9-1-1: Lone Star may be over, but the franchise’s upcoming Tennessee spinoff seems eerily similar, for better or worse. The Texas-based offshoot of the franchise began in 2020, with Rob Lowe leading the 9-1-1: Lone Star cast as Captain Owen Strand, a firefighter who moves to Texas with his son, TK (Ronen Rubinstein). Together, the father-son duo build a firehouse in Austin, Texas following the disaster that killed the previous 126 crew, save for Judson “Judd” Ryder (Jim Parrack). Along with Judd, Owen assembles a dream team to respond to quirky and catastrophic emergencies in the greater Austin area.
Unfortunately, 9-1-1: Lone Star’s cancelation came after its fourth season aired, cementing the fifth entry as the last in the series. With other roadblocks, like Sierra McClain leaving the show and taking mainstay Grace Ryder with her, the final season of 9-1-1: Lone Star seemed doomed from the beginning. The Texas spinoff pulled no punches in its final episodes, introducing storylines like Tommy Vega (Gina Torres) discovering her breast cancer, Mateo Chavez (Julian Works) facing deportation, and Judd suffering from alcoholism. 9-1-1: Lone Star season 5, episode 12 resolved its biggest issues, but the series finale now feels moot.
Chris O’Donnell’s Captain Don Sharpe From 9-1-1: Nashville Is Too Similar To Lone Star's Owen Strand
A Captain Working With His Son Was One Of Lone Star's Main Selling Points
TK began the series working under his father as a firefighter, but he joined Tommy as a paramedic in 9-1-1: Lone Star season 2 and held that role until the series finale.
9-1-1: Lone Star’s ending gave Owen and TK their happy-ever-afters, but seeing the same dynamic at the heart of the next franchise entry makes the carefully crafted endings feel inconsequential. Even the traits that are meant to set Don Sharpe apart are immediately recognizable in other 9-1-1: Lone Star characters, like Don’s rodeo experience feeling reminiscent of Judd’s backstory and how he had Wyatt (Jackson Pace). The only aspect of the character that seems truly unique is that Don Sharpe is described as a devoted husband, breaking the 9-1-1 franchise’s silliest trend of captains starting the series as bachelors.
9-1-1: Nashville’s Captain Could Have Helped Set The Spinoff Apart From Lone Star
The Protagonist Could Have Ensured Some Originality
9-1-1: Nashville could’ve [had] a new kind of captain— a woman, a person of color, a younger firefighter who was just promoted— but instead it perpetuates the status quo with a predictable lead.
Following Peter Krause’s Captain Bobby Nash from the flagship series, Don Sharpe will be the third captain in as many series to be an aging white man with complicated family problems. Bobby, Owen, and Don could each individually be great protagonists for a standalone series, but them being presented as the protagonists sequentially in the 9-1-1 franchise implies a frustrating pattern. 9-1-1: Nashville could’ve easily made a name for itself by having a new kind of captain— a woman, a person of color, a younger firefighter who was just promoted— but instead it perpetuates the status quo with a predictable lead.
Lone Star's Cancelation Doesn't Make Sense If It's Replaced By A New 9-1-1 Show That's Very Similar To It
The Series Finale Now Feels Futile
Yet, after all the commotion surrounding Lone Star’s ending, 9-1-1: Nashville seems like it’s stealing the heart of the Texas spinoff and repackaging it under a different name. News of the second spinoff’s location broke after viewers had finally come to terms with 9-1-1: Lone Star season 5 being the end, meaning that 9-1-1: Nashville’s glaring similarities make the series at large feel like a consolation prize. There’s still time for 9-1-1: Nashville to prove it has something unique to add to the franchise, but it might never fully escape 9-1-1: Lone Star’s Texas-sized shadow.
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