Cloudy … With a Chance of Improvement,” an episode ranked much higher here. It was so dull it inspired them to try again seven seasons later with “Remake, a.k.a. Roday Rodriguez said he and the cast had crowned “Cloudy … With a Chance of Murder” Psych’s weakest episode due to its bland courtroom narrative. While the rest of this list is subjective and open to friendly debate among fans, this bottom spot is inarguable. “Cloudy … With a Chance of Murder” (Season 1, Episode 12)
#PRISON BREAK SEASON 3 EPISODES 14 SERIES#
In celebration of Psych 2 : Lassie Come Home, which premiered July 15, Vulture decided it was time to revisit the series and give it the episode ranking it so richly deserves.ġ22. What could be more important in life?Įight seasons and 120 episodes aired before Psych came to an end in 2015, with two bonus films following in the years since. They never had any guaranteed money, but they sure had guaranteed fun. Viewers could see themselves as, or aspire to be, Shawn and Gus - not as a fake psychic and his brother-in-arms but as the platonic ideal of BFFs, who, if given another chance to do it all over again, wouldn’t change a damn thing about the adventures their little beachfront agency brought into the world. This show is truly a story about the bromance between two lifelong friends who didn’t hesitate to answer the door when their childhood dreams came knocking. The real magic of Psych, though, is how it tells the procedural format to suck it. The brusque head detective Carlton Lassiter (Timothy Omundson), self-assured junior detective Juliet O’Hara (Maggie Lawson), and indulgent chief Karen Vick (Kirsten Nelson) round out Psych’s core team, along with Gus’s hundreds of nicknames and a sedan called the Blueberry. Shawn’s partner in business and in life is Burton “Gus” Guster (Dulé Hill), who slowly warms to the idea that indulging in the case of the week is far more fulfilling than his nine-to-five gig at a pharmaceutical company. Stuck in arrested development with an endless rotation of obscure pop-culture references, he’s the son of a former department detective (Corbin Bernsen) and possesses a prolific amount of observational and investigative skills, giving him the perfect excuse to begin a new career as a “supernatural consultant” for hire. Shawn Spencer ( James Roday Rodriguez) isn’t actually divining anything from the spirits, of course. Back in 2006, USA Network executives gathered at their conclave and smoked up the network’s blue-skies with their new show selection: Psych, which follows a “psychic detective” and his best friend who help solve an alarmingly high amount of crimes for the Santa Barbara Police Department.