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‘Fire Country’ Season 3 Episode 17: Jelly Roll Guest Stars

Grammy nominee Jelly Roll shows up in a guest-starring role on CBS’s Fire Country season three episode 17, “Fire and Ice.” Directed by Gabriel Correa, episode 17 will air on Friday, April 11, 2025 at 9pm ET/PT.

Max Thieriot stars as Bode, Billy Burke plays Vince, Kevin Alejandro is Manny, and Diane Farr is Sharon. Stephanie Arcila plays Gabriela, Jordan Calloway is Jake, Jules Latimer is Eve, and Leven Rambin guest stars as Audrey James.

“Fire and Ice” Plot: The station 42 crew responds to a ski resort accident after a chair lift malfunctions, and Vince struggles to connect with his father. Jelly Roll guest stars as Noah, a healthcare worker and former convict who is in the process of turning his life around in the episode 17 written by Sara Casey and Manuel Herrera.

Fire Country Season 3 Episode 17 Jelly Roll
Jelly Roll as Noah and Jeff Fahey as Walter Leone in ‘Fire Country’ season 3 episode 17 (Photo: Sergei Bachlakov © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)

Fire Country Synopsis, Courtesy of CBS:

Fire Country stars Max Thieriot as Bode Leone, a young convict seeking redemption and a shortened prison sentence by joining a prison release firefighting program in Northern California, where he and other inmates are partnered with elite firefighters to extinguish massive, unpredictable wildfires across the region. It’s a high-risk, high-reward assignment, and the heat is turned up when Bode is assigned to the program in his rural hometown, where he was once a golden all-American son until his troubles began.

Years ago, Bode burned down everything in his life, leaving town with a big secret. Now he’s back, with the rap sheet of a criminal and the audacity to believe in a chance for redemption with Cal Fire.

Max Thieriot
Max Thieriot as Bode Leone in season 3 episode 17 (Photo: Sergei Bachlakov © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Jelly Roll
Jelly Roll as Noah and Billy Burke as Vince Leone in season 3 episode 17 (Photo: Sergei Bachlakov © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Leven Rambin and Stephanie Arcila
Leven Rambin as Audrey James and Stephanie Arcila as Gabriela Perez in season 3 episode 17 (Photo: Sergei Bachlakov © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Fire Country Season 3 Episode 17
Max Thieriot as Bode Leone, Jordan Calloway as Jake Crawford, and Leven Rambin as Audrey James in season 3 episode 17 (Photo: Sergei Bachlakov © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)

‘Elsbeth’ Season 2 Episode 17 Preview: Photos, “Four Body Problem” Promo and Air Date

Wicked‘s Ethan Slater and St. Denis Medical‘s David Alan Grier guest star on CBS’s Elsbeth season two episode 17, “Four Body Problem.” Directed by Bille Woodruff, episode 17 will air on Thursday, April 10, 2025 at 10pm ET/PT.

Carrie Preston stars as Elsbeth Tascioni, Wendell Pierce stars as Captain C.W. Wagner, and Carra Patterson is back as Officer Kaya Blanke. Robert King, Michelle King, Liz Glotzer, and Jonathan Tolins serve as executive producers.

“Four Body Problem” Plot: Elsbeth visits the historic and elite funeral home owned by Arthur Greene Jr. (Grier) when his conspiracy-minded nephew goes missing. Meanwhile, Elsbeth continues to adjust to Kaya’s new role and works the case with a chatty new hire, Officer Chandler (Slater). Written by Erica Shelton Kodish and Sarah Beckett.

Elsbeth Season 2 Episode 17
David Alan Grier as Clark Greene Jr. and Carrie Preston as Elsbeth Tascioni in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)

Elsbeth Season 2 Description, Courtesy of CBS:

Emmy Award winner Carrie Preston is back as Elsbeth Tascioni, the astute but unconventional consent decree attorney working with the NYPD to catch New York’s most well-heeled murderers utilizing her unique point of view. Season two of the critically acclaimed series brings new cases and challenges when mistakes of the past come back to haunt Elsbeth, her boss Captain Wagner (Pierce), and detective in training Officer Kaya Blanke (Patterson).

Carrie Preston and Ethan Slater
Carrie Preston and Ethan Slater in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Wendell Pierce and Carrie Preston
Wendell Pierce and Carrie Preston in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
David Alan Grier and Carrie Preston
David Alan Grier and Carrie Preston in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)
Carrie Preston and Ethan Slater
Carrie Preston and Ethan Slater in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Carrie Preston and Wendell Pierce
Carrie Preston and Wendell Pierce in season 2 episode 17 (Photo: Michael Parmelee © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)




‘The Bakersfield 3’ Docuseries: Episode Guide and Trailer

Investigation Discovery’s upcoming three-part documentary series The Bakersfield 3: A Tale of Murder and Motherhood takes a deep dive into the 2018 disappearances of Baylee Despot and Micah Holsonbake and the murder of James Kulstad. The docuseries premieres on Sunday, May 11, 2025 at 8pm ET, with episode two following at 9pm and episode three airing at 10pm.

The trailer shows the parents of the three individuals piecing together clues connecting Baylee, Micah, and James. The case took a shocking turn when Baylee was suspected of murder.

ID has released a description of the documentary series:

“In the spring of 2018 over the course of just 34 days, a young woman and man went missing, and another young man was murdered in Bakersfield, California. While initially thought to be tragic but unconnected events, a string of coincidences unearthed by the victims’ mothers led to the realization that these three cases were entangled with one another. Desperate for answers, they banded together in their unyielding quest for the truth, dubbing their children’s death and disappearances as ‘The Bakersfield 3.’

Now, this three-part docuseries charts the mothers’ journey as they navigate through a labyrinth of clues, dead ends, and unexpected revelations to find out what really happened to their children—and how exactly they were connected. As they uncover disturbing allegations, their newfound bond is put to the ultimate test.

After Di Byrnes’ son James was gunned down, Di’s determination to find answers led her to Cheryl Holsonbake, whose son Micah had disappeared within days of James’s murder. As the two joined forces looking for answers, they discovered another mother in the community, Jane Parrent, who was frantically searching for her missing daughter, Baylee. Each of their children vanished under mysterious circumstances, leaving behind a trail of unanswered questions, unimaginable grief, and one mysterious connection to unravel: they all knew each other.

As the months went on and the investigation evolved, authorities uncovered Micah’s remains, leading to a shocking question in the case: was one of the Bakersfield 3 responsible for the other’s murder?”

The Bakersfield 3 Poster
Poster for ‘The Bakersfield 3: A Tale of Murder and Motherhood’ (Photo Credit: ID)

The Bakersfield 3: A Tale of Murder and Motherhood Episode Guide

One Mystery – or Three?
Premieres Sunday, May 11 at 8/7c on ID
When two friends go missing in Bakersfield, California, and another is murdered in the space of one month, their families fear something sinister is brewing. They join forces to find out what happened and where their children are now.

The Boogieman of Bakersfield
Premieres Sunday, May 11 at 9/8c on ID
Terrifying discoveries in local waterways solidify the moms’ fears that the cases are connected. Their kids were all on dark paths that brought them face to face with dangerous local characters, including the self-proclaimed “Boogieman of Bakersfield.”

Fights Like a Mother
Premieres Sunday, May 11 at 10/9c on ID
Police hunt for Micah’s killer, and evidence points to someone he knew. A dramatic arrest furthers the investigation, but answers won’t come easily. The moms continue their quest for justice, but a shocking press conference threatens to tear them apart.

‘Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning’ Trailer Teases Tom Cruise’s Wildest Mission Yet

Tom Cruise runs, hangs from a plane, and asks for everyone to trust him one final time in the official Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning trailer. Cruise, who hasn’t confirmed if this is his final outing as Ethan Hunt, shows no signs of slowing down. The two-minute M:I – The Final Reckoning trailer teases the death-defying stunts to come in this eighth entry of the blockbuster action franchise.

In addition to Tom Cruise, The Final Reckoning stars Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Esai Morales, Pom Klementieff, Henry Czerny, and Mariela Garriga. Holt McCallany, Janet McTeer, Nick Offerman, Hannah Waddingham, Tramell Tillman, and Shea Whigham also star. Rounding out the ensemble are Greg Tarzan Davis, Charles Parnell, Mark Gatiss, Rolf Saxon, Lucy Tulugarjuk, and Angela Bassett.

“Our lives are the sum of our choices. Tom Cruise is Ethan Hunt in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning,” reads Paramount Pictures’ synopsis. Christopher McQuarrie, director of M:I films Dead Reckoning, Fallout, and Rogue Nation, is back at the helm and co-wrote the screenplay with Erik Jendresen. Cruise and McQuarrie serve as producers, with David Ellison, Dana Goldberg, Don Granger, and Chris Brock executive producing.

Paramount Pictures has set a May 23, 2025 release in theaters, Dolby Cinema, 4DX, ScreenX, large formats, and IMAX.

Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning Poster
Poster for ‘Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning’ (Photo © 2024 Paramount Pictures)

‘Warfare’ Review: Raw, Real, and Unflinchingly Honest

Warfare Movie Review
A scene from ‘Warfare’ (Photo Credit: Murray Close / A24)

Warfare skips the backstories, skips the reasons behind why American boots are on foreign soil, and instead is laser-focused on a specific 2006 mission in Ramadi, Iraq. By eschewing every Hollywood war movie trope, Warfare catapults the genre into striking new territory.

What co-writers/co-directors Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland deliver is a visceral and unrelenting examination of the effects of war on the men and women who serve our country. It’s not glamorous. There aren’t any shirtless hunks working out and cracking jokes about their wives or girlfriends back home. We’re never even told anything about the private lives of the men involved in the mission. That alone sets Warfare apart from decades of war films.

Mendoza, drawing on his memories of the battle and those shared by his fellow SEALs, filters out all the extraneous noise, allowing the audience to feel immersed in the battle alongside the SEALs who fought it. The constant sounds of bullets and heavier artillery provide the soundtrack to the harrowing events unfolding in real-time on the screen. Once the SEALs come under attack, the true, sheer brutality of war is unleashed.

Two critically injured SEALs add their voices to the soundtrack, wailing in agony and pleading for relief from pain via morphine. It’s unnerving sitting in a theater listening to these men who’ve suffered traumatic injuries. Being there in person as it was happening is almost unthinkable. But Warfare forces you to put yourself in their shoes as they face an enemy who is more heavily armed and greatly outnumbers them.

Decisions are made on the fly that are shocking but reflect the reality of what the SEALs were going through while pinned down. Mendoza and Garland do not sugarcoat or gloss over the doubts voiced by the men, including their leaders, while the attack was underway. But they also show the willpower and sheer grit needed to overcome those doubts.

Garland and Mendoza, who first collaborated on Civil War, assembled an exceptionally talented group of young actors to fill out the ensemble. D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai (as Ray Mendoza), Will Poulter, Kit Connor, Charles Melton, Joseph Quinn, Michael Gandolfini, and Cosmo Jarvis are the standouts, but the entire ensemble is fully committed to honoring the real men they portray. Many of the SEALs were on set and accessible to the actors, and a three-week boot camp experience helped them form a strong bond. It also helped them understand the teamwork required to survive in a situation where they had to depend solely on each other.

The production design is outstanding, and the editing is a masterclass in how to cut a film that reflects real-time events. The sound design, acting as an additional key character in the film, is truly remarkable. The sounds of war never let up, and when the characters have their ears rung by a close-proximity flyover, the audience also feels the jet’s propulsion rattle in our bones.

There was a lot of rumbling online prior to the first Warfare screenings that Garland and Mendoza’s film would be pro-American and pro-military. It’s neither. Instead, Garland and Mendoza don’t spell out how we should feel, allowing us to draw our own conclusions. Warfare definitely isn’t a 90-minute recruitment ad. It’s unlikely anyone will watch this film and immediately join the military. What Warfare absolutely nails is honoring those who put their lives on the line for their country in the most brutally violent and horrifyingly honest way possible.

GRADE: A

Rating: R for language throughout, intense war violence, and bloody, grisly images
Running Time: 1 hour 35 minutes
Release Date: April 11, 2025
Studio: A24




‘Hacks’ Season 4 Press Conference: Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder Key Takeaways

Hacks Season 4 Hannah Einbinder and Jean Smart
Hannah Einbinder and Jean Smart in ‘Hacks’ season 4 (Photograph by Courtesy of Max)

Hacks co-creator, co-showrunner, executive producer, writer, director, and actor Paul W. Downs says the series has been building up to the events of season four for a long time. The fourth season of Hacks focuses on Deborah Vance finally accomplishing the near-impossible: hosting a late-night show. And, of course, nothing about the experience will be easy.

“We always knew we wanted Deborah to get her white whale, to get this late-night show. But like with stand-up, we’ve always said that this is a show about the wig-off moments. You know, the behind-the-curtain moments,” said Downs during a press conference hosted by Max. “So, there is a lot of behind-the-scenes drama and comedy that happens at a late-night show. So, it was really fun to explore that and also to, I mean, write what you know as writers writing a comedy show. So, it was easy.”

Season four picks up at a pivotal point in Deborah and Ava’s personal and professional relationship. Max’s super-short synopsis reads, “Tensions rise as Deborah and Ava endeavor to get their late-night show off the ground and make history in the process.” And that’s putting it very mildly, based on the season four teasers.

Series stars Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder also took part in the season four press conference, discussing Deborah and Ava’s evolving relationship, among other topics. The following is a spoiler-free takeaway from the press conference.

Season four premieres on Thursday, April 10, 2025, at 6pm PT/9pm ET on Max.

Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder Talk Hacks Season 4

On season four serving up new sides of Deborah Vance:

Jean Smart: “Well, I give credit to the writing for that. I mean, it continually amazes me that they are able to find more and more for us and also keep this dynamic going, because I think that’s a lot of the fun for the audience is this relationship. And the fact that they’ve been able to keep that the way they have … because that was my biggest fear after the first season, was that, ‘Well now that they’re kind of friendly and working together, is that going to be as much fun for the audience to sort of see them butting heads?’ But it’s amazing to me that it continues in the same vein and just gets better and better. And meaner and nastier.”

Ava’s evolution into head writer of a late-night series:

Hannah Einbinder: “I think Ava is in a position, I think, [where] her hand has kind of been forced. I think a lot of people ask me, like, ‘Has Ava turned bad or is she, you know?’ No, I think she has to kind of speak Deborah’s language. I think her hand has been kind of forced, and I think she still has her core. I think she still retains that spirit but just kind of has to play ball.

And so, it’s been really cool to get to play the adversarial thing. It’s obviously, like, you know when we have to fight, Lucia calls cut and we’re just like [hugging]. It’s like, ’I’m sorry!’ But it’s fun to kind of traverse this winding road with the two of them.”

On the devastating LA fires claiming the house used as Deborah’s home:

Jean Smart: “The beautiful mansion that was built in 1930, I think. It’s been sitting there and been touched by fire [for] 100 years almost and it burns. It was really sad. And we had just finished shooting there, I think, the week before or something. And to envision those beautiful rooms and that beautiful fountain and the backyard and the couple that lived there and their dog. I mean, they’re safe, thank God. But yeah, that was shocking.”

On the tough love versus nurturing approach to acting:

Jean Smart: “I was just going to say it’s interesting because I’ve been talking about this with, I have a 16-year-old and he’s in the drama department at his school, and he just finished this weekend playing a part in the school musical.”

Hannah Einbinder: “Beautifully.”

Jean Smart: “Beautifully, yes, of course – stole the show. I don’t know where he got that; I can’t imagine. But his teacher is rather … can be verbally abusive, and it’s very upsetting as a parent, and I don’t agree with it either. As an actor, I’ve never had that in my experience. Certainly, when I was in school, no one ever spoke to me like that. I don’t see how you can possibly get good results out of somebody or have someone be able to work, you know, in that environment.

I’m the same. I mean, some people, I think, probably don’t mind it that much. It’s, I don’t know, I guess it’s sort of the cliché of the crazy directors screaming and yelling or the drama teachers saying you need to suffer for your art. It’s like, why? I don’t. I never got that. You know, it’s like, ‘Tell us your most private moment. It’ll make you a better actor.’ Really? No, I don’t think so. Just tell me what to say, thank you. It’ll be fine. Just calm down. You know, so that’s that for me. I like warm and cozy.”

Hannah Einbinder: “Yeah. I think we’re really inherently sensitive people. And I myself am really attuned to reading into even the twitch of an eyebrow. […] So, I really am, I think, like gentle and supportive. Although I will say, like I have, and we all actually have, a background in athletics. We’ve all had coaches. And I think I do kind of like having that sort of coach dynamic a little at times. But I think that can also exist with support.”

Jean Smart: [Laughing] “So I can yell at you on the set now?”

Hannah Einbinder: “Yeah. Please. By all means.”

Jean Smart: “Finally? After five years, I think you could have told me sooner.”

Hacks Season 4 Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder
Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder in ‘Hacks’ season 4 (Photograph by Courtesy of Max)

On the importance of including multiple queer characters, especially in the current environment:

Hannah Einbinder: “Very, very meaningful. And we always have, and I’m sure that that will always be a part of all of our work. I mean, Jean’s first acting role, Last Summer at Bluefish Cove, was a lesbian play.”

Jean Smart: “Started my whole career, yeah, kissing a girl.”

Hannah Einbinder: “It’s important now more than ever. And I really do think in the face of such a horrendous fascist crackdown on our community, it’s really important for people to be able to see themselves, see themselves fully, and see themselves in a way that is fully realized. And so, yeah, it is really, really meaningful to be a part of it.”

Co-creator, co-showrunner, EP, writer, and director Lucia Aniello: “And also, it feels like no matter what legislation or whatever tries to pass or does pass, at the end of the day we are reflecting society and gay people exist, trans people exist, non-binary people exist, and there’s nothing anyone can do to stop them from existing. And so, good luck.”

On the shift in how the senior community is depicted on TV:

Jean Smart: “I think it’s happening because of me. [Poses] I get a little uncomfortable when the subject comes up, because I feel like I don’t want to be like the poster child for older actresses. But certainly, it’s nice to be able to play a character where you show that people have the same kinds of hopes and dreams and desires and everything that they do when they’re 30. So, for people to be able to see that and get used to that, is just because it’s not something we used to see in film and television. But why not? You know, it’s like Lucia was saying, that’s part of real life. And no, it’s great, it’s great. And if our show has helped with that a little bit, then bravo, you know?”

On Deborah continuing to grow and open her heart to new experiences:

Jean Smart: “I think that that’s been a great thing to see on the show because she was a person who just hung on to anger and hung on to bitterness and resentment. And to see her being able to maybe let go or at least recognize that, you know, it’s important. Because it’s shocking how long it takes you in life to learn stuff. I mean, it really is true. You think, ‘Oh god, why didn’t I figure that out, you know, 30 years ago?’”




‘FBI: Most Wanted’ Season 6 Episode 17 Photos, “Gut Job” Promo and Air Date

FBI‘s Alana De La Garza guest stars as Special Agent in Charge Isobel Castille on CBS’s FBI: Most Wanted season six (the final season) episode 17, “Gut Job.” Episode 17 will air on Tuesday, April 8, 2025 at 10pm ET/PT.

Dylan McDermott leads the cast as Supervisory Special Agent Remy Scott. Season six also stars Shantel VanSanten as Special Agent Nina Chase, Roxy Sternberg as Special Agent Sheryll Barnes, Keisha Castle-Hughes as Special Agent Hana Gibson, and Edwin Hodge as Special Agent Ray Cannon.

“Gut Job” Plot: A couple known for their home renovation TV show is thrown into the limelight after the wife is found dead and her husband goes on the run. Meanwhile, Barnes reevaluates her life in New York. Written by Rickey Cook and directed by Ludo Littee.

FBI: Most Wanted Season 6 Episode 17
Dylan McDermott as Supervisory Special Agent Remy Scott, Shantel VanSanten as Special Agent Nina Chase, Edwin Hodge as Special Agent Ray Cannon, and Roxy Sternberg as Special Agent Sheryll Barnes in ‘FBI: Most Wanted’ season 6 episode 17 (Photo: Mark Schafer © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)

FBI: Most Wanted Description, Courtesy of CBS:

FBI: Most Wanted is a high-stakes drama that focuses on the Fugitive Task Force, an elite unit that relentlessly pursues and captures the notorious criminals on the Bureau’s Most Wanted list. The team’s charming but formidable leader is Supervisory Special Agent Remy Scott, who started his career in the New York FBI field office before rising through the ranks of the Bureau in Philadelphia and Las Vegas.

The team includes Special Agent Sheryll Barnes, a former NYPD detective and forensics expert; Special Agent Hana Gibson, a gifted millennial computer whiz with a sharp wit and mad hacking skills; Special Agent Ray Cannon, who is a former New Orleans cop-turned-junior detective and worked Violent Crimes in Albany after following in his retired FBI agent father’s footsteps; along with well-seasoned Special Agent Nina Chase, who worked assorted cases with the FBI’s New York office, and among her strengths is her undercover work.

Alana De La Garza and Roxy Sternberg
“FBI” Series Star Alana De La Garza as Special Agent in Charge Isobel Castille and Roxy Sternberg as Special Agent Sheryll Barnes in season 6 episode 17 (Photo: Mark Schafer © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Shantel VanSanten
Shantel VanSanten as Special Agent Nina Chase in season 6 episode 17 (Photo: Mark Schafer © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)
Roxy Sternberg and Dylan McDermott
Roxy Sternberg as Special Agent Sheryll Barnes, Dylan McDermott as Supervisory Special Agent Remy Scott, and Keisha Castle-Hughes as Special Agent Hana Gibson in season 6 episode 17 (Photo: Mark Schafer © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Dylan McDermott
Dylan McDermott as Supervisory Special Agent Remy Scott in season 6 episode 17 (Photo: Mark Schafer © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)

‘1923’ Season 2 Finale Recap: The Season Saved the Best for Last

1923 Season 2 Finale Recap
Helen Mirren as Cara in ‘1923’ season 2’s finale (Photo Credit: Trae Patton / Paramount+)

Season two, episode seven — the second-season finale of Paramount+’s 1923 — delivered the answers it needed to, including one that has lingered since the first season of Yellowstone: Who is the grandfather of John Dutton III, played by Kevin Costner? The extended season two finale was brutal and bloody, and not everyone survived. It was also heart-wrenching and, in a way, heartwarming. (Keeping it vague here for those who accidentally start reading this recap before watching the finale.)

The ending leaves the possibility of a third season open, so don’t lose hope that Taylor Sheridan isn’t finished with Spencer’s story. Now, let’s move on to the lengthy recap, which begins by wrapping up Teonna’s storyline for the season.

Marshal Mamie Fossett (Jennifer Carpenter), Two Spears (Doug Hall), and Deputy Clint Peterson (Steve Luna) discover Pete and Marshal Kent’s bodies. Two Spears notes two sets of boots and believes the priest shot the marshal based on the prints. Two Spears points to smoke rising in the distance and says, “Priest.”

The smoke leads them to Father Renaud and Runs His Horse’s corpses. They conclude the priest shot Teonna’s father, then Teonna killed Renaud. Two Spears says the men, not the girl, are killers.

Teonna (Aminah Nieves) watches from nearby, rifle pointed at Marshal Fossett.

Aminah Nieves in the Season 2 Finale
Aminah Nieves as Teonna in ‘1923’ season 2 episode 7 (Photo Credit: Lauren Smith/ Paramount+)

Fossett is prepared to ignore the warrant for Teonna; they were sent to find Marshal Kent and Father Renaud, and they’ve succeeded. However, Marshal Fossett spots Teonna in the distance, and Teonna fires in their direction. The chase ends quickly as lawmen surround Teonna. Fossett tells her men not to shoot, but Deputy Peterson ignores her. He fires, and Teonna shoots and kills him.

Fossett holds Teonna at gunpoint, warning her not to reach for her gun. Teonna insists she won’t go to jail. She lists all the atrocities that have happened to her (the rapes and torture), and Fossett disarms her before asking if she killed anyone. Teonna confesses to killing the nuns who raped her, the man who murdered her cousin, and the priest who just killed her father. They tie her hands and take her away.

A judge brings Teonna into court a few days later. She’s charged with three murders in North Dakota, and the judge doesn’t understand why he’s seeing the case in Oklahoma. The judge is handed Kent and Renaud’s death certificates and learns Fossett will testify about them.

The prosecutor admits he has no witnesses linking Teonna to the nuns’ murders. The prosecutor requests the court dismiss the charges. The judge releases Teonna.

Teonna is speechless. She exits the court, feeling free yet uncertain about her next move. Marshal Fossett says they would appreciate it if she left. Fossett tells her she should head home, and Two Spears gives her a horse. Two Spears also gives her rifle and says it’s for deer (not humans).

She’s not sure where to go, and Two Spears suggests California. She decides west sounds good. Before riding off, Two Spears yells that she was right to fight back. She agrees but says it cost her everything.

1923 Season 2 Finale Recap
Harrison Ford as Jacob Dutton and Robert Patrick as Sheriff McDowell in ‘1923’ season 2 finale (Photo Credit: Trae Patton / Paramount+)

The Battle for Yellowstone Ranch Commences in the 1923 Season 2 Finale

Cowboys guard Yellowstone, with Cara (Helen Mirren) on the porch, shotgun in hand. Zane (Brian Geraghty) patrols and advises Cara to move inside, fearing for her safety. Cara’s figured out that Spencer should arrive home today, so she’s certain that Jacob and the rest of their men will be back as well.

Elizabeth (Michelle Randolph) is worried Jack never came home, and Cara is forced to tell her that Jack followed Jacob into town. Cara doesn’t mince words and says Jack made the wrong decision.

Livingston Train Station: Jacob (Harrison Ford) fills his coffee as Clyde (Brian Konowal) and Alec (Colt Brown) enter. Sheriff McDowell (Robert Patrick) informs Jacob that he hired those men last fall with Cara’s help and that one of them was a Chicago cop. Jacob appears to sense that something is off.

Meanwhile, Banner (Jerome Flynn) confesses to his wife that he is neither good nor bad; he is just fed up with being taken advantage of. Banner claims he would rather be working fishing boats than doing what he’s doing. He thinks Whitfield is genuinely evil, with a heart as black as coal. Whitfield derives pleasure from taking advantage of others. Tossing Whitfield’s dead prostitute into the “train station” was a bridge too far for Banner. He tells his wife to pack because they’re leaving town.

Stuck in the middle of nowhere, Alex (Julia Schlaepfer) sits in the back seat and shivers, nearly frozen. She screams in frustration and pain before looking through Hillary’s purse. After briefly looking outside, she removes Hillary’s gloves and puts them on her frostbitten hands. She also grabs Hillary’s blanket and then makes a run for it outside. She reaches Paul’s body and grabs his lighter and kerchief.

Alex cracks the windows a bit and lights a fire inside the car. She burns anything she can find just to get warm.

Whitfield’s prostitutes are in the shower, and the new recruit doesn’t speak when spoken to. They join Whitfield (Timothy Dalton) for breakfast as he whines about the local newspaper. He dislikes being in Montana and longs for London. Whitfield’s mood lightens when he announces that today his life in Montana will greatly improve. There’s a lot of disturbing sexual activity and torture, as always in Whitfield’s scenes, and I’m skipping past that except to say he burns the newcomer’s back with a scorching hot beverage.

As he’s focused on this deviant behavior, his men are driving toward the Livingston train station under instructions to just start killing. Jacob and McDowell stand outside with the cowboys, while Clyde and Alec lurk nearby. McDowell says Spencer should arrive at 2:20pm, and Jacob steps back inside with the passengers waiting to depart.

Jacob spots Banner and his family buying first-class sleeper car tickets. Shocked and angry, Jacob confronts Banner, accusing him of using his wife and son as camouflage. Banner confesses he’s leaving the state; he’s had enough. Jacob wonders if it’s just a coincidence he picked the day Spencer arrives, and Banner warns him Whitfield’s just the first of the men who’ll be after his land.

Banner leans in and says Whitfield will never let Spencer leave the station. Jacob threatens Banner, taunting him to try and leave with his family and suggesting he’ll never make it. He reminds Banner that he started this, and Banner appears genuinely upset. Banner asks Jacob to allow his family to leave, and Jacob agrees. Banner also confirms Whitfield’s men will be attacking the Yellowstone.

Banner returns to his family and places all their cash in his wife’s bag. He tells her to always keep it in sight. There will be chaos on the platform, and she needs to just walk straight onto the train and not look back.

On board the train, Spencer (Brandon Sklenar) passes time chatting with a young boy traveling with his mother. The boy asks about the lion’s tooth Spencer is holding and wants to make a trade. The boy will give Spencer his Revolutionary War knife for the lion’s tooth, and Spencer reveals he intended to give the tooth to his son one day. The mother asks Spencer to please disarm her son, and Spencer agrees, calling it a good trade.

Four carloads of Whitfield’s men stop on a hill above the Yellowstone and their occupants approach the big house by walking through the woods. Two of Jacob’s men are caught by surprise above the house, and one is immediately shot. The other runs.

Cara spots Jack’s horse unsaddled and alone in the yard.

Shots ring out as Whitfield’s army moves in on the house. Cara grabs a shotgun, and Zane tells her to get up high and give the men cover. Four additional carloads of men come through the gate as Dutton cowboys take up positions.

Season 2 Finale Recap
Brian Geraghty as Zane in ‘1923’ season 2 episode 7 (Photo Credit: Trae Patton / Paramount+)

Zane watches the cars approach and tells his men to shoot the drivers once they are close enough. He barks out orders on which car for each man to shoot. Men drop as the cowboys pick them off. It’s a furious gun battle. Zane tells Dennis and Randy to get to the roof and hold off the men. The other four cars pick up the men who made their way on foot and also head toward the big house.

Randy and Dennis take up positions on the roof. They’ve got the advantage of height, but Whitfield has the advantage of men.

Cara gets busy shooting the attackers. She’s got a scope, and she’s a fantastic shot, muttering about all the things she’s had to do for this ranch while killing Whitfield’s men. Cara, Dennis, and Randy are able to make the men retreat to their cars.

Over at the train station, Clyde and Alec (who killed Jack on the way to the station) stand watch along with Jacob’s men and the sheriffs. More men pull up outside, and it’s Whitfield’s people. The odds are not in Jacob’s favor.

Jacob walks outside and tells Sheriff McDowell that at least a dozen men have just walked inside. McDowell still believes he can end this without a gunfight, but Jacob knows that’s not the case. Whitfield’s men nod at Banner, and he returns their nods.

Back inside the frozen car, Alex is down to the very end of her supply of items to burn. She cries and then grabs Cara’s letters to Spencer that she’s kept until the last. She apologizes to Spencer and begins burning them one at a time.

Alex sobs and asks God if this is really his plan for them, to let her and Spencer know love and then rip it from them. “Drag me through hell to freeze here? Hours from him? What kind of God does that?”

Suddenly, she hears a train whistle and realizes the tracks must be right next to the road she’s on. She pours alcohol on the fire and on the back seat and steps outside. The car’s fully engulfed as she yells at the train to stop. Of course, it can’t hear her, but the engineer sees her and the burning vehicle. So does Spencer!

1923 Season 2 Finale Recap
Brandon Sklenar as Spencer in ‘1923’ season 2 episode 7, the season finale (Photo Credit: Lauren Smith / Paramount+)

Spencer races through the train cars and leaps off the back. He doesn’t have a jacket, his rifle, or any of his possessions with him. He runs toward Alex, screaming her name, and it’s clear she thinks she’s hallucinating. When she realizes it’s really the love of her life, she runs to meet him. They wrap each other up in a hug, holding each other tight. Alex continues to cry and then slowly stops. She wonders why he’s there, and he says, “You sent smoke signals to my train.” She can’t believe he jumped off, and he admits he didn’t ask the train to stop. Alex is happy he’s joining her in this pickle.

Spencer lifts her and says the town is only three miles away. He’ll carry her. Spencer jokes about her weight, and only then does Alex tell him she’s pregnant.

As Spencer’s running, they realize the train’s stopped. He gets Alex on board, and a doctor who’s traveling on the train examines her. Her fingers are pitch black, as are her toes. The doctor demands warm water and towels and asks for the room to be cleared, other than Alex. He’s learned that if you get cold fast, you warm fast. If you get cold slowly, you warm slowly. They strip her of her frozen clothes and cover her in blankets. The shivers are good; it’s her body trying to warm her.

Her temperature is 94.2, which means she was minutes from death when Spencer rescued her. Spencer presses a towel soaked in warm water against her to warm her up. The doctor asks how many months, and Alex says six. He assures her that if there’s a way to protect the child, her body will find it. Alex brags to Spencer that her body is a miracle.

Season 2 Finale Julia Schlaepfer
Julia Schlaepfer as Alexandra in season 2 episode 7 (Photo Credit: Lauren Smith / Paramount+)

The doctor leaves, and Alex confesses she never thought she’d see him again. Spencer assures her he would have come for her, and Alex makes jokes through her pain. The doctor returns and explains that he’s told the engineer to take them to Bozeman because the medical care there will be better. Spencer should absolutely not get off in Livingston.

Back at the ranch, Whitfield’s men have run away from the house to regroup. The cowboys climb onto the roof to get the advantage. Zane admits to Cara that he’s impressed with her skills, and she credits the scope with doing most of the work. They agree they need the clouds to clear so they can see the men approach. If it stays cloudy, then Whitfield’s thugs will be able to burn them out.

Alex’s temperature rises a little, and the feeling is coming back to her feet. It’s incredibly painful.

As the train approaches Livingston station, both sides prepare for battle. Banner tells his wife she’s got enough money in her bag to start over and gives her and their son a kiss. He steps outside, and so do Clyde and Alec. The tension is so thick you could cut it with a knife as the train slows.

Spencer looks out the window and sees the armed men. He knows it’s trouble. He also spots Jacob and Sheriff McDowell and notices that they’re armed. He picks up his handgun and leaves the room.

A shootout begins on the train’s platform, and men fall like flies. Banner stands by the train, pistol in hand, as his wife and son approach. Spencer gives them a hand and then glances at Banner. (He has no idea about Banner’s history.) Sheriff McDowell sustains a gunshot wound. Banner takes out one thug who’s about to kill Jacob, and Spencer takes out another. McDowell fires two bullets into Banner. Before Banner dies, Jacob confirms he’s a man of his word and will make sure Banner’s family gets to Portland.

Bodies are everywhere as the gunfight ends and Jacob boards the train.

The doctor looks outside at all the dead bodies, and there are injured men on the train, too. McDowell thinks he can walk, and Jacob is bleeding from the gut. Spencer and the doctor order the train to get to Bozeman and come back for the passengers. Spencer then tells Jacob he needs to get his wife to Bozeman, and Jacob admits he may not have a home by the time he returns.

Alex finally gets to meet a member of Spencer’s family, and she tells Jacob she understands Spencer needs to stay here and help save the ranch. Spencer’s conflicted; he doesn’t want to leave his pregnant wife, but his family needs him. He tells Alex he loves her and swears he’ll meet her in Bozeman.

Spencer takes McDowell’s gun since he’s staying on the train to get treatment in Bozeman.

Jacob’s also staying on the train to Bozeman, while Spencer and the men head to the ranch.
Elsa’s voiceover confirms that Alex fears she’ll never see Spencer again, but at least she got one last taste of his lips.

Whitfield’s men advance on the ranch while one uses a submachine gun to provide cover. They make it within 50’ of the front door as the battle intensifies.

Whitfield’s men shoot into the house, breaking every window. One makes it far enough to toss a flame into the house. Zane quickly covers the fire before it spreads. He then tries to hold off the attackers as they make their way inside.

More men pour in, and Elizabeth shoots a few with a double-barrel shotgun. Thanks to her help, all the men inside have been shot or fled. Zane yells at her for not heading to the basement or upstairs before admitting he’s glad she stayed in the living room.

As this is going on, Whitfield’s hosting a black-tie dinner with his investors, explaining the parks are about to become a playground for the rich. The parks will house restaurants, hotels, and resorts, all conveniently located in one area. And best of all, the nearest competition is 600 miles away. Whitfield claims he’s about to close the deal for the land, and they cheer him on.

Alex and the injured are loaded onto ambulances, and Jacob insists on accompanying Alex. It’s only five or six miles to the hospital, and she asks Jacob to make sure they’ve got enough gas. He confirms they do and admits he’s never heard a woman ask that question before. “Well, once bitten, twice shy, Jacob,” replies Alex.

The cowboys and Spencer have made it to the front gate when Spencer hears gunfire coming from the house. He has them turn off the headlights while they drive up the road.

Cara’s informed Whitfield’s men are right outside the house, and she takes aim at the man with the machine gun. As she’s looking through the scope, she sees the two sheriff cars pulling up without their lights. Spencer and the cowboys step out and Spencer takes aim. He shoots through the cars and takes out the machine gun.

Whitfield’s men make it back inside, but Spencer is right behind them. He walks into the house with pistols in both hands. He kills everyone inside and then pulls Cara in for a huge hug while one of the men who came with him sounds disappointed that he never got to fire a shot.

Spencer informs Cara that he has a wife and that she and Jacob are at the hospital. Elizabeth asks about Jack, but no one has seen him. He never arrived at the train station. Cara sends men out to find him.

Spencer asks about the person responsible for the attack, and Cara tells him about Whitfield. She explains he’s getting fat and throwing dinner parties for the men who want to carve this place to pieces.

Over at the Bozeman hospital, Jacob’s giving a doctor a hard time. The doctor is searching for the bullet that’s causing Jacob’s stomach to bleed, and Jacob snarls that it’s an old wound that opened up. He wasn’t shot again and just wants the doctor to sew it up.

Jacob hurries to Alex’s side and walks in as a doctor tells her they need to amputate her hands legs. The baby stands very little chance of surviving, but Alex delivers him and he’s tiny but alive! The doctor again insists Alex won’t live if they don’t amputate.

Alex demands the baby, and the doctor warns her not to become attached. His little lungs can’t support him. The baby cries, but the doctor is more concerned with prepping Alex for surgery. Alex continues to ask for her baby boy, and Jacob growls, “Give her the goddamn baby!” She places the baby at her nipple and cries while smiling. The lead doctor tells his fellow doctors that there’s no crueler thing than hope.

Alex refuses surgery and Jacob supports her decision. The doctor insists she’ll die and so will the baby if she doesn’t let them amputate. He’ll send in a priest, and she doesn’t want one of those either. Alex tells Jacob she’s going to name the baby John after Spencer’s brother. (This confirms Spencer is John Dutton III’s grandfather.)

Alex will not choose herself over her child. She believes she can’t raise a child with stubs for feet or clubs for hands. Alex confesses to Jacob that she thinks her conversations with Spencer are over. She refuses to allow anyone to have to care for her and a child and understands that she’s dying. Jacob cries as he assures her she’ll be able to tell Spencer herself.

The cowboys find Jack’s dead body.

Cara and Spencer arrive at the hospital, and Cara hugs Jacob while Spencer enters his wife’s room. She’s asleep, holding their son, with her legs and arms covered in bandages. She wakes up as Spencer sits on her bed and gently touches their baby’s head. She tells him they wanted to amputate her legs and hands and take their baby. She would not allow it.

Spencer cries as Alex says she’d never trade what they made, meaning their baby, for herself. She tells Alex to be patient with John because if he’s like her, he’ll be a terrible child.

Cara and Jacob sit outside the room, and Cara says she wishes she could have met Alex. One of her men walks in and she orders him to go get milk goats.

Cara peeks into Alex’s room and sees Alex, Spencer, and the baby in bed. She closes the door without disturbing them.

Spencer wakes up in the morning, and Alex has passed away during the night. Baby John is still alive. Spencer calls out for Cara, unsure of what to do now. He’s still in bed with his wife, and Cara assures him she knows what to do. She gently picks up the baby, and Spencer grabs his hat and guns. He tells Jacob they need to leave. “I want to meet the man who killed my wife,” says Spencer.

Spencer arrives at Whitfield’s place and knocks out the man standing at the door. Whitfield’s at the dinner table with his two prostitutes, and the newcomer has a black eye.

Spencer enters the dining room and immediately shoots Whitfield in the chest. Whitfield’s whore picks up a knife and Spencer shoots her. He allows the other one to leave. Whitfield’s still able to talk and reminds Jacob that he took an oath to uphold the law. How will he explain his murder? Jacob tells him he plans to make an example of him so that no one will come near his family for 50 years. Spencer shoots Whitfield in the gut and orders him to say Alex’s name. When he does, Spencer finishes him off. They set the house on fire and walk away.

Elsa’s voiceover informs us that there are more unmarked graves in Montana than marked. An eagle soars over the funeral of Jack and Alex.

Cara feeds baby John as Elizabeth takes in a deep breath before leaving to return home. Cara understands and believes another man will enter Elizabeth’s life at some point, and that will be fine. Elizabeth promises to write.

Cara returns her attention to the future of the ranch, baby John. Elizabeth says she’ll always love Jack, but Cara knows that’s not true. She’ll love his memory, but eventually it will be replaced by new memories. Cara, however, will always keep Jack alive in her heart.

Spencer and the cowboys saddle up to round up loose cattle. He invites Jacob, but Jacob would prefer to stay on the porch and stare at baby John while contemplating the meaning of life.

Jacob’s retiring and ready to stay by Cara’s side. Cara asks about Alex and Jacob says, “If a shooting star could talk, that’s what she was like, honey.” Cara laughs, and Jacob says, “Who would have thought there’d be two of them.”

Elsa tells us Spencer didn’t remarry but had another son with a widow. The widow left, and for Spencer, her memory didn’t fade.

Alexandra Dutton was born on April 1, 1901, and died on March 29, 1924. Spencer lay on her grave and died 45 years later.

Season two ends with Alex and Spencer reuniting in heaven, dressed in fine apparel and looking young and beautiful. She jokes that it took him long enough, and Spencer responds by pulling her in closer on the dance floor.




‘TRON: Ares’ Unveils First Trailer and Poster

Eight hours in and the TRON: Ares trailer had been watched more than 3.3 million times. It appears there’s still an audience wanting to revisit the sci-fi world created by writer/director Steven Lisberger and co-writer Bonnie MacBird back in the early ’80s. The minute-and-a-half trailer debuted alongside an official poster for the third film of the franchise.

Jared Leto, Greta Lee, Evan Peters, Hasan Minhaj, and Jodie Turner-Smith star. The cast also includes Arturo Castro, Cameron Monaghan, Gillian Anderson, and the original film’s star, Jeff Bridges.

TRON: Ares follows a highly sophisticated Program, Ares, who is sent from the digital world into the real world on a dangerous mission, marking humankind’s first encounter with A.I. beings,” reads Disney’s synopsis.

TRON opened in July 1982 and grossed $50 million during its theatrical run. TRON: Legacy, directed by Joseph Kosinski, hit theaters in December 2010. Disney’s set an October 10, 2025 release date for TRON: Ares.

Joachim Rønning (Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales) directs, with Lisberger, Leto, Sean Bailey, Jeffrey Silver, Justin Springer, and Emma Ludbrook serving as producers. Russell Allen is an executive producer.

TRON: Ares Poster
Poster for Disney’s ‘TRON: Ares’

‘Matlock’ Episode 17 Preview: Olympia Wants Answers

Things have gotten incredibly juicy on CBS’s Matlock, haven’t they? Episode 16 ended with the bombshell disclosure that Olympia has been busy piecing together clues about Matty. Episode 17 teases a showdown is in store. “I Was That, Too” episode 17 will air on Thursday, April 10, 2025 at 9pm ET/PT.

The one-hour drama stars Kathy Bates as Madeline Matlock, Skye P. Marshall as Olympia, Jason Ritter as Julian, David Del Rio as Billy, and Leah Lewis as Sarah. Bates, Jennie Snyder Urman, Kat Coiro, Joanna Klein, and Eric Christian Olsen executive produce.

“I Was That, Too” Plot: A pregnant woman asks for Olympia’s help obtaining a divorce from her husband, whose family is a client of the firm. Hanelle Culpepper directed from a script by Sarah Gertrude Shapiro.

Matlock Episode 17
Kathy Bates as Madeline Matlock in episode 17 (Photo: Sonja Flemming © 2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)

Matlock Series Description, Courtesy of CBS:

Matlock stars Emmy and Academy Award winner Kathy Bates as Madeline “Matty” Matlock, a brilliant septuagenarian who achieved success in her younger years and decides to rejoin the workforce at a prestigious law firm where she uses her unassuming demeanor and wily tactics to win cases. Matty is assigned to Olympia (Marshall), a senior attorney and key rainmaker with a thirst for justice, Olympia’s ex-husband, Julian (Ritter), the son of the head of the firm, is intrigued by Matty and her clever skills.

As Matty endeavors to establish herself in her new high-stakes world, she works alongside the firm’s younger associates—the charismatic Billy (Del Rio) and the uber-ambitious Sarah (Lewis).

Leah Lewis and David Del Rio
Leah Lewis as “Sarah Franklin” and David Del Rio as “Billy Martinez” in episode 17 (Photo: Sonja Flemming © 2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)
Jason Ritter
Jason Ritter as “Julian Markston” in episode 17 (Photo © 2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
David Del Rio and Leah Lewis
David Del Rio as “Billy Martinez” and Leah Lewis as “Sarah Franklin” in episode 17 (Photo: Sonja Flemming © 2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)
Skye P Marshall
Skye P. Marshall as “Olympia Lawrence” in episode 17 (Photo: Sonja Flemming © 2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc.)




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