The season ender was also a big episode for Coop, who ultimately chose not to pursue romance with Skye or Patience. “It’s the people outside of it that are the problem.” “He can trust the people that he’s been able to trust from Day One - Coop and Jordan, all those people, they’re such a tight-knit group,” Ezra continues. “ her now, suddenly, in direct conflict with his football dreams… I don’t think he ever entertained any scenario where the two of them would be on actual opposing sides.”īut now that Wade Waters and (possibly) Coach Garrett have proven they don’t exactly have Spencer’s best interests at heart, Spencer might want to keep his Crenshaw and Beverly Hills relationships more intact than ever. I think it’s the most important thing to him,” Ezra tells us in the video above, when asked if Spencer might, on any level, feel that breaking up with Olivia is the right solution. “In that moment, he wants to fight for his relationship. Friday on Starz.Riverdale Ending: KJ Apa Reacts to Final Season News (and a ‘Bughead’ Reunion?), Teases Musical Episode While Dougal is long dead, Deadline reported last year that McTavish would be reprising his role as Jamie's uncle at some point in season seven (our bet is that it will be via a flashback), along with a number of other characters that have not been seen since Jamie and Claire left Scotland.Įpisode six of "Outlander" season seven is now available to stream on, and also airs at 8 p.m. However, in the case of Buck, the team behind the show have recast the character this season, most likely because Dougal is also set to make a reappearance this season and they didn't want to confuse audience members. It wasn't the first time the show has had an actor inhabit two roles in an inspired move, Tobias Menzies portrayed both Claire's first husband Frank Randall, and his villainous ancestor Captain Jonathan "Black Jack" Randall, in the first couple of seasons. "Outlander" did an interesting bit of casting when Buck MacKenzie showed up for the first time in season four, and had the role played by Graham McTavish, the same actor who had previously portrayed Buck's father, Dougal MacKenzie, before he was killed off in season two. When Roger ran into Morag again at the Battle of Alamance during the War of the Regulation in North Carolina, in 1771, he was relieved to see that his blood relative was still alive and gave her a kiss on the forehead, which enraged Buck so much he became hell-bent on retribution.Īs a result, Roger was beaten, bound up, and hanged by Buck and his men as a Regulator captive, an ordeal that he just barely survived.īoth Diarmaid Murtagh and Graham McTavish have played Buck MacKenzie. For audiences that might need a refresher, Buck is Roger's four-times great-grandfather, something Roger discovered after crossing paths with Buck and his wife Morag MacKenzie (Elysia Welch) during his journey from Scotland to America shortly after he traveled through the stones to the 18th century. We hardly blame him, given the strife Buck caused Roger in season five. It's safe to say that Roger, like audiences, has a lot of questions about how William Buccleigh "Buck" MacKenzie (Diarmaid Murtagh) has come to be in the 1980s, given the fact that he was born over 200 years before.īut after he catches Buck staring through the windows of Lallybroch (he is, it turns out the mysterious "nuckelavee" that his children have been talking about for the last few weeks), his first port of call is to punch him squarely in the face. It often indicates a user profile.īuck MacKenzie (Diarmaid Murtagh) makes a return in "Outlander" season seven, episode six. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.
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