š“ Script 6:3 The Pharmacist (ā 124)
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NBCās series The Blacklist starring James Spader and Megan Boone
Series created by: Jon Bokenkamp
Program air date: 1/11/2019 in the US (9pm Central/Chicago Time)
Permalink: https://wp.me/pDKwi-8Wq
Entertainment Weekly Recap: http://bit.ly/2REyQBN
š¶ Tunefind for Episode: http://bit.ly/2SQ1flI
Source: Raw Script from Springfield: http://bit.ly/2R6MuxU [ dump of captioning ]
STATUS: ā Pending ā Rough ā Preliminary š“ FINAL
STATUS: š« Pending š Rough š Preliminary ī Final
Last updated: 1/14/2019 at 3:40am CT [ Central/Chicago time ]
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Directed by: Daniel Willis
Written by: Lukas Reiter š [See Note]
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SERIES STARS:
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Raymond āRedā Reddington ā James Spader
Elizabeth Keen ā Megan Boone
Donald Ressler ā Diego Klattenhoff
Harold Cooper ā Harry Lennix
Aram Mojtabai ā Amir Arison
Samar Navabi ā Mozhan Marnò
Dembe Zuma ā Hisham Tawfiq
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GUEST STARS:
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Judge Roberta Wilkins ā Becky Ann Baker
Spalding Stark ā David Wilson Barnes
Biohacker ā David Berman
Reggie Deeks ā Alex Breaux
Pascal ā Thaddeus Daniels
Ames ā Michael Devries
Warren Kirby ā Daniel Jenkins
Jerry Lonnergan ā David Konig
Asst US Attorney Michael Sima ā Ken Leung
Dr Ethan Webb ā Lee Aaron Rosen
Walter Pruitt ā Leslie Shenkel
Margaret Hopkins ā Rebecca Street
Court Clerk ā Desi Waters
Daniel Lloyd ā John William Watkins
Officer Flynn ā William Oliver Watkins
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š“ Script 6:3 The Pharmacist (ā 124)
Brief (Where weāre at): Red is under arrest! Not by the federal government with which he has an immunity agreement, but by the aggressive Southern District of New York. The fact he just revealed and foiled an attempt to bomb the United Nations looks to hold no sway there. Nor have Cooperās attempts to get Panabaker to step in, or to get the US Attorney for the SDNY to stand down.
Worse, the tip as to Redās whereabouts came from an unlikely source ā Liz. Lilly has convinced Liz that this is the only way they will ever be able to find out who Red really is ā this man who assumed the identity of their father, Raymond Reddington, 30 years ago. But Liz now has grave doubts when she considers all the good Red has been capable of and all the lives he has saved. Redās preoccupation is only with finding out who betrayed him, a task for which he turns for help to ā (wait for it:) Liz.
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For S6 Episode 6:3 The Pharmacist šÆ EW recap ¤ š
Photo Gallery ¤ š¶ Music Videos ¤ š Script link: https://wp.me/pDKwi-8Wq [ āyou are hereā ]
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[ GRAVEL SCRAPING ] [ A man shuffles slowly and unsteadily toward a large warehouse ]
[ Caught A Ghostās ā« āFootstepsā plays ]
[ ⬠Go to Full Lyrics ] or [ ⪠Tap square below to play ⪠]
[ A small wooden window opens in the door ]
Man: Name?
Walter Pruitt: [ BREATHLESSLY ] Walter Pruitt.
[ His name is crossed off a list of five names ]
āŖ Get out the door
And smell the sulfur hanging in the air
Man: Name?
Margaret Hopkins: [ SHAKILY ] Margaret Hopkins.
[ Her name is also crossed off ]
āŖ Get out to work
Turning the page as if thereās nothing there
I often wonder ā
Man: Name?
Dan: [ Shaking and stuttering ] D-D-Dan ā
[ The name Daniel Lloyd is crossed off ]
āŖ If I ever felt another way
Iāve never known another life
There goes another day
Vaguely revolutionary songs and incantations
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[ DOOR CLOSES ]
[ Patients are on gurneys hooked to monitoring equipment. They are arranged in a circle inside a large vinyl enclosure ]
āŖ Fighting battles from the basement
You slept through the alarm
[ Spalding Stark leans on a cane and speaks with a shaky voice ]
Spalding Stark: Thank you all for coming.
āŖ Afraid we got complacent
Stark: I know it wasnāt easy to get here ā
āŖ Micro-managing behaviors
Stark: ā in your current condition.
āŖ Painting shades of gray
Stark: On the bright side, you wonāt be in your current condition for much longer.
āŖ When darkness had an army
Stark: To be clear, the procedure that we suggest today has not been approved by the FDA. In fact, youāll each have to inject yourselves. Itās a crime for us to do it for you. We ask that you administer the treatment at the same time.
[ INJECTORS FIRING ]
āŖ They told you you could have everything
If you just believe
They gave you all the information ā
[ MARGARET LAUGHING ]
āŖ You could ever need
You often wonder if the choice ā
Margaret: Oh! Oh!
āŖ Is even yours to make
[ LAUGHTER ]
āŖ You hear it happens
If you get down on your knees and beg
[ LAUGHING CONTINUES, MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY ]
Assistant: Heās seizing.
[ RAPID BEEPING CONTINUES ] [ MEN GROANING ] [ FLATLINING ] [ GROANING CONTINUES ] [ PADDLES WHINING ] [ THUMP ] [ FLATLINING ] [ FLATLINING CONTINUES ]
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[ DOOR SLIDES SHUT ] [ INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS IN DISTANCE ] [ Liz speaks to Red in his pre-trial detention cell ]
Liz: Cooper talked to the Attorney General this morning. Officially, your Immunity Agreement never existed.
Red: They wonāt let me see Marvin Gerard.
Liz: Iām sure there are other lawyers.
Red: Iām being denied my counsel of choice.
Liz: A public defenderās been assigned for the arraignment. Did you hear what I said? Cooperās been ordered not to inform the court about the Task Force. Theyāre going to prosecute you.
Red: Of course they are. Theyāre political animals. In the short run, justice always loses to politics.
Liz: Arenāt you worried? Youāve been indicted for at least half a dozen capital offenses.
Red: Iām confident Iāll prevail. I want to talk about the news. The Marshals have been watching all morning.
Liz: Yeah, youāve been the top story on every channel.
Red: Iām not talking about me. There was a story about bodies found in a Virginia warehouse.
Liz: I saw that. Some kind of underground medical experiment?
Red: What if I told you I knew who conducted that experiment? His name is Dr. Spalding Stark, and heās the next name on the Blacklist.
Liz: Youāre facing the death penalty, and youāre giving us a case?
āā
[ Spalding Stark speaks with a patient ]
Stark: Rigidity. Bradykinesis. Yes. Iām certain our treatment can help.
āā
Red: Dr Stark presents as as renegade, a biohacker, devoutly dedicated to enhancing human life by hacking our genetics.
Liz: What do you mean he āpresentsā that way?
Red: He approached a company of mine about a year ago, asked for help acquiring some advanced gene-editing equipment. I must say, he was very convincing.
āā
Ames: [ SHAKILY ] Itās just so expensive.
Stark: I know. Iām sorry. But weāre doing this on our own, without the R&D budget of a big pharmaceutical powerhouse.
āā
Red: Some of our most revolutionary scientific achievements come from minds outside the mainstream. I helped him because I thought ā he was quite possibly a visionary.
Liz: And now?
Red: And now there are five dead bodies in a warehouse suggesting otherwise. Now I fear Stark may be the worst kind of charlatan, the kind who preys on the weakest among us for his own financial gain.
āā
Ames: My- My daughterās pregnant. I want to see my grandchild. [ BREATHING SHAKILY ] I can get you the money.
Stark: Hm.
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[ Courthouse ] [ DOOR CREAKS ]
Court Clerk: All rise! United States versus Raymond Reddington. C-R 18-3656. Magistrate Judge Roberta Wilkins now presiding.
Sima: Morning, Your Honor. Assistant US Attorney Michael Sima ā for the United States.
Lonnergan: Jerome Lonnergan from the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the accused.
Uh, waive reading of the rights and charges, ā but not the rights thereunder.
Judge Wilkins: So waived.
Sima: Your Honor, given the defendantās history, the government asks that he be remanded.
Judge Wilkins: Yeah, Iām gonna calendar this for a month from today.
Lonnergan: A month from today would be just perfect, Your Honor. Thank you.
Red: Y-Your Honor, may I be heard?
Judge Wilkins: I donāt recommend it, Mr. Reddington. You have an attorney. I strongly suggest you let him do the talking.
Red: And I would, Your Honor, no question, but given how quickly things are proceeding, I get the distinct impression that Jerry here has a bus to catch.
Judge Wilkins: Iām sorry. Are we moving too fast for you, Mr. Reddington?
Red: [ CHUCKLES ] Iām just saying there are important matters to discuss.
Judge Wilkins: Such as?
Red: Well, for starters, Your Honor hasnāt really considered the issue of bail.
Judge Wilkins: Sir, you have been a federal fugitive for nearly three decades, the FBIās Number One Most Wanted. You are the textbook definition of a flight risk and a danger to the community.
Now, let me be clear ā even if you were prepared to submit every last dollar in circulation on the planet, I still wouldnāt grant you bail, ever.
Red: Okay. I, for one, feel better knowing it was considered.
Judge Wilkins: Anything else?
Red: Iām afraid so. May we approach?
Judge Wilkins: Carefully.
Red: You hang here, Jerry. This will only take a sec.
Judge Wilkins: Look at my face, Mr. Reddington. Iām not amused.
Red: And I assure you, neither am I. But the fact remains the prosecution has intentionally failed to inform the court of a critical factor in this case.
Judge Wilkins: And that is?
Red: My Immunity Agreement with the federal government, an agreement that expressly covers the charges before you and protects me from overzealous beavers like Mr. Sima and his bosses.
Judge Wilkins: Good Lord. Youāre a confidential informant. Mr. Sima?
Sima: I-If If thereās an agreement, I havenāt seen any evidence to prove it.
Judge Wilkins: Thatās hardly a denial. Mr. Reddington, is there anything you can offer this court to support the existence of an Immunity Agreement?
Red: Assistant Director Harold Cooper of the FBI is here. He may be able to shed some light on the matter.
Judge Wilkins: Assistant Director Cooper, step up, please. Sir. Mr. Cooper, Iām going to ask you this once and only once. To your knowledge, is there currently an Immunity Agreement in place with this defendant? Yes or no?
Cooper: Yes.
Judge Wilkins: Chambers, all of you, now!
[ GAVEL POUNDS ]
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[ DOOR CREAKS LIGHTLY ]
Judge Wilkins: [ SIGHS ] You. Talk.
[ DOOR CLOSES ]
Cooper: I run a task force. Officially, it doesnāt exist. Its purpose is to arrest high-priority targets using intelligence obtained from Mr. Reddington.
Judge Wilkins: So, Main Justice made a deal with the devil himself?
Red: [ LAUGHS ] Shouldnāt judges at least pretend to be impartial?
Sima: Your Honor, as I said, if such a deal existsā
Red: Oh, it exists. Harold and I have been at this for over five years now. Of course, some of the people who originally approved it are either dead or have moved on, leaving Director Cooper to deal with the cover-their-asses crowd, who, by the way, are perfectly happy to milk this cow all the way to the slaughterhouse. Iām sure the first question they asked in response to my arrest was whether I could still continue to be an effective asset while locked up in jail ā am I right, Harold?
Judge Wilkins: Mr. Cooper, you tell your superiors at Main Justice that I just ordered a hearing on the scope of the agreement, and I want a copy of it on my desk today. I canāt rule on a contract I havenāt seen. Understood? Good. Weāll reconvene in the morning. Mr. Reddington, you have an attorney sitting out there who has no idea what heās gotten into. I suggest you fill him in.
Red: Actually, I donāt think thatāll be necessary.
Judge Wilkins: Why is that?
Red: Because after careful consideration of the circumstances, I feel it more prudent to represent myself.
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[ Aram is at the Post Office talking to Samar and Ressler in their vehicle ]
Aram: His name is Spalding Stark. This guy is, like, a total icon in the biohacking community.
Samar: There are icons in the biohacking community?
Aram: Oh, yeah. Iāve been reading about this guy for years. I saw a live stream in 2009 where he injected himself with a homemade malaria vaccine.
Ressler: Why would he do that?
Aram: To prove that it was safe. The FDA wouldnāt authorize human trials without a ton of red tape. So ā get this ā the plan was to inject himself with the vaccine, then let an infected Anopheles mosquito bite him ā live.
Samar: And it worked?
Aram: No. He suffered a catastrophic hyper-immune response. Paralyzed half his face along with his left arm and leg.
Ressler: And that makes him an icon?
Aram: Yeah. He put his body on the line to to improve the human condition.
Samar: Well, he didnāt stop there. If Reddingtonās right, he just killed five of his patients.
Ressler: You really think thatās why he gave us this case?
Aram: Meaning you donāt?
Ressler: Heās in federal prison about to start the legal fight of his life. I donāt know why this guyās a priority, but I guarantee weāre not getting the whole story.
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[ Culpepper County VA ]
[ RADIO CHATTER ] [ VEHICLE DOORS OPEN ] [ VEHICLE DOORS CLOSE ]
Ressler: Officer Flynn? Agents Ressler and Navabi.
Officer Flynn: Captain said youād be coming down.
Ressler: Bodies still inside?
Flynn: Yes, sir. And we also kept the building owner on site, just like you asked.
Ressler: Excuse me, Warren Kirby? We understand youāre the one who called 911?
Warren Kirby: Yeah. Yes, sir. Sorry, still a little shaken up by what I saw in there.
Samar: What can you tell us about what happened?
Kirby: [ SIGHS ] Not much. I mean, I-I donāt really know. I own the building. Itās a storage space. Generally, I rent it out month-to-month.
Ressler: So it was rented?
Kirby: Several days ago by a guy named Stark. I never met him. Just called the office and booked it. Said he wanted to store medical equipment. I came by this morning to check on things, make sure everything got loaded in okay, and [ SIGHS ] nobody was here. The front door was unlocked. I went in, and thatās when I saw the bubble and the bodies.
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[ Inside the storage facility ]
Ressler: Dr. Maguire. What have we got?
Dr. Maguire: Well, we still have to I.D. two of the bodies, but the others were suffering from end stages of MCDD. Itās, uh, Motor Cortex Degenerative Disease.
Ressler: So these people were already dying.
Dr. Maguire: Yes, but the question is, what were they injected with, and whyād they all die so fast?
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[ Spalding Starkās office ]
Stark: Youāre all set, Mr. Ames. We received your wire transfer. Our preliminary exams all indicate that youāre an excellent candidate for my new treatment.
Ames: How does it work exactly?
Stark: Your disease is caused by multiple chromosomal defects. I identified them and created a viral payload that has all of the genetic material [ CLEARS THROAT ] in its corrected order.
[ Starkās assistant, Dr Ethan Webb, beckons to Stark ]
Stark: [ To Ames ] Excuse me.
[ They step aside ]
Stark: [ WHISPERING ] What?
Dr Ethan Webb: [ WHISPERING ] Look, I know you want to continue, but afterā
Stark: Iām not stopping. Last time was my mistake. I pushed too far. We can make adjustments.
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[ At the storage facility ]
Dr McGuire: Ohh! Looks like somebody forgot something. Looks like part of a jet injector. The force of his weight must have broken it apart.
Samar: Is that how Stark administered the medication?
Dr McGuire: Yes, but I donāt think Iāve ever seen one quite like this. Itās custom. Itās very sci-fi.
Samar: I can show it to Aram, see if he knows someone who can help figure out where it came from.
Ressler: Iāll reach out to an expert on MCDD. We really need to know what weāre dealing with here.
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[ Cooperās office ] [ DOOR OPENS ]
Liz: Are you really gonna give her a copy of the agreement?
Cooper: Judge Wilkins is waiting. Iām not sure I have much choice.
Liz: Donāt.
Cooper: If I donāt, Reddington goes to prison. Maybe worse. And this is just step one. I have to testify tomorrow, convince the court heās worth saving.
Liz: He used you. Your decency. He knew you wouldnāt lie about the Immunity Agreement. He knew youād rather violate a direct order and damage your own career instead.
Cooper: Liz, the Reddington deal exists. The kind of government willing to pretend it doesnāt, to deny facts and make reality whatever it says is reality I rejected, and I wonāt be part of it. Iām just going to tell the truth.
[ DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS ] [ DOOR OPENS, CLOSES ]
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[ Crown Life Pharmaceuticals ]
CEO Pascal: Parkinsonās, Alzheimerās, ALS, lymphoma, rheumatoid arthritis you name it. Chances are, we have a substantial market share of the drugs sold to treat it.
Ressler: And that includes Motor Cortex Degenerative Disease.
Pascal: Crown Lifeās the leading manufacturer of Sensiprex, what most neurologists would call state-of-the-art when it comes to MCDD treatment.
Ressler: So itās effective?
Pascal: To a degree. Nobodyās discovered a cure yet. All we can do is manage the symptoms.
Ressler: Iām sorry, but have you ever heard of a biohacker named Spalding Stark?
Pascal: Donāt think so. Why?
Ressler: We think heās out there, telling end-stage MCDD patients heād made some kind of a breakthrough.
Pascal: Patients get desperate. Theyāre willing to believe anything. You got no idea how many crazy characters are trying to push the envelope.
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[ HORN HONKS IN DISTANCE ] [ Samar and Aram climb the steps to a residence ]
Samar: So, who is this guy again?
[ DOORBELL BUZZES ]
Aram: Uh, just a friend. We trade ideas sometimes online. Oh, um donāt stare at his head. He hates that.
[ DOOR OPENS ]
Biohacker: Buddy, you made it! Come on in. We just ordered hot wings.
Aram: Oh, no way. Um, this is, uh, Samar. Uh, Agent Navabi.
Biohacker: Sheās staring at my head. I hate that.
Samar: Iām sorry. You have aā
Biohacker: NFC chip in my forehead, yeah. And two more in my hands. Turns on my lights, computers, and has my credit-card info.
Aram: So, what are you guys working on?
Biohacker: Uh, Gruberās still trying to edit his own DNA, increase his muscle tone. Itās a work in progress. Uh, these two guys are using CRISPR, playing around with a viral attack for leukemia. Also we got, like, 20 minutes before āAmerican Ninja Warrior.ā
āā
CEO Pascal: Weāre in a new stage of research. Itās not just Big Pharma and top academics anymore. Amateurs are cloning DNA, editing genomes. Teenagers are getting centrifuges for Christmas. Got labs in their bedrooms. Itās terrifying.
āā
Biohacker: Damn right Big Pharmaās terrified. They should be. Weāre the cutting edge now, and they know it.
āā
Pascal: They think theyāre cutting edge, but thereās no oversight and no regulation.
āā
Biohacker: Regulation? What about innovation? How many brilliant minds have been stifled by the FDAās onerous requirements? We are the future. I mean, maybe not anyone in this room, but you get the idea. [ Offers some hot wings ] Here. Help yourself.
Aram: Sweet. Um, actually, uhā we gotta run. I, uh I just came by to, uh, see if you had anything for us on that broken injector gun. You got that photo I sent, right?
Biohacker: Yeah, itās a pretty distinctive model. I-I think I know who sells it. A company called NexHack. Um. [ THUMPS LIGHTLY ] [ BEEPING ] ā [ KEYS CLACKING ] ā Yeah, here we go.
Itās fairly new. These are the founders and the guys who funded development.
Samar: Oh, my God. Thatās Warren Kirby.
Aram: Who?
Samar: Heās the owner of the storage facility. He found the victims and called 911. He lied to us.
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Judge Wilkins: For the record, I have reviewed the Immunity Agreement. The courtroom has now been cleared to protect the defendantās role as the confidential informant. This hearing is sealed in accordance with the Classified Evidence Protection Act. Mr. Reddington has called Assistant Director Harold Cooper to the stand. The witness has been sworn in. Mr. Reddington, Iām ready if you are.
Red: Thank you. Hello, Harold. Thank you, by the way.
Cooper: For what?
Red: Being honest. I regret I had to rely upon your integrity just to get this hearing. I wish thereād been an easier way.
Asst US Attorney Sima: Objection.
Red: I havenāt even asked anything yet.
Judge Wilkins: Something tells me thatās the objection. Do you have a question for Director Cooper?
Red: Just one, Your Honor, and itās this. Would you do it again?
Cooper: Excuse me?
Red: The deal we made ā my cooperation in exchange for my freedom. As the man who oversaw the arrangement in all its grand and often gory detail, would you do it again?
Cooper: Yes.
Red: Why? Sorry, I had two questions.
Cooper: Because it saved lives. I donāt know how many since we started. Maybe thousands.
Sima: Objection! Move to strike.
Red: Oh, for goodness sake.
Sima: Your Honor, I fail to see how this witnessās subjective assessment of the agreement has any relevance to its scope as a matter of law.
Judge Wilkins: Overruled.
Red: Objection.
Judge Wilkins: On what grounds? I just ruled in your favor.
Red: Your Honor, I object to almost everything about him, beginning with his power tie ā and ending with his general demeanor.
Judge Wilkins: Enough.
Sima: Objection.
Judge Wilkins: Mr. Reddington, if you are going to insist on representing yourself, you will conform yourself to the rules of the court.
Sima: Thank you, Your Honor.
Judge Wilkins: Same goes for you, Counsel. Let the witness speak.
Cooper: We made this deal for one reason ā so you could help us find those criminals we never knew existed. And youāve done that. Violent people, evil people are dead or in prison because of you. In some cases, we recovered dangerous weapons or avoided catastrophic outbreaks.
Sima: Your Honorā
Cooper: Let me finish! A few years ago, we learned some of those criminals were inside our own government ā the Attorney General, a National Security Advisor, the very people our country depends on to maintain law and order. To be clear, none of that would have happened without Mr. Reddington. So, would I do it again? Youāre damn right I would.
Red: Nothing further, Your Honor.
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Ressler: You lied to us, Mr. Kirby. You said you never knew Mr. Stark.
Kirby: Thatās the truth.
Samar: So, itās a coincidence that Stark was using a jet injector made by a company that youāre invested in?
Kirby: Okay, look. M-Maybe I do know him. But I swear, I wasnāt there whenā
Ressler: If you were working with him, conning those people out of their money, youāre an accomplice, and that means youāre gonna be charged with five counts of murder.
Kirby: No, no, no, no. You donāt understand. I wasnāt in this for money. This was personal. I was diagnosed with MCDD almost 11 years ago. Stark was my pharmacist at Greene Drugs, and I used to see him when Iād go in to get my meds. He could see I was getting worse. My body wasnāt responding to the existing treatments anymore. One day, he asked if I might be open to a more experimental approach.
Samar: Youāre saying that Starkās treatment cured you?
Kirby: He came to me a few weeks ago. Asked me to lend him my warehouse so he could expand his work. When I went to the warehouse and saw what happened ā Stark was already gone. [ SIGHS ] I didnāt know what to do. Iām telling you, Spalding Stark isnāt a con man. He documented my case. I have copies of the files. I can show you. Heās the only reason Iām alive.
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Sima: You are aware that the defendant has been indicted on multiple counts of treason?
Cooper: I am.
Sima: For selling this nationās most highly-classified secrets, ā for betraying our country?
Cooper: Yes.
Sima: Youāre aware that, for almost 30 years, heās maintained a vast criminal empire ā that the charges against him as the ā [ PAPERS RUSTLE ] so-called āConcierge of Crimeā are so extensive and so heinous, they occupy a unique place in our countryās history?
Cooper: Iām aware of the allegations.
Sima: Iām sorry. Allegations? Is it your position that the defendant is innocent?
Cooper: Until proven guilty. Or is it your position that I should ignore the Constitution?
Sima: My position, sir, is that some people are irredeemable, that a deal granting immunity to a man like Reddington is beneath the dignity of a country that prides itself on the rule of law.
Red: Objection. Heās arguing with the man, and, frankly, being incredibly self-righteous.
Judge Wilkins: Sustained the first part, the arguing. Move on, Counsel.
Sima: [ To Cooper ] Sir, is there no one you wouldnāt make a deal with? If not this defendant, is anyone too offensive to be given a free pass by your standards?
Red: Well, now heās just being insulting.
Judge Wilkins: I said move on, Counsel.
Cooper: To be clear, nobody gave Mr. Reddington a free pass. He has to earn his freedom. There are rules he has to abide by.
Judge Wilkins: I see. And does he abide by them?
Cooper: Yes.
Judge Wilkins: Really? So, to your knowledge, he hasnāt committed any crimes since becoming your informant.
Cooper: I wonāt discuss specific cases. What we do is classified and often involves matters of national security.
Sima: Okay, Your Honor
Judge Wilkins: You opened the door to this, Director Cooper. Does he abide by the rules or not?
Sima: Iāll ask you again. To your knowledge, has Raymond Reddington committed any unsanctioned crimes since becoming an informant for your task force?
[ DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS ] [ Flashes to: Red shooting Diane Fowler, Mr Kaplan, Sutton Ross ~ (Note: These are from Redās perspective, not Cooperās) ]
Cooper: I have no direct knowledge that he has. No.
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Ressler: Is there any idea which way Wilkins is leaning?
Cooper: [ INHALES DEEPLY ] Could go either way. I thought sheād rule after my testimony yesterday, but she wants to hear arguments first.
Liz: The courtroomās been cleared. We canāt even watch.
Cooper: Itās up to Reddington now, which means weāre back and free to lend a hand on Stark.
Samar: So far, we know that Stark worked as a pharmacist in one of the Greenes here in D.C. Thatās how he met Kirby. Itās also how he established contact with the five victims from the warehouse.
Ressler: Greene is a national chain. Stark was accessing its database and reaching out to patients with advanced MCDD.
Cooper: Iām guessing those five werenāt the only ones. Letās follow up, see how many people he contacted. Thereās a chance heās done other experimental trials. We could have more bodies out there.
Liz: Iāll do it. Iām going crazy ā waiting to hear about Reddington.
[ FOOTSTEPS ] [ Aram enters ]
Aram: Guys, guys. I went through Kirbyās files. Everything he told us is true.
Ressler: But Starkās treatment works?
Aram: It all started with his own injuries. That malaria vaccine he developed? It damaged his motor cortex, which is why he started studying all this stuff in the first place. And he documented everything ā how he mapped out the multi-allelic defects, how he developed a viral payload designed to produce hybrid cells with corrected genomes.
Samar: You honestly believe he cured Kirbyās condition?
Aram: He reversed it, no question.
Liz: So, Reddingtonās first impression was right. Starkās a visionary.
Cooper: If thatās true, what happened at that warehouse?
Aram: I had the same question, so I went down to the forensics lab and got a copy of the preliminary tox report. You wonāt believe what they found.
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Kirby: Sabotage?
Samar: This is the treatment formulation used by Stark on you. This is the one that was used on the five victims from the warehouse.
Ressler: Theyāre identical. Except for one key component, an extremely rare nerve agent called āCylovex.ā
Kirby: A nerve agent?
Ressler: Thatās what killed those people. And whoever put it in there didnāt expect the toxicology lab to find it, and for good reason.
Samar: Normally, Cylovex wouldnāt be on anyoneās radar, but with all the news of the Russians allegedly using Novichok in England, the FBI lab is on high alert for anything like it now.
Kirby: Stark has a partner. His name is Ethan Webb. He synthesizes all of Starkās formulations, including mine. Ethan wouldnāt do it. Never.
Samar: Why not?
Kirby: I just told you, theyāre partners. Theyāre also friends. I-I donāt believe Ethan would kill those people.
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Asst US Attorney Sima: Can you imagine ā immunity for Raymond Reddington? Immunity for a man who betrayed America, for Number One on the Most Wanted List, thousands of crimes, and how many victims? I-I canāt even guess. This wasnāt a deal. It was a conspiracy. An unjust and illegal conspiracy to deprive the American people of justice. There is nothing this defendant can do now that will erase the memory or the impact of what heās already done. Your Honor, this court has the power and the obligation to reject government conduct that shocks the conscience, conduct so outrageous, it offends the ācanons of decency and fairnessā that define our civilized society, and thatās exactly what this agreement does. This agreement should be void as a matter of public policy. Throw it out. Tell the defendant no more. Justice demands no less.
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[ KEYS CLACKING ]
Aram: All right, thatās him ā Dr. Ethan Webb, and according to his profile, heās a synthetic biologist and a molecular virologist. And guess where he used to work.
[ KEYS CLACKING ]
Ressler: Crown Life. Thatās the company that I just met with. Theyāre the leading manufacturer of MCDD medication.
Samar: He used to work for Big Pharma?
Aram: Until about two years ago when he was fired and left the company in disgrace.
Cooper: Fired for what?
Aram: Stealing proprietary data. They suspected he was working on a cure on his own. That must be when he partnered up with Stark.
Samar: I donāt understand. If they were working together, why would he sabotage their progress?
Ressler: If there is a cure, itās gonna be worth a lot of money, so maybe Webb wants it all to himself.
Cooper: Somethingās off. I still feel like weāre missing something.
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[ Courtroom ] [ Red pours himself a glass of water ] [ LIQUID POURING ] [ Slowly, he takes two sips, then stands ]
Red: [ EXHALES DEEPLY ] [ CLEARS THROAT LIGHTLY ] [ BREATHES DEEPLY ] This decision was made many years ago. The fact is, a small group at the Department of Justice did their due diligence, and with the blessing of the Attorney General and Legal Counsel at the White House, they concluded that the benefit that law enforcement and, consequently, the American people would gain from my assistance would exceed that of the rather abstract benefit of seeing a man of my alleged infamy being punished in a public fashion.
āāThere can be no question they were legitimately exercising their prosecutorial discretion. They made a judgment call. One that apparently offends Mr. Sima, and, clearly, heās not alone. Iād imagine there are any number of people from prosecutors to plumbers who, despite knowing virtually nothing about me or the events of the last five years, nonetheless would find my arrangement with the government wildly unacceptable, and to be clear, thatās fine. Debate and disagreement are at the core of any true democracy. Argument is necessary. Perfectly reasonable juries will often differ.
āāOn a side note, I once went fly fishing for a cutthroat trout in the Roaring Fork Valley, where, inexplicably, I stumbled upon uh, Justice Antonin Scalia may God rest his soul and, boy, did [LAUGHING] we have some real barn burners. My word, that man could argue. Six hours, hip deep in whitewater, and with all the yelling, neither of us got so much as an alevin.
Sima: Objection, Your Honor. Whatās the point of all this?
Red: The point, Mr. Sima, is that your outrage doesnāt concern me. What concerns me is that the powerful men and women who made this deal and those who reaped the benefits of it for years actually considered it an option to deny its existence. They decided to say that what happened never happened.
āāThe sad fact is, the facts have never mattered less than they do today. Weāre living in a time when truth has been so diminished in value that even those at the top of government are quite comfortable with truth being whatever they can convince people to believe. That is what I find wildly unacceptable. The truth certainly matters, Your Honor, in rooms like this most of all. And the truth is, whether you or he or anyone else likes it or not, that Immunity Agreement exists.
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Liz: Guys, we got a problem. I did what you said, followed up to see if Starkās contacted any other patients using the Greene Drugs database.
Aram: Donāt tell me heās done this before.
Liz: No, I donāt think he has done it before, but he is definitely about to do it again. Heās reached out to a handful of late-stage MCDD patients over the past few days. Heās conducting another trial. I talked to one of the patientās wives. Itās happening today in a storage facility in Highland Park.
Cooper: Get there, the three of you. Agent Mojtabai, notify local PD. If Webb sabotaged those doses, all those people are about to die.
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[ The storage facility in Highland Park ]
Spalding Stark: Thank you all for coming.
[ Von Greyās ā« āPoison In The Waterā plays ]
[ ⬠Go to Full Lyrics ] or [ ⪠Tap square below twice to play ⪠]
āŖ Poison in the water
Danger in the well
Do not wander, shepherdās daughter
[ Stark steps aside to speak with Dr Webb ]
Dr Webb: Almost done.
Stark: Ethan. I know you didnāt want to do this.
āŖ Poison in the water, serpent in the garden
Stark: I know youāre only here because of our friendship.
Dr Webb: You donāt have to.
Stark: No, I do.
āŖ Guard the citadel
Stark: I-I want you to know ā how much I value our partnership.
āŖ Fruit is rotten
Stark: How much I appreciate you standing by me, no matter what.
āŖ There is a Judas among us
Dr Webb: I just need a minute to finish.
[ Stark leaves. Dr Webb reaches into his lab coat and takes out syringes and vials with the poison ]
āŖ There is a Judas among us
Nobody here we can trust
There is a Judas among us
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[ TIRES SCREECH ]
Ressler: FBI. What do we got?
āŖ Poison in the water
Officer: No visuals, no movement in or out. Tacticalās getting ready to blow the loading bay doors.
āŖ Danger in the well
Ressler: Do it now.
[ WEAPONS COCK ] [ The TAC squad runs toward the building ]
āŖ Do not wander, shepherdās daughter
Poison in the water
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Stark: As discussed, we need you to inject yourselves. We ask that you administer the treatment ā
āŖ Lead the lamb to slaughter
Stark: ā at the same time.
āŖ Poison in the water
[ Patients begin to shoot their njection guns ]
[ š„ EXPLOSION š„ ] [ The TAC team storms in ]
āŖ Poison in the water
Danger in the well
ā Letās see your hands!
āŖ Danger in the well
ā Everybody, show me your hands!
āŖ Do not wander, shepherdās daughter
Ressler: FBI. Everyone, freeze!
āŖ Poison in the water
Samar: Put those down now.
āŖ Poison in the water
[ MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY ] [ A patient begins to seize ]
[ Dr Webb runs. Ressler chases him ]
āŖ Danger in the well
Danger in the well
Do not wander, shepherdās daughter
[ The patient seizing falls off his gurney. Samar goes to him ]
Samar: [ Over comms ] Aram, we were too late.
āŖ Poison in the water
Samar: We have a patient down.
āŖ There is a Judas among us
There is a Judas among us
Nobody here we can trust
There is a Judas among usāŖ Poison in the water
[ Ressler catches up with Webb in a stairwell. They struggle ] [ GRUNTING ] [ Fighting escalates ]
āŖ Careful, shepherdās daughter
[ Webb tries to inject Ressler with the poison ] [ INJECTOR FIRES ] [ The injector gun misses Ressler ] [ GRUNTS ] [ The grappling continues until Webb tumbles down the stair well ] [ Ressler looks at the injector gun in his hand ]
āŖ Lead the lamb to slaughter
Poison in the water
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[ DOOR OPENS ] [ Cooper enters the courtroom and sits behind Red ]
Cooper: Judge Wilkins cleared us to be present for the ruling. Elizabeth is on her way.
Red: Thank you, Harold.
Court Clerk: All rise.
Judge Wilkins: So, here we are at the end of a hearing nobody wanted me to have about an agreement nobody wanted me to see. Itās times like these Iām grateful that federal judges are appointed for life. Iām not as brave as Director Cooper. I agree with Mr. Sima. There are certain actions that fall beneath the standard our citizens have the right to expect from a country that prides itself on the rule of law. I honestly donāt know whether Mr. Reddington is guilty of the multitude of crimes with which heās been charged. Heās never been tried. That is the problem.
To deem this deal the abomination that Mr. Sima would have me believe, Iād have to first accept that Mr Reddington is the monster heās alleged to be. Our Constitution requires otherwise. I donāt like this deal. But like it or not, the federal government has benefited from it for over five years. They canāt pretend they havenāt, and neither will I. Accordingly, this court finds Mr. Reddingtonās Immunity Agreement legally binding.
[ An assistant whispers to Sima ]
Sima: Objection, Your Honor.
Red: Thank you, Your Honor. We really should do this again some time.
Sima: Your Honor? May I be heard, Your Honor?
Judge Wilkins: Mr. Sima, your objection is noted. The agreement stands.
Sima: Then he violated it.
Judge Wilkins: Excuse me?
Sima: The agreement bars us from prosecuting the defendant unless he violated it. Under the terms, we would then have a right to declare it null and void.
Red: Oh, please. Violated it how?
Sima: The gun. When you were arrested, you had an unregistered weapon in your possession.
Red: But thatās a state crime.
Sima: Yes, right up until someone scratched the serial number off of it. That made it a federal offense.
Judge Wilkins: Heās right, Mr. Reddington. I donāt imagine this agreement lets you walk around with a defaced firearm. If you violated your obligations under the deal, youāve forfeited its protections.
Red: To prove that, the gun would have to be admissible in evidence.
Judge Wilkins: Why wouldnāt it be?
Red: Because the officer who seized it was conducting an unreasonable search and seizure.
Judge Wilkins: I see. I take it, then, that you are moving to exclude the gun and request a suppression hearing?
Red: I am, a-and I do.
Judge Wilkins: Granted. Well, look at that. Your wish came true. It seems we will get to do this again soon.
Ā
[ Liz and Cooper are outside Redās jail cell ]
Liz: The gun hearing is in a week. You have to argue that the officer that searched you didnāt have probable cause.
Red: Where are they taking me?
Liz: If the search was bad, the gun will be suppressed, and they canāt say you violated your deal.
Red: Elizabeth, Iāll be fine. Will you do me a favor and ask one of the Marshals where Iām being transported?
[ Liz leaves ] [ METAL DOOR OPENS, CLOSES ]
Red: Harold? What happened yesterday on the stand ā
Cooper: Itās done.
Red: You testified because you value the truth. I know it couldnāt have been easy.
Cooper: I protected myself and my team.
Red: Yes, well ā a lucky confluence of interests. I admit, for a moment, I thought you might decide that our time together should end.
Cooper: I considered it. You should know I gave Agent Keen that option, and she asked that we continue.
[ METAL DOOR OPENS ] [ FOOTSTEPS ]
Liz: The gun hearingās in two weeks. [ METAL DOOR CLOSES ] Until then, theyāre gonna transfer you to Colton. For security, they want you in an actual prison and not pre-trial detention.
Red: We can talk more once Iām settled.
Liz: I havenāt told you about Stark.
Red: You got him?
Liz: You were right about him. Apparently, heās brilliant. He was being sabotaged by his partner, a guy named Ethan Webb.
Red: And this Webb, he confessed?
Ā
[ An interrogation room ] [ Webb, bruised and battered, looks up from the table at Ressler ]
Ressler: I gotta say Iām kind of glad you pulled that injector gun. Means I get to add attempted murder of a federal agent to the homicides youāre gonna be charged with. Yeah, thatās right. We know about the Cylovex.
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[ A second interrogation room ]
Spalding Stark: You donāt have to believe me, but I was trying to help them.
Samar: I do believe you, Mr. Stark. Those people didnāt die because of your error. They were poisoned.
Stark: Poisoned?
Samar: By a nerve agent called Cylovex. Dr Webb betrayed you. [ Struggling for words ] He, um ā He ā Not subverted. He, um ā intentionally undermined your research.
Stark: Ethan wouldnāt. Why would he do that?
Ā
Dr Webb: Because he was never my partner.
Ressler: You two started working together after you were fired by Crown Life.
Dr Webb: I wasnāt fired from Crown Life. That was a lie ā a smokescreen designed by my bosses to enhance my credibility with the biohacking community. Make them believe I was a kindred spirit.
Ressler: You targeted Stark.
Dr Webb: I want a deal. If you expect me to testify against the company ā
Ressler: Any deal is gonna have to be approved by the US Attorney. Now, you tell us the truth, Iāll make sure they know you cooperated. Itās the best I can do.
Ā
[ Ressler has joined Samar and Stark ]
Stark: He was assigned to befriend me?
Ressler: Crown Life knew that you were working on MCDD. They were concerned that you might make a breakthrough.
Stark: So, they sent Ethan to sabotage my research and steal my ideas so they could mass market a cure.
Ressler: Crown Life doesnāt want to market your cure. They want to bury it. The company makes billions providing the drugs to treat MCDD. They can make 10 times as much treating it over years as they can selling a one-time cure. Iām gonna go get a warrant for the company. Webb gave us the names of everyone involved.
[ Ressler leaves ] [ DOOR CLOSES ]
[ Gregory Alan Isakovās ā« āWhere Ya Gonna Goā plays ]
[ ⬠Go to Full Lyrics ] or [ ⪠Tap square below twice to play ⪠]
Stark: Am I being sent to prison?
Samar; Probably, but not for long. Youāll have to answer for the bodies left at the warehouse, but, otherwise, your part in this wasnāt criminal.
Stark: Ethan and I were a good team. He had me so fooled.
Samar: Iām sorry. Sometimes itās the people closest to you you have to watch out for.
āā
[ Liz and Red talk through the bars of Redās cell ]
āŖ Where you gonna go
Like that
With the holes in you?
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[ At Crown Life Pharmaceuticals, Ressler enters with a team of police. Mr Pascal stands ]
Ressler: Mr. Pascal. We meet again.
[ Pascalās ankles are shackled ]
Ā
āŖ With the holes in you
Where you gonna go
[ Red is being transported ]
āŖ Like that
With the holes in you?
With the holes
Ā
[ Liz is musing at her desk ] [ KNOCK ON DOOR ] [ Itās Dembe ]
Liz: Oh, hey, come in.
Dembe: Cooper told me about the gun hearing. I donāt understand. You know Raymond always carries a weapon.
Liz: That doesnāt make it legal. Around here, when it comes to Reddington, we kind of see what we want to see. Are you okay?
Dembe: Iām confused.
āŖ With the holes in you
Dembe: Someone betrayed us, and I havenāt been able to figure out who.
āŖ Jump the gun
Liz: If thereās anything I can doā
Dembe: Actually, there is something. Mr. Stark ā I need to speak with him privately for Raymond.
āŖ Run
Dembe: It cannot be recorded.
Liz: He always has his own agenda. What is it this time?
Ā
[ DOOR OPENS ] [ DOOR CLOSES ]
Dembe: Mr. Stark, we donāt have much time.
Stark: Dembe, how did youā
Dembe: I go where Mr Reddington sends me. Heās very concerned. He made a significant investment into your research. If you are unable to deliver on scheduleā
Stark: No, no. Tell Mr. Reddington Iām making progress. My situation here wonāt interfere.
āŖ Where you gonna go ā
Dembe: I certainly hope not. Mr Reddington is counting on you.
āŖ ā like that
With the holes in you?
With the holes in you
[ Samar is at her desk writing her report, with help from a thesaurus ]
Samar: Sabotage.
āŖ Where you gonna go ā
Samar: He sabotaged your research. Dr Webb betrayed you.
āŖ ā like that ā
He sabotaged your research.
[ Aram enters ]
Aram: Hey. Everything cool?
āŖ ā with the holes?
Samar: Yes.
Aram: Letās get out of here. I am starving.
Ā
[ METAL CLANGS ] [ Prison gates open. Transport vehicles enter ] [ ENGINE STOPS ]
[ RADIO CHATTER ]
MAN: Confirm yard recall.
MAN #2: Uh, 2-1-2 transport is in the lead.
MAN #3: We have another team over on ā
[ The door of the transport van opens ] [ Red gets out, squinting ]
Prison Official: Mr. Reddington, welcome home.
Ā
⬠go to top
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āāā 6:3 End The Pharmacist
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For S6 Episode 6:3 The Pharmacist šÆ EW recap ¤ š
Photo Gallery ¤ š¶ Music Videos ¤ š Script link: https://wp.me/pDKwi-8Wq [ āyou are hereā ]
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Trivia: Lukas Reiter was a writer for Boston Legal, the show in which James Spader starred along with William Shatner and Candice Bergen. Spader won three Emmys for Best Actor for the role of Alan Shore (The first Emmy was for playing the same role in the prior show The Practice.) In both series, Spader played a renegade but brilliant courtroom attorney not afraid to buck the system. Another Boston Legal alum, Jonathan Shapiro, is a producer of The Blacklist and has written several episodes. (Reiter is a Blacklist executive producer.) I would love to see Boston Legal revived once The Blacklist has run its course. ~ LB90
š [Return]
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š“ Episode Songs
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š¶ ā Check Tunefind for any additional music for this episode
ā« Footsteps
By Caught a GhostāŖ get out the door and smell the sulphur hanging in the air
get out to work turning the page as if thereās nothing there
I often wonder If I ever felt another way
Iāve never known another life, there goes another dayāŖ vaguely revolutionary songs and incantations
fighting battles from the basement
you slept through the alarm
afraid we got complacent micro managing behaviors
painting shades of grey
when darkness had an armyāŖ see the foolish ones still standing on the sides
see your schoolmates filing into different lines
but youāre a soldier, serve and protect with your heart
you hear the footsteps of evil boots on the marchāŖ itās an explosion but weāve got nothing to fear
when itās all over, weāll be still standing right hereV2
āŖ they told you you could have everything if you just believe
they gave you all the information you could ever need
you often wonder if the choice is even your to make
you hear it happens if you get down on your knees and begāŖ vaguely revolutionary songs and incantations at the devilās coronation
you slept through the alarm
afraid we got complacent photographing our vacations
playing with the light when darkness had an armyāŖ see the fools all lines up by the flashing lights
see your schoolmates all buying into different lies
but yourāre a soldier serve and protect with your heart
u hear the footsteps of evil boots on the marchāŖ itās an explosion but weāve got nothing to fear
when itās all over, weāll be still standing right hereš¹ Return to where this song occurs in script above
Lyrics and Credits: https://tinyurl.com/4wmjh272
YouTube: https://youtu.be/tCrW5lJTNcc
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https://youtu.be/^
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ā« Where Ya Gonna Go
By Gregory Alan IsakovāŖ Where you gonna go
Like that
With the holes in you
With the holes in youāŖ Where you gonna go
Like that
With the holes in you
With the holes in youāŖ Summer sun wonāt come
With the holes in you
With the holes in youāŖ Jump the gun
Run, run, runāŖ Where you gonna go
Like that
With the holes in you
With the holes in youāŖ Where you gonna go
Like that
With the holes in you
With the holes in youš¹ Return to where this song occurs in script above
Lyrics and Credits: http://bit.ly/2HiuIDg
YouTube: https://youtu.be/JG90PD6j_Lo
ā« Poison in the Water
By Von GreyāŖ Poison in the water
Danger in the well
Do not wander,
sheperdās daughter
Poison in the water
Serpent in the garden
Guard the citadel
Fruit is rotten,
move with caution
Serpent in the gardenāŖ There is a judas among us
Nobody here we can trust
There is a judas among usāŖ Poison in the water
Danger in the well
Do not wander,
sheperdās daughter
Poison in the water
Blood on the horizon
Blood along the tracks
Shadows rising, organizing
Marching in the night
Poison in the water
Careful shepherdās daughter
Lead the lamb to slaughter
Poison in the waterš¹ Return to where this song occurs in script above
Lyrics and Credits: http://bit.ly/2RoOYIl
YouTube: https://youtu.be/z4PgwzX6pAU
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š“ General
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ā Script 6:3 The Pharmacist https://wp.me/pDKwi-8Wq Status: īFINALī @NBCBlacklist #TheBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1084818396691214337/photo/1
ā Easy-Search Scripts updated thru Episode 6:3 The Pharmacist https://wp.me/pDKwi-8Mi#pharmacist #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1084842917330595840?s=20/photo/1
ā 6:3 The Pharmacist ~ A Twitter āMomentā https://twitter.com/i/moments/1086293782830768133
š“ Episode Photos
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ā Twitter Moment
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The photo collection from this episode is available in a Twitter āMomentā. You do not need a Twitter account. Just follow the link.
Twitter photos are higher resolution (1024 pixels vs 655 pixels or less on WordPress). Not all my edited photos can bear such scrutiny, but sometimes the WordPress results disappoint me.
I am not doing the Storybook or the Twitter āEpisode in Tweetsā feature for Season 6 due to the compressed broadcast schedule. But I love photo editing more than anything, so Iāll focus on photos from my ā” favorite ā” scenes.
This is the link to the Twitter Moment for this episode:
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The Blacklist 6:3 The Pharmacist
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ā Twitter Collage
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Robo-collage ā by Twitter. Search ā from:BlacklistDCd since:2019-01-11 until:2019-01-19 [6:3
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ā Links to Individual Tweets
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š£ ā« āPoison in the Waterā [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086281566899372032/photo/1
š£ Unsanctioned clinical trial [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist /https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086281765751345152photo/1
š£ Custom-made injection gun [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086281970739490817/photo/1
š£ Judge Roberta Wilkins [6:3 The Pharmacist] Becky Ann Baker #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086282156345823232/photo/1
š£ Listening to the charges [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086282407073013765/photo/1
š£ Cooper backs up Red [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086282610224128001/photo/1
š£ The halls of justice [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086282818630635520/photo/1
š£ A bow to the prosecution [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086283190870908930/photo/1
š£ Cooper on the stand [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086283410149122049/photo/1
š£ Red channels Alan Shore [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086283620426354690/photo/1
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š£ ⦠[6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086283851444424705/photo/1
š£ ⦠[6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086284075864748032/photo/1
š£ āThe truth certainly matters, Your Honorā [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086284408150204416/photo/1
š£ Persuaded? [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086284692524072961/photo/1
// Judge listens
š£ ⦠[6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086284897453568000/photo/1
š£ Reprimanded [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086285227146780680/photo/1
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š£ FBI raid [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086285566919041025/photo/1
š£ Viral attack [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086285787832946689/photo/1
š£ Ressler prevails [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086286031832403968/photo/1
š£ Dembeās request [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086286257175564290/photo/1
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š£ Red arrives at Colton Prison [6:3 The Pharmacist] #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1086286470325911552/photo/1
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