President Donald Trump’s FBI director nominee Kash Patel will appear at a confirmation hearing this week, as the devoted Trump ally has long vowed to punish Trump’s enemies—drawing widespread criticism from even top officials in Trump’s first White House.
It was probably inevitable that the worlds of FBI and CIA would eventually collide on a TV show from Dick Wolf, the king of crime procedurals. It is happening with FBI: CIA, a planted spinoff from Wolf’s hit CBS drama FBI,
Langley joins the FBI and Energy Department in agreeing that a lab leak is the most likely source of the pandemic.
FBI: CIA, a spin-off of the show FBI, is in the works at CBS. Per Deadline, casting is underway for the three series leads. These characters will appear in an episode of FBI set to air this spring. The episode will serve as a backdoor pilot.
The project is said to be written by Dick Wolf himself as well as FBI: Most Wanted showrunner David Hudgins, Nicole Perlman of Pokémon: Detective Pikachu and Guardians of the Galaxy fame, and former CIA officer David Chasteen. The lead characters have yet to be cast.
As Donald Trump signs an executive order to declassify and release all remaining records relating to the assassination of President John F Kennedy, ‘The Rest is History’ podcaster and historian, Dominic Sandbrook,
FBI: The CIA is set to follow a dedicated, straight-laced FBI agent and a street-smart CIA agent who are part of a new, clandestine task force charged with solving and preventing domestic terrorism in and around New York City.
The new series unites a dedicated, strait-laced FBI agent and a street-smart CIA agent in a New York City taskforce
Nobody does franchise television quite like CBS. With hits like CSI and NCIS, the network continues to expand its universe with a new FBI spin-off that promises to surprise viewers.
The evaluation, declassified and released by new CIA director John Ratcliffe, was conducted during the Biden administration.
The finding suggests the agency believes the totality of evidence makes a lab origin more likely than a natural origin, but the agency's assessment assigns a low degree of confidence to this conclusion.