The Event

A commercial airliner hijacking. The discovery of a secret CIA prison deep within the mountains of Alaska, whose prisoners apparently aren't human. A presidential press conference that could put the national security of the United States at risk. The mysterious disappearance of a young woman aboard a crowded cruise ship.

None of these incidents are "The Event". EV3NT".

The Event is a drama/science fiction TV series by executive producer Evan Katz (24). Told in anachronic order, the series tells the stories of several seemingly unrelated people whose lives intertwine as circumstances propel them toward some mysterious future happening known only as "the Event". The show premiered in the United States in 2010 on NBC, and stars Jason Ritter, Blair Underwood and Laura Innes.

The series premiered very strongly, but ratings dropped steadily throughout its run, and it was announced as cancelled on May 13, 2011.

The Event provides examples of the following:
"Vicky: Why are you so interested in Walker? Dempsey: Because every time I put an obstacle in his path, he destroys it."
 * Action Mom: Vicky
 * Action Survivor: Leila becomes this by episode four. Sean is this from the start.
 * Aliens In My Sky:
 * America Saves the Day: Thoroughly averted. America is actually making the situation worse as their unilateral approach is definitely endangering the entire human race. Made worse by the fact that every other nation is completely unaware that Sophia's people even exist.
 * Anachronic Order: Not only does the series continually switch among the main characters to tell the story from their perspectives, but it often shows events in reverse order before making its way back to the present.
 * Particularly funny as the time shifts are often seemingly done at complete random. Probably the worst is a flashback to Sean and Leila's first meeting being plopped into the middle of an exciting chase through a hospital.
 * Averted completely since the mid-season break. The storytelling is now completely linear.
 * Ancient Tradition: Dempsey claims to be part of a lineage of "Sentinels" who have protected the world from the aliens for thousands of years.
 * Anti-Villain:.
 * Apocalypse How: The aliens' home sun is on apparently on the verge of going supernova. Depending on how strong it is, this could place it somewhere between a Class 5 and a Class X-2.
 * And Sophia's plan is now to.
 * Awful Truth: Apparently the whole basis of the series, and the reason why the mysterious future incident is only referred to as "The Event".
 * Batman Gambit: Vicky and Carter pull one off in Episode 4 to fake Vicky's death and get Leila to call Sean.
 * In Episode 13, Sophia informs Martinez that Thomas is planning to teleport fuel rods out of a nuclear power plant, which would cause a meltdown. Martinez orders the rods removed from the plant,.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Sophia finds out that Isabelle wanted to have her assassinated.
 * Sean Walker. A unassuming computer programmer at the start, over the course of the series he manages to constantly foil many plots, take down many people far more powerful than he is, through sheer luck, Indy Ploys, and from being Genre Savvy. Dempsey even lampshades this fact, that whenever he puts an obstacle in front of him, Walker will find some way to destroy it.
 * Big Bad: Dempsey.
 * Also Thomas and now
 * Big Bad Wannabes:  find out that neither of them has quite what it takes to usurp Sophia.
 * Blood From the Mouth: When the flight 514 passengers displayed signs of some unknown illness, it manifested by bleeding from the eyes, nose, and mouth. Thomas offered the President an antidote to the unknown agent causing the illness in exchange for Sophia's release.
 * Break the Cutie: Sean had a difficult time after
 * The Chosen One: Dempsey apparently believes that Sean is predicted to protect the world from Sophia's people.
 * CIA Evil, FBI Good: Subverted in agent Simon Lee (played by Ian Anthony Dale), who seems genuinely interested in saving lives and is implied to be the person who leaked the files about the secret prison to President Martinez, although he is an alien and The Mole. Possibly played straight with Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Blake Sterling who kept the information from the President, though it's hard to gauge his motives without knowing who the prisoners are and why they're being held.
 * Thus far.
 * Played with by the two FBI agents that capture Sean Walker. Though they don't believe a word he says, they appear to be sympathetic and not a part of any conspiracy. By the third episode, the female agent has been converted to Sean's side, by virtue of her field office and coworkers being shot up by baddies.
 * Played straight with
 * Cliff Hanger: Assuming the series isn't renewed for a second season, then it ends on one hell of a cliffhanger - . At least they knew to end the season/series with a bang.
 * Cold-Blooded Torture:  attempts to do this to
 * Also.
 * Cradling Your Kill: This happens to one of the Alaskan prisoners when he offers to detail the plans of the aliens living outside the compound in exchange for the release of himself and his girlfriend. His girlfriend, still loyal to Sophia, holds him close and tells him to keep imagining their future together while she stabs him to death.
 * Cut Short
 * Damsel in Distress: Leila tends to be this although she can also kick ass when she has to. After her rescue she graduates to Action Survivor.
 * Dark Action Girl: Vicky.
 * Death Equals Redemption:.
 * Defector From Decadence: Simon attempts to desert Sophia because of her new Knight Templar attitude. Unfortunately,.
 * Destination Defenestration: One of Sophia's people kills himself this way to avoid being captured by the government.
 * Die Hard On Inostranka:  in episode 12.
 * Disney Death: Agent Lee, initially.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: The secret prison conversation below is disturbingly similar to a certain compound for holding dangerous individuals that would frighten the public.
 * Eerily played up further by references to Cuba in the conversation.
 * The Dragon: Sterling was this at first for Martinez, but now, it seems as if he's become a failing Morality Chain for the President. As of episode 16, Senator Catherine Lewis has become this for Martinez (and seems poised to become a Dragon-in-Chief - as it looks as if she might end up becoming Martinez' new Vice-President).
 * How? The Vice-President's not dead yet.
 * Oh, maybe because
 * Dull Surprise: A common complaint about Sarah Roemer's (Leila's) acting.
 * Dying Like Animals:  in episode 15.
 * Enemy Mine:
 * Engineered Public Confession: In the season finale,
 * Establishing Series Moment: The disappearance of a plane in the first episode: the first indication that this is a sci-fi series.
 * ET Gave Us Wi Fi: allegedly helped to push ahead the development of the atomic bomb by several decades.
 * Even Evil Has Standards: According to Vicky, she decided to stop working for Dempsey, after she learned about
 * Evil-Detecting Dog: A dog on the street can tell something's not quite right about Sophia.
 * Exposition of Immortality: The extraterrestrials look just like humans, but live much longer and age slowly. Photos of these characters taken decades ago, but still looking just the way they do now, are often the only clue the human characters get that reveal the true nature of friends and family members they thought they knew very well.
 * Face Heel Turn:
 * Freudian Excuse: Subverted. Vicky gives Sean a sob story about having to kill her abusive stepfather, then five seconds later she tells him it was all a lie and that she was pretty much born the way she is.
 * Gambit Pileup: There are some serious plans going on in this show.
 * Genre Blind: Jarvis' one weakness. He is an excellent manipulator, constantly makes everyone swallow his Blatant Lies and keeps up his flawless act even when he is called out on it - but in the finale he falls for one of The Oldest Tricks in The Book.
 * Genre Savvy: James Dempsey. Let's see, he understands that Martinez will be a good President, but further predicts both his and Sophia's shifts to Well-Intentioned Extremist. Even better, he successfully identifies Sean as The Hero, lures Sean in by putting his partner in UST in a Death Trap, and then offers him anything he needs to save the world..
 * Genre Savvy: James Dempsey. Let's see, he understands that Martinez will be a good President, but further predicts both his and Sophia's shifts to Well-Intentioned Extremist. Even better, he successfully identifies Sean as The Hero, lures Sean in by putting his partner in UST in a Death Trap, and then offers him anything he needs to save the world..

"Lee: "We may have a problem. He thinks he can buy his freedom back. Trade it for information..." Maguire: "What kind of information?" Lee: "He's going to tell them... about The Event.""
 * Genre Shift: The show appears to be a conspiracy thriller (albeit one in Anachronic Order) until the very end when it shifts to science fiction when the kamikaze plane disappears into a big ol' ball of spacetime. On the other hand, the title itself is a pretty big hint. After all, you don't refer to things you understand (like terrorist threats or natural disasters) as "the Event."
 * Government Conspiracy: Hiding the nature of the prison and the prisoners.
 * Gray and Gray Morality: The US Government built a secret prison to detain the aliens until they gave the whole story, but the aliens themselves are no paragons of morality either, especially Thomas' faction which has apparently decided to go the Alien Invasion route. Meanwhile their are powerful people behind the government that apparently want to augment their lifespans by studying the very long lived aliens and keep it all in the shadows, killing anyone that opposes them. The only really "good" characters are Simon, Leila, and Sean (though Sean seems to be drifting more into Type III antihero range), while the only truly evil character is Dempsey, and even he is pretty affable....
 * Later,
 * Guile Hero: Sean Walker in spades.
 * Half-Human Hybrid: It turns out some of the aliens that went to ground had kids.
 * Hazy Feel Turn:
 * Heel Face Turn: Vicki
 * Heroic BSOD: Sophia has one after
 * Heroic Sacrifice: does this in episode six.
 * in episode 12.
 * in episode 15, in order to save Sophia and their people.
 * ... sort of. After seeing that Sean and Vicky were so determined to kill him that they didn't care about stopping Sophia, he killed himself so that they wouldn't be preoccupied with stopping him anymore.
 * Hot Scoop: Madeline Jackson.
 * Human Aliens: The 97 prisoners and the hundreds of others who established lives on Earth.
 * I Choose to Stay: Most of the sleepers want to remain on Earth, mainly because.
 * Idiot Ball: When you consider that HIV (from SIV in apes), H5N1 (bird flu), H1N1 (swine flu) all managed to cross species into humans and have proven lethal... why on earth would Sophia test a "kill all humans" virus, on a hybrid?! The chances that it'd mutate to be lethal to her species is now 1 in 2?!
 * Indy Ploy: "I'll find a way!" is nearly everybody's excuse for not having formulated a specific plan yet. See It's the Only Way for when someone actually does have a plan.
 * In Medias Res: The pilot episode begins with shaky news camera footage of the President's address as the jetliner hurtles towards it.
 * Interspecies Romance: Revealed in a flashback between the Human Alien Simon Lee and his human lover decades in the past. Later we learn that quite a few got to the ultimate conclusion;
 * Ironic Echo: In 1x12, President Martinez finds himself having almost the exact same argument as he did in the pilot regarding the Inostranka prisoners, only this time with him on the opposite side.
 * It's Going Down:, as a last-ditch attempt by.
 * It's the Only Way: Practically Sean's Catch Phrase, though President Martinez and others have used it as well. One episode had two characters utter the phrase, in completely separate situation, before the opening credits rolled. See Indy Ploy for what happens when they haven't come up with an "only way" just yet.
 * Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: Absolutely shamelessly; see Anachronic Order, above.
 * Somewhat less of an issue since the Retool.
 * Knight Templar: At first it looks like Director Sterling is this. However as the series progresses his paranoia is looking increasingly reasonable and  looks like the unreasoning extremist.
 * Lady Macbeth: Isabelle
 * Let's Get Dangerous: Both Sean and Leila are proving quite adept at this. President Martinez fits this as well (as of episode 15, when he started to grow a pair and became more of an interesting character.)
 * Magical Database: Sean is able to access any information on Earth in record time, no matter who holds it, no matter how secret, no matter how protected, with his Macbook Pro and a flawless, extremely fast wireless Internet connection that apparently works from anywhere, including Planes, Trains and Automobiles.
 * Mayfly-December Romance: Simon bumps into this hard when he has to leave the woman he plans to marry, then encounters her by chance about 50 years later. She's old and suffering from Alzheimers; he looks exactly the same.
 * The Mole: Simon served as one for Sophia, keeping her aware of Martinez's plans. And when he's discovered, he's able to escape the White House with aid from a scrambled voice on a phone, which would suggest that there's another mole in the White House (the President and Sterling certainly seem to think so).
 * Monumental Damage:  is destroyed by Sophia in order to get Martinez to back down during a standoff.
 * My Master, Right or Wrong: Michael
 * Necessarily Evil:
 * No Name Given: Not for a character, but for the entire alien race, as well as their planet. Instead it's always referred to as "our people", "Sophia's people", and "our planet".
 * Not Quite Dead: The passengers from flight 514.
 * Noughties Drama Series
 * Oblivious to Love: It's implied that Vicky has an increasing attraction to Sean, who on the other hand, repeatedly has no idea why she is still helping him.
 * Oh Crap: Jarvis has a moment bordering on Villainous Breakdown in the season finale during his.
 * The Finale has an epic one.
 * The Oner: A good portion of the escape sequence inside the collapsing warehouse is an impressively long one continuous shot.
 * Out-Gambitted:.
 * Pet the Dog: Vicky spared and adopted a child she was told to kill.
 * Playful Hacker: Sean used to be this, a skill set that has since come in handy.
 * Playing Against Type: Anyone who has seen Zeljko Ivanek (Blake Sterling) in anything else immediately identifies him as the villain...except he's actually a Reasonable Authority Figure.
 * Plot Hole: Viewers were led to believe that the flashbacks which had been part of the regular narrative would explain, eventually, how Sean got from the cruise ship Leyla was abducted from to the plane in the pilot, which implied there had been nine days between those two scenes. Since the later episodes dropped that technique, it was left hanging.
 * Police Are Useless: In the first few episodes, no-one seems willing to listen to Sean Walker, dismissing him as paranoid or delusional for his claims. This is despite the fact that any sane person should recognise that even if Sean is delusional, exactly what is the explanation for everything? Such as why a normal person engaged to be married, would commit a brutal murder on a Cruise ship, despite their being no record of him boarding the vessel? So why was he there? Or later, when he ended up in a hospital in Arizona after being seen boarding a plane in Miami, which disappeared completely on live news? There is literally no other explanation for how he could have arrived there in the time allotted?! There are far too many holes in this story, even if he was crazy!
 * President Evil: Raymond Jarvis.
 * President Minority: President Elias Martinez (played by Blair Underwood) is Cuban, referenced by Sterling the DNI while he tries to dissuade the President from his decision to release the prisoners from their secret prison. Also seems to be a President Personable.
 * The Quisling: The Vice-President (though he comes across as Head-in-The-Sand Management).
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Sophia and all the rest of the aliens.
 * Reasonable Authority Figure: Both Martinez and Sophia at first, but Blake Sterling stays this way.
 * Redemption Equals Death: has killed a fellow prisoner to keep Sophia's secrets and gave her own life to save
 * Also,
 * Red Herring: Subverted. There were some facts that could prove that  is an alien. However, it turned out that her family just had problems with law. Then, in the end of the final episode, she called the alien planet home.
 * Retool: The series was taken off the air between late November 2010 and early March 2011, notably missing February sweeps. When it returned, the flashbacks (which advertising for the show presumably assumed would be a draw due to comparisons with Lost) were gone, and the storytelling was now completely linear.
 * Quite possibly done because they knew the show's plummeting ratings would guarantee the show's cancellation after season one, and so things were streamlined to Wrap It Up and give the show's remaining fans a suitable Grand Finale.
 * Reverse Mole: Simon Lee is really an alien. At first he's a straight example of this trope with the Sophia's group having good intentions,.
 * Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes:  seems to be drifting somewhere between Type II and Type III as of "A Message Back",   has over time drifted from Type III to Type IV ,   has become a Type IV as of episode 15, while   has gone from straight-up villain, to a Type V, and is now approaching a Type IV.
 * Staged Shooting: When Leila gets the drop on Vicky, Leila manages to take her gun and fires, seeing Vicky tumble down the stairs from the impact. Later in the episode it is revealed that Vicky had previously loaded the gun with blanks, as part of a gambit to make her think she escaped so that she would call Sean.
 * Switching POV: The flashbacks do this.
 * Taking the Bullet: for
 * And for . Although this time it was the rocket
 * The Singularity: Near the end of the season/series finale, Simon reveals to Sean that "the event" is an evolution into a higher form for his people, but something that humanity won't survive.
 * Tomato Surprise:  are half-alien.
 * Title Drop: In an exchange between CIA agent Simon Lee and Sophia Maguire during the pilot episode.
 * Tomato Surprise:  are half-alien.
 * Title Drop: In an exchange between CIA agent Simon Lee and Sophia Maguire during the pilot episode.

"Dempsey: "It's just that I have a feeling that this Mr. Walker and I will cross paths again... soon.""
 * At least some episodes titles are lines from that episode.
 * Took a Level In Badass: Sean has been doing this throughout the series. Leyla isn't quite there but she's catching up.
 * Took a Level in Jerkass: The President, in response to constantly getting jerked around by Sophia and Thomas and losing control of the situation, is becoming increasingly short-fused. He was willing to risk a nuclear meltdown if it meant catching Thomas, and isn't even considering diplomatic options anymore. By contrast, Sterling seems to be mellowing out, and is more willing to consider working with Sophia.
 * Actually, What's happening is more of a constant effort to Break the Cutie (or Bullying the Dragon, if you remember that the people involved are messing with the U.S. President), leading into a quite acceptable case of Beware the Nice Ones.
 * Too Soon:
 * Jetliner Suicide Attack as a weapon against the United States complete with screaming passengers. Obviously NBC's hope is that nine years is enough for this to just be a credible dramatic threat and not stomach-turning to most of the audience.
 * The old warehouse collapsing in 1x6.
 * The episode "Turnabout", in which the threat of a nuclear incident in Southern California is a major plot point, aired a few days after the massive Sendai earthquake in Japan that led to major incidents at several nuclear reactors. In a moment before the President gets updated on the situation, we see him in a meeting with a foreign dignitary... from Japan.
 * Trailers Always Spoil: The question of whether Simon survived a building collapse is abruptly answered by the next episode preview immediately following the scene.
 * The first episode back after the hiatus between February and March had a trailer for rest of the season rather than the usual next episode preview.
 * If you saw any of the pre-series trailers, you knew the Washington Monument was going down.
 * Tranquil Fury: Becoming more and more Martinez' default setting.
 * Vagueness Is Coming
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: This show really loves this trope
 * Thomas, the free leader of Sophia's people.
 * And now Sophia herself has become one.
 * Arguably Dempsey as well, he wants to stop the aliens, but is very ruthless about doing it.
 * And the Vice President both as first Dempsey's then Sophia's pawn thinks he is acting for the best interests of his country.
 * We Will Meet Again: Dempsey regarding Sean:


 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Where's Leila's sister?
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Simon Lee to Sophia after
 * And similarly, Sterling to President Martinez after.
 * X Meets Y: It's been advertised as 24 meets Lost and been referenced as The X-Files meets The West Wing.
 * Xanatos Gambit / Kansas City Shuffle: In Episode 20, Shawn and Vicki stop one of Sophia's people from releasing a deadly virus into a shopping mall, . It's the former for the hidden bouns and the latter for the distraction.
 * You Have Failed Me: Averted with, who, even after numerous occasions where the heroes get the best of her subordinates, forgives them and immediately trusts them to complete equally important missions. Even those subordinates who betray her get every chance to prove their loyalty and come back to her group. Likely justified by the fact that she deeply loves all of her people and wants the best for them, despite her ruthless goals.