On 25 January 2019, it was announced that Netflix had given the production a series order for a six-episode first season.[10] Steve Lightfoot is credited as the creator and executive producer of the series.[11] In August 2019, it was announced that Erik Richter Strand would direct the limited series.[8]


Behind The Eyes is the ninth and season finale episode of the fifth season of Prison Break, and the ninetieth episode overall. It was broadcast in the United States on May 30, 2017 on FOX.


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That insidiousness comes at the hands of Adele's friend Rob (Robert Aramayo), who, it turns out, has been grifting his way through life via some Freaky Friday-inspired body-switching antics. It's almost impressive in its shockingness and ability to wildly unmoor itself from the earlier episodes and give viewers zero time to process the conclusion.

Before we dig into the astral projection of it all, let's review Adele's backstory. Adele is a Scottish heiress whose extremely wealthy family owns estates and grounds. When she was a teenager, a fire broke out that killed her sleeping parents, but David, the son of a farmer that worked for her family, saved her from the flames (David sustained bad burns to his arm). The cause of the fire is unclear, and despite some red herrings that suggested in earlier episodes that David or Adele had something to do with it, it seems it was just your run-of-the-mill deadly fire. Adele also feels guilt because she did not realize her parents were dying because she was astrally projected outside of her body during the event. (We'll get to the astral projection in a bit.) At one point, Adele also shares that one of her relatives was a practicing witch, which is one of the few hints about the ending.

Organized Crime ended in a simultaneously perfect and aggravating place, with Bell asking Reyes what happened in the foster home. Whatever it seemed to have been highly traumatic -- did a foster parent rape all four boys?

Several areas inside the brain process visual information that is transmitted from the eyes through nerves. If these areas are affected by illness or injury, double vision can result. Some brain conditions that can lead to double vision include:

Multiple sclerosis. Multiple sclerosis is a disease in which your autoimmune system attacks the myelin sheath covering nerve fibers in your brain. In people with optic neuritis, the risk of developing multiple sclerosis after one episode of optic neuritis is about 50% over a lifetime.

If an episode revolves around a haunting (or alien visitation) (or lake monster sighting) (or whatever) that turns out to be a hoax, the episode will end with a shot of a real ghost/alien visitor/lake monster/whatever.

He was there at the same time as Dan Corcoran, who you heard at the beginning of the episode. Reid Lyon saw heavy combat in Vietnam. He fought in the Tet Offensive. He was almost killed once when a piece of shrapnel just missed his head. He retrieved the shrapnel from the tree behind him and carried it with him for years. Some of his buddies returned home from Vietnam with horrible head injuries. And some of them had lost their ability to read.

Back at Organized Crime headquarters, Jet Slootmaekers overhears Sergeant Ayanna Bell talking with Deputy Inspector Lillian Goldfarb. Goldfarb advises Bell that she should disband the task force since it was created really just to take down Wheatley and that it's time for her to leave Stabler behind. Jet's understandably angry before Stabler arrives and fills her in on the home invasion. Bell, Stabler, Jet and new detective Jamie Whelan swing by Gabriel's house. Stabler does light cop crimes and enters the house without permission. Gabriel recognizes Stabler as the "rat" who testified against other cops, so begrudgingly puts down his weapon and talks to them. He tells them the main cop had "crazy blue eyes" and that he runs with a crew of killers -- a gangster posing as a cop. The scene cuts to a man named Dante getting out of jail and reuniting with two other men, one of whom has super-blue eyes. Uh-oh.

Bell and Whelan are on the scene the next morning. They recognize that it's the same modus operandi as before, except the woman was shot point blank and not raped. Bell goes to talk to Ramone, the brother of the woman Vaughn killed. She asks him if one of the men had blue eyes and he says yes, the leader and man who killed his sister did. When he came to, he heard Dante yelling at Vaughn to stop and then he heard his sister scream and the gun go off. Another cop recovers a bit of glass with blood on it. This might be their first break!

Jet gets a hit on the blood: a man named Manny Rivera. Stabler and Bell investigate his last known address, belonging to his former foster father. He claims he hasn't seen Manny in years; he was a troubled kid, so he had to send him back into the system. Stabler doesn't believe him, so Bell pulls a warrant on him while Jet investigates his online presence. She not only finds his locations and pictures easily, but she also mocks his personality and "Boomer Elliot." At the hospital, Maria and Jasmine identify a photo of Manny based on his eyes.

Rivera just so happens to call as Jet reviews his cloned phone and invites her to a party. The board lights up then -- Manny is making another call to somebody about a raid happening that night. Bingo! Stabler, Whelan and Detective Bobby Reyes head out to swoop in. As the fake NYPD swarm another victim's home, the trio arrives with swarms of backup. A firefight ensues, looking like cop-on-cop crime.

Dante is shot and Rivera refuses to leave him, staying behind to be arrested rather than leave his friend. There is some honor among thieves. In the interrogation room, Stabler makes the case for Rivera to work with them. Dante's in critical condition and he was the only one who stayed with him. He asks for a lawyer but Stabler pushes on. Bell stops him by saying she'll get Rivera his lawyer; it's 2022 so Stabler has to follow the law at least a little.

Bell is upset Stabler didn't stop the interrogation while Elliot's upset that their backup cops seemingly shot at him. Just then, Jet and Whelan come in with confirmation of Dante's involvement in the crimes. If Rivera won't turn, maybe Dante will... should he survive. Bell finds Reyes watching over Dante in the hospital -- it turns out that he, Rivera and Dante grew up together in the same foster home, along with Vaughn. What happened in that house, Rivera says, likely made them the way they are today. Plot twist -- and Law & Order: Organized Crime ends on a cliffhanger.

"Dega Don't" starts off like every other episode of Queer Eye. The new roster of hosts, which include two people of color, are driving to surprise their nominee, a cop named Cory. Karamo Brown, the host specializing in culture, is driving when police sirens start up behind them. While cracking jokes to ease his obvious and immediate tension, the father of two pulls over. Brown, a queer black man, waits for a familiar scenario unfold.

The cop asks for his license, which Brown doesn't have. ("We have follow cars that the producers are in behind us, and we drop our stuff with them.") The cop asks for Brown to step out of the car to a chorus of protests from Brown's cohosts Tan France, Jonathan van Ness, Antoni Porowski, Bobby Berk. The cop still hasn't clarified why Brown was pulled over despite repeated requests. The cop instead asks for more information about the show Brown said they were filming. The cop then reveals his name is Henry, the best friend (and nominator) of the episode's star Cory.

The literal screams of delight when Brown and his cohosts know they're out of danger and the light-hearted Queer Eye won't be turning into UnReal Season 2 or worse, a segment on the nightly news, provide a palpable release of tension. The sheer relief is so overwhelming that it's not till the end of the episode during which Cory and Karamo have a long, ultimately positive discussion about why black people fear the police in America that you ask yourself, how manufactured was this happy ending? According to Brown and producer David Collins, the fact that Brown ended up behind the wheel for this intro was freakish coincidence -- one of the few unengineered moments in a show that otherwise sticks to the reality script.

"Every morning that we started a new episode, the guys would do Rock, Paper, Scissors and try to buck up to see who got to drive," said Collins in a call with TV Guide. The producer's only role in this morning routine was to make sure the same person doesn't end up behind the wheel too often so the episodes don't feel repetitive.

Queer Eye producer Collins said that what started out as an innocent prank ended up becoming a bigger creative risk for the show than anticipated. As two individuals living entirely different experiences, Brown and Henry (and later in the episode, Cory) became a living example of the big, sometimes uncomfortable conversation about law enforcement and people of color -- conversations that sometimes get boiled down to angry rhetoric on both sides.

Immediately after Henry's reveal, Brown asked him if he "had to be such an ass" at the window. Henry's response gave Brown a new perspective. "I'm not giving any passes to anyone, of course. Any police officer, especially no white police officers, but what I will say, is that it opened my eyes a little bit to understanding that they're scared as when they come up [to the window]," said Brown. "When you are that guy, you put on this bravado. And so Henry's mindset was like, 'I have to get into the mode. I can't be my natural self because my natural self may allow someone to act in a way that would make me not go home to my family.'"

That conversation left Brown in a position few people of color find themselves in, in 2018: with an understanding of how to open a dialogue with someone in power who seems diametrically opposed to you. Later in the episode Brown and a mid-makeover Cory are driving back from Atlanta and have a shockingly ernest talk about Brown's fear of the police. "It was the first time that in the past three years especially that I've heard a cop say, 'I am so sorry,'" said Brown. 006ab0faaa

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