The final episodes of a Rookie Blue season usually up the ante for everyone in 15 Division, and this season the Kevin Ford case has touched everyone, either emotionally, mentally or physically. Was that always the intention?

l have been confused lately. I have been watching AXN in Taiwan and in the same time slot they had been showing reruns of The Rookie they started showing Rookie Blue. I had to Google it. Apparently it is set in Toronto and ran for six seasons from 2010 to 2015 and it also ran on ABC in the US. I haven't been watching it but I was wondering if anybody on this group did.


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Tassie Cameron: Partly we picked that when we were developing the undercover story last season. We picked six months because it seemed like a really long time [for Andy and Nick] to commit to, so we wanted it to be a dramatic choice for Traci (Enuka Okuma) to say no and for Andy to say yes, especially knowing it would take her away from Sam (Ben Bass) for that long. Sam and Andy have been separated for a couple months at a time but never this long, and it seemed interesting and more dramatic. It helped us establish that Andy and Nick have become really close friends.

THR: You mentioned Marlo, the new training officer, but we also know that a new rookie will be joining the force. What can you say about her and how is she different from the rest of the rookies?

No police academy course or simulation exercise could have prepared Division 15 for the events that unfolded in "Under Fire" and "You Can See The Stars", the two-part season-four finale of "Rookie Blue".

The intense episodes found criminal Kevin Ford targeting the precinct's officers. On two separate occasions, he shot Officer Chloe Price (Priscilla Faia) and then later Officer Sam Swarek (Ben Bass). Both were gravely wounded and their survival uncertain by the end of the season but viewers won't have to hold their breath much longer once "Rookie Blue" returns on May 19.

"We did a really interesting thing this year, where it picks up right where we left off," says Peter Mooney, sporting a full uniform during an on-set interview in April. "We pick up at the hospital. It will be exciting for the audience because last season ended with so much stuff up in the air and we didn't resolve anything in the downtime."

On a sunny Monday morning, it's back to business. The boys and girls in blue have gathered in the main conference room. Officer Oliver Shaw (Matt Gordon) stands at the front talking about their latest assignment. The "plum job" revolves around clearing out any stragglers from a subsidized housing complex about to be demolished. There's some grumbling amongst the officers and in true snarky Gail fashion, Sullivan pipes up and says, "I'd rather mop the gym floor with my tongue."

"Nick stepped away in the season finale last year," states Mooney. "Those life and death situations sometimes bring things into a sharp focus. Right off the top, Nick takes himself out of the equation. That's tough because we all come to work every day. It's difficult, especially at the beginning of this season, but it will be on to different adventures for him."

"This season, there's a lot more cop stuff than personal for Nick," continues Mooney. "As the season goes on, there will be some big reveals about his past and personal life and where he comes from. There's still a lot of procedural stuff, including the revisiting of an old tradition at the station, which is a fun episode."

"My reaction was, 'are we doing this just to kiss a girl on screen because I don't want to do that,'" says Sullivan. "I want it to mean something. I had even talked to executive producer Tassie Cameron in season one. I said, 'What is Gail's sexuality?' She was like, 'Isn't it clear?' I was like, 'no. Who is this woman?' Once I told Tassie my instinct was that Gail was gay, Tassie took it and ran with it. I'm honoured that she included it in the storyline.

Every season, "Rookie Blue" introduces new characters to shake-up the team dynamic. This year is no exception. Eager rookie Duncan Moore (Matthew Owen Murray) will have problems fitting in and rub his fellow cops the wrong way. Meanwhile, Inspector John Jarvis (Oliver Becker) is out to make his mark on Division 15.

Sitting in the office of Tassie Cameron, just down the hall from the interrogation rooms and the gun lockers on the police station set of Rookie Blue, the show she runs, we are discussing the ways in which fans have come to take ownership of a series that is about to begin its fourth season.

And not always wholly pleasant. Rookie Blue, now the senior member of Canadian series that have been exported to the United States, where it airs on ABC, took what was a big leap this past season and killed off a character, Detective Jerry Barber.

So, shortly after posting this in April. RB came back. A week or so ago there was a courtesy banner added that RB leaving soon. So I bombed the heck out of it but fell asleep before the last two episodes of ther final season. I figured on the 29th of the month (today) it works still be there to finish up. IT'S NOT!! IT'S GONE! SO bummed out, only 2 dang episodes to go too. Soooo frustrating. Next time say WHEN leaving soon actually is PLEASE!!

Not so pleasing are the romantic hookups and other stereotypical cop show-isms that the creators toss in as audience teasers. Some of these boys and girls in blue are sneaking around for in-the-closet lip-locks and gropes. Most are cohabiting with someone or other, and at least one has had dalliances with a woman married to his superior. Thus, we sometimes see a little too much of these service-minded men and women without their uniforms on.

(GLOBAL / ABC)Season six of the Canadian police drama "Rookie Blue" is coming to U.S. shores on June 25. Fans are counting the new season as season 5B, which was initially filmed together with season five for a total of 22 episodes. Canadian fans have already watched the first episode, which aired on Global last week.

Season five ended with a bomb going off in the evidence room of the police station. The bomber, kills himself, indicating the end of the serial crime. Showrunner Tassie Cameron dropped some hints about the new season in an interview with TV Junkies. When asked about the season tagline "nothing will ever be the same," Cameron pointed to the serialized crime spree that began at the end of season five. "That Ted McDonald (Shawn Doyle) bomb plot, you have not seen the end of that story," said Cameron. "That's part of it, that 15 Division is starting to realize that something is going on within their own force, with their own people. I think that's what they are talking about."

Cameron also revealed that Juliette Ward (Erin Karpluk) would be the main addition in season six. "She's the main addition in Season 6 and she walks into the premiere and bowls Nick over and takes him off guard, this woman who basically ditched him. She has a very, very mysterious agenda in Season 6."

Set in Toronto, "Rookie Blue" follows the lives of five rookie cops who have just graduated from the academy. The series stars Missy Peregrym as Andy McNally, Gregory Smith as Dov Epstein, Charlotte Sullivan as Gail Peck, Enuka Okuma as Traci Nash and Travis Milne as Chris Diaz. The series was created by Morwyn Brebner, Tassie Cameron, and Ellen Vanstone.

Reed is joined on the All-NBA G League First Team by Oklahoma City Blue center Moses Brown, Lakeland Magic forward Mamadi Diakite, Westchester Knicks guard Jared Harper and Rio Grande Valley Vipers guard Kevin Porter Jr. All five players have seen action in the NBA this season.

The All-NBA G League Second Team includes three Raptors 905 players in forwards Henry Ellenson and Alize Johnson and guard Malachi Flynn. Joining them are Fort Wayne Mad Ants forward Oshae Brissett and Canton Charge guard Brodric Thomas. Ellenson, Flynn and Thomas have played in the NBA this season, while Johnson signed a 10-day contract with the Brooklyn Nets on March 22.

The All-NBA G League Third Team features Iowa Wolves forward Tyler Cook, Austin Spurs guard Tre Jones and forward Robert Woodard II, Santa Cruz Warriors guard Jordan Poole and Erie BayHawks forward Jarrod Uthoff. Cook, Jones, Poole and Woodard II have played in the NBA this season, bringing the total to 12 of 15 players on the three NBA G League Teams who have competed in both leagues in 2020-21. ff782bc1db

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