9-1-1 The latest episode of Season 8, “Sick Day,” truly endures the name. disease In my stomach, and it was day. Part 2 of the “Contagion” story can’t be faster enough.
In some respects, it feels strange that the show launches this two-part emergency deep in the season. There are still four episodes left, especially considering it was opened with that wild three-parter. But I’m still at risk for throwing gangs (and loving my man by negating Eddie, who is still in El Paso).
Despite the number of close calls the show lets the characters pass, 9-1-1 He became famous for not killing any of the main characters. What was cut by a serial killer? Don’t worry. Coma from inhaling smoke? It’s all good. Have you been shot by a sniper struck by a lightning bolt, a solid part of the iron through your actual brain? I said it was okay! However, with accumulated interests, there is no long-term impact, but how long can it last like this?
In this comfortable eight seasons (and the ninth confirmed midway), it will definitely shake things up and throw a spanner at the piece. And that It will be displayed The final part of the story, so that “Illness Day” will be what is currently set for “Lab Rats.”
“Sic Day” is a mountain of buses in the city where three-month-old babies almost explode, beginning with the first emergency of the episode after cute brunch and gender revealing cakes and cries. Ah, I understand. Then straighten it. The baby survives thanks to Captain Bobby Nash (Peter Krauss), who runs into the wreckage, risks his life and risks his life, putting him at risk to save the team’s life.
There is a moment when 118 holds his breath. While Bobby plays emotional piano music in the background, I’m not sure if Bobby will bring it to life. But no, he holds his hand and steps. of course! No one dies on the show, and they don’t die for 10 minutes, especially in a two-part episode. Don’t be ridiculous.
Cut into magnificent old Bobby and Athena (Angela Basset) while remodeling a new dream house. This fun little scene comes with a snack in May, with Harry Grant returning to make his first appearance of the season. But why did they come back? Why have Grant’s kids, who have never seen skin or hair since Bobby’s brush in the season seven finale, come back to this long, one-minute scene about architectural works? At this point, I doubt everyone and everything.
The next scene is also a snack, but it’s not that fun. Ravi (Anirudh Pisharody) has a terrible day after wiping out the car and missing a baby in a bus emergency, and feeding him a beer in Buck (Oliver Stark). It feels so good to see him return as more than a comic relief after a longtime rabbi delivering one-liners over the phone or disappearing completely from the fire station for several months at a time. He is a complicated character with an interesting backstory (did it not mention it again after being dealt with once?), and he is finally getting his well-earned spot on the main roster.
The second of the season, “Drinking at Ravi and Buck Drinking at the Bar,” is much heavier than the first second scene. Distraught, the rabbi threatens to quit the team. Buck tells him that he is clearly not ready to lose another partner and tries to tell Pep’s story while the rabbi doesn’t cry in his beer glass.
Meanwhile, something sinister is happening in the SoCal Tech lab… Moira (Bridget Regan), A, “Drive” scientists are hungry for breakthroughs, creating new tensions in the hemorrhagic fever of Crimea and Congo. Luckily she also makes it antiviral. However, she breaks a ton of scientific protocols to do so, and as a result, she is clearly launched from the lab.
9-1-1 There’s something really for the villain this season. Like Maddie’s abusive ex-Doug, serial rapist Jeffrey Hudson, and firefighter murderer Jonah Greenway, we’ve brought a lot of terrible foils and antagonists with comprehensive plots over the years, but they usually have emergency situations and interhuman dramas that are the regular cause of our first responders. However, Season 8 has been stuffed with them so far. Captain Gerrard, Council Woman Ortiz and Brad Torrence caused varying degrees of mayhem in the first half of the season. And now we have an evil scientist trying to create four episodes rather than four after having a murderer detective with a serial killer of Maddie hostages in her basement.
Anyway, other scientists get trapped inside and kickstart what’s shaping in the lab to fire and become one of them 9-1-1The most exciting major emergency to date. 118 has a tendency to call, and things go smoothly at first. The building’s explosion puts the lab in full lockdown, with Bobby, Hen, Chim (Kenneth Choi) and Rabbi all locked inside, and a modified steamed version of CCHF fills the air. The sound off to the radio in the back is cold as the rest of the crew doesn’t respond.
Things get worse from there. Athena and Buck work together to try a fruitless rescue, with the whole army joining the scene, Hens feels broken and unconscious of his fallen lungs and Chim’s face mask, exposing him to the virus, and Maddie (Jennifer Love Hewitt) keeps the dispatch line from panic. The rest of the episode is dedicated to various rescue attempts. This includes the extremely stressful but tasty moments where Chim tells Bobby to perform surgery in Hen in the lab, but most of them are useless. Then the chim begins to vomit blood.

After obtaining winds for the shortened incubation period, the Army Colonel decided that 118 people must die there to protect the rest of the people. Well, I understand, but no one’s going actually You’re going to die, right? right? Finally, after the final ditch rescue and miraculous recovery of eight seasons, I’m not sure.
The episode ends at the peak – the antiviral agent is still there, and at an absolutely beautiful Punchza Air moment, the rabbi runs to grab it, even though it is threatened with domestic terrorism charges, if controlled. but, shockthere are no vials. The disgruntled scientist took it with her, and now it depends on balance. And we have to wait until next week for a solution. And if you’ve already watched the preview for “Laborat,” you probably know it hurts.
Whatever the conclusion of “contagion” is, you can bet that the first responder will need some kind of support to pass it. The family theme, discovered or otherwise — has always been at the heart of the 9-1-1, but the show was not even more subtle about it at the recent point. Much of the “Sick Day” was dedicated to major emergencies, but it created time to get in touch with the family relationships between the characters. Wilson and Han’s family gathered for the cake, and in May and Harry didn’t get their own room at Bobby and Athena’s new location, went outside of work outside of work, working towards the 118-family rabbis location.
But it’s more than just a “sick day.” Half of the season so far has put families at the forefront. Bobby’s mother and siblings are back in the photo. Maddie and Chim are preparing to welcome the upcoming baby han. Eddie’s El Paso storyline revolves around his son’s relationship with his parents. Buck has been examining the family units built with Eddie and Chris for many years. Even Chim’s words in the hospital waiting room for “voice” (“You should be with your family” / “What do you think I’m not?”) have lit the spotlight on what we always know. This is one big family. When we lose one of them it becomes even more devastating.
I feel like I’ve been saying this every week recently, but I really feel “sick days” 9-1-1 In its best condition. The balance between emergency action, interpersonal drama and character development in Season 8 has been strong for some time, but the show finally managed to bring the big stake back into the mix. With almost no near-death experiences this season, it feels like it’s only a matter of time before your luck runs out.
Season 8 9-1-1 It will air on Thursday on ABC in the US and Friday on Disney+ in the UK.
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