Not a bad episode, but riddle me this: From previous seasons, it's been established that the team have each other's contact information, including cell numbers, and surely Mac knows the number to his own damn lab and Jo's extension. So...why would he need 911 to connect him to Jo Danville at the crime lab? I thought that mayhap the kidnappers had taken his phone, but he had it with him a very short time later. Why not use it instead of wasting time and energy by staggering to the one remaining payphone in NYC, a payphone that happens to be in the middle of the suburban boonies?
I did like that Jo gently called out Mac on his hypocrisy about following his "gut" while chiding his subordinates with self-righteous tirades about the imperative to "follow the evidence, not your instincts." Mac can call it what he wants, but he believed Tessa in the face of an initial lack of evidence to support her ramblings. He believed her because he wanted to. It's nice to see someone acknowledging his hypocrisy without coming across as a whiner.
Too bad it did no good whatsoever. Because Mac is always right. Even though he can't remember the number to his own lab and needs the mystical intervention of a convenient payphone.
If Tessa was a lawyer who went around the bend, then wouldn't her fingerprints have been on file with the law firm for which she worked? Most law firms do background checks. If they knew she worked for law firm x, then they clearly had legal proof of her identity. There was no need for that stupefyingly treacly ending beyond the writers' clumsy desire to tug at the heartstrings like a cat on an Emery Cat. It was lame.
Oh, Flack, bless you. You keep me from chewing through my wrists to ease the pain.
I did like that Jo gently called out Mac on his hypocrisy about following his "gut" while chiding his subordinates with self-righteous tirades about the imperative to "follow the evidence, not your instincts." Mac can call it what he wants, but he believed Tessa in the face of an initial lack of evidence to support her ramblings. He believed her because he wanted to. It's nice to see someone acknowledging his hypocrisy without coming across as a whiner.
Too bad it did no good whatsoever. Because Mac is always right. Even though he can't remember the number to his own lab and needs the mystical intervention of a convenient payphone.
If Tessa was a lawyer who went around the bend, then wouldn't her fingerprints have been on file with the law firm for which she worked? Most law firms do background checks. If they knew she worked for law firm x, then they clearly had legal proof of her identity. There was no need for that stupefyingly treacly ending beyond the writers' clumsy desire to tug at the heartstrings like a cat on an Emery Cat. It was lame.
Oh, Flack, bless you. You keep me from chewing through my wrists to ease the pain.