Tracker Season 3 Premiere Kicks Off With the Shaw Brothers Reunited and Tackling a Disturbing New Case
Welcome back to Tracker land, folks!
Colter’s still reeling. Jensen Ackles is back. And the Shaw brothers just stumbled into their weirdest and potentially most deadly case of all.
What a start to Tracker Season 3!

Listen, coming into this new season, a lot of people were hoping things would pick up right where they left off with Colter and Otto getting into the nitty-gritty about what happened up on that cliff.
The revelation at the end of Tracker Season 2 Episode 20 was by far the most critical piece of information we’ve received about the Shaw family drama, and that conversation was far from over.
But it’s television, and instead of returning to Colter’s confused and heartbroken face, we got a time jump of a few weeks that honestly annoyed me at first.
Shows love to skip over essential events sometimes, summing them up in a little information dump instead of allowing the audience to immerse themselves in those tough conversations alongside the characters.
But once things played out, with Russell tracking Colter down and the two of them having this elongated and decidedly raw talk about what Colter learned, the past, and what to do moving forward, I understood that the better play was having the audience learn more about Colter and Otto’s talk for the first time alongside Russell.

Colter’s been tortured by what happened to his father and the pains from his adolescence his whole life.
It may not dominate his every move, and he does a hell of a job trying to suppress his feelings to the point that the casual acquaintance would never know internally how much the past eats him up inside, but he can’t hide that way from Russell.
Taking himself off the grid was dire enough for Reenie to send Russell after him, and it didn’t take long for Colter to tell Russell everything he knew, and while it was an information dump, it was also a highly charged moment that was able to breathe.
Anyone who watched Justin Hartley in This is Us knows that he can nail an emotional beat with the best of them. Still, Tracker has never been the kind of show that needs him to get to these super deep, emotional places unless it’s dealing with things regarding his family.
Colter confiding in Russell was so beautifully done, with these big moments of silence between the two brothers, as they processed and observed one another, and even though these are grown men now, with years of hard life experience, it just honestly felt like a big brother and little brother moment.

Colter talked, Russell listened, and when Colter apologized after YEARS of ghosting his brother and believing the very worst about him (for valid reasons or not), Russell didn’t make him feel bad about it or throw anything back in his face.
In typical Russell fashion, he often deflected or made a joke where possible as a means to lighten the mood. Still, he also validated his brother and made him feel like, even with everything, their relationship was going to be okay, and it was going to be okay.
For as good as Hartley is in these kinds of scenes, Jensen Ackles is just as great, and the two have this amazing dynamic that we’re fortunate to get to see a few times a season.
I appreciated that they allowed both brothers to be the most honest we’ve probably ever seen them, with Colter not pretending like he could shut off his feelings like Russell does, and Russell seeing that for what it was and not leaving him to fester in the past and still searching for answers without offering a hand.
Considering where things started during Tracker Season 1 between them, I’m amazed by how far they’ve come and have slowly taken the steps to strengthen their relationship.

Big brother Russell was, of course, the one to offer up that they get back in the reward game, and again, that felt like his way of trying to get his brother out of his head for a bit.
Getting him back on the road and out of his doom spiraling, if even for a few days, felt to Russell like a healthy alternative to Colter spending his nights drinking beer at random backwoods bars and obsessing in the Airstream every night.
Now, it would probably be better for Colter if his everyday job wasn’t so dangerous, but that’s a conversation for another day.
Their case of the week ended up being much more complicated than it seemed on the surface, and while Tracker loves a conspiracy or a twist, this one had twist upon twist, but nothing felt forced.

What started as the brothers believing that Cal’s wife and daughter were potentially caught up in his ex’s new boyfriend’s pyramid scheme shenanigans, turned odd really quickly when they found said boyfriend dead and missing a hand.
Tracker cases that immediately subvert early expectations are the best kind of cases, and this one kept getting stranger and stranger, especially once it started to look like Lisa may have had nothing to do with the whole plan.
Colter and Russell always make such a fun duo because of how different they are and how they treat everything. Colter’s consistently stoic and by the books, whereas Russell flies by the seat of his pants and makes everything fun, even when it shouldn’t be.








