Spoiler Alert: The following article contains details from the series finale of CBS’s MacGyver.
On tonight’s series finale of MacGyver, MacGyver (Lucas Till) and Riley (Tristin Mays) stumble onto a mind control conspiracy, which leads them to question their commitment to the Phoenix Foundation.
Directed by David Straiton, from a script by Alessia Costantini, Stephanie Hicks, Andrew Klein and Monica Maser, “Abduction + Memory + Time + Fireworks + Dispersal” hinges on a plot thread set up in Episode 11, in which Mac and Riley are exposed, via tear gas, to nanoscopic tracking devices.
The episode opens in seemingly ordinary fashion, with Mac, Riley, Desi (Levy Tran) and Bozer (Justin Hires) undertaking an undercover operation at an underground poker game. Desi stealthily places a tracker on the back of a target, and all is going well—until Mac and Riley suddenly go missing.
When Phoenix Foundation Head Matty (Meredith Eaton) discovers that Mac’s comms have gone offline,...
On tonight’s series finale of MacGyver, MacGyver (Lucas Till) and Riley (Tristin Mays) stumble onto a mind control conspiracy, which leads them to question their commitment to the Phoenix Foundation.
Directed by David Straiton, from a script by Alessia Costantini, Stephanie Hicks, Andrew Klein and Monica Maser, “Abduction + Memory + Time + Fireworks + Dispersal” hinges on a plot thread set up in Episode 11, in which Mac and Riley are exposed, via tear gas, to nanoscopic tracking devices.
The episode opens in seemingly ordinary fashion, with Mac, Riley, Desi (Levy Tran) and Bozer (Justin Hires) undertaking an undercover operation at an underground poker game. Desi stealthily places a tracker on the back of a target, and all is going well—until Mac and Riley suddenly go missing.
When Phoenix Foundation Head Matty (Meredith Eaton) discovers that Mac’s comms have gone offline,...
- 5/1/2021
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
A former Tuscaloosa cop won her discrimination case against the state police department after they demoted her and refused to find proper breastfeeding accommodations when she returned from maternity leave.
Stephanie Hicks first filed the lawsuit in 2013, and a federal jury ruled in her favor last year, agreeing that the department violated the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. The city appealed the ruling, but the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the verdict on Thursday.
Hicks started working in the force in 2008, and had glowing reviews until she left for maternity leave in 2012 for the birth of her first child.
Stephanie Hicks first filed the lawsuit in 2013, and a federal jury ruled in her favor last year, agreeing that the department violated the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. The city appealed the ruling, but the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the verdict on Thursday.
Hicks started working in the force in 2008, and had glowing reviews until she left for maternity leave in 2012 for the birth of her first child.
- 9/11/2017
- by Julie Mazziotta
- PEOPLE.com
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