The following contains spoilers for NCIS: Origins Season 2, Episode 5, “Funny How Time Slips Away,” which aired on Tuesday, November 11, on CBS.
The two-hour event begins with NCIS: Origins Season 2, Episode 5, “Funny How Time Slips Away.” The team is called to investigate the mysterious death of Louis Burke, who was blown apart in his car by an oncoming train. When Gibbs (Austin Stowell) and the rest of Mike Franks’ (Kyle Schmid) team go to investigate, they discover the entire dust-blown town of Serenity, California, is lying to them, and the community is covering up for a murderer. When the team must step away from the case, the series reveals the origin of a vital rule that Gibbs follows.
Mark Harmon’s Return as Gibbs in NCIS: Origins Crossover Event Explained
When the news broke that Harmon would reprise his role as Gibbs, the legendary NCIS actor said he took the opportunity because he was proud of the boundary-pushing storytelling that NCIS: Origins showrunners David J. North and Gina Lucita Monreal were doing, and they approached him with a premise he liked. Harmon also thought it was a good time to check in with his retired NCIS character. At the top of the episode, Gibbs is sitting at his secluded cabin in Alaska, tinkering with a radio as a storm blows through his home in Naktok Bay.
NCIS has ended an era 20 years after Ziva David’s memorable debut, ushering in a new one with Alden Parker’s story in Season 23’s premiere.
Gibbs looks different from when audiences last saw him, but his vitality hasn’t waned, nor has the former Special Agent-in-Charge’s cool demeanor. As Gibbs gets his radio powered up, he tunes out of the weather forecast and into an old song, Willie Nelson’s “Funny How Time Slips Away.” Not much has changed for Gibbs, and he says as much to a new friend, a dog he’s welcomed into his home just before the storm. As older Gibbs reflects on his history, his face morphs into Stowell’s rendition of Gibbs, as NCIS: Origins slips into the past.
NCIS: Origins Reveals the Origin of Gibbs’ Rule #11
When Gibbs urges Mike that the job isn’t done, Franks pushes him up against the wall and tells him that they need to walk away. He reminds Gibbs that Sheriff Mulligan (Shiloh Fernandez) is willing to go to prison to help Lainey Sims (Gabrielle Haugh), and implies that he should stop carrying around pictures of victims. Still, the story reveals that Mike struggled to follow his own rule, which inspired Gibbs’ Rule Eleven. Franks visited Mulligan every year until he died, with NCIS: Origins featuring an appearance from the original Mike Franks actor, Muse Watson, to close out Franks’ story and the episode.
NCIS: Origins Breaks Three Gibbs Rules in Season 2, Episode 5
Therefore, NCIS: Origins quietly breaks Gibbs’ Rule One, “Never let suspects stay together,” which the Special Agent-in-Charge tells Kate Todd (Sasha Alexander) in the premiere of NCIS. The three suspects turn out to be harmless, and in fact, keeping them in the same jail cells leads to a remark that breaks the case, with the youngest of the suspects making a passing comment that the sheriff always loved Birdy, but she never loved him back. Therefore, the installment just goes to show further that sometimes even one’s own rules are worth breaking.


