Latest news with #Sullivan'sCrossingSeason3
Yahoo
19-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
'Sullivan's Crossing' Season 3: Chad Michael Murray, Morgan Kohan have a hard goodbye as Cal faces his monster
As we continue to learn more about Cal's (Chad Michael Murray) family in Sullivan's Crossing Season 3, things are getting even more emotional with him and Maggie (Morgan Kohan) at his parents home. Earlier in the season we found out that Cal's dad Jed (John Ralston) was diagnosed with prostate cancer, with last week's episode ending as it's revealed the cancer spread as is terminal. While Cal tries to manage his feelings about his dad illness, while still being upset about how he, and his siblings, were treated as kids, Maggie is there for support. But while they're gone, the threat of Glenn's (Dean Armstrong) development next to the crossing becomes more up right where we left off, Maggie is trying to comfort Cal. He's hurt that his parents kept the information about his dad's health from him, and he starts to think that if he had come home sooner things would be different. The next morning Cal's mom Marissa (Torri Higginson) asks Maggie if she thinks Jed is doing the right thing by not accepting treatment. Maggie says that while treatment may buy him more time, she's not sure how much time that will actually be. Marissa goes on to say that she's worried about Cal taking on this news, given how angry he's been at his father for so long, while admitting that she relied on Cal a lot as she tried to manage Jed's condition, with Cal taking on more responsibility than any child should have to. But she stresses to Maggie that she hopes Cal remembers the good days they had too. While Cal is chopping wood on the property, he has another flashback to his youth. His mom yelling at his dad yelling about how their kids need "stability" and a "proper home." As Maggie goes over to him, Cal admits he's having a hard time processing his feelings, but Maggie suggests they get away from the house, taking him for a hot air balloon ride. It works, with Cal feeling like he's "disconnected" to everything happening below him. When they get back to Marissa and Jed's home, Cal talks to his mom, who says his father promised her not to tell him anything about his cancer. "You're always letting him tell you what to do, putting him first," Cal responds. "We were just kids. We needed you too." "I wanted you to have a father in your life Cal, even if that meant having one that wasn't perfect. He loved you. Did you really want me to turn my back on him when he needed us?" Marissa says. "I wish things could have been different for all of us." But then Cal realizes that he never thought about how hard the situation was for his mom. "The person it's hardest on is your father. Remember that," Marissa stresses to her son. Meanwhile, Jed tells Maggie how grateful he is that Cal has her, and he can leave this world knowing he's OK. "It really broke my heart, you know, when he moved away," Jed says. "And I never understood why he did that. Until now." "It just tears me up knowing that I'm the reason he's going to carry around all that anger for the rest of his life." After that conversation, Maggie wants Cal to reconcile with his dad, but as he starts crying, Cal opens up about not being able to say goodbye, after losing his late wife Lynne. "I don't think I can do that again," Cal says. But Maggie responds by saying that if he doesn't make space for a proper goodbye with his dad, he'll regret it. Sitting by his father's bedside, Cal picks up a wooden duck his dad carved when he was young. We see a flashback of Cal coming out of his tent at night, he couldn't fall asleep, and his Jed picks him up in a piggyback, and they howl together to keep the monsters away. Back to the present day, Cal brings up that moment to his dad, but also tells him that he wasn't there for him and his siblings because he wouldn't take the medication. Jed says the medication made him feel "disconnected from the world" and from his kids. "I wish things could have been different, I thought I made the right choice," Jed says. "Maybe I was wrong. Maybe you would have been better off without me." "You know, I don't think I've ever understood until right now, that the monster you were always so afraid of was me." "I guess I wasn't the only one running from monsters was I," Cal says in response. After his conversation with his dad, Cal apologizes to his mom for judging her, and at dinner Cal's parents announce that they're going on one last adventure, driving the school bus to the Grand Canyon. As they're about to leave, Jed tells Cal to live life to the fullest, and hopefully he'll tell his kids stories about the good times they had together. Then Jed gives his son something top open after they're gone, it's a wood carving of a man with a little boy on his back, just like when Cal was a kid. Back at the Crossing, Jacob (Joel Oulette) and Frank (Tom Jackson) head out together to collect lichen samples, and Jacob talks about how he came to Nova Scotia because he was hoping to get to know him and Edna (Andrea Menard) better. Jacob spots a boreal felt, a rare species of lichen, but it looks like it's dying, because it's particularly sensitive to environmental toxins. That's when Frank brings Jacob over to see the the nearby construction site for Glenn's (Dean Armstrong) development. That means this could be the key to shut down the resort project. Sully (Scott Patterson), Jacob and Frank go to the Nova Scotia Environmental Agency with the lichen sample and an inspector is set to visit Glenn the next morning. But the inspection comes up clean, with Glenn telling Sully's he's gone too far and he should watch his back. Meanwhile for Rob (Reid Price), finding a new diner space is proving difficult, and he tells Sydney (Lindura) that he may have to move. When Sydney tells Sully and Edna about Rob's possible move, Sully has an idea for an available space. Sully brings Rob and Sydney to a lodge his great-great-grandfather initially built as a social hall, but it's been abandoned for years. Sully planned to fix it up, but never got around to it. He also explains to Rob that Glenn bought land next to the Crossing, which he's developing into a resort, so having a restaurant with a "talented chef" on the property will giving the Crossing the attention for guests that they need. Unfortunately, we'll have to wait and see if Sully's new spat with Glenn poses more problems for the Crossing.
Yahoo
18-03-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
All American Might Be Going There With Coop's Love Life (and We Wish It Wouldn't)
All American Yeah, we suppose that All American breakup was inevitable. More from TVLine CW Sets Dates for Sherlock & Daughter, Sullivan's Crossing Season 3 and Children Ruin Everything's Final Run Leighton Meester Talks Good Cop/Bad Cop's Quirky Gilmore Girls-Meets-Twin Peaks Vibe, Adam Brody's Guest Spot All American Bosses Break Down Olivia's Big News in Episode 2 - Including a Bonus Spoiler! During Monday's episode of the CW drama, long-distance lovebirds Coop and Patience decided to permanently call it quits, punctuating an on-again-off-again relationship that dates back to the show's first season. Patience, who's been away performing in a Broadway show, revealed she'd been invited to star in a brand-new stage production coming to London's West End. Coop recognized that she's fully thrown herself into her law school studies. And in a tearful-but-amicable breakup scene that paid sweet tribute to the couple's series-long romance, Patience and Coop ended things for good. Logistically, at least, the writing was on the wall for these two. Bre-Z, who plays Coop, returned as a series regular this season — one of only three All American OGs to do so — while Chelsea Tavares did not. With that arrangement, it'd be tough to keep even the strongest TV couple alive. In some alternate CW universe, maybe this pair could have gone the distance, but they seemed destined to separate in this one. With Patience now out of the picture, though (and hardly on Coop's mind when she was in the picture), All American appears to be speeding toward another narrative inevitability, and it's one that we're giving some preemptive side-eye: a potential romantic something between Coop and her law school professor, Breonna Strong. Breonna, who teaches Coop's torts class, first showed up in Episode 2 of the current seventh season, skillfully talking Coop down from a first-day-of-law-school panic attack. At the time, neither woman realized that Coop would be a student in Breonna's classroom — but that revelation hasn't squashed their chummy dynamic, either. In fact, the lines have only gotten blurrier since then: Coop watches Breonna's class lectures on repeat, even when she attended them in person; they've spent time alone in Breonna's office, including a long hangout that involved alcohol; and Breonna recently dropped the news that she's into women, which seemed to pique Coop's interest. It's possible we're off-base with our assumptions here. Maybe nothing will come of Coop and Breonna's increasingly friendly vibe. Maybe something briefly will — they're both single now, after all — but one of them will have the good sense to end it. (Ideally Breonna, for obvious reasons.) Maybe Layla, who's already picked up on Coop and Breonna's unusual closeness, will find a way to insert herself more forcefully as the voice of reason that Coop's been tuning out. But the show has already dropped enough clues that something is starting between these two, something that might not be extinguished until they've acted on their whatever-is-going-on-here — and we're worried about that. For one? It's weird and inappropriate. Sure, Coop is in her 20s and capable of making her own romantic decisions… but a power imbalance is a power imbalance, and even a student-professor fling that seems mutual won't shake out evenly in the end, especially when said student is rebounding from a long-term love. That's especially worrisome for Coop, a character who's currently enjoying a richly deserved 'look how far she's come!' arc, one that we're concerned will get tarnished by this potential tryst. Coop has thus far taken law school extremely seriously — she's unsatisfied with any grade lower than an 'A' — and Breonna is not only a potential distraction, but a possible liability to Coop's success, should word get out around GAU about those after-hours office visits. We're already a little nervous for Coop, now that she's likely moving in with Amina and Preach, and circling some uncomfortable truths about what really happened to Amina's mom years ago. This yet-to-be-defined situation with Breonna only makes us more concerned for, and protective of, Coop's hard-fought stability — and though All American might very well overrule us in the weeks to come, this is one objection we've got to raise. fans, I hand it over to you. What are your thoughts on Coop's breakup with Patience, and whatever's brewing with Breonna? Drop a comment below. Best of TVLine Weirdest TV Crossovers: Always Sunny Meets Abbott, Family Guy vs. Simpsons, Nine-Nine Recruits New Girl and More ER Turns 30: See the Original County General Crew, Then and Now The Best Streaming Services in 2024: Disney+, Hulu, Max and More