Current:Home > InvestRekubit Exchange:David Boreanaz vows epic final 'SEAL Team' mission before Season 7 ends -Capitatum
Rekubit Exchange:David Boreanaz vows epic final 'SEAL Team' mission before Season 7 ends
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-06 07:39:55
During an upcoming episode of "SEAL Team,Rekubit Exchange" David Boreanaz's Bravo Team leader Jason Hayes has a rare moment of relaxing reflection on a beach while sucking down a bottle of the show's famed (and fictional) Liberty Anthem beer.
"Beer always tastes better after a mission's success," Hayes muses wryly.
For Boreanaz, who has played the leader of the most elite unit of Navy SEALs since 2017, the line has greater resonance, knowing that Season 7 of the Paramount+ series (the first two episodes stream Sunday) will mark the end of "SEAL Team." It's time to declare "mission accomplished" for the military show, which is still a blow for the cast, crew, and semper-fi fan base.
"I've always looked at the 'SEAL Team' dialogue as a metaphor, and this is the right time to be ending the series," Boreanaz, 55, tells USA TODAY. "But that beer ... it tasted bittersweet."
Max Theriot leaves 'SEAL Team':The actor is pouring his heart, hometown into 'Fire Country'
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Why is 'SEAL Team' ending in Season 7?
Sure, it's hard to let go of the gritty, long-running series. Boreanaz and Hayes have survived every type of gnarly firefight since 2017, when "SEAL Team" was a primetime CBS show. They kept rolling as the series moved from the network to Paramount+ before Season 5 and endured the Season 6 TV death of core member Clay Spenser (when actor Max Thieriot left the show to create "Fire Country").
"SEAL Team" has continued with its loyal, if not overwhelming, audience and a lean budget.
"You watch some of these seasons. and you're like, 'How the hell did we do that with that budget we had?' " says Boreanaz. "I'd put 'SEAL Team' up against any big action film."
Still, Boreanaz says he has supported, even endorsed, the idea of ending the show after this Hollywood strike-delayed season, at least partly because of the physical grind for a 50-plus actor portraying an active Navy SEAL every week.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
"My body was hurting and sore; I had four MRIs in four months," says Boreanaz. Hayes' Season 4 promotion to get him out of the weekly battles didn't last long. "Hayes just isn't the guy who stays behind the scenes and watches his men go out without him."
A hand-to-hand battle between Hayes and an armed terrorist early in Season 7 shows Boreanaz can still bring the beast. But there's a cost.
"We wanted it to be brutal," he says. "Your hips and your shoulders hurt. You put the ankle brace on and it's just part of the game."
Does Jason Hayes die in 'SEAL Team' Season 7?
Bravo Team is Initially sidelined in Season 7 by Navy brass for ruffling feathers while seeking support on real-world issues such as traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. But Hayes and his "SEAL Team" crew − including Ray Perry (Neil Brown Jr.) and Sonny Quinn (A.J. Buckley) − will get unleashed on a final mission involving a return to Afghanistan. This trip will be so dangerous that Boreanaz repeatedly teases the prospect of ending the show with Hayes' death.
FYI, this probably won't happen, but it was discussed.
"What excited me about ending the show was ending the character altogether," says Boreanaz. "Because that's what happens every time you come off a Blackhawk helicopter on a mission."
If history is a guide, Boreanaz has not gone for the finale stake in the heart on any of his past characters or TV shows, including "Angel," the supernatural WB spinoff of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." The open-ended 2004 finale featured Angel and his vampire pals about to fight an overwhelming army of supernatural freaks, with an unbowed Angel growling, "Let's go to work."
"Does (Angel) make it, does he not make it? It teases the audience," says Boreanaz. "There's a thirst for more."
The actor's Fox police procedural "Bones" ended in 2017 after 12 years and 246 episodes. Boreanaz's FBI Special Agent Seeley Booth and Emily Deschanel's forensic anthropologist Dr. Temperance "Bones" Brennan were still in a good place after thwarting a hair-raising final bomb plot. The two "Bones" stars are great friends, even if Boreanaz has not appeared on Deschanel's episode-dissecting podcast "Boneheads." (He officially cites "SEAL Team" scheduling for the oversight.)
An overdue podcast appearance could be in the future, but Boreanaz says there are no "serious discussions" about resurrecting any past characters or shows or appearing on any new "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" reboot. He's cultivating his next move.
"I'm now seeing the fruits of labors planted during 'SEAL Team' starting to mature, whether a new series or movie or stage play," says Boreanaz. "For me, it's really putting one series to bed and starting another project."
How will 'SEAL Team' end for David Boreanaz?
There are many story threads to tie up, but the "SEAL Team" finale, titled "The Last Word," will stream on Oct. 6. Boreanaz says the setting will be Honduras, with the month-long shoot taking place in Colombia.
Rather than Liberty Anthem beer, each cast and crew member received multiple bottles of the finest bubbly from Boreanaz to toast the final scene. Ending "SEAL Team" might be bittersweet, but actually completing the show's ultimate scene was a champagne-soaked Colombian beach party under the setting sun.
"To be able to pop corks and spray champagne like I just won the World Series made it one of the most satisfying endings of all for me," says Boreanaz. "I have hilarious video of us all spraying each other. It was a great relief knowing we accomplished what we set out to accomplish."
veryGood! (631)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Clashes erupt in France on May Day as hundreds of thousands protest Macron's pension reforms
- Researchers explore an unlikely treatment for cognitive disorders: video games
- How one book influencer championing Black authors is changing publishing
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Why Women Everywhere Trust Gabrielle Union's Hair Line to Make Their Locks Flawless
- The 'Orbeez Challenge' is causing harm in parts of Georgia and Florida, police warn
- Iran airs video of commandos descending from helicopter to seize oil tanker bound for Texas
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Elon Musk addresses Twitter staff about free speech, remote work, layoffs and aliens
Ranking
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- Lincoln College closes after 157 years, blaming COVID-19 and cyberattack disruptions
- Axon halts its plans for a Taser drone as 9 on ethics board resign over the project
- What does a black hole sound like? NASA has an answer
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Here's how Americans view facial recognition and driverless cars
- Netflix lost viewers for the 1st time in 10 years, says password sharing is to blame
- Fast, the easy checkout startup, shuts down after burning through investors' money
Recommendation
Blake Lively’s Inner Circle Shares Rare Insight on Her Life as a Mom to 4 Kids
The Environmental Cost of Crypto
How the false Russian biolab story came to circulate among the U.S. far right
King Charles' coronation crowns and regalia: Details on the Crown Jewels set to feature in the ceremony
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Abbott Elementary Star Quinta Brunson’s Epic Clapback Deserves an A-Plus
COMIC: How a computer scientist fights bias in algorithms
Estonia hosts NATO-led cyber war games, with one eye on Russia