Ryan Guzman Wants Eddie's 9-1-1 Mustache Back — Together, We Can Make His Dream a Reality
9-1-1 fans have had to say goodbye to a number of beloved cast members over the past eight seasons, but one recent departure felt like an especially personal attack, and the viewers want — nay, deserve — justice.
I'm referring to Eddie Diaz…'s mustache, which became a social media sensation back in July 2024, a full two months before making its official on-air debut in the Season 8 premiere. There was just something about it. Something undeniable. Something poetic.
More from TVLine
Doctor Odyssey Revives TVLine's Fever Dream Theory With Fresh Clues in Episode 12
Grey's Recap: A Blast From the Past Blows Up Mer's Future - Plus, Wait, Wait... Jules Slept With Whom?!?
Doctor Odyssey Delivers Another Pregnancy Shocker
Unfortunately, as showrunner Tim Minear explained to me at the time, the mustache was also 'a manifestation of something going on within Eddie.' And not in a fun, Village People kind of way.
You see, after losing his son to Texas over the affair he had with his dead ex-wife's look-alike (this show!), Eddie began Season 8 in a pretty dark place, and his new facial hair was deemed a 'disguise' to hide from the joy he no longer felt he deserved. That's why, after only six episodes, the mustache made a dramatic exit from Eddie's face.
During my recent interview with Ryan Guzman about the second half of Season 8, he told me that Eddie is 'going to gain a lot' in the coming weeks, so I followed up with a question that any sane person would ask: Is there a chance Eddie will ever 'gain' his mustache back? He is, after all, going through another difficult emotional period now that he's trying to build a new life with Christopher in Texas.
'God, I wish,' Guzman replied. 'I miss it.' He told me that he had been pitching a mustache for Eddie since he joined 9-1-1 back in Season 2. 'I was lucky enough to get six episodes out of it,' he said. 'If the fans want it back, and Tim listens to them, maybe I can hold on to it for a little longer.'
As far as I'm concerned, there's only one way forward from here: the mustache needs to come back. Have you read the news lately? It's bleak out there. We could all use a little more joy in our lives, and what's more joyful than this reel of Peter Krause getting positively giddy over Guzman's then-fresh facial hair? Just look at it:
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Kenneth Choi (@kennethchoi_)
And is that really so much to ask? Abby was brought back for an episode, and she lives all the way in Arizona now. Eddie's mustache grows from Guzman's own face, and you don't even have to pay it a day rate. He wants it, we want it, let's just make it happen. We'll consider it a make-good for all the 9-1-1: Lone Star crossovers we never got.
Do you think Guzman should get his wish? Weigh in via the poll below (vote like Minear is watching!), then drop a comment with your thoughts.
Best of TVLine
Yellowjackets' Tawny Cypress Talks Episode 4's Tai/Van Reunion: 'We're All Worried About Taissa'
Vampire Diaries Turns 10: How Real-Life Plot Twists Shaped Everything From the Love Triangle to the Final Death
Vampire Diaries' Biggest Twists Revisited (and Explained)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
‘Rick And Morty' Bosses On Pulling Off Another Citadel-Centric Episode — This Time In The Form Of A Western: ‘That Was A Fun Challenge'
A still from 'Rick and Morty' Season 8, Episode 3: "The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly" It's very hard to recapture lightning in a bottle, but the wild minds behind Rick and Morty hoped to do just that in the third episode of Season 8: 'The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly." Taking the form of a Western-style revenge story, the latest installment was conceived as 'a spiritual sequel' to Season 3's 'The Ricklantis Mixup," series co-creator, co-showrunner, and executive producer Dan Harmon reveals over Zoom. The highest-rated episode of Rick and Morty to date according to IMDb, 'The Ricklantis Mixup' delivered a clever bait-and-switch, setting up one storyline for the titular duo (then voiced by co-creator Justin Roiland) before switching gears to something else entirely. Per Harmon, it was all about dropping 'the audience into this unexpected meta joke of, 'I bet you didn't know we were going to spend the entire episode focusing on this thing.'' The gimmick turned out to be a number of interconnected stories set against the backdrop of the Citadel, the former inter-dimensional stronghold inhabited by different Ricks and Mortys from across the multiverse prior to its destruction at the hands of "Evil Morty" at the end of Season 5. Written by Albro Lundy, James Siciliano, and Michael Kellner, 'The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly" picks up sometime after the fall of the Citadel and Rick's decision to reset his portal fluid, which caused all Rick and Mortys to return to their realities of origin. As a result, the only people left standing are the many clones who were bred on the Citadel to serve a multitude of purposes — from backup bodies to restaurant chain mascots. Left with almost nothing, these duplicates have built an Old West-style society from the rubble of their former existence. 'We got excited at doing something that was a Western and it felt like it brought out a lot of life when we tapped into the Citadel and all the human shrapnel that came with it,' explains co-showrunner and executive producer Scott Marder. "What is life [like] A still from 'Rick and Morty' Season 8, Episode 3: "The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly" The episode opens with the main Rick and Morty (voiced by Ian Cardoni and Harry Belden, respectively) cleaning up Citadel debris when their ship is damaged. They briefly land on the farm of a lone homesteader Rick, who then takes over as the main focus of the episode. After he's left for dead by Morty-kidnapping Rick marauders in the employ of a nefarious, Colonel Sanders-style Rick (he was specifically cloned to be the flamboyantly Southern face of a gumbo franchise), the farmer sets out for revenge alongside a pair of Mortys looking to find their kidnapped friends. 'We had this huge advantage [with 'The Ricklantis Mixup'] where the idea was like, 'Oh, it's life in the city genre, and it's going between all these stories; it's hustle and bustle.' This is almost the opposite in terms of that because it's a frontier story," Harmon concludes. "You're hyper-focused on these small stories and you're not cutting between…it's not Love Actually or Summer of Sam or something. So that became a big challenge because it's, 'We're going to do this again. We're going to drop the audience into a thing that's not our ongoing show, and then we're gonna do Unforgiven?' That was a fun challenge. It's like, 'How do we make this feel right and make the audience feel supported?' New episodes of Rick and Morty Season 8 air on Adult Swim every Sunday night at 11:00 p.m. ET
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘NCIS: Hawai'i' Alum Jason Antoon Shares Clip Of Canceled Show's Vacant Studio Lot
A year after NCIS: Hawai'i ended its three-season run on CBS, the state's film and TV industry continues to suffer a decline in business. Jason Antoon, who played cyber intelligence specialist Ernie Malik on the police procedural spin-off, recently shared a video of the series' vacant and overgrown Hollywood Film Studio, where shows like Lost (2004-'10), Hawaii Five-0 (2010-'20) and Magnum P.I. (2018-'24) also filmed. More from Deadline 'NCIS Hawai'i' Cast Joins Together On The Beach To Celebrate Series 'Rescue HI-Surf' Canceled By Fox After One Season '9-1-1' Eyes Hawaii As Setting For Potential New Spinoff On ABC 'Hawaii Film Studios – Empty and full of weeds,' wrote Antoon, sharing the clip Friday on X. Hawaii is an expensive location that is harder to fit into continuously trimmed TV budgets, especially in linear TV. Cost was among the factors for CBS' decision to cancel NCIS: Hawai'i after three seasons, despite being the #12 most watched non-sports program on broadcast, averaging 7.8 million linear viewers and 10M multi-platform viewers (Live+35). After the cancelation last April, Antoon wrote on Instagram, 'This business is brutal and makes no sense. But we had soooo much fun. Love you all and mahalo.' Hawaii Film Studios – Empty and full of weeds. #NCISHawaii #MagnumPI #Hawaii50 #Lost 😢 — Jason Antoon (@jasonantoon) June 7, 2025 The actor's latest post comes after Fox's Rescue HI-Surf, which also filmed in the Aloha State, was canceled after one season last month. Although CEO Rob Wade said the reason for the decision 'certainly wasn't the locale or the budget,' filming in Hawaii made it one of the network's more expensive dramas, coming in at close to $4 million per episode. Meanwhile, Hawaii was passed over as the locale for the next 9-1-1 spin-off, which is instead filming in Nashville, starring Chris O'Donnell and premiering this fall on ABC. On Friday, Gov. Josh Green, M.D. released an intent-to-veto list, which includes HB796, a bill that would sunset tax credits after five years. 'This bill would have a significant long-term impact on income tax credits across a variety of industries, including film and television, research, and renewable energy,' said Gov. Green of the veto. 'These tax credits are critical to supporting economic development and diversification, particularly within growing and emerging sectors. Categorically sunsetting income tax credits will not only disincentivize future investors from doing business in Hawai'i, but will destabilize existing businesses that currently rely upon these tax credits. Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
ABC News Suspends Correspondent Terry Moran Over Post Calling Trump Administration Official a 'World-Class Hater'
ABC News has suspended senior national correspondent Terry Moran after the network veteran called Trump administration deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller a 'world-class hater.' Moran posted on X late Saturday night and deleted it not long after. More from The Hollywood Reporter Late Night Erupts With Schadenfreude Over Donald Trump's Feud With Elon Musk: "World War Douche" The Twilight of Evening News: Anchor Swaps, Trust Gaps and a Looming AI Threat Seth Meyers on Finding Joy (and Comedy) in Trump's Second Term 'ABC News stands for objectivity and impartiality in its news coverage and does not condone subjective personal attacks on others,' an ABC News spokesperson tells The Hollywood Reporter. 'The post does not reflect the views of ABC News and violated our standards — as a result, Terry Moran has been suspended pending further evaluation.' Moran has been with ABC News since 1997, covering events like 9/11 the Iraq war and multiple presidential elections. He even interviewed President Trump in the Oval Office just over a month ago. But after his post, White House officials, including Vice President JD Vance and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, ripped into the journalist for his take (Leavitt called it 'unhinged and unacceptable') and demanded that ABC News take action. 'The thing about Stephen Miller is not that he is the brains behind Trumpism,' Moran wrote in his since-deleted post. 'Yes, he is one of the people who conceptualizes the impulses of the Trumpist movement and translates them into policy. But that's not what's interesting about Miller. It's not brains. It's bile. Miller is a man who is richly endowed with the capacity for hatred. He's a world-class hater. You can see this just by looking at him because you can see that his hatreds are his spiritual nourishment. He eats his hate. Trump is a world-class hater. But his hatred only a means to an end, and that end his his own glorification. That's his spiritual nourishment.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More