Station 19 Season 7 Episode Info
7x01
‘This Woman’s Work’
Written by: Henry Robles (5x05*, 5x17*, 6x02, 6x15*)
Directed by: Paris Barclay (1x01, 1x02, 1x10, 2x01, 2x08, 2x17, 3x01, 3x02, 3x07*, 3x16, 4x01, 4x03*, 4x13, 4x16*, 5x13, 6x10*, 6x15*)
Synopsis: Andy steps into the station's captaincy as Jack's life hangs in the balance. The team is called to a hostage situation. Natasha fights for her career, and Maya and Carina make a choice.
7x02
'Good Grief’
Written by: Meghann Plunkett (3x04, 3x12, 4x06*, 5x06, 5x15, 6x12)
Directed by: Tessa Blake (2x03, 2x16, 3x06*, 5x11)
Synopsis: Ben and Theo respond to a challenging Crisis One call, and Jack struggles adjusting to his new reality. Maya and Carina treat a nanny with a surprising diagnosis. Travis finds a surprise at Dixon’s wake, and Vic joins Beckett at a family funeral.
7x03
'True Colors'
Written by: Staci Okunola (5x10, 5x17*, 6x09, 6x17)
Directed by: Peter Paige (4x14*, 5x02, 5x08, 6x02, 6x07*)
Synopsis: The Station 19 crew struts their stuff at the FABruary Winter Pride parade, where Maya encounters someone important from her past. Carina looks to Bailey for support, while Travis and Eli arrive at a crossroads.
7x04
'Trouble Man'
Written by: Mellow Brown (6x05*) & Sybil Azur (new writer)
Directed by: Stefania Spampinato (!!!!!!!!!!)
Synopsis: The Station 19 team faces a grueling 24 hour shift that threatens to split them apart. Andy must make an impossible decision; and Maya and Carina navigate new parenthood.
7x05 (100th Episode)
'My Way'
Written by: Emily Culver (4x10, 5x04, 5x09, 6x04, 6x16) & Alex Fernandez (6x10*)
Directed by: Daryn Okada (2x10, 3x12, 4x12, 5x05, 5x15, 6x06)
Synopsis: Andy Herrera earns her captain’s stripes as she fearlessly leads her team during a life-or-death emergency at Seattle’s most beloved landmark. Vic struggles with emotional burnout, and Maya helps Carina navigate some difficult news.
7x06
'With So Little To Be Sure Of'
Written By: Rochelle Zimmerman (4x09, 4x15, 5x03*, 5x11, 5x16, 6x06, 6x11)
Directed By: Boris Kodjoe
Synopsis: With both Vic's job and Crisis One in jeopardy, a flashback shows how the program has changed the lives of the team and the local community. Meanwhile, Ben keeps a secret from Bailey.
7x07
'Give It All'
Written By: Heidi-Marie Farren (new writer) & Leah Gonzalez (5x07*, 6x08, co-wrote 5x16, co-wrote 6x17)
Directed By: David Greenspan (3x08*, 4x10, 5x07*, 6x13*)
Synopsis: The crew responds to a call at a local park, only to have their assumptions challenged by the Tulalip Tribe when they arrive. Meanwhile, Maya confronts her past, and Carina goes on the offense.
7x08
'Ushers Of The New World'
Written By: Shernold Edward (new writer) & Beresford Bennet (co-wrote 6x11)
Directed By: Letia Solomon (new director)
7x09
'How Am I Supposed To Live Without You'
Written By: Zaiver Sinnett (4x03, 4x15, 5x08, 5x14, 6x07*, 6x15*)
Directed By: Tessa Blake (2x03, 2x16, 3x06*, 5x11, 7x02)
7x10
'One Last Time'
Written By: Zoanne Clack (6x18*)
Directed By: Peter Paige (4x14*, 5x02, 5x08, 6x02, 6x07*, 7x03)
(* = episode that includes multiple and/or good Marina scenes)
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Rachel McAdams and Lindsay Lohan in Mean Girls (Mark Waters, 2004)
Cast: LIndsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Tina Fey, Tim Meadows, Amy Poehler, Ana Gasteyer, Lacey Chabert, Lizzy Caplan, Daniel Franzese, Neil Flynn, Jonathan Bennett, Amanda Seyfried. Screenplay: Tina Fey, based on a book by Rosalind Wiseman. Cinematography: Daryn Okada. Production design: Cary White. Music: Rolfe Kent.
Mean Girls is probably what it was called at the time: the best teen comedy since Clueless (Amy Heckerling, 1995). That film had Jane Austen as an underpinning, where all Mean Girls has is Tina Fey's wry take on that crucible of growing up, high school. Fey's screenplay is the chief distinction of Mean Girls, which follows the usual trajectory of teen comedies: innocence, fall from grace, suffering, redemption, reward. (The reward is, of course, the girl getting the boy she thought was lost to her forever.) What Fey does is to load the conventional plot with lovely non sequiturs: For example, in the "redemption" scene in which students get up to confess their mean acts, Fey sends in a ringer, a girl who proclaims, "I wish I could bake a cake filled with rainbows and smiles and everyone would eat and be happy." Whereupon she's unmasked as not even a student at the school -- "I just have a lot of feelings," she whimpers -- and dismissed. With touches like that, Fey manages to parody the teen comedy genre without losing its essential feel-good effect. Mean Girls also features some exceptional young actresses whose careers went in opposite directions: Lindsay Lohan, who descended into tabloid notoriety, and Rachel McAdams, who was nominated for an Oscar last year for her performance in Spotlight (Tom McCarthy, 2015). I also relished Lizzy Caplan's turn as the arty girl named Janis Ian. (The real Janis Ian's "At Seventeen" is heard on the soundtrack.)
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