Goodbye to Camelot (Third Watch)
Encyclopedia
"Goodbye to Camelot" is the 132nd and final episode of the American television series Third Watch
. It was the 22nd episode of the 6th season.
Storylines of central characters are wrapped up; Carlos finally weds after visiting Doc, Yokas and Bosco bury the hatchet, Finney wakes up from the coma, Sully and Jelly retire while Cruz dies in a blaze of glory after taking out the person who attacked their station. Cruz's grave is often visited by Manny who always places a rose on her headstone.
Critics hailed it as a somewhat rushed and anti-climactic ending to a gripping series that had a good run and was prematurely shut down.
Third Watch
Third Watch is an American television drama series which first aired on NBC from 1999 to 2005 for a total of 132 episodes, broadcast in 6 seasons of 22 episodes each....
. It was the 22nd episode of the 6th season.
Plot summary
In the series finale, following 'The House' going up in flames after a grenade attack, the Third Watch team is officially dissolved and its surviving members are reassigned to new squads with some veterans opting for retirement.Storylines of central characters are wrapped up; Carlos finally weds after visiting Doc, Yokas and Bosco bury the hatchet, Finney wakes up from the coma, Sully and Jelly retire while Cruz dies in a blaze of glory after taking out the person who attacked their station. Cruz's grave is often visited by Manny who always places a rose on her headstone.
Critics hailed it as a somewhat rushed and anti-climactic ending to a gripping series that had a good run and was prematurely shut down.
Quotes
- Cruz: Marcel Hollis thinks that the only thing keeping street gangs from ruling New York is...organization. Says if they all got together they'd outnumber us.
Bosco: Jackoff.
Cruz: Yeah. Except he's right. - Bosco: Um, where did all this come from?
Cruz: Been on the street 13 years. You never got any weapons?
Bosco: I turned 'em all in.
Cruz: I didn't.
External links
- Goodbye to Camelot at tv.comTV.comTV.com is a website owned by CBS Interactive. The site covers television and focuses on English-language shows made or broadcast in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and Japan...