News

It’s both fascinating and a little invasive feeling to look through what’s on the auction block in “The David Lynch ...
At least it’s not yellowface again. “Twin Peaks” finally introduced fans to Diane, the oft-named but never seen secretary whom FBI Agent Cooper addressed his recordings to in the original ...
Instead, I have a different theory when it comes to Diane, one proposed by my former colleague H. Perry Horton in his book, “Between Two Worlds: Perspectives on Twin Peaks“: Diane isn’t real.
Fans were only familiar with Diane, an unseen figure with the FBI, through Agent Dale Cooper’s conversations with his tape recorder. We finally saw her in Twin Peaks: The Return where she played ...
Diane and Cooper make love ... s Carrie Page and she can’t remember a thing about having any life in Twin Peaks. Cooper believes she’s Palmer and talks her into returning to Twin Peaks.
As has become tradition, Twin Peaks Day—commemorating Special Agent Dale Cooper’s arrival in the sleepy Washington town to investigate the murder of Laura Palmer—has arrived once more and ...
Throughout the first two seasons of Twin Peaks, Cooper is seen recording notes for Diane, a woman who is never seen that plays the role of his secretary. He dictates his notes into a tape recorder ...
As Dale Cooper helpfully told Diane on one of those tape recordings, he arrived in Twin Peaks at 11:30 a.m. on Feb. 24. In ...
When the news broke that Twin Peaks was happening again ... Before getting back in the truck, he sends another text to Diane that reads: “: – ) ALL.” Yes, Evil Coop uses emoticons.
Diane, it's 10:30am, August 10, and I've just made the most incredible discovery. You remember the Laura Palmer case, dramatized in the 1990 television series Twin Peaks? Fans of the program are ...
As Dale Cooper helpfully told Diane on one of those tape recordings, he arrived in Twin Peaks at 11:30 a.m. on Feb. 24. In most ways, he never left. Nor, really, did David Lynch. And how lucky we ...