The CW has released some promotional images and an official spoiler description to promote the Wednesday, January 11 episode of the Frequency television series.
Yes, Episode 111 airs on 1/11. Go figure! Here’s the write-up for the episode, which is called “Negative Copy.”
ONLY THREE EPISODES LEFT UNTIL OUR SEASON FINALE! — Raimy (Peyton List) and Frank (Riley Smith) find themselves in the thick of things. Meanwhile, Frank learns the meaning behind a betrayal. Mekhi Phifer, Devin Kelley, Anthony Ruivivar, Daniel Bonjour and Lenny Jacobson also star. John Behring directed the episode written by Michael Alaimo (#111). Original airdate 1/11/2017.
You can find some photos from the episode below. Browse KSiteTV for more Frequency coverage!
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Looks like the regular trailer is misleading. In the trailer, it looks like Raimy is in trouble for shooting Deacon Joe at the gas station, but of course that time-line has been erased by the failed kidnapping.
Instead, it looks like Joe got out of the trunk after the accident, and went to the police about it. Frank will initiate an investigation about him being the Nightingale Killer (images of Joe in an interrogation room). This will come to nothing, because Joe is still free in 2016, when Raimy points a gun at him in the police station due to her confused multiple memories, and gets in trouble for it.
Bottom line, if the police couldn’t arrest Joe as the NK for 20 years, then he is innocent of everything except domestic abuse. He didn’t even kill his wife. If his house can be searched, no body will be found. It was probably planted by the real killer sometime after 1996. The killer has not only been playing with them, but probably has access to temporal messages himself to set up this elaborate frame to get Frank, Raimy, or both into trouble.
It would seem only the car accident, which the killer could not have predicted, has saved Frank and Raimy from killing the wrong man, an act that would have destroyed them. Raimy will face some well-deserved consequences for her trigger-happy vigilante-style “police work,” but it’s far from the worst that could have happened.