‘The Rookie’ Season 7 Episode 15 Recap: I’m Begging for the End of These Mockumentaries!

Nolan Has Ties to a Missing Woman in ‘The Rookie’
The episode opens with the Mid-Wilshire Police Department sitting down to meet with the documentary crew they’ve worked with in previous episodes. John Nolan (Nathan Fillion) discusses the case of a missing woman named Abigail Tierney (Madeleine Coghlan), who used to be the fiancé of Nolan’s son. They have since broken up, but then she was reported missing. There are a lot of cheesy red herrings in Abigail’s case. She is initially making a horror movie, so we see many shots of her scream-acting, and we learn that Angela Lopez (Alyssa Diaz) donated money to help produce the movie.
None of this is actually all that relevant to the plot. While spending time with Angela, Abigail learns about serial killer Liam Glasser (Seth Gabel), who had links to the Westview Psychiatric Institute. Although it seems wildly out of character that Angela would offer details about an open case, Abigail gets inspired to change her movie into a documentary about Westview.
Then, completely nonsensically, a nanny named Mary who was a patient at Westview is interviewed, and she just so happens to be the nanny of Charlotte Russell, one of the little girls who stabbed her friend, from Episode 10. Zuzu, the bizarre AI element from that same episode, tells them that Abigail is in Room 666 at the hospital. I get that the writers weren’t completely done with the Zuzu thing, but it felt odd that they were trying to fit it into this episode.
We Finally Get a Fun Chenford Moment in ‘The Rookie’ Season 7, Episode 15
Besides the documentary crew filming this whole investigation, there are also some ghost hunters that stop by Westview. They don’t add anything to the episode, other than a little silly humor as they roam the hospital. Tim Bradford (Eric Winter) and Lucy Chen (Melissa O’Neil) start looking for Abigail at Westview, and observe that the walls seem to be wet. Before they know it, they’ve been mysteriously drugged by something in the hospital and call for backup.
It’s not entirely clear where the relationship will head after the two of them get the truth serum out of their systems (or if they’ll even remember all of what they discussed), but I’m happy we got a solid scene for them in this episode.
The Case Gets Solved in a Convoluted Way in ‘The Rookie’
Nolan and Celina Juarez (Lisseth Chavez) arrive as backup, and they discover a walled-off area in the abandoned ward. They break through the wall to discover Abigail, who is amazingly still alive. She had enough food in her purse to survive, but she’d been drugged as well (and had made friends with a skeleton named Bob). Turns out, Zuzu was right, and the room was marked 666. This is where the episode truly lost me. The details behind Abigail’s case got way too convoluted for me to follow exactly, but here’s what I could piece together.
Frankly, the next part is too confusing for a complete breakdown. But Abigail almost gets killed by the security guard again because he’s trying to help the new head of the hospital cover up all of their misdeeds. The Mid-Wilshire crew also determines that the hospital was forcing many of its rich patients into conservatorships to help their families gain control of their finances. And this is what happened to the nanny they interviewed earlier in the episode. Bob the Skeleton was a PI that got taken out when he stumbled upon the Westview crimes. The police are able to charge the new head of the hospital with a whole host of things, and then Westview is shut down for good.
Either way, I think this could have been placed in an episode with a regular narrative, without going off the rails with this whole documentary episode. I appreciate The Rookie trying to switch things up with these types of episodes, but I prefer straightforward storytelling that doesn’t rely on random characters and plots from many episodes ago. This episode got way too complicated, and besides Chenford maybe moving towards a future together (fingers crossed), there weren’t a ton of really meaningful developments that made me glad I tuned in. So, please, from now on, let’s skip the documentary gimmick!

