![]() (Photo by Scott Everett White/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images) NATHAN FILLION, STANA KATIC, TOKS OLAGUNDOYE, JON HUERTAS, SEAMUS DEVER 'We have our insecurities' EDT), on the Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Television Network. office, Castle and Beckett's investigation leads Castle to suspect the victim's death could be the work of the Antichrist, on "Castle," MONDAY, MAY 9 (10:00-11:00 p.m. Like the fact that I was eating a donut when Ryan was on a cleanse, that was taken directly from actually me being on a cleanse and him eating some trash, and I was like, 'what are you doing man, eating that,' and the writers heard that.”ĬASTLE - "Hell to Pay" - When an axe-wielding, escaped psychiatric inmate drops dead in Castle's P.I. “They started taking these like little ideas we had and creating actual stories and episodes out of it. “A lot of the stuff that we did was because we wanted to have a different take on a procedural, the collaboration between Nathan and myself, Seamus and Stana. “That show to me was some of the most creative fun that I was able to have,” he said. While Huertas agrees that Castle certainly ended abruptly, which at the time (and still to some respect today) created a frenzy among fans of the series, he did say that if the cast could get back together, he would revive Esposito for some sort of reboot content. (Photo by Richard Foreman/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images) STANA KATIC, NATHAN FILLION, JON HUERTAS ![]() Carlos Bernard guest stars as Jared Stack, a mysterious operative who may hold the key to solving the case. That is why this scene is so relatable: We tend to gloss over the mundane and frustrating aspects of service in favor of drama and high tension but these are the stories service members most often retell at the smoke pit, or recount with old friends years later over beers, long after they’ve gotten out and left it all behind.CASTLE - "The Human Factor" - When Homeland Security inexplicably seals the crime scene of a car bombing, Castle and Beckett find themselves with two mysteries on their hands: who murdered the victim, a government whistleblower, and why are federal agents trying to take over the case? The plot thickens when they discover that the victim wasn't killed by a car bomb but by a missile from a military drone, on "Castle," on the Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Television Network. It’s one of those well-known facts of military life that rarely makes its way onto the screen. This means that every single one of those things can get you in trouble if you do it wrong. Am I wearing a belt? How cold are my hands and is it worth the risk to put them in my pockets? Am I 15 minutes early to being 15 minutes early to formation? Do I really have to attend this ‘mandatory’ family fun day on my first day off in weeks? Is anyone watching or can I get away with walking on the grass? Is my mustache trimmed enough? And by extension, am I courting disaster by simply having facial hair?Įach and every one of those things is detailed and specified by a military regulation - and even the ones that aren’t, like reserved parking spots for the command team, are still strictly enforced. Which means that during every hour of every one of those days, you’ll have to consider things like: Am I wearing the right color of socks? ‘Is the hair on top of my head 3 inches, or 3.25 inches,’ for men, or ‘Is my hair in a tight enough bun?’ for women. Emails released to Task & Purpose showed that testing was slowed down over a debate about whether to include social security numbers on COVID-19 testing kits. Another example occurred during the novel coronavirus outbreak aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt in March 2020. One instance involves a battalion sergeant major who made headlines for allegedly forcing Marines to stand extra duty during block leave. The military is rife with examples of regulation-mania. And that’s how you end up with this scene, with the top-ranking enlisted Marine in the battalion more concerned with his own beliefs about what someone’s face scruff says about their effectiveness in combat than a looming military operation. In the case of Sixta, we see what happens when that fixation on control spirals, resulting in a leader who obsessively micromanages the little things at the expense of the big things that matter most, like making sure his guys have the right equipment, or that the right people are in the right positions, for the job ahead.
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