Watch brooklyn nine nine season 3 episode 22
If you ask me about it again, I’ll hunt you down and rip your face off”), while Terry is dispatched to teach Jake to do his first pull-up, something he only manages to pull off by screaming a lot. In Rosa’s case, that’s doing enough yoga to fit into the bottom of a mail cart (“It helps keep me centered. So the quartet plan a heist to get into the FBI building and snag the hard copy of the case file, with each assigned a key task. After sending Jake to confirm the ID in an ill-advised magazine-stand operation that leads him to read a title called Clown Boobies, Jake, Holt, and Rosa dispatch Anderson to get the FBI files on Whealon and Jimmy Figgis - but they’ve been digitally wiped. (That, of course, doesn’t apply to Holt and Anderson themselves, who are such rule-following straight arrows that they consider it overkill to consume both chocolate and nuts in a single candy bar.)Īnderson immediately knows the identity of the double agent whom the cops have dubbed “ScarJo”: Special Agent Ryan Whealon (Jonathan Root). As Haysbert and Andre Braugher have more than a few things in common, it’s not a surprise that Anderson is essentially just a second Holt (Jake: “Oh my God, there’s two of them!”), a prospect that’s just as fun as it sounds, because there is no such thing as too much of a good thing when it comes to Holt.
So, in a bit of inspired casting, Holt calls in his old pal at the FBI, Bob Anderson, who’s played by Dennis Haysbert. 225641441636324 (which comes from assigning a numerical value to each letter in the word “Pimento,” then squaring it) has hit a roadblock: With imprisoned Amy still unable to get useful information out of Maura Figgis, the precinct is struggling to figure out the identity of the FBI double agent with a scarred hand who ordered the hit on Adrian. The direction from Modern Family go-to Ryan Case, who helmed B99’s pilot but hasn’t been back since, definitely stands out for its crisper pace, and manages to give the show more of a procedural feel than it normally has, which melds nicely with the jokes.Īs Holt recaps in the opening, case No. That’s why it’s particularly impressive that “Bureau,” part two of a three-part season finale arc, manages to nail a credibly tense heist sequence without neglecting its sense of humor. Though it was originally conceived as an action-comedy, Brooklyn Nine-Nine has definitely become more of a workplace sitcom since its early episodes, in part because it struggled to integrate its jokes with awkward, low-budget action sequences. Dennis Haysbert as Anderson, Stephanie Beatriz as Diaz, Andre Braugher as Holt.