Tracker‘s newest episode had Justin Hartley‘s Colter Shaw looking for a missing girl in a possible murder case — but was he able to track her down alive?
The Sunday, December 7, episode of the hit CBS series showed Colter helping a grieving mother one year after her daughter disappeared from their home. The mother was struggling with alcohol addiction at the time and woke up to find her little girl missing — in addition to blood at the scene that hinted at an injury.
The whole town turned on the mother so when her daughter’s dress was left on her property, she was arrested on suspicion of murder. Colter had to race against time to find clues that would absolve the mom, which is how he discovered that the original detective on the case with the little girl’s grandfather.
Ultimately the original detective kidnapped the girl and raised her with his wife. But once Colter was onto him, the grandfather nearly killed a man trying to escape. He decided to release his granddaughter, who was safe and sound. Colter reunited mother and daughter by the time the episode came to an end.
Tracker, which premiered in February 2024, introduced fictional survivalist Colter as he travels the country to help solve various missing persons cases. As Colter has received more and more help, the ensemble cast has grown with their respective characters, including handlers Teddi (Robin Weigert) and Velma, hacker Bobby (Eric Graise) and attorney Reenie (Fiona Rene).
After joining Tracker in season 1, Weigert’s character was written off in the premiere with her wife, Velma (Abby McEnany), admitting that they needed some distance. Velma then started working with Reenie and Teddi wasn’t discussed again in season 2.
Season 2 then caused some to be concerned about when Graise was noticeably absent from six episodes. News later broke that Graise and McEnany wouldn’t be coming back — at least for now.
“I do think it’s evolving. If I can’t evolve those characters — Randy or Reenie or Bobby — they’re not just people that just pick up the phone and go, ‘OK, here is the answer.’ That’s when the show is phoning it in,” executive producer Elwood Reid exclusively told Us Weekly in May. “The challenge is when you got to learn about them, which I thought was interesting. That’s the challenge of the show is not having it fall into a formula.”
Reid noted that they didn’t want Tracker to “fall into complacency.”
“The only rule I really have of the show is each week Colter is going to come to a new place and there’s going to be a new case. How he gets those answers and what he uses on the team, that’s all something that’s up for grabs,” Reid teased. “Meeting these [local] weird characters is something we’re going to try to do more of as the season goes on. Just Colter coming in and interacting with other characters. That’s fun to see Justin flex those muscles with really good guest cast members.”
Ahead of season 3, Reid defended the decision to shake up season 3.
“Justin has to carry so much of the show. So I don’t want the other characters that are in the show to just be phone-a-friend where whenever he’s in trouble, he just picks up the phone. The challenge in season 3 has been how do we build actual good story out of [it],” Reid teased.
He continued: “It’s just building out those story lines. The challenge we set up for ourselves this season was to build out those people’s world a little bit. It’s about trying to get a little bit of lightness [into the show] because sometimes Colter is doing some really dark and heavy stuff. It’s life or death.”
Tracker airs on CBS Sundays at 8:30 p.m. ET before streaming the next day on Paramount+.











