Farewell to the Unsung Hero: FBI Loses Agent Jeremy Sisto After Bloody Mission
FBI Deals With Some Tired Themes Other Shows Have Done
Season 7, Episode 18 Isn’t Presenting Anything New

The episode does check all the boxes as far as the bones of the story are concerned. There’s some technical wizardry, an interrogation scene, and multiple action sequences, including the climax that takes place on a stage at the fictional Hudson University. Fans get the drama that they are used to from this show, and all of the main actors are as reliable as they’ve ever been. John Boyd is a bit of a scene-stealer, as his character Stuart Scola offers up more blunt commentary, plus he gets involved in a shootout and then also gets to shoot at a speeding van. The core cast is doing their best.
Stuart Scola: Every time I think people can’t get any crueler, some psycho tells me to hold their beer.
And the main female characters are either victims or almost victims. Jericho and 24 alum Sprague Grayden is wasted as Aimee Fenway, the CEO of Scorch. She has one scene explaining why she created the app and identifying one of the suspects, but then doesn’t turn up again until she’s taken hostage. With as talented as Grayden is, it’s a missed opportunity not to give her character more to do than provide exposition and someone for Maggie to rescue. The best TV crime dama episodes of any kind are the ones where the supporting characters come alive to make the proceedings feel real, and “Blkpill” misses that mark.
FBI Season 7, Episode 18 Lacks Any Meaningful Character Development
Maggie’s Personal Life Isn’t Enough
“Blkpill” delivers an action-packed tale in which the good guys stop the bad guys, and the day is saved. In that most basic sense, it works. But it doesn’t succeed when one steps back to look at the bigger picture of underdeveloped characters and a troubling premise. This show has done better both plot and character-wise. It can get audiences to sit on the edge of their seats, and even move them emotionally, with a whole lot less than this.
