Its time to get serious on Miami Vice and the Go With The Heat podcast. We dive real deep into every small minutiae that causes Sonny to finally snap. We look at his conversation with Tubbs and his fears of the type of cop he will do anything to stop from becoming. Things even get a little contentious at the end in a highly engaging debate if Sonny planted that gun on Hackman. Oh yeah and Caitlin dies. Bye. John questions whether or not Sonny could compete with Kevin Costner (BODYGUARD JOKE!). Melissa is surprised Caitlin is surprised Sonny shot a lady. Dominic just tries to keep John and Melissa from throwing hands. Its an all-time classic for both Vice and the podcast. Show notes and more: http://gowiththeheat.com Support us on Patreon! / gowiththeheat Episode Information Miami Vice – Season 04 Ep. 21 – Deliver Us From Evil Premiered April 29, 1988 Writer: Dick Wolf Director: George Mendeluk (Just saw him with Blood and Roses. Last episode from him) Guest Stars Guy Boyd as Frank Hackman Don Opper as Johnny Blatt Sheena Easton as Caitlin Davies-Crockett Music We Do What We’re Told by Peter Gabriel Lazybones by Hoagy Carmichael Don’t Turn Your Back by Sheena Easton Follow My Rainbow by Sheena Easton Feedback Got some feedback? Contact Us. Email: gowiththeheat[@]gmail[.]com Dom Twitter: @domcorriveau John Twitter: @corriveau_john Melissa Twitter: @mrsmelcorriveau Intro & transition music provided by: Cuban Sandwich, Voice Over Under Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Creative Commons License The Go With The Heat podcast and associated works are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. You are free to share, copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and/or remix, transform or build upon the material as long as you distribute the work under the same terms and license. You may not use or distribute for commercial use without permission. You must give appropriate attribution or credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.