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The Rookie: From Now On, Please Make That DOCTOR Nathan Fillion

Congratulations to The Rookie star Nathan Fillion, who announced receiving a doctorate from Concordia University over the weekend.


We've reached that point between seasons regarding our coverage of AMC and Showrunner Alexi Hawley's The Rookie. But even though we're cooling our engines production coverage-wise until the news hits that work on Season 8 is underway, that doesn't mean we're still not going to have some goodness from the show's universe to pass along. For example, Nathan Fillion hit us with the surprise news that he received a doctorate from Concordia University over this past weekend – and even shared some looks at the festivities.

The Rookie: From Now On, Please Make That DOCTOR Nathan Fillion
Image: ABC Entertainment; YouTube Screencap

"I'd like to address the rumors that I got a doctorate over the weekend. It's absolutely true. I did," Fillion began the caption to his post, which also included an image gallery from the event. "If anyone out there has any concerns that I'm going to be absolutely impossible to deal with from now on, that is also absolutely true. Thank you, Concordia University. What an honor (for Canadians- honour). I can't wait to correct people who call me Mr. Fillion. 'That's DOCTOR Mr. Fillion.'"

The Rookie: "Comfort" Network TV Needed Now More Than Ever: Hawley

In a piece published by Variety in late May, Hawley made an excellent argument about why network television shows matter now more than ever. At the end of his opening paragraph, he stated, "Network television has become comfort food for the anxiety generation." In terms of what he meant by "anxiety generation," Hawley noted that it wasn't specific to any one group (like Gen Z or Millennials), and that it applied who grew up over the past 20 years. From there, Hawley listed the high-level street factors that they've faced in that relatively short period of time, including 2007's financial crash, the global pandemic lockdown, and two terms of Donald Trump's presidency. It's during those times that long-running shows with large episode counts tend to see viewership numbers explode, from The Office and Parks and Recreation to Suits, Criminal Minds, Law and Order: SVU, and others. Why?

The Rookie
THE ROOKIE – "Mutiny And The Bounty" (Disney/Mike Taing) ERIC WINTER, DERIC AUGUSTINE, NATHAN FILLION, JENNA DEWAN

"Because the comfort is in the familiarity of the world and the characters, not the tone. It's in the close-ended structure of episodic storytelling where a comedic problem or a criminal investigation is launched, and both can be solved by episode's end. And it's in the sheer number of episodes. That factor is key. You can disappear in a show that has 100-plus episodes, rewatching whole seasons or jumping around from favorites to favorites while doing homework, putting on makeup, or cooking dinner. You can't do that with streaming shows — at least not yet," Hawley shared.

Hawley's defense of network television and its approach to the medium, as compared to how streaming services approach television, is a fascinating read that we can't do justice to here without just recopying word-for-word. What could prove interesting down the road is seeing just how much the streaming services might be learning the lesson. For example, HBO Max is already in production on a second season of Noah Wyle-starring The Pitt for a January 2026 return. If streaming series could begin ticking up the episode counts, networks may have bigger competition than they expected. But for now, Hawley speaks for a lot of folks (us included) when he argues that streaming shows aren't at that point yet where they can offer the kind of emotional embrace and mental escape that shows like The Rookie can – and that's why younger viewers are seeking them out.

"Sure, they might be fancier, but kids and young adults who are trying to find some calm in a world of chaos or regulate a panic attack that threatens to derail their day, aren't looking for fancy. They're looking for the solace they get from watching Leslie Knope and Ron Swanson bicker, knowing that Detectives Benson and Stabler are on the case while Jim is forever pranking Dwight," Hawley wrote to end his piece. "The way this younger generation watches television is different than those that have come before, and yet the shows they are watching — like 'The Rookie' (120 episodes and counting) — are old school in the best way."


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Ray FlookAbout Ray Flook

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought onto the core BC team in 2017.
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