9-1-1 | 2x7
Hewitt’s performance is restrained and devastating. Watch her eyes when the call disconnects. That’s not just professional frustration—it’s the terror of knowing exactly what happens when no one answers.
Buck gets a lighter but meaningful B-plot: after a string of minor, bizarre accidents (a falling ladder, a slippery floor, a near-miss with an exploding transformer), he becomes convinced the firehouse is cursed. Chimney and Hen mock him, but Buck’s superstition is really about control. Since his leg injury earlier in the season, Buck has been grappling with his own fragility. The “curse” is just his anxiety wearing a Halloween mask. The resolution—Bobby revealing that the “accidents” were just normal job hazards—doesn’t quite land as catharsis, but it reinforces the show’s core theme: this job is dangerous, and the only way through is trust. 9-1-1 2x7
If you came for the spectacular rescue sequences (a dangling crane, a sinking ship), “Haunted” will disappoint. The emergencies are low-stakes and domestic. The pacing is meditative, even slow. One subplot—a teenager who fakes a haunting to get out of a family trip—feels underbaked and ends abruptly. And while the episode respects its characters, it doesn’t advance the season’s larger arcs much. (Where is Eddie? Where is Christopher’s custody battle?) It’s a bottle episode dressed in Halloween decorations. Hewitt’s performance is restrained and devastating
Character studies, quiet trauma narratives, and episodes that prove a firefighter show can be as tender as it is explosive. Buck gets a lighter but meaningful B-plot: after
The primary 9-1-1 call involves a family convinced their newly purchased smart home is possessed. Lights turn on by themselves, the thermostat spikes, and the garage door opens at 3 a.m. The 118 arrives expecting a faulty circuit board but finds a terrified mother and child. Bobby’s calm, methodical investigation reveals the truth: a previous owner—a lonely elderly man who died in the house—had programmed the home’s automation to “wake up” with music and lights every morning because he had no one to greet him. It’s a genuinely poignant reveal, and one that 9-1-1 excels at: the supernatural is debunked, but the loneliness is real. The team doesn’t fix the house; they honor the ghost by simply acknowledging his existence.
High-octane rescues, fast pacing, or a Halloween episode full of actual monsters. (The real monsters here are memory and fear.) “Haunted” is a reminder that 9-1-1 is at its best when it answers the call not just for help, but for humanity.