After 293 Episodes, the Reagan Family Prepares to Say Goodbye β But Not By Choice
When Blue Bloods first premiered in 2010, its future was far from guaranteed. βIt was the last pilot CBS picked up,β Tom Selleck recalls, βbut also the highest testing.β Legendary producer Leonard Goldberg fought to get it greenlit, and the partnership between Goldberg and Selleck gave the show its first real shot. βTom and Leonard were two titans,β Donnie Wahlberg says. βTheir reputations gave the show a chance.β
Wahlberg was on a New Kids on the Block cruise when he got the call to fly to New York for CBSβs upfronts. The network gave the new series the dreaded 10 p.m. Friday night slotβa time slot where shows usually went to die. But Blue Bloods beat the odds and dominated the night for 15 years.
From the very beginning, the cast knew this show was different. Though the pilot was filmed in Toronto, relocating to New York felt right. βThe Reagans belonged there,β they agreed. For over a decade, Selleck commuted from Los Angeles every two weeks, driven by his commitment to the showβand to the now-iconic weekly family dinner scenes. βThose dinners made it worth it,β he says.
But now, after 293 episodes, the Reagans are preparing to say farewellβnot because the cast is ready, but because CBS has decided Season 14 will be the last. The finale will air in two parts, concluding on December 13. Originally, the network ordered just 10 episodes, but Selleck pushed for a fuller sendoff and convinced them to add eight more.
A Legacy Built on Values
When Selleck first read the pilot script, he was worried the family dinner scenes would be cut. Goldberg promised they wouldnβtβand kept that promise.
Selleck also fought to keep the show grounded. The original concept had Police Commissioner Frank Reagan leading operations from a green screen-filled control room. βThatβs ridiculous,β Selleck saidβand his insistence on realism changed everything.
βI was scared to death at the start,β Selleck admits. A last-minute suggestion to adopt a New York accent rattled him, but he stuck to his instincts. His portrayal of Frank Reagan became the moral anchor of the show, even when characters clashed politically or personally. βThey didnβt always agree, but there was always respect,β Selleck reflects. βFrank and I might not vote the same wayβand thatβs a good thing.β
An Ending That Still Feels Unreal
Though filming wrapped five months ago, the finality hasnβt fully hit the cast. The last scene filmed was a funeral, but the real emotional gut punch came during the final family dinner. When the director called βThatβs a wrap,β the cast lingered. Then, unexpectedly, Selleck recited Edna St. Vincent Millayβs Love Is Not All.
βTom started saying it, and literally, my life passed before my eyes,β Wahlberg said through tears. βThis scrappy kid from a big family, watching him on TV, now sitting beside him in that momentβit was magic.β
Wahlberg says playing Danny Reagan changed him. βDannyβs loyalty to family made me think. I live in a different state than my siblingsβmaybe I need to fly home more, show up for things like Thanksgiving.β
Heβs keeping busyβNKOTB just announced a 2025 Las Vegas residencyβbut he still hopes for a miracle. βI keep waiting for someone from Blue Bloods to chase me down and say, βWaitβone more season!ββ
What’s Next?
Selleck isnβt retiring anytime soon. βIβve got a mortgage. Iβve got a ranch. And I love the work,β he says with a smile. Heβs working on another Jesse Stone movie and even entertained a pitch about a Blue Bloods spinoff where Frank retires and runs a small-town police force. βThatβs good,β he said, βbut Iβm writing Jesse again.β
As for a spinoff without the full Reagan family? Wahlbergβs not so sure. βWhereβs the family going to be? Thatβs the heart of the show.β
For now, the cast is moving forwardβbut still holding onto the magic of what they built. And maybe, just maybe, theyβll find their way back to the Reagan dinner table one more time.
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