From Yahoo/The Wrap:
“How ‘Blue
Bloods’ Said Goodbye to the Reagans After 14 Seasons”
From the
moment it premiered Sept. 24, 2010, and throughout its 14 seasons on CBS, “Blue
Bloods” distinguished itself as more family drama than police procedural. Its
series finale, which aired Friday, stayed true to that concept by honing in on
a heightened case for the cop family involving a notorious gang leader joining
forces with other gangs to orchestrate violent hits around the city in a play
for amnesty, rather than a grandiose send-off or flashback-driven series
reflection.
Eddie
Janko-Reagan’’s (Vanessa Ray) partner Luis Badillo (Ian Quinlan) was killed in
an ambush, making the case personal for the entire Reagan clan, including her
husband Jamie’s nephew Joe. Even from a hospital bed, Eddie refused to back
down from the case. Because the Mayor was also shot, Frank (Tom Selleck) was
even more tied to the case professionally. And of course, there is a personal
tie for Danny (Donnie Wahlberg) because there almost always is.
An ensemble
show since its inception, “Blue Bloods,” created by “Sopranos” alums Robin
Green and Mitchell Burgess, followed the Reagans, an Irish Catholic family
intimately tied to the NYPD: 1980s “Magnum P.I.” star Selleck as NYPD Police
Commissioner Francis “Frank” Reagan, his father Henry Reagan (Len Cariou),
known as “Pop,” as a retired NYPD Police Commissioner, along with son Danny
Reagan serving as a detective, daughter Erin (Bridget Moynahan) filling the
role of Assistant District Attorney and youngest son Jamie (Will Estes) blowing
off Harvard Law to become a cop himself. For seasons, Frank’s son Joe, also a
cop, being killed on the job also haunted the show. His death is even
referenced in the finale.
Although
catching bad guys and helping good people was always one of the show’s main
features, it’s the bygone belief in honor and justice that fueled “Blue
Bloods.” In the worst of moments, Frank especially stood above the fray, almost
always opting to do what was right and not what was popular, frequently
sparring with whomever the NYC mayor was at the time. The weekly Reagan dinner
with the entire family, including kids, grandkids and significant others with
Frank and Pop sitting as heads of the table at opposite ends, served as a
powerful symbol of the honor, respect and love that bonded the Reagans to each
other, while also implying that their values is what kept New York City
principled.
Today,
nepotism is called out frequently. But on “Blue Bloods,” Frank following in his
father’s footsteps and his children working in law enforcement, with two of his
sons working directly under his command, was simply shown as “the good side” of
the family business. In the past, that family police dynamic wasn’t at all
uncommon in this country’s biggest cities, which is why “Blue Bloods” presented
it as a dying practice, leaning into its upside while downplaying the potential
negatives. Frank, for his part, let his children make their own decisions in
life and on the job. In many conversations with his daughter in the District
Attorney’s office, he gave his side of a given situation but left her to
determine which way to proceed. Whenever his kids came to him, he usually found
an ethical way to help them out.
The Reagans,
of course, have relatable quibbles of their own. Sibling rivalry appeared early
in the show. Mere minutes in, Danny, the hothead of the family who served in
Iraq, teased Jamie, “the golden boy,” about disappointing their dead mother to
become “another boot in a suit” like the rest of the Reagans to which Erin
interjected, forcing Danny to acknowledge her loftier status in the District
Attorney office. That moment also foreshadowed Danny’s many clashes with his
family. While Selleck’s Frank is the show’s anchor or North Star, Wahlberg’s
Danny was arguably the star as his antics and cases primarily drove the drama
in many of the show’s episodes. His evolution over time as a police officer
also reflected the American public’s changing attitudes about what constitutes
acceptable police behavior, undoubtedly in the aftermaths of Tamir Rice and
George Floyd.
In that very
first episode, Danny’s de facto waterboarding of a suspect via dumping his head
in the toilet to rescue a young, diabetic Hispanic girl from not just death but
also potentially unspeakable harm gets him in trouble. Several times throughout
the series, Danny is taken off the streets, with his gun seized, for going too
far, with his desire to do the right thing always saving his badge in the end.
For both Erin
and Jamie, their personal lives and professional lives intertwined with their
main storylines from the jump. Erin was raising her daughter Nicky (Sami Gayle)
while seeking a divorce from Jack Boyle (Peter Hermann), a formidable defense
attorney in a recurring role at various points throughout the show’s run,
including a surprising turn in the series finale.
Jamie’s dating
life, beginning with Sydney (Dylan Moore), the lawyer to whom he was engaged
until after he blindsided her by becoming a cop, was always a topic.
Impressively, “Blue Bloods” successfully managed his attraction to his partner
Eddie from the first episode of Season 4 until they became engaged at the end
of Season 8, announcing it during a Reagan Sunday dinner, and married at the
end of Season 9. Leaving their mutual attraction on the backburner for so many
seasons to protect their jobs of course deepened their bond and love for each
other. Keeping a potential relationship brewing that long is a television feat
few shows successfully achieve, especially when the coupling still leaves more
story to tell.
But Jamie’s
role in the show entailed far more professional subterfuge than that of Erin’s.
Immediately after becoming a cop, FBI agents approached him about his deceased
brother Joe working with them undercover to investigate potential corruption in
an internal group within the NYPD known as the Blue Templar. It’s a secret
Jamie initially kept from his father, but that culminated in an explosive
Season 1 finale with the entire family and close cohorts working secretively to
bring Joe’s killers to justice and weed out corruption. That episode, “The Blue
Templar,” is frequently acknowledged as one of the series’ most iconic
episodes. One of the show’s heartwarming Joe-adjacent moments was the discovery
of his son Joe Hill (William Hochman), whom he never knew, who joined the Reagan
family Sunday dinner in the Season 10 finale, titled “Family Secrets.”
Danny’s
devoted wife Linda (Amy Carlson), whose return to her career as a nurse
presented growing pains for the couple in previous episodes, being dramatically
shot in the hospital by a co-worker’s son threatened by a powerful gang with
Method Man guesting as the leader Mario, for the Season 5 finale “The Art of
War,” was another emotional family moment. It was already a charged episode for
Frank, who was seeking justice for his friend Deputy Chief Kent’s (Dennis
Haysbert) murder in the background. But though Linda survived Season 5, she
would indeed be reported dead in an off-camera tragedy in the Season 8 premiere.
Danny’s struggle to raise their two sons Jack and Sean (brothers Tony and
Andrew Terraciano) and do his job through the grief was tough, which makes the
family rallying to his aid to have dinner in his new home all the more
heartwarming.
Cast members,
recurring guests and guest stars throughout the 14 seasons have included more
than Dennis Haysbert and Method Man. Whoopi Goldberg, Treat Williams, Lou
Diamond Phillips, Aidan Quinn, Stacy Keach, Bebe Neuwirth, Kevin Dillon,
Jennifer Esposito, Nicholas Turturro, Tamara Tunie, Ali Stroker, Cassandra
Freeman, Michael Imperioli, Chazz Palminteri, and Billy Magnussen, among the
many others, with Edward James Olmos helping to close out the series. Tony
Bennett’s performance with Carrie Underwood in the Season 2 premiere is an
especially treasured moment. Frank’s battles with the New York City mayors have
also been epic, with Bruce Altman playing Mayor Frank Russo (not to mention
former Mayor Robert Levitt in the season 3 episode “Men in Black” in what some
call an error in continuity), David Ramsey playing the city’s Black mayor,
Mayor Carter Poole, Lorraine Bracco stepping in as the female mayor, Mayor
Margaret Dutton, and Dylan Walsh closing the series out as Mayor Peter Chase.
In addition to
the core Reagan family, fan favorites also include Frank’s trusted assistant
Detective Abigail Baker (Abigail Hawk), his advisors Garrett Moore (Gregory
Jbara) and Lt. Sidney Gormley (Robert Clohessy), Erin’s trusted ace Anthony
(Steve Schirripa from “The Sopranos”) in the DA’s office, and Danny’s longest
partner Det. Maria Baez (Marisa Ramirez).
Saying goodbye
is always hard, especially when a show has lived at the end of a Friday night
for 14 years, even during COVID. That hard part is territory covered by the
one-hour “Entertainment Tonight” special “Blue Bloods: A Family Legacy” that
aired Nov. 29.
The wonderful
thing about this “Blue Bloods” series finale is that it’s not a dramatic
departure from the very first episode. Instead, “End of Tour”reaffirmed the
core values of family and honor in duty that has kept us hooked through 293
episodes while also offering much promise for the future, with Danny showing up
to the family dinner with Baez after a presumed date prompted by his
grandfather advising him to find love again in an earlier scene, capped off
with Jamie and Eddie announcing a baby is on the way, which prompted Erin to
hold back that she and Jack had re-married.
An ending like
that with so many new beginnings definitely gives “Blue Bloods” fans hope that
this may not be the last time we see the Reagans. And that is a good thing.
All episodes
of “Blue Bloods” are available to stream on Paramount+.
^ I have been
watching “Blue Bloods” for 14 years now. It is such a shame that it ended. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/blue-bloods-said-goodbye-reagans-040345520.html
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