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Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 7 Review: A Trip Down Memory Lane

Critic's Rating: 3 / 5.0

After a week off for Thanksgiving, Sheriff Country returned in style, opening with a case that involved a student brutally beaten at school.

It didn’t take long to find out who was involved in the attack, but it was clear there was something much bigger going on. This wasn’t an attack due to just any boy.

Meanwhile, we got to see more of Nathan and Cassidy’s personal storylines, making it clear that there is more to come for these characters, and Wes started his journey of going legit.

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

Boone Finally Showed Emotion

Since meeting Boone, there’s been something off about him, but Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 7 finally gave him a chance to show some emotion.

During Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 6, we learned that he married his best friend’s widow, but it was clear there was more to this relationship.

All of that came up in “Glory Days,” with Boone and Nora finally discussing their feelings and the events that led to their relationship. Sure, it started in grief, but there are genuine feelings for each other there.

Boone has always come across as wooden and emotionless, and that’s what has been so off-putting with him. There was only emotion when he was looking to get one up on Mickey.

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

This episode adds a new layer to his character, as we finally see that someone can make him tick and make him confess feelings.

A lot of this came out of nowhere.

When we met Nora on Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 5, there was no hint of real feelings. Even on the next episode, there was little from Boone when it came to romantic feelings.

It honestly felt like their marriage was simply one of support and financial need, which then led to one-sided feelings for Nora.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

Sheriff Country could have done a better job of showing Boone having feelings for Nora during the sixth episode, but at least we finally got some emotional arc for him.

Where do they go from here? That’s something for Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 8 to answer.

Cassidy Gets More Backstory

There’s always a character or two on a new show that takes time to develop, and we’ve certainly had that on Sheriff Country with Gina and Cassidy.

However, I will give the series credit, as there are clearly teases here and there, and we did learn a lot about Cassidy in a recent episode as she helped a sufferer of domestic violence.

Sheriff Country
(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS )

On Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 7, we learn a little more. She had a sister, and something happened to that sister that we don’t get to know about.

It’s possible to infer a few things, in that Cassidy’s sister likely passed away, but with Cassidy’s story of domestic violence, the two arcs may connect.

We need more of Cassidy’s personal life, as this episode is only the second time we’ve even seen her out of uniform.

It’s almost like her job is her whole life, but working on the car at the end of “Glory Days” makes it clear that is not the case.

We’re still in the early days of Sheriff Country Season 1, though, and there’s been a lot going on with Mickey and Boone’s storylines, but I would like to see things pick up for Cassidy outside of her relationship with Travis very soon.

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

Wes Going Legit

The episode certainly brings up a reason for many people not to go legit when it comes to selling weed.

Wes is put off by the paperwork and government oversight in his operations, and it genuinely makes him question whether going legit is worth it.

In the end, it’s not Mickey, Travis, or even the threat of the law itself that makes Wes decide that he has to go legit; it’s all about Skye.

Having these two with their B — or sometimes C — stories has been incredible, as it highlights the fact that age is just a number. They are both struggling with the same issues.

Sheriff Country
(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS )

Sheriff Country has done a fantastic job of showcasing Wes and Skye’s relationship and how that bond has grown in a short time.

We’ve had a chance to see how they lean on each other and support one another, and even how they need to be in each other’s lives.

Having Wes choose his granddaughter over everything means the world to Skye, and of course, she’s going to help him with the paperwork.

There is a hint of a potential future for Skye in all of this, as she clearly handles paperwork well and shows signs of familiarity with legal documents and contracts. Could she become a paralegal or something similar?

With so much focus on what Wes will do with his life, we do need to spend time on Skye and see her develop personally, and not just in terms of her bond with her grandfather.

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

Mickey and Travis Reminisce

The case of the week was brutal, but it also continued to highlight Mickey and Travis’ past. While they worked a case that took them to high school, they couldn’t help but reminisce.

There are plenty of feelings still between them, and I did love the point Mr. Diamond made about flames of love being like stars in the sky — has it really flamed out?

Mickey and Travis clearly haven’t flamed out, and the hour finally gives us a real connection that could have me rooting for them.

While Mickey says they get along well now because they’re divorced, she’s not looking at why that is.

Being divorced has taken the pressure off them and made their relationship work, and now they can see what they did like about each other as they continue to co-parent their adult child.

Mickey’s Ironclad Instincts

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

Sometimes, I do wish Mickey were wrong about a suspect, though, as it’s going to make her head big soon.

During this episode, she refused to believe that Mr. Diamond was a predator because she looked up to him for the way he helped her in high school.

However, everyone had a reason to suspect him because some of the things he did could be taken the wrong way, and he should have thought about that.

I was happy that he wasn’t the predator in the end, because I would hate to see what that would do to Mickey, realizing that he was potentially grooming her as a teen, but I would like to see her instincts be wrong just the once.

(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

The case itself is critical, focusing on predators in school and how they can manipulate people, but the episode didn’t do it justice.

This is something I’m finding with a few cases on Sheriff Country. Those cases serve as catalysts for the personal arcs rather than as essential cases in their own right.

With Sheriff Country landing a second season, there is time to correct this, and maybe once all the characters have been thoroughly introduced, the series can put the focus on some of the police work.

Sheriff Country airs on Fridays at 8/7c on CBS.

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Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 6 Review: Wes Gets Time to Shine

Critic's Rating: 4 / 5.0

I think we all knew how the ending to Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 6 would go.

What we didn’t know was just how heartwrenching this episode would be for Wes Fox.

The man has seen a lot over the years, but nothing quite like what he experienced during “Exit Interview,” which added another layer to an already lovable man.

At the same time, there was plenty of development for Boone, with his story making sense and adding a layer to his character that I definitely didn’t see coming.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

Wes Is Heartbroken

We knew Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 6 would be personal for Wes just from the promo, but I wasn’t expecting something as personal and heartbreaking as we got.

When a body was found by the Eel River, Wes immediately rushed over, as this was a friend of his.

Not only was Wes there to comfort the widow of this man, but he made sure that the investigation happened and that nobody was railroaded into a false confession.

He definitely didn’t want anyone arrested for something they didn’t do, and Wes wasn’t exactly going to trust Boone after what he did to Skye.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

I was so glad to see Mickey give Wes something to do, since she knew that he would end up taking part in the investigation anyway.

In the end, Wes was the right person to handle some of the investigation, as not only did he help rule out the Bulgarian gang that had moved into Edgewater, but he also got information the cops never would have.

However, at the same time, he got a few home truths thrown at him, as not everyone was happy about him moving back in with his daughter, because she’s a cop.

These friends are all illegal weed growers, and it’s not surprising that they’re against the cops, but not all of them are against Wes going to live with his daughter.

They get that choice, especially when his granddaughter is also there, and I think so many of them would have done the same if they could.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

The anger toward him came from a different place, and Sheriff Country reminds us that hurt people hurt people.

In the end, the murder was something we didn’t see coming, and it had nothing to do with the threats against Will’s widow, Bernice.

This was far more personal and heartbreaking, and W. Earl Brown portrayed the hurt, the shock, and the grief perfectly.

Finding out that one friend murdered another is already heartbreaking in itself, but this wasn’t a basic case of jealousy or anger.

Sure, those emotions were there, but there was also guilt, sorrow, and a general sense of loss.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

As the truth came out, Wes could just watch as another friend died — this time, taking his own life due to the guilt and shame.

But that’s not where Sheriff Country ended it.

After Wes got back home, he felt a similar sense of loss, because this wasn’t just about grieving a friend; it was about losing purpose.

The friend who murdered Will was losing everything in life, and without being able to sell his home, he was bankrupt and had nowhere to go.

For Wes, there’s a loss of place, as it’s clear some of his friends look down on him for leaving the backcountry.

Sheriff Country
(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS )

Mickey knows that Wes doesn’t want to completely give up who he was in the past, but he needs to do things legally, and she supports him with a pamphlet on how to grow weed legally.

As we get older, we’re supposed to have our lives set, right?

There’s this idea that as adults, we have our career paths sorted out, and that we know where we’ll be in our retirement, but that’s not always the case, and Wes is that voice for so many who don’t quite know what they want to do or where they’re going.

Wes is leaning on family in the way that it would be nice for all of us to do, and I’m so glad that he has Mickey, because if he didn’t, I’d be afraid that he’d take the same route as his friend in taking his own life.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

Boone’s Past

At the end of Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 5, we got a twist that didn’t make sense, and nobody really saw coming.

It turns out Boone is married, but nobody knew. 

Well, except for Gina, because Gina seems to know everything, and it’s clear that she is the gossip in the station.

Now, I would love to know a little more about Gina, but this episode wasn’t the time for that, as the focus was on getting information about Boone.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

Yes, he came out with the expected line about keeping work and personal life separate, because that was Mickey’s thing for so long, but there is more to this story of the wife in another city.

No, Boone and his wife weren’t going through a trial separation, and they weren’t even planning on “getting back together” when Boone moved back to Oakland.

This was more of a marriage of duty rather than one of love, as Nora explained that she was with Boone’s former partner, and that man was the father of her child.

Gina and Mickey had worked out that something had happened with Boone’s former partner due to surnames, but Nora and Boone hadn’t had an affair.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

It turned out that Nora and Boone’s friend weren’t married, and when he died, it meant that Nora and her son couldn’t get the survivor’s pension, which caused financial problems.

Boone had always felt guilty that he couldn’t help his friend, who had taken his own life due to alcoholism and depression, and so, he married Nora to make sure there was some sort of protection for her and some financial help.

We get this honorable look at a man who has spent two years in Edgewater and barely gotten to know anybody.

Up to this point, he’s made some questionable choices, and he’s come across as a little cliched, but there is a depth to him, and I’m now glad that he is sticking around in Sheriff Country Season 1, as it means we get to learn more and see how far he will go for the people he cares about.

Sheriff Country
(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS )

Cassidy Makes a Choice

It was only on Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 4 that Wes told Mickey that Cassidy and Travis wouldn’t make it past a couple of months, and he was right.

After Skye’s murder trial, Cassidy decided that she needed space, but Travis wasn’t really willing to give that space.

Look, I get both sides of this.

While Cassidy certainly needed time to process her feelings and figure out what she wanted, she also needed to keep some communication open with Travis.

Sheriff Country
(Christos Kalohoridis/CBS)

By cutting him out completely, she had effectively made her choice, and when she finally told him that their relationship had to come to an end, it wasn’t the shock that it probably could have been.

I don’t feel anything for this couple, though.

We haven’t had the chance to get to know them.

Travis has been in a handful of episodes, and mostly for Skye, while Cassidy only got the time to share some of her backstory on Episode 5, and we’ve barely seen them together as a couple to really want them to succeed.

This entire storyline should probably have been closer to the middle of the season to have an impact, but I do wonder if it was just a way to give Cassidy a voice and show that she will use it in a relationship.

Sheriff Country
(Darren Goldstein/CBS )

I also wonder if it was just a way to show us the kind of man Travis is in a relationship with, as Mickey points out that he loves too fast, which can be a problem.

In the end, the arc was one that just didn’t seem to matter, but that was a good thing for Sheriff Country Season 1 Episode 6, as the focus was on Wes and Boone.

This episode does end in a way that makes it clear we have a bigger story to come after the Thanksgiving break — or maybe after the winter break — as while Will’s murder was solved, the threats against Bernice and Will before his murder and the break-in during the episode were left open, and this offers more hope we’ll see yet more development for Wes.

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Sheriff Country airs on Fridays at 8/7c on CBS.

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Cheryl Brannen

Saturday 22nd of November 2025

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