Game Face
- El episodio se transmitió el 13 mar 2025
- TV-14
- 43min
El sueño de ser socia de Olympia está en juego mientras ella y su equipo luchan por retirar del mercado una bebida peligrosa.El sueño de ser socia de Olympia está en juego mientras ella y su equipo luchan por retirar del mercado una bebida peligrosa.El sueño de ser socia de Olympia está en juego mientras ella y su equipo luchan por retirar del mercado una bebida peligrosa.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Alfie Kingston
- (as Aaron D. Harris)
Opiniones destacadas
The intricate screenplay drops powerful clues both in revealing the smoking gun of Olympia's case as well as how Maddie cleverly manipulates a potential whistle blower to get closer to the coverup evidence in her main cause of revealing who at the firm was most responsible for her daughter's death by drugs. The way the ongoing investigations (by Olympia and by Maddie) parallel each other is solid writing, with a familiar supporting cast member rising in importance by episode's end.
Kathy Bates remains the heartbeat of the show, her calm command and quiet intensity giving the case real weight. She manages to show both resilience and vulnerability, a mix that makes her compelling to watch. Leah Lewis also gets more to do, and she brings energy and tension to the team dynamic, hinting at future shifts in firm politics. Even Bitsy has moments that underline how Matty's personal and professional worlds constantly overlap.
What works best is the balance. The case is gripping, the internal drama never distracts, and together they push the show into one of its most satisfying hours so far.
¿Sabías que…?
- ErroresSarah ask the receptionist if Olympia's old office has been assigned. The receptionist says "yes" while her hands are on top of the desk, but immediately it cuts back to a pull of the camera, and then the receptionist is holding a pen.
- Citas
Sarah Franklin: The box is untraceable.
Billy Martinez: Couldn't track down whoever VP123 is either. Which means still no leads on who threw the party, but we did find something else.
Sarah Franklin: At first we thought these were the usual Slamm'd cans, but they're not.
Olympia Lawrence: They must be the beta version. They were testing out different colors, logos, fonts.
Sarah Franklin: Makes sense. The parties were before Slamm'd went to market.
Billy Martinez: Exactly. Which means they had to come directly from Slamm'd, which means Slamm'd has to be connected to the parties. That's our link.
Olympia Lawrence: You did great work. Problem is, defense will argue he got the cans from somewhere else. They could've fallen off the back of a truck. It's all circumstantial.
Billy Martinez: But the DJ was paid.
Olympia Lawrence: And we don't know how.
Shae Banfield: Because they buried it with creative accounting. Single-use vendor, an errant payment, even a charitable donation. That way, they wouldn't have to disclose, which is completely unethical.
Madeline Matlock: They'd do that?
Shae Banfield: Oh, you wouldn't believe the shady ways corporations cover things up. It makes me so crazy.
Madeline Matlock: Well, these were research and development parties, right? So what were they researching?
Shae Banfield: That's easy to figure out. Look at what changed on the can.
Billy Martinez: It's a different tiger.
Shae Banfield: So, the mascot.
Sarah Franklin: Also, the warning label has slightly different wording.
Shae Banfield: So, the language.
Shae Banfield: Wait. Are there studies that match those changes in discovery? Because there is always a study before a company changes anything, whether it's a warning label, a color, a character.
Sarah Franklin: There is one for the warning label, but there is nothing about the tiger.
Shae Banfield: They must have hidden it from discovery. There's a missing document.
- Bandas sonorasPerfect
Performed by Ed Sheeran