Dexter Season 1-3

Miguel is not a psychopath; he is an emotional man corrupted by power. He wants the Code, but he wants it without the discipline. "I want to be able to kill someone," Miguel says, "and not feel a thing." Dexter, naively, believes he is building a friendship—a partnership of like-minded "monsters." The tragedy is that for a few episodes, Dexter feels real joy. He has a confidant. But Miguel’s fundamental misunderstanding—he thinks the Code is a tool for revenge, when Dexter knows it is a tool for safety—leads to disaster.

details the psychological origins of the Code and Harry's influence. WIRED's Binge Guide Dexter Season 1-3

Throughout the season, Dexter's dark passenger becomes increasingly dominant, leading to some shocking and disturbing moments. The season's central plot revolves around Dexter's obsession with Trinity, and the two engage in a cat-and-mouse game that takes them to the darkest corners of human experience. Miguel is not a psychopath; he is an

Most shows struggle to follow up a perfect first season. not only matches Season 1 but arguably surpasses it by flipping the script entirely. Abandoning the "serial killer of the week" format, Season 2 introduces a spectacularly high-stakes premise: Dexter’s dumping ground, the underwater graveyard, has been discovered. He has a confidant