The Price of Free and Fair Election

"The Price of Free and Fair Election"
Scandal episode

Olivia convinces Fitz (left) to speak to the nation after the bombing.
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 18
Directed by Tom Verica
Written by Shonda Rhimes
Featured music "The Light"
"Papa Was a Rollin' Stone"
Original air date April 17, 2014
Guest actors

"The Price of Free and Fair Election" is the 18th episode and the season finale of the 3rd season of Scandal, and is the 47th overall episode. It aired on April 17, 2014 in the U.S.

Plot

Fitz has yet to arrive to the funeral with only 14 minutes left before a bomb goes off, as Cyrus keeps stalling him. Rowan is rushed into the hospital after the stabbing by Maya and Adnan is worried about the President's absence from the church. After calling Cyrus multiple times, Jake warns Fitz about the bomb and starts to evacuate just in time before the bomb goes off. Olivia comes to the White House and convinces Fitz to talk to the nation, but faces trouble when the networks use a split screen showing both Fitz and Sally Langston as she helps victims outside the church after Leo convinced her it will help her chances of winning the election. After the incident, Sally's poll numbers go up, convincing both Olivia and Cyrus that Fitz is going to lose the election. Fitz is desperate to try to win, but Olivia tells him its over.

Harrison convinces Adnan to help her get away from Maya in exchange for letting him go. When he and Abby come back to Pope & Associates, they are shocked to see Huck and Quinn having sex in the office. Charlie breaks up with Quinn, but before he leaves, he gives her an envelope containing information about something Huck has been looking for. David tries to convince Jake that B6-13 must be brought down, along with Cyrus because of his refusal to inform Fitz about the bomb, but Jake is not interested.

Back at the White House, Fitz talks to Olivia about how they can finally move to Vermont after he loses the election, but Olivia, feeling guilty about Fitz's plan to leave Mellie, reveals the secret that Mellie was raped by Big Jerry 15 years ago. Fitz goes to Mellie and reconciles with her, and she breaks down about what happened.

With 24 hours left until election day, people are speculating that Sally Langston will win and become the first female president of the United States. Leo Bergen enjoys a drink with Cyrus, who advises him to protect his soul and stay single when he becomes the White House Chief of Staff. After reading the information given to her by Charlie, Quinn takes Huck to the house where his estranged family lives. However, Huck becomes furious that she brought him to their new home. Fitz calls Olivia while waiting to give a last speech with his family, explaining that he can't leave Mellie for her and Vermont, not after learning about the rape. Maya shows up at the hospital to threaten Olivia and explains why she tried to kill Fitz. At the same time, as Fitz gives a speech, his son Jerry suffers a seizure and later dies.

At the hospital, Olivia informs the press about Jerry's death due to Bacterial Meningitis. With America rallying behind Fitz after his family's loss, Cyrus and Olivia realize that they are going to win the election, and they discuss their transformation to political animals rather than people. Tom tells Fitz that a substring of the bacteria that killed Jerry had been stolen from a lab just a few days earlier, and that Jerry was murdered. Rowan talks to Fitz about Jerry, in which Fitz claims his suspicion of Maya Pope's involvement of the murder, in which Rowan convinces Fitz to let him kill Maya.

On election day, it is revealed that Fitz has had a sudden surge in the polls after the loss of his child. He comforts Mellie when she packs Jerry's clothes after she realizes that she was not there for her son. Huck tells Olivia that Quinn found his family, and he explains why he can't involve himself in their lives. in a phone call with Rowan, Olivia asks if the offer of a new life is still available. Abby is furious with Olivia for deciding to leave and for trusting Rowan.

Harrison meets Rowan, who asks him to help finding Maya, but Harrison refuses. Rowan tells him that Adnan is dead - killed by Maya, which convinces Harrison to tell Rowan about where she will collect her money. Maya is later captured by Rowan's men.

Jake confronts Olivia about her decision to leave, and she blames everything that has happened on her. Jake asks to come with her, and though she claims to be in love with another man, she eventually agrees. When Harrison is informed about Olivia's plan to leave, he asks Rowan to stop her. Harrison figures out that it is Rowan, not Maya, who is responsible for Jerry and Adnan's death. Rowan explains to Harrison that Fitz took his child, Olivia, from him, so he took Fitz's child in return. Harrison tries to run, but Tom points a gun at him and kills him.

Fitz wins the election, but breaks down in the Oval Office with grief, as Mellie tries to get in touch with Olivia. David receives a bunch of B6-13 files from Jake, along with a note that says, "Go get the bad guys." Huck knocks on the door of his family's new home, and his former wife opens the door. It's revealed that, rather than killing Maya, Rowan has put her in the hole at B6-13. Olivia ignores a call from the White House and boards the plane with Jake, which takes them into the horizon.

Production

The episode was written by Shonda Rhimes and directed by executive producer Tom Verica.[1] The episode featured the songs "The Light" and "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone". The episode was the last for series regular Columbus Short as Harrison Wright after it was later announced that the actor would not return for the show's fourth season due to personal reasons.[2] As such, many critics and fans speculated about the character's fate after Harrison saw himself in a situation where he was pointed a gun at.[3]

The season finale was supposed to be episode 22, however due to the show's lead Kerry Washington's pregnancy, the episode count was trimmed by ABC of four episodes to 18 episodes.[4][5] Filming for the episode began on March 13, 2014,[6] and ended on March 27, 2014.[7] Information about the episode was kept under wraps. During filming the cast and crew were not allowed to take pictures and upload them on social media such as Twitter.[8]

Reception

Broadcasting and ratings

"The Price of Free and Fair Election" was originally broadcast on Thursday, April 17, 2014 in the United States on ABC. The episode's total viewership of 10.57 million scored a series high in total viewers,[9] up 15 percent from the last season finale which aired in May 2013, and was the top TV show in the 10:00 p.m. slot, beating Parenthood by 162 percent in Adults 18-19.[10] In the key 18-49 demographic, the episode scored a 3.4 in Nielsen ratings, up 6 percent from the previous season's finale, and the show reached the highest Adult 18-49 number for any 10pm drama telecast on any network since October - the season premiere.[10]

The 10.57 million people tuned into the episode marked a 15 percent viewership increase from the previous season's finale (9.12 million), in addition to the installment's 3.4 Nielsen rating in the target 18–49 demographic marked a 6 percent increase from 3.2, which was from the last season's finale.[10] The Nielsen score additionally registered the show as the week's highest rated drama and highest rated scripted series in the 18–49 demographic, and the fourth-highest rated scripted series in Total Viewers only behind CBS's NCIS (17.12), NCIS: Los Angeles (14.68) and Person of Interest (10.74).[11] Seven days of time-shifted viewing brought an additional 1.5 rating points in the 18–49 demographic and 3.81 million viewers, bringing the total viewership for the episode to 14.39 million viewers with a 4.9 Nielsen rating in the 18–49 demographic.[12]

Critical reviews

"I think if every episode of Scandal this season had been just like “The Price Of Free And Fair Elections,” this season would have been aces. It’s fast, it’s dramatic, and it pivots so fast it’s basically careening off the rails—which is all I want from Scandal, most of the time."

— Sonia Saraiya, AV Club [13]

The episode got a mixed to positive response from critics, who were happy with the finale but were more critical towards the third season as a whole. Sonia Saraiya from AV Club called the third season short on story and long on time, in addition saying "The third season barreled straight into the sun without looking back.[13] Luvvie from Awesome Luvvie was disappointed about the third season, calling it the weakest so far in the series as Olivia wasn't the strong woman she was in the first two seasons.[14]

Cory Barker from TV.com said: "it's probably for the best that Scandal's third season only ran for 18 episodes as opposed to the typical 22 to 24. Because you guys, it's been a huge mess—and the finale was absolutely no different".[15] Margaret Lyons of Vulture compared the episode to the third season, which she described as "all crescendo, no climax".[16] Avery Thompson from the Hollywood Life called the finale "crazy" because of the numerous twists that occurred in the episode.[17] Meredith Blake from Los Angeles Times said "Sure, this is a finale, so the stakes are necessarily going to be higher, but when the outcome of a presidential election -- on a show that is at least nominally about politics -- plays as a mere footnote, well, then you’ve got one overstuffed episode on your hands."[18]

Many critics commented on the pace of the episode. Andy Swift from TV Line called the finale a non-stop parade of explosions. [19] Cory Baker from TV.com commented that the finale, like the rest of the season, was "stuffed full of moments intended to shock us, or make us feel every single FEEL there is."[15] People's TV critic Tom Gliatto commented on how rushed the finale was, saying, "If you dared to leave the room for a glass of seltzer or to go to the bathroom, you might return and find yourself totally disoriented".[20] Mark Harris, executive editor for Entertainment Weekly, called the episode "an efficient summary of a five-hour episode."[21] Ben Doody from Heavy.com commented on the hype the bomb sequence had gotten before the finale aired but was only a small part of the episode saying "the bomb we’ve spent weeks waiting for goes off in the first few minutes of the episode."[22]

Writing for TV Fanatic, Miranda Wicker criticized the decision Olivia made when she told Fitz about the rape that Mellie had asked her not to reveal, saying, "It wasn't her truth to tell."[23] Sonya Saraiya from AV Club shared her opinion that the rape wasn't Olivia's secret to spill. However, she called the decision a statement of independence for a strong-minded woman.[13] Cory Baker expressed his disappointment that only a small part of the episode dealt with the news of the rape.[15]

References

  1. Writer: Rhimes, Shonda. Director: Verica, Tom (April 17, 2014). "The Price of Free and Fair Election". Scandal. Season 3. American Broadcasting Company.
  2. Abrams, Natalie (April 25, 2014). "Scandal Shocker: Columbus Short Not Returning for Season 4". TV Guide. Retrieved July 29, 2014.
  3. Swift[first=Andy (April 18, 2014). "Scandal Season Finale Recap: Father Knows Best". TVLine. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  4. Kondolojy, Amanda (December 6, 2014). "'Scandal' Episode Order Reduced". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  5. Ausiello, Michael (December 6, 2014). "Scoop: Scandal Season 3 Episode Order Trimmed in Wake of Kerry Washington's Pregnancy News". TV Line. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  6. "Today at #ScandalThursday Two units today epi 317 w/ Dir @msdebbieallen last day. Epi 318 Day 1 w/ Dir. @tomverica. Cast & Crew screening!😱👍". Twitter. March 13, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  7. "The crew moves for the final scenes of #Scandal epi 318 season 3. Lots of great energy on set tonight!". Twitter. March 27, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  8. "@tangelaekhoff Today's location and filming was so big, I literally couldn't show a thing/person that wouldn't spoil. Makeup peeps tomorrow.". Twitter. March 24, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  9. Bibel, Sara (April 18, 2014). "Thursday Final Ratings: 'Grey's Anatomy' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Bibel, Sara (April 18, 2014). "ABC Wins Thursday with 'Scandal' Posting Best-Ever Season Finale Ratings". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  11. Kondolojy, Amanda (April 22, 2014). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Scandal' & 'The Voice' Top Week 30 With Adults 18-49; 'NCIS' Leads Total Viewers". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  12. Kondolojy, Amanda (May 5, 2014). "Live+7 DVR Ratings: 'Grey's Anatomy' Has Biggest 18-49 Ratings Gain, 'Person of Interest' Tops Viewership Gain, 'The Following', 'The Vampire Diaries' & 'Reign' Top Percentage Gains in Week 30". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Saraiya, Sara (April 17, 2014). "Scandal: “The Price Of Free And Fair Elections”". AV Club. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
  14. Luvvie (April 18, 2014). "The Price of Free and Fair Election: Scandal Season 3 Finale Recap". Awesome Luvvie. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Barker, Cory (April 18, 2014). "Scandal Season 3 Finale Review: Handle Yourself". TV.com. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  16. Lyons, Margaret (April 18, 2014). "Scandal’s Season 3 Finale: Crescendo, Crescendo, Crescendo". Vulture.com. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  17. Thompson, Avery (April 18, 2014). "‘Scandal’ Finale Recap: Fitz’s Re-Election Ends In Heartbreak". Hollywood Life. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  18. Blake, Meredith (April 18, 2014). "'Scandal' recap: Olivia flies off into the sunset... for now". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  19. Swift, Andy (April 17, 2014). "Scandal Season Finale Recap: Father Knows Best". TV Line. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  20. Gliatto, Tom (April 18, 2014). "Scandal's Season Finale: Why It Was So Satisfying". People (magazine). Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  21. "That episode was like an efficient summary of a five-hour episode.". Twitter. April 17, 2014. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  22. Doody[first=Ben (April 17, 2014). "Scandal Season 3 Finale Recap & Review: Top 5 Spoilers". Heavy.com. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  23. Wicker, Miranda (April 17, 2014). "Scandal Review: The Devil In Disguise". TV Fanatic. Retrieved October 23, 2014.

External links