In Season 7, the deputies of Reno’s Sheriff’s Department reassemble old faces such as Lt. Jim Dangle, Deputy Trudy Wiegel, Deputy Raineesha Williams, Deputy James Garcia, Deputy S. Jones, and Deputy Travis Junior return (along with others) to respond to a new wave of absurd calls. But now, episodes are short, punchy sketches dealing with hostage situations, conceal-carry fashion shows, hostage standoffs, and other over-the-top scenarios. The season leans into quick-fire parody of modern policing and reality-cop shows, often exaggerating incompetence, corruption, and absurd bureaucracy. Despite constrained runtime, Season 7 keeps the show’s biting satire, edgy humor, and irreverent tone alive proving that even after a long break, the chaos never left.
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Films that twist perception and push your mind to the edge.
Stories that challenge your thoughts and make you rethink everything.
Movies that feel like drifting through a vivid, cinematic dream.
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Warm, uplifting stories filled with joy, comfort, and feel-good moments.
Root for the unlikely heroes who rise, fight, and win against the odds.
Cinematic journeys that explore life, existence, and the universe itself.
When Season 7 premiered, the revival didn’t just bring back old deputies it brought back characters who had “died” in the original run. Some fan-favorite cops killed off in earlier seasons (after the infamous explosion of the taco stand at end of Season 5) returned as if nothing had happened. Many fans were shocked and confused. The show essentially ignored prior canon deaths, resurrecting characters without explanation.
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