It's been nearly two months since Devious Maids bowed its second season, and yet there's still no official word on whether or not the series would return for a third-and with the cast all seeking out new ventures, things are continuing to look exceedingly grim for the show.

Edy Ganem Says She Doesn't Want Her 'Devious Maids' Character To Die

The latest news concerning a member of the cast comes from Edy Ganem, who has been blogging about New York Fashion Week for Latina Magazine. Attending shows including the one with the Project Runway contestants, Lacoste, Son Jung Wan, Angel Sanchez, Custo Barcelona and Vivienne Tam, Ganem has been writing about the various shows and collections, giving her opinions and talking about specific pieces she would consider buying-a departure from her previous venture-acting as Valentina on the Lifetime series.

Ganem previously did an interview with Examiner.com where she talked about the cliffhanger season finale, and appeared to make a plea to Lifetime to consider renewing the show for a third season.

Ana Oritz Says There's Still 'No Word' On 'Devious Maids' Return

"I remember reading one of the final versions of the script before the final one was given to us and yes, he [Ty] was aiming to shoot Valentina because he wants to get rid of her and basically cover his tracks," she said. "But in one of the early scripts, accidentally he was shooting Carmen (Roselyn Sanchez). Now she wasn't going to die, I think it was going to be like oh he shot the wrong person accidentally, what a mess. "

"Then Marc Cherry changed it to the way we saw it, which ends a way where we don't know who gets shot," she continued. "And truthfully, I actually don't know so I'm just praying Valentina doesn't die! We actually don't know what's happening. So for me, when I read the ending I was like there's gotta be a third season because this has no conclusion here!"

However, a third season of the show has still not been announced, and while the show had respectable ratings for its second season, viewers came to watch in lower numbers on average, compared to the high ratings the first season brought in.

The drama did face some stiff competition  in its 10 p.m. timeslot on Sundays this season, getting beaten by a wide variety of shows, including HBO's Silicon Valley and The Leftovers, AMC's Mad Men, Bravo's Real Housewives of Atlanta and Real Housewives of New Jersey, Adult Swim's Bob's Burgers, TLC's Return to Amish, TNT's Falling Skies and Discovery's Naked and Afraid.