One more month until Matt Bomer's Neal Caffrey is working his final con on USA's "White Collar." There haven't been many spoilers for the show's sixth and final season but TV Guide recently got a little intel on Bomer's character.
"Neal will actually use being kidnapped to his advantage when he learns his captor(s) are the gateway to an elite criminal organization the FBI has been tracking for decades. But after the FBI decided not to release Neal (again!) at the end of last season, will Neal share this information with the Feds or use it to secure his freedom?"
Last month, USA president Chris McCumbers told Entertainment Weekly that the show would end on a very shocking note.
"From its inception, 'White Collar' captured a massive and loyal following, in large part due to the incredible on-screen chemistry between [Matt Bomer and Tim DeKay], who deserve credit for one of the most brilliantly performed 'bromances' in all of television," McCumber said. "The series also benefited from smart writing and an extraordinarily talented supporting cast who helped it become a fan favorite crime drama for five straight years. This season will not disappoint, with an exciting and shocking ending that fans will never forget."
The last season will be short, with only six episodes but executive producer Jeff Eastin told Entertainment Weekly back in June that it was the perfect amount of time and "just enough room for one really beautiful plot: What is the last adventure these guys go on?"
He also said the last season would be re-shifting its main focus to the Neal/Peter Burke (DeKay) tension.
"It's to create this idea of Neal vs. Peter - what the show always has been, and always should be - and really run at that," he said. "That's the approach this year: Make the show when it's at its best. And to me, the show is at its best when Neal and Peter are talking and they're happy and smiling, and then as soon as Neal steps out the room, Peter's eyes narrow, because he knows he's up to something. So it's taking that to the extreme and saying, 'What do both these guys want more than anything?' Let's take Neal to his logical extreme, and Peter to his logical extreme, and crash the two things together and see what happens."
The sixth season of "White Collar" premieres Nov. 6 on USA.