Search

» » 9-1-1 Full Moon (Creepy AF) (2018– )

Short summary

A full moon keeps the crew busy with some of the craziest calls yet, as Athena investigates a potential home invasion and "faces off" against a rabid criminal, and Abby helps investigate the murder of a caller.

"P/R" is first responder jargon for "Person Reporting," or the person who filed a complaint.

The subtitle of the episode "Creepy AF", is known in full as "Creepy As Fuck".

In the scene where the tapeworm is being pulled from the patient, the background music is Shelley Duvall singing "He Needs Me" from the Popeye soundtrack.

The incident with the face eater is likely a direct reference to a real life event that happened in Miami on May 26th, 2012, where a man, who was assumed to be under the influence of bath salts, was found eating a homeless man's face. In the show, they mention that the man's tox screens for synthetics came back negative and showed only alcohol in his system (in the real life occurence, the man was only under the influence of marijuana, according to some sources)

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Shakataxe
    For a show that deals strongly in medical issues, this episode at one point unacceptably perpetuates a medical myth. Revealing this doesn't, IMO, qualify as a spoiler, and I don't think it will ruin the plot for anyone.

    The Fire-Department guys are called to a specialized yoga class where all the participants are late-term pregnant women. One woman has become "stuck" in a yoga pose and says she can't move because of severe pain in her back and legs. After the fire-guys/EMTs examine her, they determine that the baby is OK and that she has probably injured her back attempting the difficult yoga pose. Then the FD leader says, "She probably just *slipped* a disc."

    The problem, of course, is that there is no such thing as a "slipped disc." Spinal-column discs don't "slip" in and out of the spinal vertebrae like greasy pancakes. Discs herniate. They get tears in them, and those tears allow the fluid that separates and cushions our vertebrae to ooze out and press against the spinal nerves, causing pain.

    This is the 2nd "medical" program I've seen on TV within the past few months where the script has inaccurately perpetuated this incorrect myth. Why not just say, "She has herniated a disc"? Why not share correct medical information, instead of medical myths? I fault the show's writers, consultants, and producers for thinking we're all too dumb to be able to handle the correct medical terminology here.
  • Episode cast overview, first billed only:
    Angela Bassett Angela Bassett - Athena Grant
    Peter Krause Peter Krause - Bobby Nash
    Oliver Stark Oliver Stark - Evan 'Buck' Buckley
    Aisha Hinds Aisha Hinds - Henrietta 'Hen' Wilson
    Kenneth Choi Kenneth Choi - Howie 'Chimney' Han
    Rockmond Dunbar Rockmond Dunbar - Michael Grant (credit only)
    Connie Britton Connie Britton - Abby Clark
    Tracie Thoms Tracie Thoms - Karen
    Abby Brammell Abby Brammell - Eva
    Jenny O'Hara Jenny O'Hara - Nora
    Debra Christofferson Debra Christofferson - Sue Blevins
    Colby French Colby French - Det. Marks
    Pete Ploszek Pete Ploszek - Connor
    Sean Maher Sean Maher - Paul
    Kelly Smith Kelly Smith - Nora Jane (as Kelly E. Smith)
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com