![]() ![]() Aiden goes back to work and gets good news: a hit in CODIS on the DNA from the swizzle stick. She presses him to go and tells him she's just looking out for him. Aiden asks Danny if he's been to his mandatory psych evaluation after the shootout he was involved in, and he tells her he hasn't. Danny tells her he ran the bullet and it matched a gun used in three unsolved robberies from 1999-2002 the owner is unknown. Aiden is swabbing the swizzle stick in the lab. He retrieves the fatal bullet from one of the man's bones. Hawkes tells Danny the second shooter is Adam Baxter, who had a short rap sheet. She confesses she was getting the nerve up to talk to Mac, and afterwards she approaches him and suggests meeting at a bar. Stella questions Rose, who doesn't remember much. Mac also noticed a third man, who dropped a twenty-dollar bill on the table and left after the shootout. The first shooter got away, but he left behind a chewed up swizzle stick, which the CSIs bag. The first ricocheted off a metal chair and hit a pastry tray the second hit Amy the third killed the second man. When the CSIs arrive at the scene, Danny and Aiden are sent to search for evidence in the shop while Mac fills Stella and Flack in on what happened. Mac tries to stop the first man from fleeing but he escapes while Mac tends to Amy. A shootout ensues Amy and the second man are hit. The gun's owner picks it up and aims it at the girl another man rises and aims a gun at the first man. ![]() Before Mac can respond, he's distracted: Amy has pulled a newspaper off a customer's table to reveal a gun. After her boyfriend leaves, Amy starts to get Mac's order and the woman next to him, Rose, begins flirting with him shyly. Amy, the waitress, is chatting with her boyfriend and Mac takes a seat. ![]() Mac walks into a coffee shop for his morning breakfast. Only someone who'd imbibed quite a bit would believe that 16 million viewers will endure the painful download and registration process, and learn the strange byways of Second Life, just to get a glimpse of a virtual Sinise at work.While Mac dines at his local breakfast spot, a gunman opens fire, leaving a waitress critically injured and a man dead, and Mac having to choose whether to chase after the suspect or save the life of the young woman. Well, that makes a certain sense, if you're sloshed. The way Zuiker tells it, CBS bought a stake in 3-D-world content developer Electric Sheep and realized it needed to do something with it. "What you'll see is Gary Sinise's avatar be downloaded. Zuiker, divulging the details to columnist Ellie Gray at a CBS party, seems to have been confused, and possibly more than a little drunk. The premise is similar to alternate-reality games - a genre which crosses between the Web and real life, in which authors scatter a collection of mysterious puzzles online and offline, already practiced by ABC ( Lost) and NBC ( Heroes) to maintain viewer attention between broadcasted episodes. The television conclusion will air sometime in the spring. Viewers can then follow the Gary Sinise avatar into Second Life, where they'll help solve the mystery in a virtual Crime Lab. ![]() This fall, Gary Sinise, the lead on CSI: New York, will chase a killer into virtual worlds. The bad news is that creator Anthony Zuiker has decided to build a CSI-branded crime lab in Second Life. The good news is that we're not going to get a fourth painfully derivative iteration of CBS's CSI: Crime Scene Investigation franchise. This image was lost some time after publication. ![]()
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