The following is a list of episodes from the American television series Walker, Texas Ranger. A total of 203 episodes aired from April 21, 1993, to May 19, 2001. Although some sources identify the first four episodes aired at the end of the 1992–1993 television season, as the first season (making nine seasons in the series overall),[1][2] those episodes are included in the Season 1 (1993–94) DVD release and are not acknowledged as a separate season.
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
Pilot season | 4 | April 21, 1993 | May 1, 1993 | |
1 | 24 | September 25, 1993 | May 21, 1994 | |
2 | 25 | September 24, 1994 | May 13, 1995 | |
3 | 26 | September 23, 1995 | May 18, 1996 | |
4 | 27 | September 21, 1996 | May 17, 1997 | |
5 | 25 | September 27, 1997 | May 16, 1998 | |
6 | 23 | September 26, 1998 | May 22, 1999 | |
7 | 25 | September 25, 1999 | May 20, 2000 | |
8 | 24 | October 7, 2000 | May 19, 2001 | |
Television film | October 16, 2005 |
Episodes
Pilot Season (1993)
- This season was produced by Cannon Pictures, in the wake of Chuck Norris's movie Hellbound (which would not be released for another year); Cannon went out of business shortly thereafter.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "One Riot, One Ranger" | Virgil W. Vogel | Leigh Chapman as "Louise McCarn" | April 21, 1993 | 101 | 24.4[3] | ||||||
2 | 2 | ||||||||||||
Cordell Walker (Chuck Norris) is a contemporary Texas Ranger who believes in dealing with criminals the old-fashioned way: by beating them up and/or gunning them down. During a bank robbery in Fort Worth, Walker's partner Bob Mobley (Steven Ruge) is killed. It doesn't help that Walker's new partner, Ranger James Trivette (Clarence Gilyard), has a history with one of the robbery suspects. Ultimately, Walker discovers that the heist was a practice run for the simultaneous robbing of four banks...which all happen to be next door to each other. After a bank across town receives a valuable shipment, that bank is bombed but not robbed. Walker alone sees through the diversion and is pitted against the heist's mastermind: former Central Intelligence Agent Orson Wade (Marshall Teague). When not on said case, Walker helps three Russian circus performers - an acrobat and two jugglers - against a trio of goons who raped the acrobat, and who now want to run the Russians out of town. Villain: Orson Wade Notes:
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3 | 3 | "Borderline" | Michael Vejar | Robin Madden | April 24, 1993 | 102 | 17.1[3] | ||||||
While Tarrant County Assistant D.A. Alex Cahill is prosecuting cop killer Benny Carl Devlin (Ray Lykins), she gets a veiled threat from former Cuervo County sheriff Dewey Baker (Leon Rippy) – the first person she ever put away, because he routinely beat up suspects; he also terrorized anyone who complained about it. But Alex has no proof that Baker is the man who now stalks her, since Baker is having his former cellmate Duane Hopkins (Mark Walters) stalk Alex for him. Baker even kills Alex's horse, Amber. Then Baker kills Hopkins, whom he doesn't need anymore. Walker and Trivette spring into action when Baker abducts Alex and takes her to a remote cabin (not content with simply killing her outright). Villain: Dewey Baker Note: Leon Rippy would return to WTR for the 1997 episode "Days Past", and for the series finale in 2001, portraying a different role each time. | |||||||||||||
4 | 4 | "A Shadow in the Night" | Alexander Singer | J. Michael Straczynski | May 1, 1993 | 103 | 16.9[4] | ||||||
In Tokyo, powerful Yakuza director Mitsua Usagi (Danny Kamekona) is murdered by Karl Jaeker (John S. Davies) - the personal assistant of Congressman Leo Cabe (Andrew Robinson of Dirty Harry fame). The Yakuza pursue Cabe, whom Walker and Trivette are sent to protect; the Rangers soon wonder, however, if there's something Cabe isn't telling them. Meanwhile, Walker is reunited with his old friend Yoshihito "Yoshi" Sakai (Aki Aleong), whose father was a master of Sakai-Ryu karate; Walker was one of the elder Sakai's students. Walker discovers that Yoshi has joined the Yakuza...from whom Cabe and Karl have stolen some priceless Japanese artwork, in addition to slaying Usagi-san. Villain: Leo Cabe |
Season 1 (1993–94)
- This is the first season to be produced by Chuck Norris's own company, Top Kick Productions.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | 1 | "Bounty" | Vern Gillum | Frank Lupo | September 25, 1993 | 104 | 19.2[5] | ||||||
Bank robber Roy Buchanan is accidentally arrested, and then liberated. Now he has not only Walker and Trivette on his heels, but also homicidal bounty hunter Boone Waxwell (Bruce McGill). Walker races to prevent Waxwell from murdering Roy's brother Ned, who has unwittingly gotten involved. Villain: Boone Waxwell Notes:
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6 | 2 | "Storm Warning" | James Darren | Story by : Leigh Chapman (as "Louise McCarn") Teleplay by : Leigh Chapman (as "Louise McCarn") & Terry Grief | October 2, 1993 | 105 | 16.3[6] | ||||||
Trivette is up the river—and in very hot water—when he goes undercover in prison. He finds himself trapped with other convicts during a brutal escape attempt, while a hurricane is going on. Now Walker must find Trivette before he is exposed. Villain: Rollins (Richard Norton) Note: Richard Norton's previous roles include that of Chuck Norris's leading nemesis in The Octagon. | |||||||||||||
7 | 3 | "In the Name of God" | Michael Preece | Peter Lance & Terry D. Nelson | October 30, 1993 | 106 | 18.1[7] | ||||||
Alex tries to rescue a friend's daughter from a religious cult, but instead becomes another prisoner of the cult's charismatic leader. Villain: John Bodie (Frank Luz) | |||||||||||||
8 | 4 | "Crime Wave Dave" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | November 6, 1993 | 107 | 17.5[8] | ||||||
While searching for Billy Clancy (Tom Hodges), an escaped parolee that he helped before, Walker learns that Billy's parole officer Dave Kilmer (R.D. Call) has been forcing Billy to commit crimes. To protect himself, Kilmer abducts Billy's wife Frances (Marsha Dietlein) and son Billy Jr. (West Gibson) and Walker must rescue them before Billy is killed by the corrupt Kilmer. Villain: Dave Kilmer | |||||||||||||
9 | 5 | "End Run" | Michael Vejar | Rick Husky | November 13, 1993 | 108 | 15.6[9] | ||||||
The wedding of Ranger Hoss at the Ranger Office is interrupted by a courthouse breakout of gang leader Axel Tate (Cylk Cozart), during which Trivette subdues the leader of the break-out, who to Trivette's surprise is an attractive woman, Katherine 'Kat' Prather (Troy Beyer), Axel's girlfriend who was planning on leaving the gang life behind along with Axel. While Walker and Trivette transport the unruly Kat to testify in the out-of-state murder trial of Trigger Jenks (Gregory Scott Cummins) a gun smuggler who had in the past murdered a Ranger Captain who mentored Walker, Trivette struggles with his feelings for the dangerous woman who is being hunted by the now freed Axel and his gang which has been taken over by Trigger, who has ordered the reluctant Axel to kill his girlfriend, Kat to keep her from testifying against him. Villain: Trigger Jenks | |||||||||||||
10 | 6 | "Family Matters" | Tony Mordente | Frank Lupo | November 20, 1993 | 109 | 20.1[10] | ||||||
Walker clashes with Agent Escalanti (Marco Rodríguez) & the FBI after he arrests criminal Mickey Flanders (Benjamin Mouton) who feels himself to be above the law because of his sister Lainie Flanders's (Judith Hoag) involvement in the Witness Protection Program and he Trivette and Alex must find a way to ensure a conviction before the FBI sets him free. Meanwhile, Walker befriends a young boy named Archie (Brady Bluhm) after saving him from some bullies. Villain: Mickey Flanders | |||||||||||||
11 | 7 | "She'll Do to Ride the River With" | Andrew Stevens | Peter Lance | November 24, 1993 | 110 | 13.3[11] | ||||||
Dr. Victor Slade (Ken Kercheval), a veterinarian investigating the strange deaths of local animals is killed in what appears to be a drunk driving incident, and his daughter Ally (Cali Timmins) teams up with Walker and Trivette to prove otherwise. The three discover that an environmental waste company has been mixing toxic chemicals with waste oil and spraying them on roads in order to make a larger profit, and had Dr. Slade killed when he got too close to their scheme. Meanwhile, Trivette finds himself taking care of a dog named "Old Blue" after he and Walker save it from drowning after the hound was thrown into a lake. Villain: Nash | |||||||||||||
12 | 8 | "Unfinished Business" | Michael Preece | Harold Apter | November 27, 1993 | 111 | 19.3[11] | ||||||
A renegade vigilante Samuel J. Bodine (Sam J. Jones), a failed Texas Ranger applicant challenges Walker with his attempts to capture several escaped criminals, but he inadvertently endangers innocent civilians in the process. Meanwhile, Evie (Kim Myers), a young woman who works in the Ranger Office falls in love with a man named Tommy Williams, who unbeknownst to her, is actually the renegade vigilante Walker's looking for. Villain: Samuel Bodine Note: Sam Jones would return as a different villain - "Big Mick" Stanley - for another WTR episode, 1997's "Devil's Turf". | |||||||||||||
13 | 9 | "An Innocent Man" | Michael Preece | Charles Holland | December 4, 1993 | 112 | 15.5[12] | ||||||
Before a condemned man's execution, Walker finds new evidence that may clear the man's name. But when the man doesn't want to change his plea, Walker suspects blackmail, and must prove it before the man is put to death. Villain: Leon Muncie | |||||||||||||
14 | 10 | "Night of the Gladiator" | William A. Fraker | David H. Balkan | December 11, 1993 | 113 | 17.8[13] | ||||||
Diane, an old flame of Trivette's asks him to help her brother Randy who is involved with an illegal street fighting ring. Walker and Trivette join the gang by posing as street fighters, and Randy learns from them that the opponent he thought he had accidentally killed, actually died from a overdose of morphine. Though he realizes that his boss was responsible, Randy is forced to continue fighting when his boss kidnaps Diane to keep him in line, and Trivette must hold off Randy so Walker can use the opportunity to save Diane and put an end to the fights for good. | |||||||||||||
15 | 11 | "Legend of the Running Bear" | Michael Preece | Harold Apter | January 8, 1994 | 114 | 15.8[14] | ||||||
Walker's cousin, David "Little Eagle" Jackson, returns to the reservation after studying medicine to find that many do not like him, including his girlfriend's father (a member of the reservation's tribal council), whose murder he soon witnesses. Walker must clear his cousins' name when he is arrested for the murder by two corrupt FBI agents who framed him for murder of the tribal leader who they killed after he uncovers they conspired with a mining tycoon to steal land belonging to the reservation. | |||||||||||||
16 | 12 | "Something in the Shadows: Part 1" | Tony Mordente | Harold Apter & Gordon T. Dawson | January 15, 1994 | 115 | 19.1[15] | ||||||
Kurt Nypo, a powerful drug dealer, is attempting to get rid of Walker when he starts to get close. Nypo also has Tony Kingston, one of Walker's karate students (and whose mom he is dating), deliver the drugs. Meanwhile, the Rangers are working on locating a rapist at a college that Alex teaches at. | |||||||||||||
17 | 13 | "Something in the Shadows: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Harold Apter & Gordon T. Dawson | January 22, 1994 | 116 | 19.1[16] | ||||||
Tony is busted for delivering the drugs, but refuses to come forward to protect his mother. After Nypo puts her in the hospital, Tony attempts to take matters into his own hands, and Walker, who is being held captive must escape and bust Nypo and his drug lord boss. Meanwhile, the Rangers continue their investigation on the college rapist and suspect that a professor that Alex knows might be the rapist. | |||||||||||||
18 | 14 | "On Deadly Ground" | Tony Mordente | Rick Husky | January 29, 1994 | 117 | 18.7[17] | ||||||
Walker and Trivette, despite having no jurisdiction, travel to Mexico to rescue a captured D.E.A. agent, who is an old friend of Walker, from a Mexican drug cartel. | |||||||||||||
19 | 15 | "Right Man, Wrong Time" | Michael Preece | Chris Bunch & Allan Cole | February 5, 1994 | 118 | 18.8[18] | ||||||
Country singer Merrilee Summers (Mary Elizabeth McGlynn) needs Walker's protection from her estranged music producer ex-husband Waylon Hampton (Wings Hauser), who is stalking and threatening her. | |||||||||||||
20 | 16 | "The Prodigal Son" | Tony Mordente | Peter Lance | March 5, 1994 | 119 | 19.8[19] | ||||||
Walker does some soul searching after he nearly causes a young man's death during a hostage situation. He ends up helping another young man (Tobey Maguire), who is on the run for stealing drugs from a mob boss to impress his estranged father. | |||||||||||||
21 | 17 | "The Committee" | Michael Preece | Lawrence Hertzog | March 12, 1994 | 120 | 15.1[20] | ||||||
Walker is asked by Alex and an old Justice Department colleague of hers to go undercover and infiltrate the committee: a secret group of dirty law officials (cops, lawyers, and a judge) who use vigilante style tactics to kill criminals released due to legal procedures. To get in, he is forced to display a harsher attitude and put his career and life on the line to bust them. To top it off, one of their members, a public defender who Walker befriends, is marked as a target when she has second thoughts about the committee's actions, which puts them at risk of being exposed. | |||||||||||||
22 | 18 | "Deadly Vision" | Lee H. Katzin | B.G. Henry | March 26, 1994 | 121 | 17.8[21] | ||||||
Using a psychic to help locate a kidnapped 8-year-old girl earns Trivette ridicule from his fellow Rangers, except from Walker and C.D., who support his decision; but will it pay off? | |||||||||||||
23 | 19 | "Skyjacked" | Tony Mordente | Gregory S. Dinallo | April 2, 1994 | 122 | 15.4[22] | ||||||
While transporting a condemned man from Ohio to Texas, his friends hijack the plane and subdue Walker and Trivette, who must find a way to prevent his escape. | |||||||||||||
24 | 20 | "The Long Haul" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | April 9, 1994 | 123 | 19.1[23] | ||||||
Walker and Trivette go undercover to try to catch a gang of big rig hijackers. Note: An unbilled Debbie Barker portrays Callie, the lovely-but-shady truck-stop waitress. | |||||||||||||
25 | 21 | "Rampage" | Tony Mordente | Gregory S. Dinallo | April 30, 1994 | 124 | 17.1[24] | ||||||
C.D. must rescue Walker and Trivette when they are trapped deep inside Texas while tracking a band of law-breaking brothers. | |||||||||||||
26 | 22 | "The Reunion: Parts 1 & 2" | Michael Preece | Donald G. Thompson | May 14, 1994 | 125 | 15.4[25] | ||||||
27 | 23 | ||||||||||||
Walker and Trivette get help from a legendary Texas Ranger, back to seek justice for his murdered son, in tracking down an assassin with a U.S. Senator in his sights. (Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) *Walker Texas Ranger 3: Deadly Reunion | |||||||||||||
28 | 24 | "Stolen Lullaby" | Michael Preece | Julie Friedgen | May 21, 1994 | 126 | 18.8[26] | ||||||
Walker investigates the claim of a woman (Danica McKellar) whose baby has been kidnapped, that the baby has been seen in the possession of a politician. The investigation leads to a baby broker agency who has been stealing babies and conducting illegal adoptions for profit. Note: Danica McKellar previously co-starred as Jonathan Brandis's girlfriend in the 1992 Chuck Norris vehicle Sidekicks. |
Season 2 (1994–95)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | 1 | "Badge of Honor" | Michael Preece | Leonard Katzman | September 24, 1994 | 201 | 17.2[27] | |||||||
Trivette meets Beau Langley (Geoffrey Lewis), an old acquaintance of Walker, who is a sheriff in a small town and runs it with an iron fist and promotes racism among his deputies. When he gets real close to exposing Langley, Trivette is captured, and learns that with a young teenage boy he is to be put to death in a secret location where the remains of other captured prisoners are. With time running out, Walker must find a way to get someone to reveal what is going on, rescue Trivette and the boy, and put an end to the sheriff's racial tyranny. | ||||||||||||||
30 | 2 | "Branded" | Jerry Jameson | Calvin Clements Jr. | October 1, 1994 | 202 | 15.7[28] | |||||||
After a cattle inspector is killed by rustlers, Walker and Trivette work with the inspector's deputy to find those responsible, but the rustlers seem to be one step ahead of the Rangers. Walker suspects a mole, and must find a way to uncover it before the rustlers' trail gets cold. | ||||||||||||||
31 | 3 | "Silk Dreams" | Michael Preece | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | October 8, 1994 | 203 | 17.0[29] | |||||||
A deadly new designer drug sends Walker and Trivette out into the nightlife to seek its source. Meanwhile, Alex is having a recurring nightmare of Walker being shot, which is connected with this case. | ||||||||||||||
32 | 4 | "Mustangs" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | October 15, 1994 | 204 | 16.6[30] | |||||||
The death of a man who tried to bring Alex information on a plot to exterminate a group of wild mustangs leads Walker to a local ranch run by two brothers, Ned and Mitch Travis. The elder brother Ned, who is responsible is intending to get out of a lease agreement by getting rid of the herd (although Mitch is unaware of the murder). But when Walker gets too close, Ned and his gang are able to trap him in the badlands with no means of communication. Now, Walker must ride with the leader of the herd in order to turn the tables on them in time. | ||||||||||||||
33 | 5 | "Til Death Do Us Part" | Alexander Singer | Story by : Channing Clarkson & Sheree J. Wilson Teleplay by : Channing Clarkson | October 22, 1994 | 205 | 18.6[31] | |||||||
Walker winds up in a coma after trying to save a child from a car that teetered off a bridge following a hit-and-run crash. As Trivette and C.D. search for the culprits responsible, they and Alex reminisce about their individual histories with Walker as they pray for his recovery. | ||||||||||||||
34 | 6 | "Rainbow Warrior" | Jerry Jameson | Larry Brody | November 5, 1994 | 206 | 17.3[32] | |||||||
While attending the funeral of Chief Six Feathers, Walker learns that his death was not an accident, as he refused to turn over Cherokee land to a land developing company and his son and Walker's blood brother Billy Gray Wolf (August Schellenberg) is launching an act of vengeance against the man within the company who is responsible, and Walker must stop him before Billy goes too far, while Trivette looks into finding evidence to prove that Chief Six Feathers was murdered. | ||||||||||||||
35 | 7 | "The Road to Black Bayou" | Michael Preece | Story by : David Thoreau Teleplay by : David Thoreau & Calvin Clements Jr. | November 19, 1994 | 207 | 18.4[33] | |||||||
36 | 8 | 208 | ||||||||||||
Work-related stress builds so Walker, under doctor's advice, takes Trivette and C.D. to Cajun country for a fishing trip. But the vacation turns sour when local ruffians grow tired of the Rangers' presence and take desperate measures to conceal their drug trade. At the end of the second second part episode, Alex, Trivette and C.D. give a new gun to Walker as a present, a Beretta 92FS Inox, to replace his old weapon that he lost in the first part. Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode. | ||||||||||||||
37 | 9 | "Line of Fire" | Tony Mordente | Rick Husky | November 26, 1994 | 209 | 19.1[34] | |||||||
After receiving information about Dallas police officers dealing in drugs seized from a past bust, Alex receives a threat on her life. Walker and Trivette suspect that the assassination attempt is from a result of career criminal Mitch Cutter, whom Alex has been struggling to prosecute, and who also seems to be linked to the corrupt cops and stolen narcotics. They must prove it before Cutter can make another attempt to kill Alex. | ||||||||||||||
38 | 10 | "Payback" | Alexander Singer | Gordon T. Dawson | December 10, 1994 | 210 | 18.7[35] | |||||||
Corrupt banker Harper Ridland puts out a hit on Walker, already busy trying to locate a stolen van that is designed for a handicapped boy, as revenge for Walker killing his nephew, who was one of the men assigned to steal the special van. | ||||||||||||||
39 | 11 | "Tiger's Eye" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea | December 17, 1994 | 211 | 18.7[36] | |||||||
The Japanese yakuza kidnap the daughter of Jesse Morell, a Texas power broker in order to get revenge on his security chief Manzo Tokada. Tokada, a former Japanese policeman, previously infiltrated their gang before faking his death with Jesse's help after his cover was blown. However, Tokada refuses Walker's assistance, preferring to handle the task his way. | ||||||||||||||
40 | 12 | "The Big Bingo Bamboozle" | Michael Preece | Robert Wynne | January 7, 1995 | 212 | 16.9[37] | |||||||
A protected witness to a bingo game (that was actually a money laundering operation) keeps trying to escape protective custody. Walker must uncover the truth before they miss the trial that will incarcerate Ricky Ricketts (Robert Forster), the mastermind of the operation. Notes:
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41 | 13 | "Money Train" | Christian I. Nyby II | Rick Husky | January 14, 1995 | 213 | 17.3[38] | |||||||
Walker and Trivette chance upon a planned train robbery after Trivette gets the pair work on a movie set. | ||||||||||||||
42 | 14 | "Mean Streets" | Michael Preece | Mitchell Wayne Katzman | January 28, 1995 | 214 | 17.9[39] | |||||||
A masked group consisting of spoiled rich boys have chosen to clean up the streets their way by beating up the homeless. But when one of their attacks results in a homicide, Walker goes undercover as a homeless man to catch them before they can destroy a homeless shelter and kill a witness to the crime. | ||||||||||||||
43 | 15 | "Cowboy" | Christian I. Nyby II | Richard Stanley | February 4, 1995 | 215 | 21.2[40] | |||||||
Alex gets caught at the scene of an oil tycoon's abduction by career criminal Victor LaRue (Wayne Pére) and is rounded up as a hostage herself. Walker and Trivette set out to track down LaRue and save her and the other hostages before LaRue kills them all. | ||||||||||||||
44 | 16 | "War Zone" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | February 11, 1995 | 216 | 20.7[41] | |||||||
45 | 17 | 217 | ||||||||||||
A series of high-profile robberies puzzle the Rangers, but when one results in the death of Logan Reno, Walker's ex-partner, it becomes a personal crusade. As Walker works on helping Logan's two children (a rebellious teenage son and a State Trooper daughter who wants in on the case) cope with their loss, Walker and Trivette suspect that an employee of an armored car company that have been present during these thefts may be working with the robbers whom the Rangers discover are ex-military. (Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) | ||||||||||||||
46 | 18 | "Trust No One" | Tony Mordente | Teleplay by : Terry D. Nelson & Rick Kelbaugh Story by : Fred McKnight | February 18, 1995 | 218 | 18.6[42] | |||||||
Walker must clear the name of Trivette, who has been accused in the disappearance of $5 million in counterfeit money. | ||||||||||||||
47 | 19 | "Blue Movies" | Michael Preece | Calvin Clements Jr. | February 25, 1995 | 219 | 17.8[43] | |||||||
A judge is killed during a secret meeting with Alex and Walker, by a man who reveals to Walker that the one who ordered the hit is D.L. Dade (Howard Keel), a respectable businessman who has been keeping his true activities hidden from the law. Alex and Walker are forced to make a deal with the judge's killer in order to get his testimony to convict Dade. But after the killer himself is murdered to keep him from testifying, Walker remembering that the man said that Dade once made adult films, decides to track down one of the actresses a girl known by the stage name, "Candy Delight" suspecting that she was underage at the time. However, an informant in Alex's office is keeping Dade up to date on the Rangers' moves. Walker finds the actress is now a married woman with a husband and two young children, who is unwilling to testify about her past. Not wanting to ruin the woman's happy life, Walker chooses against convincing her to testify, but Dade is determined to get rid of witnesses, and Walker must save her from being killed by Dade's hitmen. | ||||||||||||||
48 | 20 | "On Sacred Ground" | Joe Coppoletta | Gordon T. Dawson | March 11, 1995 | 220 | 16.6[44] | |||||||
Walker investigates when Cherokee youths led by Tommy Bright Hawk, the son of Billy Gray Wolf (from the earlier Season 2 episode "Rainbow Warrior") steals artifacts from a museum, claiming they were illegally taken from their ancestral burial grounds. As Billy joins Walker to save Tommy, the two uncover a secret operation of smugglers stealing artifacts from Native American burial grounds that are being sold to museums for profit. | ||||||||||||||
49 | 21 | "Case Closed" | Tony Mordente | Steven L. Sears | April 29, 1995 | 221 | 19.8[45] | |||||||
Walker seeks to disprove 40 years of UFO sightings in a small, Texas town, while also trying to find the missing father of a young girl. | ||||||||||||||
50 | 22 | "Flashback" | Tony Mordente | Jim Byrnes | May 6, 1995 | 222 | 16.1[46] | |||||||
51 | 23 | |||||||||||||
Walker and Trivette pursue a group of robbery suspects/killers seeking the lost treasures of Hayes Cooper, a Wild West Texas Ranger. During the pursuit, Walker is attacked by a rattlesnake. Parts of the episode are "flashbacks" to Hayes Cooper, who with Lockett (played by Trivette/Gilyard), is pursuing a group of killers. (Notes: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) | ||||||||||||||
52 | 24 | "Standoff" | Michael Preece | Tom Blomquist and Rick Husky & Terry D. Nelson | May 13, 1995 | 223 | 17.7[47] | |||||||
53 | 25 | |||||||||||||
Walker (with the aid of a jet pack) and Trivette protect a Mexican Presidential candidate (Gregory Sierra) from a deadly assassin (Robin Sachs). (Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) |
Season 3 (1995–96)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
54 | 1 | "Blown Apart" | Tony Mordente | Terry D. Nelson | September 23, 1995 | 301 | 19.4[48] |
An escaped psychopathic prisoner named Max Kale (Ed O'Ross) goes on a spree, eager to kill people who helped put him away in prison—a list of people including Walker, Alex, a doctor named Jane Pine, a judge named Hollister, Max's ex-wife Angela, and the neighbors from the street where Max was raised. Now Walker must do whatever it takes to protect the people and put an end to Kale's rampage. | |||||||
55 | 2 | "Deep Cover" | Tony Mordente | Calvin Clements Jr. | September 30, 1995 | 302 | 19.5[49] |
While on loan to the DEA for a case, Walker and Trivette head to Miami, Florida, where Walker poses as a cocaine dealer to help break up a drug trafficking operation and rescue a cop that is being held hostage. | |||||||
56 | 3 | "The Guardians" | Michael Preece | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | October 7, 1995 | 303 | 17.5[50] |
When an undercover cop winds up dead, Walker goes undercover at an oil rig to locate The Guardians, a group of eco-terrorists that have infiltrated the rig with the intention of blowing it up. | |||||||
57 | 4 | "Collision Course" | Chuck Bowman | Jim Byrnes | October 14, 1995 | 304 | 18.6[51] |
C.D.'s niece is kidnapped by her ex-boyfriend (Brian Krause) who forces her into a string of bank robberies. Walker and C.D.'s pursuit of the pair becomes further complicated when a radio show host "Tumbleweed Tom", unaware of what's really going on, offers a bounty on their Bonnie and Clyde-style bank robberies, attracting the attention of people who want to collect this reward, even if it means killing them. | |||||||
58 | 5 | "Point After" | Joe Coppoletta | Story by : Ronald M. Cohen Teleplay by : Rick Husky | October 21, 1995 | 305 | 19.5[52] |
The Rangers' investigation of the murder of an assistant high school football coach leads to their discovery of a blackmail plot towards the team caused by an illegal high-stakes gambling ring and they must end it before the state tournament game the high school team had been preparing for starts. | |||||||
59 | 6 | "Evil in the Night" | Michael Preece | Tom Blomquist | November 4, 1995 | 306 | 20.0[53] |
Running Wolf, a malevolent medicine man (Billy Drago) resurrects after the desecration of his burial ground, and Walker must confront his past demons if he hopes to stop the spirit before he gets revenge. | |||||||
60 | 7 | "Final Justice" | Joe Coppoletta | Rick Husky | November 11, 1995 | 307 | 21.0[54] |
After learning that one of his parents' killers was never brought to justice, Walker finds a witness and goes undercover to locate the culprit. | |||||||
61 | 8 | "The Lynching" | Michael Preece | Nicholas J. Corea | November 18, 1995 | 308 | 20.2[55] |
In a small town, an elderly woman is murdered and a young mentally disabled man who was living with her (Eric Bruskotter) is accused of murdering her by a lynch mob (who is led by a vengeful father whose son was accidentally killed by the man several years earlier) which demands to settle it with vigilante-style justice. Walker and Trivette must prove his innocence before the mob extracts vengeance. Note: Eric Bruskotter, who plays Jonah Nelson in this episode, plays another character one season later in "Devil's Turf": Joey O'Bannon. | |||||||
62 | 9 | "Whitewater: Part 1" | Michael Preece | Lou & Liz Comici | November 25, 1995 | 309 | 20.6[56] |
Alex and Walker's whitewater rafting trip becomes a working vacation when one of the rafters is murdered. Meanwhile, Trivette and CD pursue an escaped convict...who's headed down-river in the same direction as Alex and Walker. Note: Parts 1 and 2 are shown as a single episode on the DVD release. | |||||||
63 | 10 | "Whitewater: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Lou & Liz Comici | December 2, 1995 | 310 | 22.1[57] |
See Part 1 above. Note: Parts 1 and 2 are shown as a single episode on the DVD release. | |||||||
64 | 11 | "The Covenant" | Tony Mordente | Teleplay by : Donald G. Thompson & Gordon Dawson Story by : Donald G. Thompson | December 9, 1995 | 311 | 22.1[58] |
A gang leader who is trying to start a turf war attempts to recruit one of Walker's karate students, Tommy Lopez, to his side. When Tommy refuses, the gang severely wounds his older brother Ernesto, a former member of theirs, in a drive-by shooting and frames a rival gang who they had shot just moments previously for it, and Walker must stop the rival gang from retaliating and igniting the turf war, as well as prevent Tommy, who decides to join Ernesto's old gang to get retribution for his brother's shooting (not knowing that they are actually responsible for it), from throwing his life away in an act of misguided vengeance. | |||||||
65 | 12 | "Rodeo" | Michael Preece | Babs Greyhosky | January 6, 1996 | 312 | 19.2[59] |
Victor DeMarco (Joseph Campanella), a mob boss who was put away in prison years ago, is given a new trial and intends to go free by using false witnesses. After his men kill two of the real witnesses, Walker and Trivette go undercover to protect the final witness, a rodeo rider who is an ex-boyfriend of Alex after he refuses protective custody. | |||||||
66 | 13 | "Flashpoint" | Aaron Norris | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | January 13, 1996 | 313 | 18.7[60] |
The IRA targets one of their own - Adam McGuire (Michael Beck), who now pleads for peace in Northern Ireland - for assassination. Instead the militants' leader is captured, and his son plots to free him. Notes:
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67 | 14 | "Break In" | Joe Coppoletta | Jim Byrnes | January 20, 1996 | 314 | 21.1[61] |
Walker and Trivette go undercover in a prison as a convict and a guard respectively to gather evidence on a convicted felon that had a key witness and two rangers murdered, but are unaware that the assistant warden and some of the guards are working for the felon. On top of all that, Trivette gets exposed, forcing Walker to work alone and bust the warden before his own cover is blown and the felon walks free. | |||||||
68 | 15 | "The Return of LaRue" | Michael Preece | Tom Blomquist | February 3, 1996 | 315 | 21.9[62] |
Paroled on a technicality, Victor LaRue pretends to have changed as he takes revenge on Walker and Alex. | |||||||
69 | 16 | "The Juggernaut" | Tony Mordente | Calvin Clements Jr. | February 10, 1996 | 316 | 22.1[63] |
Alex helps an abused wife at a mountain retreat of her women's support group to see that her violent husband can never change, but when he tracks her down to the retreat's location, it places all of them in danger. | |||||||
70 | 17 | "El Coyote: Part 1" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | February 17, 1996 | 317 | 21.4[64] |
After saving a female Mexican immigrant who was brought in illegally and forced into prostitution, Walker goes undercover with Mexican agent Jesse Rodriguez (from the Season 2 episode "Standoff") as a peasant to track a large operation of slave-labor smugglers in Mexico that are migrating Mexican immigrants into the United States illegally by tricking them with false promises of providing them with a better life. | |||||||
71 | 18 | "El Coyote: Part 2" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | February 24, 1996 | 318 | 22.3[65] |
While being put to work at a farm, Jesse finds one of their men there to whom he once arrested a long time ago could identify him as a police officer once he remembers him which puts both his and Walker's cover at risk, forcing Walker to take a daring risk by showing his worth in standing up to the slavers to meet the real leader of this slave-labor operation before their cover is blown. Meanwhile, after the female immigrant they saved is recaptured and forced back into prostitution, Trivette leads a manhunt to get her back. | |||||||
72 | 19 | "The Avenger" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea | March 2, 1996 | 319 | 20.4[66] |
Arms-dealer Randall Hooks (Christopher Dahlberg) is killed by Walker in a raid. Then Randall's elder brother, mercenary Caleb Hooks (Michael Parks), retaliates by killing FBI Agent Phillip Daniels (Michael Costello)...who led the fateful bust. After that, Caleb kidnaps Walker and makes him fight to the death...while Trivette works with Daniels' partner, Agent Carl Bishop (Todd Terry), to locate Walker. Note: Michael Parks previously co-starred as Chuck Norris's partner-turned-nemesis in 1991's The Hitman. He would return, three years later, in Season 7's "No Way Out". | |||||||
73 | 20 | "Behind the Badge" | Michael Preece | Tom Blomquist | March 23, 1996 | 320 | 19.5[67] |
Action surrounding Walker stymies Trivette's attempts to impress the female reporter of a "Behind the Badge" documentary show. | |||||||
74 | 21 | "Blackout" | Joe Coppoletta | Rick Husky | April 6, 1996 | 321 | 17.7[68] |
A blow to the head leaves Walker with amnesia during an undercover operation to uncover money laundering at a casino, and his only ally is a female spy who must help him recover his memory to bust the scam. | |||||||
75 | 22 | "Deadline" | Tony Mordente | Story by : Jeff Myrow Teleplay by : Nicholas J. Corea | April 13, 1996 | 322 | 21.2[69] |
A senator proposes to save money by disbanding the Texas Rangers. But when his daughter is kidnapped by a gang of jewelry store robbers, he refuses the Rangers' help, choosing to rely on the F.B.I., although Walker and Trivette have a better chance of locating the kidnappers in time. | |||||||
76 | 23 | "The Siege" | Tony Mordente | Gordon Dawson & Calvin Clements Jr. | April 27, 1996 | 323 | 20.6[70] |
While on vacation at a friends' house, heroin smugglers lay siege on their house when Alex and their friend's son accidentally stumble on their operation. Matters become complicated when the son is critically wounded and Walker and Trivette's guns start running low on ammunition, forcing Walker to use guerrilla tactics to pick off the attackers. | |||||||
77 | 24 | "The Moscow Connection" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea & Terry D. Nelson | May 4, 1996 | 324 | 19.0[71] |
A Russian policeman comes to Texas to help the Texas Ranger deal with Russian criminals that are attempting to take over a local organization. Notes: While on a stakeout, Trivette quotes a passage from The Secret Power Within, and Walker asks Trivette for the title of the book. When Trivette tells him, and mentions that it was written by Chuck Norris, Walker gives the impression that he's never heard of Norris (although he does correct Trivette on the number of world karate championships Norris had won). This episode shows that Chuck Norris exists in the show's fictional universe. | |||||||
78 | 25 | "Miracle at Middle Creek" | Michael Preece | Rick Husky | May 11, 1996 | 325 | 18.1[72] |
While he and C.D. are trailing a group of bank robbers, Walker learns a small boy is trapped underground, unaware that the boy's father was forced to help in the robbery. When Walker finds himself buried alive with the boy, it is up to Trivette to rescue them. | |||||||
79 | 26 | "Hall of Fame" | Michael Preece | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | May 18, 1996 | 326 | 18.3[73] |
A serial killer from C.D.'s past taunts him as he prepares for induction to the Texas Rangers Hall of Fame and Walker and Trivette set out to help C.D. bring him to justice. Features Baboon |
Season 4 (1996–97)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
80 | 1 | "Higher Power" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | September 21, 1996 | 401 | 16.9[74] | |||||||
Walker and Alex save a Buddhist monk (Master Rin), a mother, and her son Davey from some local thugs. They learn that Master Rin is searching for the reincarnation of his former master, Lama Dolgin, whom Rin believes to be Davey (he is later proven correct). When Master Rin is hurt while protecting Davey, when they are attacked during Tai Chi practice by a man who believes himself to be the reincarnation of a man named Chang, who Lama Dolgin disgraced when he defeated Chang after the man had challenged him and who Dolgin stopped from committing ritual suicide (he later swore to take revenge on the Lama). The current Chang intends to capture & imprison Dolgin's reincarnation so he may corrupt him (because killing Davey would only result in the young Lama's reincarnation). Walker must fight Chang in order to protect young Davey. | ||||||||||||||
81 | 2 | "Patriot" | Tony Mordente | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | September 28, 1996 | 402 | 17.7[75] | |||||||
After the leader of a white-supremacist group is arrested for the murder of Trivette's military cousin, the group retaliates by taking over a minority-owned television station and threatens the lives of the hostages (including Alex) if their leader is not released. Kind-hearted reporter Shelly Preston confronts the leader Sergeant Major Bart Hawkins (John Savage) in the studio, but Hawkins punches her and knocks her out cold. As she helplessly lies there, defeated, everyone looks on, waiting for Walker, who's now their last hope, but may have to fight Hawkins to the death, as Hawkins attempts to air a hate message to indoctrinate more people to his cause. | ||||||||||||||
82 | 3 | "Ghost Rider" | Karl Kases | Nicholas J. Corea | October 5, 1996 | 403 | 19.99[76] | |||||||
The spirit of a dead Apache teenage boy assists Walker to discover who murdered him eight years prior. | ||||||||||||||
83 | 4 | "The Brotherhood" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | October 12, 1996 | 404 | 18.32[77] | |||||||
A group of vigilante cops from the Brookdale Police Department have been targeting and murdering criminals who get off due to technicalities (as the group's founder killed a criminal that got off on a technicality after the criminal murdered the founder's younger brother, who was a rookie cop). Meanwhile, Walker helps Ernesto Lopez (who had joined Marine Corps after recovering from being shot in "The Covenant"), who has been accused of rape (the victim had mistakenly picked him out of a police lineup) and Alex is able to help him uncover DNA evidence that would prove his innocence. However, before this becomes public knowledge, the rogue cops murder Ernesto and it becomes a personal issue for Walker, especially when they decide to kill Walker before he can expose them after figuring out who they are. | ||||||||||||||
84 | 5 | "Plague" | Tony Mordente | Ron Swanson | October 19, 1996 | 405 | 18.48[78] | |||||||
An agricultural feed is tested on the Cherokee reservation by a company that is more interested with containing the information from their research rather than to contain the virus. But when Walker learns that the company had murdered an informant who tried to inform Alex about the company's motives, he soon finds that the company intends to massacre the Cherokee inhabitants to keep their research a secret. Now, Walker is on a race against time before the research kills the natives and destroys the reservation. | ||||||||||||||
85 | 6 | "Redemption" | Tony Mordente | William T. Conway | October 26, 1996 | 406 | 14.2[79] | |||||||
Alex's attorney father, Gordon Cahill (Rod Taylor), who walked out on his family years ago because of his problems with alcoholism, is defending Karl Mayes, the crime boss that she is prosecuting. But when Mayes' henchman Hendricks disguises himself as a cop and kills a witness that Walker has in custody, Gordon quits the case out of disgust. However, this makes him a key witness and both he and Alex are next on Mayes' hit list. | ||||||||||||||
86 | 7 | "Codename: Dragonfly" | Michael Preece | Story by : Nicholas J. Corea Teleplay by : Nicholas J. Corea & Bob Gookin | November 2, 1996 | 407 | 19.00[80] | |||||||
A military helicopter with stealth capabilities has been stolen to be utilized by a drug cartel. The thief turns out to be ex-Marine Randy Shrader (Marshall R. Teague) who betrayed and abandoned his unit during the war in Vietnam, leaving the men (including Walker) for dead. With no time to lose, Walker must catch Shrader before the helicopter falls into the cartel's hands. | ||||||||||||||
87 | 8 | "A Silent Cry" | Michael Preece | Mitchell Schneider | November 9, 1996 | 408 | 18.51[81] | |||||||
The Rangers seek out a trio of construction workers, who have been using date rape drugs to subdue and assault young women. Things get personal for Walker when Darcy Reynolds (Yelba Osorio), the daughter of his friend Cora Reynolds (Rosanna DeSoto), falls victim to the trio while out celebrating her 21st birthday, and she struggles to deal with the traumatic experience. After the rapists' next victim turns up dead from a rohypnol overdose, Walker turns up the heat on the investigation, prompting the trio to take drastic measures to shake the Rangers off their trail. Meanwhile, Alex and Darcy's mother try to get Darcy to attend a rape victim support group, but Darcy finds the process too painful and wants to put the rape behind her. She later reconsiders when her mother reveals that she was raped by a family friend as a child, and that she regrets having suffered alone in silence all those years because of being unaware about victim's support groups like them in front of her daughter, Alex, and the support group. | ||||||||||||||
88 | 9 | "Swan Song" | Karl Kases | Story by : Lou & Liz Comici Teleplay by : Gordon T. Dawson | November 16, 1996 | 409 | 20.60[82] | |||||||
Walker and Alex lead an expedition in Utah to locate a crashed plane, that was used as an escape by criminals eight years ago to rob a bank and kill seven people, including the local sheriff, who was one of Walker's friends. However, a group of opportunists hearing that there is three million dollars on board, secretly follow the group to take the cash for themselves. Unbeknownst to either group, one of the robbers survived the plane crash, and has been living in a cave as a mountain cannibal, who now stalks the two groups looking to claim more victims. | ||||||||||||||
89 | 10 | "Cyclone" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea & Bob Gookin | November 23, 1996 | 410 | 21.52[83] | |||||||
As a tornado approaches Dallas, kidnappers demand $10 million for a school bus full of kidnapped children, as well as C.D. and Alex, which unknown to the Rangers has been buried alive. Walker and Trivette must locate the bus during severe weather before its occupants run out of air. | ||||||||||||||
90 | 11 | "Lucky" | Tony Mordente | Story by : Bob Gookin & Rick Husky Teleplay by : Bob Gookin | November 30, 1996 | 411 | 17.43[84] | |||||||
A homeless man's dog helps Walker track down the assailants behind an assault and near death of a priest. Meanwhile, Alex and C.D. put on a charity Thanksgiving dinner. | ||||||||||||||
91 | 12 | "The Deadliest Man Alive" | Tony Mordente | Calvin Clements Jr. | December 14, 1996 | 412 | 16.36[85] | |||||||
Steven Michael "The Viper" Jamieson (Kai Wulff), a deadly international assassin, is in Texas to fulfill his latest contract. Being Walker, he sniffs out Jamieson faster than you can say "In the Line of Fire"...but finding the Viper and taking him down are two very different things. Note:
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92 | 13 | "A Ranger Christmas" | Michael Preece | Nicholas J. Corea | December 21, 1996 | 413 | 17.38[86] | |||||||
Walker tells the story of the Old West's Hayes Cooper, a Scrooge-like Texas Ranger who finally learned to have Christmas spirit. This episode aired just four days before Christmas in 1996. | ||||||||||||||
93 | 14 | "Mayday" | Tony Mordente | Story by : Rick Husky Teleplay by : Nicholas J. Corea & Rick Husky | January 11, 1997 | 414 | 19.61[87] | |||||||
After surviving a plane crash that was supposed to kill him and Charlie Brooks (Terry Kiser), an important witness and former mob accountant, Walker must protect Charlie and the other survivors from hit men who have come to finish them off. | ||||||||||||||
94 | 15 | "Last Hope" | Rich Thorne | Teleplay by : Bob Gookin Story by : I.B. Otto & Bob Gookin | January 18, 1997 | 415 | 20.29[88] | |||||||
The Rangers set up a camp to help troubled teens with pressure, with the assistance of Charlie Brooks, who had been sentenced to community service. However, one of the teens endangers everybody at Ranger Camp by unknowingly stealing a money bag from drug dealers. With Walker indisposed as he had been called away earlier, Trivette must deal with the drug dealers alone. | ||||||||||||||
95 | 16 | "Full Contact" | Michael Preece | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | February 1, 1997 | 416 | 17.06[89] | |||||||
Joey Prado (John Haymes Newton), the world kickboxing champion and a protegé of Walker's is working to defend his title against arrogant up-and-coming hotshot Bart "The Destroyer" Vallen (Tim Griffin). Bart's manager and older brother Frank (Gary Hudson) also happens to be Joey's predecessor as world champion, but had lost the title after he was discovered to have been using steroids and almost killed the sports reporter who exposed him, with the latter act also landing him in prison for several years. Frank, determined to regain his former glory by having his brother become the next champion, aims to ensure that Bart wins by any means necessary. After he and Bart goad Joey into losing his temper at a press conference, Frank decides to further shake up and discredit him by framing him for illegal drug possession. Unfortunately, Joey's longtime mentor and trainer Gino Costa (Bill Cobbs) catches Frank in the act of planting the drugs in Joey's gym bag, forcing Frank to kill him to keep him quiet. The drugs are then uncovered in the ensuing investigation, which also puts Joey under suspicion of having killed Gino. Things get even worse when Frank has more drugs planted at Joey's apartment and reported anonymously, forcing the police to arrest and charge Joey. Walker works to help Joey fight the legal allegations and train him for the championship match, while Trivette works with the investigating detective to clear his name and prove the Vallens' criminal actions. | ||||||||||||||
96 | 17 | "99th Ranger" | Tony Mordente | Gordon T. Dawson | February 8, 1997 | 417 | 17.02[90] | |||||||
While looking into recruiting a replacement for a Texas Ranger that was killed in a shootout, Walker meets Ranger applicant Roberta "Bobbie" Hunt (Tammy Lauren), a Fort Worth, Texas police officer who is being haunted by her violent ex-husband Russell Stafford (Jeff Kober). The harassment by him eventually becomes so bad, that she almost gives up her dream of becoming a Texas Ranger until Walker convinces her otherwise. But when Stafford ignores the restraining order Walker had Alex issue and attacks her in her home, Bobbie must fight him off on her own. | ||||||||||||||
97 | 18 | "Devil's Turf" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | February 15, 1997 | 418 | 17.86[91] | |||||||
Walker goes undercover as a high school teacher to help bust a drug ring that are using Powerballs, a deadly drug that had killed a couple of students, as well as help his students improve themselves. Notes:
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98 | 19 | "Days Past" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea | February 22, 1997 | 419 | 16.96[92] | |||||||
After 10 years, mob boss Vince Pike (Leon Rippy) - whose murder victims include Walker's fiancée (Pike's intended target was Walker himself) - is given an early release. Pike immediately vents his grudge by targeting C.D., Trivette, and Alex for assassination. It's up to an equally-vengeful Walker to protect his friends, while sniffing out sufficient evidence to put his old nemesis out of business permanently. Note: Leon Rippy previously co-starred in WTR's pilot-season episode "Borderline" as Dewey Baker; he would later appear in the two-part series finale as Chastain. | ||||||||||||||
99 | 20 | "Trial of LaRue" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | March 8, 1997 | 420 | 15.17[93] | |||||||
Victor LaRue (Wayne Pére), an old nemesis of Walker's, disarms a bailiffs during his competency hearing. LaRue takes the entire courtroom hostage...killing the judge, taunting Alex, and waiting for Walker to show up. Walker is away, tracking down other criminals (and apprehending them with his usual violent ease). "Judge LaRue" proceeds to terrorize and/or kill jurors and litigants at random...including a divorced couple who were there for a custody hearing. Walker finally discovers what's going on via radio and TV coverage; he bolts across town, rushes into the courthouse, and quickly guns down LaRue. As the villain's body is wheeled away on a gurney, Alex has a conscious nightmare about him snapping back to life. Note: This is Wayne Pere's third and final appearance as Victor LaRue; the first two were the Season 3 episode "Cowboy", and in the Season 4 episode "Return of LaRue". Pere himself, however, later co-starred in the Season 6 two-parter "Last of a Breed" as Cuadroza. | ||||||||||||||
100 | 21 | "Heart of the Dragon" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | April 5, 1997 | 421 | 15.26[94] | |||||||
Walker protects a college student of Dr. Henry Lee's (Mako)-- who is the father of his old friend, Susan Lee, from "Higher Power", and is therefore, Davey's grandfather-- who has stolen a jade dragon from a Chinese gang who believes it has magical power that will heal his sister after their parents are both killed in a D.W.I. accident. | ||||||||||||||
101 | 22 | "The Neighborhood" | Eric Norris | Nicholas J. Corea | April 26, 1997 | 422 | 18.95[95] | |||||||
Walker helps one of his karate students, a ten-year-old girl named Kyla Jarvis (Kyla Pratt) after she miraculously survives being severely wounded in a drive-by shooting. Young Kyla reveals that she had a Near-death experience where she went to heaven and encountered an Angel who gives her a divine mission from God to help end violence in her community with Walker's help and support. To succeed though, he'll need to convince her grandfather, frustrated Vietnam veteran turned anti-gang vigilante Leon Barlow, to use a less violent approach to fighting gangs, and stop local gang the "B-3 Dukes" and their ruthless leader Zach Russell (Stoney Jackson), who was responsible for ordering the drive-by shooting of Barlow that resulted in Kyla's getting shot as retaliation for a firebombing of a B-3 Dukes' crack house by Barlow's vigilante group composed of other frustrated residents, while also helping young gangbanger Bobby Miller (Patrick Malone) (who is conflicted over his unwitting role as Kyla's shooter and disagrees with Russell's cold blooded mentality and methods) to stray away from the gang life. | ||||||||||||||
102 | 23 | "A Father's Image" | João Fernandes | Gordon T. Dawson | May 3, 1997 | 423 | 17.52[96] | |||||||
Ranger Bobbie Hunt (Tammy Lauren reprises the role of Roberta "Bobbie" Hunt who successfully became a Ranger at the end of the "99th Ranger") goes undercover to gather evidence against crime boss Sal Matacio (Dan Lauria), who is raising his ten-year-old son, Nicholas (Joseph Ashton), to take over the family business, as well as plotting to kill his ex-wife Dana (Mary Chris Wall) when he fears she might eventually agree to Walker's efforts of having her testify against him to get Nicholas back. | ||||||||||||||
103 | 24 | "Sons of Thunder" | Aaron Norris | Teleplay by : Bob Gookin Story by : Chuck Norris & Aaron Norris | May 4, 1997 | 424 | 18.34[96] | |||||||
104 | 25 | 425 | ||||||||||||
When a preacher friend of Walker's dies, his military son, Trent, returns to take care of his family. Walker tries to get him to become a police officer, but this proves difficult because of Trent's refusal to carry a firearm (because of a childhood incident with a revolver that resulted in the death of a friend). Meanwhile, a serial cop-killer is on the loose and one of the targets happens to be Carlos Sandoval, a good friend of Walker and Trent. (Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) The search for a cop killer gets personal especially for Walker. When Trivette is shot by the suspect with a different gun and left badly injured while following a lead, it confirms that the cop-killer is not killing at random, but is instead only targeting certain cops due to a personal vendetta. Walker and Trent soon discover that the killer's next target is Carlos, as Carlos confirms the killer is actually a violent ex-cop named Rod Barkley, who is targeting the cops he blames for ruining his career. | ||||||||||||||
105 | 26 | "Texas vs. Cahill" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin & Glenn A. Bruce | May 10, 1997 | 426 | 18.53[97] | |||||||
When Alex's former lover, who's also the defending attorney in her current trial, turns up dead beside her in bed, she's accused of his murder and sent to a women's prison that's packed with inmates who hold a grudge against her, though her cellmate who was put in there due to a botched defense is able to protect her. While Gordon Cahill returns to defend Alex in court, he helps Walker suspect that Lane Tillman (Robert Forster)—the man Alex was prosecuting—had a good reason to frame her. | ||||||||||||||
106 | 27 | "Rookie" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea | May 17, 1997 | 427 | 15.10[98] | |||||||
Joey Prado (John Haymes Newton), after retiring from kickboxing, graduates from the police academy with the best marks since Walker. One of his first assignments is to go undercover as a drug dealer. Along the way, he reunites with his childhood friend and sworn blood brother, Victor Solano (Damon Collazo), who is one of the men he has to arrest. Joey finds himself in the precarious position of having to deceiving his former friend by convincing him that he is a criminal and earning his trust in order to gather enough evidence to take down both Victor and his boss. |
Season 5 (1997–98)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
107 | 1 | "The Fighting McLains" | Tony Mordente | Nicholas J. Corea | September 27, 1997 | 501 | 15.49[99] |
Belle Starr McLain, a mole for the DEA, is exposed and murdered by drug kingpin Jack Garret. Then her Marine-brother JW (John Wesley), to whom she sent proof of Garret's wrongdoing, goes AWOL to launch a vendetta against the drug lord. Instead, JW is stopped and captured by Walker. After JW's commanding officer Luther Parrish comes to pick him up, JW is sprung by his two other siblings, Jessie and Wyatt. Now Walker, Trivette, and Parrish must keep the McLains from taking the law into their own hands to avenge their sister, while at the same time gathering sufficient evidence to bust Garret for his crimes. Notes: This plotline was recycled considerably for the TV movie Logan's War: Bound by Honor, in which Eddie Cibrian portrays Airborne Ranger Logan Fallon. As a child, Logan witnessed the murder of his sister and their parents by a corrupt politician; Logan withholds all evidence regarding their killer from the authorities, since this matter is personal. The difference herein is that the Chuck Norris character – Logan's uncle Jake, himself a retired Airborne Ranger – supports this private vendetta instead of opposing it. Moreover, like many episodes of WTR, the movie has a supernatural element: Logan's never-explained premonitions of danger. | |||||||
108 | 2 | "Iceman" | Christian I. Nyby II | David Bennett Carren & J. Larry Carroll | October 4, 1997 | 502 | 15.39[100] |
A freelance explosives expert known as the Iceman (Terry Kiser) is hospitalized. The Rangers ask their ne'er-de-well friend Charlie Brooks (Kiser in a dual role) to help them catch a crime boss for whom the Iceman was working. As part of his community service, the bumbling Charlie poses as the Iceman...only to lose the tracking device which Walker planted on him. It doesn't help when the real Iceman escapes from the hospital. | |||||||
109 | 3 | "Lucas: Part 1" | Michael Preece | Story by : Chuck Norris & Aaron Norris Teleplay by : Nicholas J. Corea | October 11, 1997 | 503 | 15.03[101] |
An AIDS-stricken 7-year-old (Haley Joel Osment) tries to find his mother, with Walker's help. | |||||||
110 | 4 | "Lucas: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Story by : Chuck Norris & Aaron Norris Teleplay by : Nicholas J. Corea | October 18, 1997 | 504 | 14.58[102] |
After Lucas' mother dies, Walker takes him to the Cherokee Reservation to help him overcome his nightmares and tell him about his A.I.D.S condition. At the same time, Walker also must get a powerful drug cartel leader before he kills Lucas, as he's the only witness to his drugs operation. | |||||||
111 | 5 | "Forgotten People" | Tony Mordente | Teleplay by : Mick Curran Story by : Mick Curran & Mitchell Schneider | October 25, 1997 | 505 | 13.71[103] |
Trivette visits old friend Josh Leonard (who is also his girlfriend's father) in a nursing home, who is unable to find the tape recorder he had that would tell Trivette about the suspicious things the doctors were up to, not knowing that one of the home's abusive orderlies had found it first. Upon learning of this evidence, the head doctor (Gail Strickland) murders Josh by making it look like a heart attack to prevent him from exposing them and based on Trivette's suspicions, a few clues are uncovered that suggests the doctors are conducting illegal experiments on their elderly patients in order to put a new Alzheimer's drug on the market to profit from. C.D. is then sent in undercover as an Alzheimer's disease patient to gather evidence to prove this, unaware that one of the other patients is also undercover for the same reason after her best friend's similar death. At the same time, Walker, Trivette and Alex try to uncover evidence of the nursing home's illegal testing by exhuming the bodies of the patients that died there to secure a search warrant. | |||||||
112 | 6 | "Last of a Breed: Part 1" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | November 1, 1997 | 506 | 15.11[104] |
Children visiting the Texas Rangers Hall of Fame get treated to Walker telling a story about the Old West's legendary Hayes Cooper. Note: Chuck Norris is the only series regular to appear in this two-part episode, which actually contradicts Hayes Cooper's backstory...in particular, how and when Cooper became a Texas Ranger (as depicted in Season 2's two-parter "Flashback"). | |||||||
113 | 7 | "Last of a Breed: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | November 8, 1997 | 507 | 15.20[105] |
Walker continues to tell the story of Hayes Cooper. And he continues when Cooper upon seeing the family he befriended killed, he sets out to go after the ones he believes responsible for their deaths. After getting one of them, he meets a Texas Ranger (Robert Fuller) who warns him about crossing the line and after saying that he gives Cooper a Texas Ranger badge which Cooper takes. After tracking down his quarries, he gets shot but is found by some Indians who nurse him back to health and gives him a moment to think. Notes: Robert Fuller would return to WTR as another Texas Ranger, Wade Harper, for the 2000 episode "A Matter of Principle". | |||||||
114 | 8 | "Brainchild" | Michael Preece | Nicholas J. Corea | November 15, 1997 | 508 | 16.48[106] |
Chad Morgan (David Gallagher) is a youngster with telekinetic powers and a genius-level IQ. He lives at a prison-like research center, whose director (Paul Gleason) is fatally overtaxing Chad's abilities...to the chagrin of the facility's sole sympathetic scientist. Accordingly, Chad flees the center and meets up with Walker...who proceeds to help find the boy's long-presumed-dead mother (Anne Lockhart). | |||||||
115 | 9 | "Mr. Justice" | Eric Norris | Teleplay by : Bob Gookin Story by : Bob Gookin & Rebecka S. Norris | November 22, 1997 | 509 | 16.46[107] |
A new "boot camp" for young offenders comes under heavy opposition from a senator (Mod Squad star Clarence Williams III) who believes prison is the only solution...and who doesn't stop at playing dirty to sabotage Walker's "Camp Justice" program. U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison makes a special guest appearance as herself. | |||||||
116 | 10 | "Rainbow's End" | Eric Norris | Nicholas J. Corea | December 6, 1997 | 510 | 14.56[108] |
James Lee Crown (Randolph Mantooth), a horse owner, wants to win races in order to increase his horse's stud fees, even if it means by cheating. Crown murders a rival horse, along with its owner and trainer (the latter of whom was secretly working for him) that beat his horse in a race. He then sets his sights on fixing an upcoming race by targeting another rival horse Rainbow's End, which is owned by one of Walker's friends. Walker must stop Crown before he reaches the horse and his friend's daughter. | |||||||
117 | 11 | "A Woman's Place" | Gregg Champion | Teleplay by : Dawn Ritchie Story by : Dawn Ritchie & Hannah Louise Shearer | December 13, 1997 | 511 | 13.83[109] |
Alex's cellmate Alfre (from the season 4 episode "Texas vs. Cahill") is now out of prison (since Gordon Cahill was working on getting her released at the end of that episode) and has a job as a female construction worker, but she finds herself in danger after threatening to blow the whistle on unsafe construction practices, which are secretly caused by a small group of employees led by the site foreman who are actually running an illegal money-making scam behind their company owner's back. Walker and Alex must keep Alfre and her family safe and expose the scam before the group gets to her first to keep their activities secret. | |||||||
118 | 12 | "Small Blessings" | Eric Norris | Bob Gookin | December 20, 1997 | 512 | 15.01[110] |
When two recently adopted orphans run away from their new foster home when they misinterpret a discussion between their foster parents and think that one of them might be sent back to the orphanage (which was actually about how their foster parents could not afford to have two "cars"), they witness a murder committed by the Rangers' latest target: Tony Chan (Leo Lee), a gangster running a chain of illegal sweatshops across the country, and the victim in question was one of his workers. With the help of Jack Belmont (the homeless veteran from the Season 4 episode "Lucky"), Walker and FBI Agent Doug Foster must save the two from being killed by Chan and shut down his sweatshops before they could give testimony. | |||||||
119 | 13 | "Tribe" | Jerry Jameson | Nicholas J. Corea | January 3, 1998 | 513 | 17.09[111] |
An archaeologist on the Cherokee reservation is murdered when a greedy oil company learns there's oil under her dig site. Her rejected would-be suitor, Sam Coyote (Eloy Casados), a reservation cop and friend of Walker, is used to take the fall for her murder. Walker must work on clearing him before Sam is transferred to F.B.I. custody. | |||||||
120 | 14 | "Saving Grace" | Jerry Jameson | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | January 10, 1998 | 514 | 13.83[112] |
Prison escapees take refuge in a church where Alex and her battered women's group are meeting and take them and the church's nuns hostage, threatening to kill them if their demands are not met. | |||||||
121 | 15 | "Money Talks" | Tony Mordente | James L. Novack | January 17, 1998 | 515 | 16.07[113] |
C.D. is filling in temporarily as the head of security for a country club until a replacement can arrive. While there he becomes suspicious over the mystery of what happened to his predecessor. Walker, Trivette, and Alex are later asked to go to the club discreetly to keep an eye on the rich CEOs that would be attending a social function at the club. However behind the scenes, C.D.'s second in command, Grady, who had murdered the previous head of security when he got too close, is working with some men under a mysterious leader to pull off a heist at the function. | |||||||
122 | 16 | "The Crusader" | Rich Thorne | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | January 31, 1998 | 516 | 14.56[114] |
Walker helps a pro wrestler Cody "The Crusader" Conway ("Rowdy" Roddy Piper) whose ex-wife is in hiding after witnessing a murder by her boss Tony Ramos and has sent their son Jake whom he was unaware of to him for his own safety. However, Cody's attempt to bond with Jake becomes complicated, as Cody is dealing with stress, having recently learned from his doctor that he has a life-threatening condition which carries the risk of killing him if he attempts to wrestle again. When this stress causes Jake to run away and gets kidnapped by Ramos, Cody must work on negotiating with Ramos to get Jake back. (Note: This was the last episode to air on CBS before the network's broadcast of the XVIII Olympic Winter Games in Nagano, Japan.) | |||||||
123 | 17 | "In God's Hands" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | February 28, 1998 | 517 | 16.24[115] |
While pursuing two armed robbers, Trivette finds a 6-year old boy shot during his pursuit of one of the robbers and believes that he is responsible. Placed on suspension and having to deal with the moral implications (such as inaccurate media coverage which implicates Trivette) and the wounded boy's older brother (Kaj-Erik Eriksen), Trivette finds the man leading the investigation against him is an officer who has a grudge against him for being passed over in favor of Trivette for initiation into the Texas Rangers, and who wants to have Trivette brought up on criminal charges. Meanwhile, Walker looks into proving that Kroeger (Sal Landi)— the man that Trivette was pursuing — was the one who shot the boy. | |||||||
124 | 18 | "Undercover" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | March 7, 1998 | 518 | 14.48[116] |
Detective Carlos Sandoval who is undercover in a drug ring is found out by the ring leader (John Vargas) who had also previously murdered Carlos' older brother Hector. The wounded Carlos escapes and is taken to a homeless shelter to recover. | |||||||
125 | 19 | "Everyday Heroes" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | March 21, 1998 | 519 | 14.50[117] |
After he protects a woman from her abusive ex-husband, Trent Malloy is contacted by the abused wife of a drug lord who watched the news report about his recent exploit on TV and asks for his help in getting away from her violent husband. To succeed, Trent asks Walker to help. | |||||||
126 | 20 | "Warriors" | João Fernandes | Bob Gookin | April 4, 1998 | 520 | 12.42[118] |
The Rangers' old friend, Susan Lee, the mother of Davey (reincarnation of Buddhist monk Lama Dolgin from the episode "Higher Power" and "Heart of the Dragon"), who works as geneticist, is kidnapped again by a supremacist group wanting to use her research (which was derived from her son's unique DNA which grants him a form of rapid healing) to create a race of genetically superior soldiers. Davey returns to the states with Master Rin, wanting to help Walker find his mother via a special bond he shares with his mother. To save her, however, Walker must contend with the group's genetically enhanced enforcer. | |||||||
127 | 21 | "Angel" | Jerry Jameson | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | April 18, 1998 | 521 | 14.76[119] |
When Trivette's old girlfriend gets his help to locate her father, then kills him and knocks out Trivette (while Walker is at the boot camp started in "Mr. Justice"). The investigation leads to a Jamaican drug gang so Trivette sets out find out why she killed her father, but first must save her when the gang suddenly attacks her. | |||||||
128 | 22 | "The Soul of Winter" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | April 25, 1998 | 522 | 14.66[120] |
Roscoe Jones (Paul Winfield), the minister who replaced Trent's father, is targeted by a former military comrade, now part of a white supremacy group after they inadvertently kill the wrong kid outside his church, namely, Rodney Summers (when, in fact, they intended to kill his son, Adam, who is also the best friend of Trent's younger brother, Tommy), terrorize the other congregants and then burn down another church, prompting Roscoe to organize a charity fundraiser for its repairs. In order for Walker, Trivette, Trent and Carlos to bring Jones' old comrade to justice, they must connect him to Summers' murder. | |||||||
129 | 23 | "Circle of Life" | Michael Preece | Nicholas J. Corea | May 2, 1998 | 523 | 13.02[121] |
Joe Lopez (Danny Trejo), a paroled safecracker is approached to join a group that needs his skills to commit a robbery. Wanting to stay straight for his family's sake and repair his strained relationship with his son Tommy (who previously appeared in Season 3's "The Covenant"), Joe asks Walker for help, and has a plan to identify the leader of the group. | |||||||
130 | 24 | "Test of Faith" | Eric Norris | Bob Gookin | May 9, 1998 | 524 | 12.46[122] |
When a teacher who is an old friend of Walker and Trent is killed for standing up to a gang leader, Walker goes undercover as a teacher to locate the killer as well as promote the message of standing up to gang influence. However when Faith, one of the Walker's students, starts a campaign to clean up the school, she also becomes a target. | |||||||
131 | 25 | "The Wedding: Part 1" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | May 16, 1998 | 525 | 13.57[123] |
In this season-ending cliffhanger, The gang gets ready for Alex's friends Kim (Lauralee Bell) and Phil's wedding. Walker finally decides to propose to her after, but the wedding is then attacked by a group of hitmen. When the shootout is all over, Walker tries again to propose to Alex, but she is shot by Karl Storm (Tobin Bell), a man she helped incarcerate five years earlier. |
Season 6 (1998–99)
- This is the first season to be produced by Norris Bros. Entertainment.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
132 | 1 | "The Wedding: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | September 26, 1998 | 601 | 17.30[124] |
As Alex lies in the hospital in critical condition, Walker embarks on a quest to find Karl Storm (who wounded Alex at the end of the Season 5 cliffhanger) and bring him to justice. | |||||||
133 | 2 | "Trackdown" | Jerry Jameson | William T. Conway | October 3, 1998 | 602 | 15.17[125] |
Walker helps free Hector Lopez (Greg Serano) Det. Carlos Sandoval's nephew-in-law, when he is falsely accused of a crime by his greedy former employer. Before he is officially released, however, Hector is forced to escape from prison to when he witnesses his cellmate being killed by corrupt prison guards (after he passes off evidence of guard's corruption to Hector). Det. Sandoval tries to bring his escaped nephew in alive but is shot by prison guards. Carlos (with help from Walker) must protect Hector and bring the guards to justice. Meanwhile, Alex, after realizing she needs to do more with her life following her recent shooting, opens her Help Our People Excel (HOPE) center to help the less fortunate. | |||||||
134 | 3 | "Royal Heist" | Michael Preece | Nicholas Corea | October 10, 1998 | 603 | 15.20[126] |
Garret Stone (David Parker), who Walker helped put away years prior, is paroled and resumes his life of crime. Trivette infiltrates his gang to bring him back to justice once again. Meanwhile, Alex and Carlos attempt to help save a youth from gang life. | |||||||
135 | 4 | "War Cry" | Karl Kases | Nicholas Corea | October 17, 1998 | 604 | 12.15[127] |
Walker investigates a mystery illness sweeping across the children on his Cherokee reservation from polluted water, and after two children die, suspicion falls on a nearby factory. When the E.P.A. tests find nothing wrong with the water, Walker must work with Sam Coyote to stop a band of radical Cherokee from waging vigilante justice, and prove that the factory owner (Luke Askew) had rigged the inspection by directing the E.P.A. agents to a water emission pipe that produces actual clean water, but had secretly concealed the real pipe that is dumping the toxins from his factory which Walker intends to find. | |||||||
136 | 5 | "Code of the West" | Michael Preece | Janet A. Wilson and Michael L. Wilson | October 24, 1998 | 605 | 15.87[128] |
A convict (Lindsey Ginter) escapes from prison seeking retribution against those responsible for putting him there. After the convict murders the prosecutor and head juror from his case, Walker and Trivette try to stop him before he can murder the trial's judge (Mike Connors), who happens to be on a retreat with his orphaned granddaughter (Amanda Fuller), Alex, C.D., and a group of youths who are the children of convicted felons, including his own daughter (Camilla Belle). | |||||||
137 | 6 | "The Children of Halloween" | João Fernandes | Bob Gookin | October 31, 1998 | 606 | 14.17[129] |
A Satanic symbol found at the crime scenes suggest abducted children are going to be sacrificed on Halloween by a group of devil worshippers. When Alex is also abducted, Walker must stop whoever is planning the sacrifice before it is too late. Appropriately, this episode aired on Halloween night in 1998 (the only such episode to do so). | |||||||
138 | 7 | "Survival" | Jerry Jameson | Bob Gookin | November 7, 1998 | 607 | 16.61[130] |
A camping trip turns nightmarish when Alex is kidnapped by a trio of deranged brothers, and the men (Walker, Trivette, Trent, and Carlos) must come to the rescue. | |||||||
139 | 8 | "Second Chance" | Christian I. Nyby II | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | November 14, 1998 | 608 | 14.01[131] |
Walker and the Rangers find themselves in the middle of an IRA conflict when a former member brings his daughter (Mika Boorem) to Dallas for medical treatment, and she is kidnapped by a splinter faction in retaliation for her father's killing one of their members, albeit in self-defense. Walker and Trivette must save the girl before either the group or her sickness claim her life. (Note: this episode is tied to the events of the season 3 episode "Flashpoint") | |||||||
140 | 9 | "Paradise Trail" | Michael Preece | Nicholas Corea | November 21, 1998 | 609 | 13.80[132] |
In another Hayes Cooper adventure, Mormons and their wagon train must be defended from outlaws. | |||||||
141 | 10 | "Eyes of a Ranger" | Michael Preece | Story by : Gordon Dawson and Dawn Ritchie Teleplay by : Gordon Dawson | December 5, 1998 | 610 | 15.05[133] |
Teenage country music artist Lila McCann plays aspiring singer Kelly Wyman. She is being closely followed by the wealthy and entitled Brad Alt (Sean Kanan) and follows him under the pretense that he will help her launch her career. What she does not know is that he is trying to gain control of the heroin industry in Dallas, and is the focus of a Ranger investigation. When Kelly is sentenced to 300 hours of community service at the H.O.P.E. Center following Brad's botched arrest at the beginning of the episode, it seems as though Walker and Alex just might be the ones to help make her dreams come true. This episode also featured an appearance by Michael Peterson. | |||||||
142 | 11 | "On the Border" | Jerry Jameson | Allan Cole | December 12, 1998 | 611 | 15.95[134] |
A corrupt sheriff (Lee Majors) fakes a drug-related accident to disguise a murder of a trucker who refused to participate in his drug smuggling. But when the boy's mother claims to Alex that he would not have anything to do with drugs, she gets Walker and Trivette to help her investigate. | |||||||
143 | 12 | "Lost Boys" | Rich Thorne | Robin Madden | January 9, 1999 | 612 | 16.00[135] |
Carlos' nephew, Jesse Estrella, is in trouble with the law when a gun is found in his room, that was used by a man named Johnny Blade (Dan Clark) to kill a cop and was hidden there by Jesse's best friend, Bobby Landrum (Chauncey Leopardi), who was also an accomplice of Blade. When Blade finds out, he kidnaps Jesse's mother (Ada Maris), then has his lawyer (Michael Costello) help him force Jesse to take the rap for the crime or they would kill his mother, unless Bobby is willing to come forward and tell the Rangers what really happened. Note: Dan Clark is best known as "Nitro" from the hit series American Gladiators | |||||||
144 | 13 | "Special Witness" | Christian I. Nyby II | Bob Gookin | January 16, 1999 | 613 | 16.35[136] |
A female Special Olympian (Andrea Fay Friedman) is the only witness to Trent's stabbing attack when he volunteers to escort her to running practice, and the Rangers and Carlos need her help to identify the assailant (Gary Busey) in order to prove that the mob boss who Trent was going to testify against (Gianni Russo) hired him to keep him off the witness stand, but at the same time, her life is also in jeopardy from the boss and his hired hitman. | |||||||
145 | 14 | "The Principal" | Jerry Jameson | Nicholas Corea | February 6, 1999 | 614 | 15.48[137] |
A principal of a high school (Morgan Stevens), who is an old friend of Walker, has his suspicions about a faculty member who is supplying drugs and is murdered when he accidentally witnesses the exchange between a teacher (James Remar) and a student after the Rangers busted the Head of Security who was thought to be the ringleader. Walker and Trivette go undercover as the new Principal and Head of Security to find those responsible. The Power Team guest stars in this episode. | |||||||
146 | 15 | "Team Cherokee: Part 1" | Michael Preece | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | February 13, 1999 | 615 | 14.26[138] |
The Rangers investigate a series of suspicious crashes involving a Cherokee Indian racing team that are being caused by Team Forbes, a rival team that wants to put them out of the race for good. Meanwhile, Trent and Carlos search for a kidnapped young girl (Sara Hickman) and rescue her from a pedophile. | |||||||
147 | 16 | "Team Cherokee: Part 2" | Michael Preece | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | February 20, 1999 | 616 | 15.23[139] |
When Brian Falcon (Michael Greyeyes) is injured in a racing crash caused by the No. 2 man on Team Cherokee (Byron Chief-Moon) who secretly betrayed the team out of jealousy, Walker, who had prior experience with racing, is asked to drive their NASCAR stock car as a replacement driver. This forces Team Forbes to try to destroy Team Cherokee's car before the next race. Meanwhile, after uncovering the evidence that would convict a young girl's kidnapper and molester (Lynn Mathis), Trent's car is stolen with the evidence, promoting the Rangers to search for the thieves to recover the evidence. | |||||||
148 | 17 | "livegirls.now" | Jerry Jameson | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | February 27, 1999 | 617 | 14.19[140] |
Trivette's girlfriend disappears and pictures of her surface on an Internet site, with details that suggests that she is to be sold in a sex-slavery auction with other missing girls. He and Walker then have only a few days to find her before she is sold. | |||||||
149 | 18 | "No Way Out" | Eric Norris | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | April 24, 1999 | 618 | 13.71[141] |
Caleb Hooks, an old enemy of Walker's (from Season 3's "The Avenger"), continues to seek revenge for the death of his brother Randall...this time by imprisoning Alex and Trivette in a gradually-filling water tank. Trivette and Alex reminisce about Walker's past adventures, while waiting to be rescued. Notes:
| |||||||
150 | 19 | "Brothers in Arms" | Eric Norris | Nicholas Corea | May 1, 1999 | 619 | 13.02[142] |
Simon Trivette, Jimmy's brother, is arrested by the Rangers. They learn from Simon that there's a murder contract out on Jimmy. Note: This episode is dedicated to the memory of creative consultant Nicholas Corea (1943–99), who died of pancreatic cancer after filming was completed. | |||||||
151 | 20 | "Mind Games" | Michael Preece | Robin Madden | May 8, 1999 | 620 | 12.83[143] |
While Walker and Trivette are busy going after an escaped convict and find that he had been hired for some kind of job, C.D. after noticing some strange occurrences revolving around the death of Brian, the son of his friend Maisie Whitman (whom C.D. met while undercover at the nursing home in season 5's "Forgotten People"), suspects foul play and decides to investigate. | |||||||
152 | 21 | "Power Angels" | Eric Norris | Story by : Leslie Pike Teleplay by : Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | May 15, 1999 | 621 | 10.69[144] |
A loan shark, who has a minister's son under his thumb, attempts to steal a charitable telethon's proceeds, and Walker must stop him and save the boy while dealing with two competitive German officers in a competition. The last scene of this episode leads directly into the next episode, Jacob's Ladder. | |||||||
153 | 22 | "Jacob's Ladder" | Michael Preece | Janet A. Wilson and Michael L. Wilson | May 15, 1999 | 622 | 13.44[144] |
Alex's attempt to prosecute a gang leader is having some difficulty when his gang starts using fear tactics with arson to prevent the witnesses from testifying. However, it gets out of hand when Metro Fire Captain Jacob Crossland (John Schneider) denounces their act as cowardly on the news, and the gang responds by attacking the firefighters during their next attack, during which Jacob is shot and severely injured after rescuing a man from the fire. It's up to Walker and Trivette to stop the gang before anyone else gets hurt. | |||||||
154 | 23 | "In Harm's Way: Part 1" | Jerry Jameson | Story by : Gordon T. Dawson and Nicholas Corea Teleplay by : Gordon T. Dawson | May 22, 1999 | 623 | 11.86[145] |
In this season-ending cliffhanger, a wealthy Dallas family and staff are murdered by a group of masked men as an example. This was part of a larger plan that was meant to extort millions of dollars from other wealthy families. Meanwhile, a twin-engine plane carrying Ranger Walker and his fiancée, Alex Cahill, crashes into a lake after it was shot down by a World War II-era plane.A North American P-51 D Mustang. |
Season 7 (1999–2000)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
155 | 1 | "In Harm's Way: Part 2" | Jerry Jameson | Story by : Gordon T. Dawson and Nicholas Corea Teleplay by : Gordon T. Dawson | September 25, 1999 | 701 | 13.88[146] | |||||||
In this concluding episode from the Season 6 cliffhanger, Walker and Alex survive a plane crash and end up on an island with critical evidence of a mass murder spree killer in their hands and a group of mercenaries sent in to kill them. As Trivette and mission control are busy trying to locate them, they are unaware the pilot they initially asked to locate them is actually the one who shot down the plane and purposely misdirected them. It is now a race against time for Walker and Alex to be rescued before the murderer is set free. | ||||||||||||||
156 | 2 | "Countdown" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | October 2, 1999 | 702 | 12.33[147] | |||||||
Terrorists plan an urban release of anthrax in 48 hours, sending Walker and Trivette into action to stop them. They recruit Rangers Francis Gage and Sydney Cooke to help. Note: Although Sydney Cook (Nia Peeples) and Francis Gage (Judson Mills) appear in the credits of this season's opener, this episode is the first in which they are actually introduced. | ||||||||||||||
157 | 3 | "Safe House" | Jerry Jameson | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | October 9, 1999 | 703 | 12.88[148] | |||||||
Gage and Sydney protect an accountant along with his wife & daughter, so he can testify at the trial of a crime boss who wants him and his family dead. Gage & Sydney manage to foil two separate attempts on the accountant and his family before making it to a safe house with a built-in panic room. However the accountant's wife mistakenly calls her mother to let her know they are alright (despite being warned earlier not to), alerting the mob boss to the safe house's location. | ||||||||||||||
158 | 4 | "Way of the Warrior" | Michael Preece | Story by : Guy Prevost Teleplay by : Guy Prevost, Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | October 16, 1999 | 704 | 13.24[149] | |||||||
An Indian shaman transports Walker back to the 19th century to prevent a recurrence of a 20th-century injustice. | ||||||||||||||
159 | 5 | "Tall Cotton" | Michael Preece | Bob Gookin | October 23, 1999 | 705 | 12.22[150] | |||||||
Sydney and Gage go undercover in a bar to locate Gage's reporter sister who had gone missing working on a story regarding the bar's owner. Meanwhile, Walker and Alex's romantic camping trip is interrupted by a lost Boy Scout troop. | ||||||||||||||
160 | 6 | "The Lynn Sisters" | Christian I. Nyby II | Rob Wright | October 30, 1999 | 706 | 12.22[151] | |||||||
Record pirates kidnap the Lynn sisters (who play themselves in this episode), hoping their disappearance will help sales of their bootlegs. | ||||||||||||||
161 | 7 | "Suspicious Minds" | Jerry Jameson | Story by : Bob Gookin & Anne Dremann Teleplay by : Bob Gookin | November 6, 1999 | 707 | 12.05[152] | |||||||
The deaf daughter of an Elvis impersonator witnesses the murder of an undercover cop by a mob boss's underlings, necessitating the Rangers' protection until the boss can be taken down. | ||||||||||||||
162 | 8 | "Widow Maker" | Jerry Jameson | Gordon T. Dawson | November 13, 1999 | 708 | 12.23[153] | |||||||
With the community gearing up for its first rodeo for charity, a father targets Trivette, after Trivette accidentally killed his son, who had tried to sexually assault a female rider. But after bull rider Ty Murray (who plays himself in this episode) is injured in one of the revenge attempts, Walker must take his place to ride a dangerous bull known as the Widow Maker. | ||||||||||||||
163 | 9 | "Fight or Die" | Michael Preece | Gordon T. Dawson | November 20, 1999 | 709 | 12.89[154] | |||||||
A deep-cover cop is killed while investigating a prize fighting tournament inside an Arkansas prison. The Governor of Arkansas calls in the Texas Rangers, since it will be easier for out-of-state lawmen to maintain an undercover status. Trivette (as a guard), Walker and Gage (both as convicts) just have time to discover that the warden (Charles Napier) is behind this brawling-for-dollars ring...before the warden's leading enforcer (UFC legend Frank Shamrock) gives Gage and Walker the fight of their lives. | ||||||||||||||
164 | 10 | "Rise to the Occasion" | Eric Norris | Bob Gookin | November 27, 1999 | 710 | 13.59[155] | |||||||
Sydney poses as a singer to investigate a corrupt club owner, while Walker seeks to end the conditions that led to a middle-schooler's suicide. | ||||||||||||||
165 | 11 | "Full Recovery" | Clarence Gilyard Jr. | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | December 11, 1999 | 711 | 11.18[156] | |||||||
When Brad Roberts (Scott Weinger), an employee of a genetic research facility finds sarin nerve gas there, he enlists his younger brother Danny to help get a sample of the gas to the authorities, which backfires and results in Brad's death and Danny being left badly hurt and with amnesia. Danny needs the rangers' protection until he can recover his memories to verify the assailants, as the owner of the facility plans to use the gas at an upcoming military air show in an act of revenge against the military's top brass (as he blames them for his son's suicide). | ||||||||||||||
166 | 12 | "A Matter of Faith" | Michael Preece | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | December 18, 1999 | 712 | 12.34[157] | |||||||
The Rangers investigate a rash of armored car robberies by a gang whose members dress as Santa Claus. Elsewhere, at a church where ex-gang members worship, the Christmas donations are stolen by current gang-members; the church pastor is accidentally injured during the robbery. The pastor's protégé, an ex-gang member, threatens to throw his life away by hunting down those responsible. Notes:
| ||||||||||||||
167 | 13 | "Vision Quest" | Jerry Jameson | Rob Wright | January 8, 2000 | 713 | 12.23[158] | |||||||
Just as Walker and Alex decide to get engaged, Walker is temporarily blinded by a bomb during an attempt on his life. While Walker learns to cope with this disability, the other Rangers seek out those responsible. Note: The opening credits are modified for the remainder of the season, following Noble Willingham's departure from the series. | ||||||||||||||
168 | 14 | "A Matter of Principle" | Eric Norris | Janet A. Wilson and Michael L. Wilson | January 15, 2000 | 714 | 14.37[159] | |||||||
A retired Texas Ranger (Robert Fuller) joins Walker in the pursuit of those who shot his daughter during a jewelry store robbery. | ||||||||||||||
169 | 15 | "Thunderhawk" | Mike Norris | Story by : Rob Wright and Reuben Leder Teleplay by : Rob Wright | February 5, 2000 | 715 | 10.97[160] | |||||||
The head of security of a research lab steals a powerful sonic arm laser cannon from his employers while en route to have it transported to a military base and plans to sell it to a group of Middle Eastern terrorists, but they subsequently have it stolen from them from a group of robbers the Rangers were already chasing. | ||||||||||||||
170 | 16 | "Justice Delayed" | Michael Preece | John Lansing | February 12, 2000 | 716 | 11.53[161] | |||||||
Seeking to prove her father innocent of murder, a female student (Tammy Townsend) gets Trivette to help. Meanwhile, registering for their wedding shows Alex a part of Walker she'd not seen before. | ||||||||||||||
171 | 17 | "The Day of Cleansing" | Christian I. Nyby II | Story by : John Lansing and Bruce Cervi Teleplay by : Gordon Dawson | February 19, 2000 | 717 | 15.47[162] | |||||||
In this crossover episode, which continued from the Martial Law episode "Honor Among Strangers", Walker comes back from Los Angeles with Sammo Law (Sammo Hung) to track down the white supremacist Cliff Eagleton, whom they had caught but had later escaped custody. To help determine Eagleton's next target, Sydney and Gage go undercover to gather information, with Gage infiltrating Eagleton's hate group and Sydney going to a ranch owned by the man who is financing Eagleton's operations. | ||||||||||||||
172 | 18 | "Black Dragons" | Michael Preece | Doug Heyes Jr. & Rob Wright | February 26, 2000 | 718 | 13.71[163] | |||||||
Gage is assaulted by a diplomat's son, who is protected by diplomatic immunity. However, when Gage reveals he overheard the son talking about a drug shipment, the Rangers start a new investigation, when they believe that it's connected to the deaths of several students and gang members. | ||||||||||||||
173 | 19 | "Soldiers of Hate" | Jerry Jameson | Leslie Pike | March 18, 2000 | 719 | 9.26[164] | |||||||
The Texas Rangers must stop a white supremacist group from destroying a Unity Festival. Meanwhile, Gage finds out that a little boy is being tempted towards gang life by his brother's influence and decides to be a positive role model to help steer him away from it. | ||||||||||||||
174 | 20 | "The General's Return" | Christian I. Nyby II | Galen Tong | April 8, 2000 | 720 | 10.54[165] | |||||||
Walker seeks to bring justice to a Vietnamese gang responsible for murdering the son of his former martial arts instructor. | ||||||||||||||
175 | 21 | "Showdown at Casa Diablo: Part 1" | Eric Norris | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | April 29, 2000 | 721 | 10.83[166] | |||||||
The Rangers incur the wrath of a Mexican drug lord by intercepting several shipments of cannabis. Alex and Sydney were kidnapped by the drug lord at the end of the episode. | ||||||||||||||
176 | 22 | "Showdown at Casa Diablo: Part 2" | Jerry Jameson | Bruce Cervi and John Lansing | May 6, 2000 | 722 | 11.76[167] | |||||||
Walker, Trivette, and Gage go to Mexico to rescue Alex and Sydney. They work their way across the Mexican countryside to Casa Diablo. In the ensuing showdown, the drug lord and his brother are both killed. | ||||||||||||||
177 | 23 | "The Bachelor Party" | Mike Norris | Rob Wright | May 13, 2000 | 723 | 12.52[168] | |||||||
On a wilderness trip for Walker's Bachelor Party, the men (Walker, Trivette, and Gage) have to contend with both a violent criminal out on bail and an equally violent grizzly bear which puts Gage in critical condition. | ||||||||||||||
178 | 24 | "Wedding Bells" | Christian I. Nyby II | Bob Gookin | May 20, 2000 | 724 | 13.16[169] | |||||||
179 | 25 | 725 | ||||||||||||
As Walker and Alex prepare to tie the knot, Walker finds out that they have both been targeted for death by an assassin. The wedding, which features a performance by country singer Tracy Lawrence, proceeds without incident. However, what happens en route to their honeymoon in Paris is a different story. (Joan Jett plays an ex-CIA Agent in this episode. In syndication, this is a two-part episode; however, it is one episode on the DVD release.) |
Season 8 (2000–01)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | Viewers (millions) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
180 | 1 | "Home of the Brave" | Michael Preece | Rob Wright | October 7, 2000 | 801 | 11.57[170] | ||||||
To catch a group of kidnappers targeting newborns, Sydney and Gage play the role of the parents of the most recent baby-napping. Meanwhile, Alex encounters a man trying to force tenants out of rent-controlled apartments and convinces a judge to halt the owner's attempt to have the place condemned so he can demolish it to make room for a strip mall. When a boy accidentally witnesses the owner's accomplice sabotaging the building's furnace (so the owner could stage an accident to demolish the building without being held liable) and is trapped, Walker must rescue him before the building collapses. | |||||||||||||
181 | 2 | "Deadly Situation" | Eric Norris | Gordon T. Dawson | October 14, 2000 | 802 | 10.05[171] | ||||||
A rookie police officer, trying to expose corruption in his department is forced to take Alex hostage after they framed him for stealing drug evidence and killed his partner. Walker must protect the rookie cop (who happens to a descendant of legendary Texas Ranger, Hayes Cooper) from both the corrupt officers and the rest of his own department who believe him to be dirty until he and Alex can prove his innocence and find the person who framed him. | |||||||||||||
182 | 3 | "White Buffalo" | Mike Norris | Janet A. Wilson and Michael L. Wilson | October 21, 2000 | 803 | 10.16[172] | ||||||
On the reservation, Walker investigates the mystery of a statue of a white buffalo (an animal sacred to the local native Americans) that appears to cry real tears. Gage goes undercover to bust the dealers of a designer drug called "white buffalo", while Sydney and Alex, who are on a hike in the mountains with a young Cherokee girl Fawn to visit the site where the last white buffalo was killed, inadvertently stumble upon the headquarters of the drug distributors and Sydney is injured when she is shot in the arm forcing them to hide to escape their pursuers. | |||||||||||||
183 | 4 | "The Avenging Angel" | Mike Norris | Shel Willens | October 28, 2000 | 804 | 9.36[173] | ||||||
A professional wrestler friend of Trivette's dies in an act of sabotage, and when their search suggests that this was due to an extortion scheme against his manager by a local businessman to forcibly merge his company with their wrestling company, Sydney and Gage go undercover to gather evidence to prove it. At the end of this episode, Walker and the group receive devastating news: C.D. Parker has died. Guest starring Ernest Borgnine as Eddie Ryan. | |||||||||||||
184 | 5 | "The Winds of Change" | Eric Norris | Rob Wright | November 4, 2000 | 805 | 10.72[174] | ||||||
First episode of a four-part storyline, the longest in the series, which aired over four weeks during the November sweeps in 2000. At a senator's behest, Walker must stop a criminal genius who has infiltrated Federal law enforcement computer systems by leading a task force consisting of himself, Trivette, Gage, Sydney, a New York cop, and a computer hacker. Guest starring Paula Trickey (Pacific Blue). | |||||||||||||
185 | 6 | "Lazarus" | Michael Preece | Galen Tong | November 11, 2000 | 806 | 9.58[175] | ||||||
In the second episode of a four-part storyline, the Chairman (Michael Ironside) continues to use knowledge gained from his computer hacking to terrorize Federal agents, and manages to keep Walker at bay. However, Walker's hacker manages to discover a crucial detail in the Chairman's plan that could give them a breakthrough. | |||||||||||||
186 | 7 | "Turning Point" | Eric Norris | Story by : Rob Wright Teleplay by : Duke Sandefur | November 18, 2000 | 807 | 10.55[176] | ||||||
In the third episode of a four-part storyline, Walker begins making real progress in ending the Chairman's reign of terror. Hoping to gain an edge over Walker, the Chairman hijacks a plane carrying a key witness to protect one of his associates, and Gage and Sydney are their only hope of delivering it safely. | |||||||||||||
187 | 8 | "Retribution" | Michael Preece | Raymond Hartung | November 25, 2000 | 808 | 11.15[177] | ||||||
In a desperate bid to avoid capture as Walker closes in, the Chairman orders hits on the task force. But when that fails, he kidnaps Alex in the finale of a four-part storyline. | |||||||||||||
188 | 9 | "Child of Hope" | Mike Norris | Julie Beers | December 9, 2000 | 809 | 9.47[178] | ||||||
A young woman leaves her baby with Alex after her husband is killed by a gang of thieves he assisted in a home invasion gone sour. Alex decides to care for the baby, in spite of Walker's reluctance. As soon as the Rangers discover the link between the infant and his mother and the botched home invasion, attempts by the gang on the young woman's life are thwarted, with the final showdown being at the Walker ranch, where the young woman is reunited with her parents. At the end of the episode, Alex finds out she is eight weeks pregnant. | |||||||||||||
189 | 10 | "Faith" | Michael Preece | Rob Wright | December 16, 2000 | 810 | 9.79[179] | ||||||
The granddaughter (Arreale Davis) of a close friend of Walker and Alex (Dionne Warwick), who was diagnosed with a genetic liver disorder, is in need of a transplant when her current liver starts to fail. A donor is found two weeks later, but the ambulance transporting the organ is hijacked by a group of bank robbers, also kidnapping one of the EMTs after killing the other. When the young girl's current liver begins to fail rapidly than expected, the Rangers have very little time to track down the thieves, rescue the paramedic and recover the liver. | |||||||||||||
190 | 11 | "Golden Boy" | Eric Norris | Story by : Chuck Norris Teleplay by : Raymond Hartung | January 6, 2001 | 811 | 9.79[180] | ||||||
Walker tries to keep promising young boxer Juan Guerrero from throwing away his future after his caring mother and abusive father are killed in a car crash (due to the father's drunk driving). Meanwhile, the Rangers start an investigation to stop a counterfeit ecstasy ring which is selling Angel's Kiss (ecstasy laced with PCP), after three teens high on the drug are hit and killed by a train. While surveying the drug dealers, they witness Juan at a meeting with the ring's leader, whom Juan has been told is a big-time fight promoter. | |||||||||||||
191 | 12 | "Desperate Measures" | Michael Preece | Duke Sandefur | January 20, 2001 | 812 | 10.83[181] | ||||||
After two bank robbers break their girlfriends out of a prison transport bus to continue their robbery spree, Walker and Trivette are in hot pursuit. Meanwhile, two other escapees pick up Gage, who is in need of transportation after his bike breaks down on his way back to Dallas from a charity motorcycle ride. One of these women is a thrill killer, but the other is the victim of a setup by her mob boss ex-husband, who, upon hearing the news, sends his men out to kill her. | |||||||||||||
192 | 13 | "Division Street" | Mike Norris | Story by : Aaron Norris and Galen Tong Teleplay by : Julie Beers | February 3, 2001 | 813 | 10.62[182] | ||||||
To help stop gang-related activities, Walker and Boomer Knight (Hulk Hogan) organize basketball tournaments amongst a group of rival gang members.[183] When Boomer convinces the kids to stop working for a local drug dealer, the dealer takes his revenge by kidnapping Boomer. Now, Walker embarks on a manhunt to rescue Boomer and put an end to the drug dealer's reign. | |||||||||||||
193 | 14 | "Saturday Night" | Eric Norris | Rob Wright | February 10, 2001 | 814 | 9.40[184] | ||||||
Walker and Alex have dinner at a local nightclub with the wife (Denise Gentile) and daughter (Laura Bailey) of the owner (Frank Stallone). Meanwhile, Trivette goes undercover as a street hustler to investigate recent mob-related murders, which are also associated with the main plot. It is revealed that the nightclub owner owes money to a loan shark who wants him to repay the debt by signing over the club, so Walker sets out to find a way to bring down the loan shark, and the murders may prove the smoking gun. | |||||||||||||
194 | 15 | "Justice for All" | Christian I. Nyby II | Story by : Chuck Norris Teleplay by : Gordon T. Dawson | February 17, 2001 | 815 | 11.05[185] | ||||||
When a lawyer (C. Anthony Jackson) preparing to file a scathing police brutality lawsuit on behalf of a serial rapist (David Saunders) is found dead, Walker investigates. Meanwhile, his replacement (Jonathan Adams) prepares to file a lawsuit against Trivette, Sydney, and Gage on behalf of the rapist after they attempted to question him earlier, to which this lawyer plots to have the rapist and his friends falsely implicate the Texas Ranger's actions during the incident to receive a huge payoff from the civil suit. Also meanwhile, the vengeful father (Beau Billingslea) of one of the rapist's previous victims takes matters into his own hands and stalks him in order to catch him doing so again in an effort to prove his crimes so his daughter can then testify against him. | |||||||||||||
195 | 16 | "6 Hours" | Michael Preece | David T. Levinson | April 14, 2001 | 816 | 8.65[186] | ||||||
During an awards banquet where Alex is being honored for her work at the H.O.P.E. Center, a billionaire's (Daniel Hugh Kelly) teenage daughter (Mercedes McNab) is taken hostage by her traitorous bodyguard (Nick Chinlund) who demands a ransom. To make things go from bad to worse, he plots to kill her on an Internet feed broadcast on live television and then flee the country, and the Rangers have within six hours to find and catch the traitorous bodyguard and rescue the girl before she is murdered. | |||||||||||||
196 | 17 | "Medieval Crimes" | Eric Norris | Story by : Raymond Hartung and Chuck Norris Teleplay by : Raymond Hartung | April 21, 2001 | 817 | 8.36[187] | ||||||
Workers at a Medieval-themed restaurant moonlight as fine art and jewelry thieves. But after one of them is killed during a robbery, Sydney and Gage go undercover at the restaurant to find the rest of the gang. Trivette goes to a prison to pick up a prisoner that says that he is a jinx. | |||||||||||||
197 | 18 | "Legends" | Mike Norris | Rob Wright | April 21, 2001 | 818 | 10.95[187] | ||||||
After a mob boss is convicted, his son decides to get revenge by targeting the three key people that put his father away, the judge, the head juror, and the prosecuting attorney, Alex, by hiring people who are not connected to his organization to murder them and then kill them afterwards to cover his tracks. Meanwhile, Walker's kickboxing friends are in town for the World Kickboxing Championships set to take place in Dallas that weekend. | |||||||||||||
198 | 19 | "Unsafe Speed" | Garry A. Brown | Duke Sandefur | April 28, 2001 | 819 | 8.49[188] | ||||||
After a truck driver who was using meth kills a family, he tells the Rangers who his supplier was before he dies and the supplier in turn tells them that a biker gang gave him the meth. Meanwhile, Alex discovers that with the driver's qualifications, he would not have been given a trucker's license and there have also been similar recent incidents of unqualified drivers. While Sydney and Gage go undercover as bikers to infiltrate the gang, Trivette goes undercover as a new trucker applicant at a licensing firm to find who is illegally issuing trucker's licenses. | |||||||||||||
199 | 20 | "Without a Sound" | Mike Norris | Aurorae Khoo | April 28, 2001 | 820 | 10.76[188] | ||||||
Gage loses his hearing during a car theft, in which his old high school girlfriend and her fiancée were killed by the thief. While Gage faces the prospect of being deaf for life, Walker and Trivette try to track down the killer, who is the leader of an auto theft ring, while Sydney guards Gage from the gang, who plot to assassinate him before he could ID the leader. | |||||||||||||
200 | 21 | "Blood Diamonds" | Eric Norris | Raymond Hartung | May 5, 2001 | 821 | 8.28[189] | ||||||
The Rangers try to bring a halt to the black market trade of African conflict diamonds for illegal weaponry. Meanwhile, Alex finds herself in danger of exposure to the Ebola virus, and matters go worse when Walker and Trivette are being tracked down by the men responsible for the illegal trade. The episode would not only turn out to be a vivid nightmare by Alex, but also a premonition, which might result in the deaths of Walker and Trivette. | |||||||||||||
201 | 22 | "The Reel Rangers" | Christian I. Nyby II | Julie Beers | May 5, 2001 | 822 | 10.26[189] | ||||||
Walker and Alex make preparations for the impending arrival of their baby. Meanwhile, the Rangers end up on a movie set and become stars in the process. A charity motorcycle ride features Walker and Trivette. | |||||||||||||
202 | 23 | "The Final Showdown" | Aaron Norris | Gordon T. Dawson | May 19, 2001 | 823 | 10.82[190] | ||||||
203 | 24 | ||||||||||||
In the series finale, a gang of Walker's former enemies break out of the Texas State Penitentiary in Huntsville. They proceed to exact revenge on Walker and his fellow Rangers by exterminating Ranger Company B in its entirety...including Wade Harper (last seen in Season 7's "A Matter of Principle"). The leader of this group, Emile Lavocat, also reveals that he murdered C.D. Parker via ricin poisoning. Meanwhile, Alex goes into labor and makes clear her concern for Walker's well-being, as she does not want to raise this baby alone; elsewhere, Trivette asks an old girlfriend Erika to marry him. (She was last seen in Season 7's "Justice Delayed", recruiting Trivette to help clear the name of her jailed father.) One last Hayes Cooper story also concurs: Cooper retires from the Texas Rangers to raise a family, but a group of outlaws – led by an old enemy (who is Lavocat's ancestor) – plot to kill him. At the episode's end, the Rangers take down the gang (with Walker blowing up Lavocat with a grenade), and Alex and Walker introduce their daughter Angela (a reference to Chuck Norris's 1988 movie Hero and the Terror) to their friends. (Note: In syndication, this is a two-part episode.) |
Television film (2005)
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Walker, Texas Ranger: Trial by Fire | Aaron Norris | John Lansing & Bruce Cervi | October 16, 2005 | 10.20[191] |
References
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- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 10-16)". The Los Angeles Times. November 19, 1997. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 17-23)". The Los Angeles Times. November 26, 1997. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 1-7)". The Los Angeles Times. December 10, 1997. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 8-14)". The Los Angeles Times. December 17, 1997. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 15-21)". The Los Angeles Times. December 24, 1997. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 29-Jan. 4)". The Los Angeles Times. January 9, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 5-11)". The Los Angeles Times. January 14, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 12-18)". The Los Angeles Times. January 21, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 26-Feb. 1)". The Los Angeles Times. February 4, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 23–March 1)". The Los Angeles Times. March 4, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (March 2–8)". The Los Angeles Times. March 11, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (March 16–22)". The Los Angeles Times. March 25, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (March 30-April 5)". The Los Angeles Times. April 8, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 13–19)". The Los Angeles Times. April 22, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 20–26)". The Los Angeles Times. April 29, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 27-May 3)". The Los Angeles Times. May 6, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 4–10)". The Los Angeles Times. May 13, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 11–17)". The Los Angeles Times. May 20, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 21-27)". The Los Angeles Times. September 30, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 28-Oct. 4)". The Los Angeles Times. October 7, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 5-11)". The Los Angeles Times. October 14, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 12-18)". The Los Angeles Times. October 21, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 19-25)". The Los Angeles Times. October 28, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 26-Nov. 1)". The Los Angeles Times. November 4, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 2-8)". The Los Angeles Times. November 11, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 9-15)". The Los Angeles Times. November 18, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 16-22)". The Los Angeles Times. November 25, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 30-Dec. 6)". The Los Angeles Times. December 9, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 7-13)". The Los Angeles Times. December 16, 1998. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 4-10)". The Los Angeles Times. January 13, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 18-24)". The Los Angeles Times. January 27, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 1-7)". The Los Angeles Times. February 10, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 8-14)". The Los Angeles Times. February 18, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 15-21)". The Los Angeles Times. February 24, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 22-28)". The Los Angeles Times. March 3, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 19–25)". The Los Angeles Times. April 28, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 26-May 2)". The Los Angeles Times. May 5, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 3–9)". The Los Angeles Times. May 12, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- 1 2 "National Nielsen Viewership (May 10–16)". The Los Angeles Times. May 19, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 17–23)". The Los Angeles Times. May 26, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 20–26)". The Los Angeles Times. September 29, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Sept. 27–Oct. 3)". The Los Angeles Times. October 6, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 4-10)". The Los Angeles Times. October 13, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 11-17)". The Los Angeles Times. October 20, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 18-24)". The Los Angeles Times. October 27, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 25-31)". The Los Angeles Times. November 3, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 1-7)". The Los Angeles Times. November 10, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 8-14)". The Los Angeles Times. November 17, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 15-21)". The Los Angeles Times. November 24, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 22-28)". The Los Angeles Times. December 1, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 6-12)". The Los Angeles Times. December 15, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 13-19)". The Los Angeles Times. December 22, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 3-9)". The Los Angeles Times. January 12, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 10-16)". The Los Angeles Times. January 19, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 31-Feb. 6)". The Los Angeles Times. February 9, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 7-13)". The Los Angeles Times. February 16, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 14-20)". The Los Angeles Times. February 24, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 21-27)". The Los Angeles Times. March 1, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (March 13–19)". The Los Angeles Times. March 22, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 3–9)". The Los Angeles Times. April 12, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 24–30)". The Los Angeles Times. May 3, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 1–7)". The Los Angeles Times. May 10, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 8–14)". The Los Angeles Times. May 17, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 15–21)". The Los Angeles Times. May 24, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 2–8)". The Los Angeles Times. October 11, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 9–15)". The Los Angeles Times. October 18, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 16–22)". The Los Angeles Times. October 25, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 23–29)". The Los Angeles Times. November 1, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 30–Nov. 5)". The Los Angeles Times. November 8, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 6-12)". The Los Angeles Times. November 15, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 13–19)". The Los Angeles Times. November 22, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 20–26)". The Los Angeles Times. December 1, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 4–10)". The Los Angeles Times. December 13, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Dec. 11–17)". The Los Angeles Times. December 20, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 1-7)". The Los Angeles Times. January 10, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 15–21)". The Los Angeles Times. January 24, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 29–Feb. 4)". The Los Angeles Times. February 7, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ The basketball games are played at midnight, a time when crimes occur. The parents and citizens attend the games in a gesture of community awareness.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 5–11)". The Los Angeles Times. February 14, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 12–18)". The Los Angeles Times. February 22, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 9–15)". The Los Angeles Times. April 18, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- 1 2 "National Nielsen Viewership (April 16–22)". The Los Angeles Times. April 25, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- 1 2 "National Nielsen Viewership (April 23–29)". The Los Angeles Times. May 2, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- 1 2 "National Nielsen Viewership (April 30–May 6)". The Los Angeles Times. May 9, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 14–20)". The Los Angeles Times. May 23, 2001. Retrieved April 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ "Weekly Program Rankings (Oct. 17-23)". ABC Medianet. October 25, 2005. Archived from the original on December 21, 2008. Retrieved April 22, 2023.