After 7 seasons, the time has finally come to say goodbye to Seattle’s hardest-working firefighters on ABC’s Station 19. As they say, all good things must come to an end. But, thanks to some gifts left behind in the finale by showrunners Peter Paige and Zoanne Clack and the writers, fans can expand on the firefighters’ stories well beyond tonight.
The episode titled “One Last Time” continues the story from last week’s episode as Station 19 is battling a raging wildfire targeting Seattle. Everyone is in danger but they’re keeping cool heads and working together to protect anyone else from getting hurt. In a particularly intense scene, the team has to take cover when a firestorm threatens everyone’s lives quickly. They get under aluminum fire shelters that they pull over themselves like a blanket. The foil made them look like TV dinners, which is the best way I can describe it.
While they were tucked into their foil like baked potatoes, many of the team focused on the beautiful futures they could have if they just hold on a little longer. Although handled in a totally different way, those moments felt similar to how Six Feet Under famously ended its run with a look at how everyone’s lives turned out.
They were all extremely special but we have to call out Vic’s (Barrett Doss) flash forward. In her vision, she is speaking to a crowd while on stage with a huge smile on her face as she thanked her audience for attending. Earlier in the episode, she revealed she was moving to Washington D.C. to head up Crisis One on a national level.
Crisis One was developed by Dean Miller (Okieriete Onaodowan) in response to the growing number of incidents involving police that was funded by a lawsuit he won against the police for wrongful arrest. Miller sadly died while on duty in Season 5, taking the secret that he was in love with Vic, his friend who helped raise his daughter Pru.
Back to Vic’s fast forward, she is on stage speaking about the program and there’s a poster in the back that reads: Crisis One Founder, Dean Miller, with a large photo of him. To Vic’s surprise, Dean walks out of the poster—yes, it’s really Onaodowan making a cameo appearance!—and tells Vic, “You did it, Hughes. Proud of you.” They share a sweet smile and side-by-side as they look at the audience, filled with many of their friends, and quietly celebrate their moment in the spotlight together…if only for a brief moment in time. Crisis One is their baby.
In another touching moment, Sullivan (Boris Kodjoe) sees himself opening up a center to help veterans become firefighters he named Sankofa, a word that means go back and get what you forgot in the Akan language of Ghana.