant, Amber Dooley.
He was under the impression that Beth was involved due to circumstances that she cannot avoid. One night, he sees that Beth truly enjoys the life of crime. With this realisation, he starts plotting in order for Beth to be caught.
Dean approaches Stan with his plans to take Beth down and he agrees.
Who Played Dean In The First Season Of Good Girls?
In its first two seasons, NBC’s Good Girls really made you feel the plight of Beth (Christina Hendricks), her sister Annie (Mae Whitman), and their friend Ruby (Retta) as three moms who turned to crime to feed their families. They were victims of circumstance and a system based on patriarchal values that kept women down in the business world, so they decided to fight back. CBR VIDEO OF THE DAY RELATED: Netflix’s Kingdom: Season 2’S Gory Ending, Explained Beth’s case stands out most with Dean (Matthew Lillard), a former car salesman who became a mogul.
But as he got clean, Beth descended more and more into the dark underworld, loving crime and letting power go to her head, until her swelling ego let him know who’s the boss. She cheated on him with Rio as well, and she kept coming up with dangerous schemes to make more money when they could have gotten out. Eventually, the FBI came knocking on her doorstep but she hasn’t learned — she’s addicted to the game, which is unfortunate because she’s endangered her entire family.
Sure, he deserved karma early on but now he’s a better man. What makes it heartbreaking is this season, just when they reconciled, Beth played Dean, trying to get him to impregnate her, not out of love — but so she could make Rio think it’s his so he wouldn’t kill her. The fact he knows his children could be kidnapped anytime is driving him crazy, and as he sells hot-tubs, rebuffs the advances of women, he’s wondering if Beth’s worth it or if she’ll embark on the right path.
As a cop, Ruby couldn’t let him know what they were doing but when they were on the cusp of getting busted by the FBI, Stan was let in and he actually doctored evidence for the women. He eventually got booted off the force but after a recent investigation, they asked him back. Still, it kills Stan to know what the ladies are up to and he just can’t take the job in good conscience.
Their greed is incurring major emotional debt and the husbands are the ones sacrificing to pay off this hefty price. Dean has to worry about kids finding his weapon while Stan has to consider the fact someday he’d have to let his kids know he’s an accomplice. Good Girls stars Christina Hendricks, Mae Whitman, Retta, Matthew Lillard, Reno Wilson and Manny Montana.
Who Is Dean Boland?
Spoilers for ‘Good Girls’ Season 3 Finale Episode 11 ‘Synergy’ If the entirety of Season 3 hasn’t been able to put you off the absolutely garbage dump of a person that is Dean Boland (Matthew Lillard), maybe the finale, aka Episode 11 finally will. For a season that was cut short due to stalled production due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the only respite we get from this abrupt ending is Beth Boland (Christina Hendricks) getting all the reasons to practically throw away her lying, cheating, suck up of a husband. But she once again disappoints us and decides to stick around, maybe for the kids, maybe for a viable system to turn black money into white, but her decision has fans so livid, they are now threatening to boycott the next season if Beth doesn’t divorce Dean by then.
Beth’s silence and shifty stares led Gayle to deduce she wasn’t the only person Dean has cheated on a bombshell like Beth with, and all Beth could do (before robbing the store with Mick later) was leave quietly. That wasn’t all Dean did. HE answers in the affirmative and all Beth can do is thank him for being honest.
Taking it to Twitter, a fan threatened to boycott the show if the divorce didn’t happen soon. Another chimed in writing: Need a season 4 solely to see Beth divorce Dean’s sorry ass. Another fan cited this excellent point about a scene where Dean just barges in on Beth peeing, writing: If my husband ever bothered me while I was on the toilet I would sign the divorce papers right there and then.
So Here’s hoping Season 4 finally grants our wishes. ‘Good Girls’ Season 3 finale, Episode 11: ‘Synergy’ aired on Sunday, May 3, at 10 pm only on NBC.
Who Is The One And Only Real Legal Threat To The Girls On American Idol?
It would’ve been nice if Agent Turner (James Lesure) had represented the one and only real legal threat to the girls, wouldn’t it? After all, despite the deeply complicated relationship between Rio (Manny Montana) and Beth (more on that later), the one good thing that can be said for Rio is that he dispatched Turner once and for all. At one point, Rio and Turner had a deal to work together but, since Rio is not the most trustworthy criminal in the world, he went back on the deal by murdering Agent Turner.
For the last four episodes, there’s been a new proverbial sheriff in town in the form of Agent Phoebe Donnegan (Lauren Lapkus), and she’s potentially a more savvy adversary than Turner ever was. In an interview with TV Insider, showrunner Jenna Bans said that Donnegan is set to become a frenemy of sorts. In the season finale, Donnegan turns up at the salon to get her nails done by who other than Ruby.
After the heist of the episode (which we’ll come to in a moment) Donnegan shows up at the end of the episode as the girls enjoy a bit of celebratory sparkling wine. Donnegan asks what they’re celebrating knowingly as the ladies attempt to deflect, but it’s clear that the new agent is already onto them. What does she know from Ruby’s phone, and how will she use that information?
Who Is Beth Boland’S Husband?
Photo: NBC It is easy to say Beth Boland (Christina Hendricks) is caught between two men — her husband, Dean Boland (Matthew Lillard), her partner of over twenty years who has cheated on and lied to her and is the father of her four children, and her crime boss and lust-and-or-love interest, Rio (Manny Montana), a businessman and father with a ridiculous internal and external…
Who Is Beth’S Gang Member?
The second season of NBC’s quirky, ironically titled dramedy, Good Girls, finds Beth (Christina Hendricks), Ruby (Retta), and Annie (Mae Whitman) dealing with the consequences of their criminal behavior. The series left off with, among other cliffhangers, Beth confronted by gang member Rio (Manny Montana), who told her to shoot husband Dean (Matthew Lillard) if she truly wants to be the boss. Can Stan, as an officer of the law, reconcile his wife’s wrongdoing, even knowing that deep down she is a good person and her actions were for a noble cause?
Does she find that her background in comedy helps her when it comes to a performance in a dark-humored drama like Good Girls? “I don’t necessarily feel like there’s a lot of comedy [in the show],” Retta clarified. I get to sit and enjoy the comedy from her.
It really hurts his feelings to know that he’s been lied to for so long. I mean, even last season she really struggled with having to lie, because I think she really didn’t believe that he would survive it. There’s a scene at the end of Episode 9 last season where it looks like she’s about to tell him, and she’s super-conflicted, and it’s really hurting her to know or to wonder what his reaction is gonna be when she tells him.
It makes it really, really tough. So, the first few episodes are a struggle for Ruby and Stan.” And likely for the couple’s children, too, as Retta adds that, “There’s a scene with the whole family where the kids are like, ‘What is happening?’
Before acting, Retta graduated Duke University with a degree in sociology. Does she think the fact that she so deeply studied human behavior may have helped her acting when it comes to understanding the motivations of characters like Ruby? “Yeah.
I think I do have an understanding of that, but honestly, I think just being a person, I kind of get it. So, I get it in that respect.” Audiences seem to get it, too.
“We think that it’s doing well enough,” she said, “particularly on Netflix [Season 1 episodes air on the streaming service], that we might get a spike in viewership for the new season, which should — knock on wood — ensure another season.” Good Girls, Season 2 Premiere, Sunday, March 3, 10/9c, NBC