Pensamientos Acerca de Televisión
The 4400: “Trial by Fire”
Oh, no. Someone leaked a list detailing the names and addresses of the 4400 returnees and made it available to the general public. An unscrupulous newswoman who regularly encourages distrust of the 4400 was suspected of leaking the list but that's not the real problem.
The real problem was that someone was using the list to strike back at the 4400 with homemade bombs. The first targets were Lily Moore and Sam Tyler, who came home one day and found out that the front door of their apartment had been booby-trapped.
In desperation, they turned to millionaire returnee Jordan Collier, who is building a new compound especially intended to provide sanctuary for the surviving members of the 4400. Collier gave them a place to live and Sam a job as his new security chief. He even provided Lily with free medical care. But there turned out to be strings attached to Collier's generosity and the man definitely had cards he wasn't showing.
Meanwhile, Kyle woke up from his coma and returned to his mother's house, only to find himself increasingly alienated from his new surroundings. Neither his mother nor his father could figure out what was wrong with him but something definitely was out of sync. Could Kyle be having an identity crisis?
Shawn found himself increasingly attracted to Nikki and eventually acted on said attraction. Will this cause problems between him and his younger brother? Obviously, but not as great as the problems his cousin Kyle was having.
In other news, a stranger from Homeland Security named Warren Lytell (played by Mark Valley of Keen Eddie fame) showed up at NTAC headquarters to “help out” Dennis Ryland. But Ryland suspected he was up to something. Apparently D.C. wasn't too happy with the way Ryland was handling the 4400 case and sent Lytell to help sort things out.
Meanwhile, Baldwin and Skouris traced the bombs to some relatives of one of the previous episode's murder victims. Could they stop the mad bombers before they struck again?
Stay tuned.
The 4400: “Trial by Fire”
Oh, no. Someone leaked a list detailing the names and addresses of the 4400 returnees and made it available to the general public. An unscrupulous newswoman who regularly encourages distrust of the 4400 was suspected of leaking the list but that's not the real problem.
The real problem was that someone was using the list to strike back at the 4400 with homemade bombs. The first targets were Lily Moore and Sam Tyler, who came home one day and found out that the front door of their apartment had been booby-trapped.
In desperation, they turned to millionaire returnee Jordan Collier, who is building a new compound especially intended to provide sanctuary for the surviving members of the 4400. Collier gave them a place to live and Sam a job as his new security chief. He even provided Lily with free medical care. But there turned out to be strings attached to Collier's generosity and the man definitely had cards he wasn't showing.
Meanwhile, Kyle woke up from his coma and returned to his mother's house, only to find himself increasingly alienated from his new surroundings. Neither his mother nor his father could figure out what was wrong with him but something definitely was out of sync. Could Kyle be having an identity crisis?
Shawn found himself increasingly attracted to Nikki and eventually acted on said attraction. Will this cause problems between him and his younger brother? Obviously, but not as great as the problems his cousin Kyle was having.
In other news, a stranger from Homeland Security named Warren Lytell (played by Mark Valley of Keen Eddie fame) showed up at NTAC headquarters to “help out” Dennis Ryland. But Ryland suspected he was up to something. Apparently D.C. wasn't too happy with the way Ryland was handling the 4400 case and sent Lytell to help sort things out.
Meanwhile, Baldwin and Skouris traced the bombs to some relatives of one of the previous episode's murder victims. Could they stop the mad bombers before they struck again?
Stay tuned.
Labels: Los 4400, Mark Valley, Pensamientos Acerca de Televisión IV, Series de Televisión de Ciencia Ficción II
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