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If Agents of SHIELD managed to turn the tide and become a celebrated entry in Marvel canon, that’s because of its great cast of characters. The relationship between Leo Fitz (Iain De Caestecker) and Jemma Simmons (Elizabeth Henstridge), initially framed as a charming scientific partnership, evolved across the series into one of television’s most emotionally grueling love stories. Daisy Johnson, who spent her first season as a hacker operating on the team’s periphery, ultimately transformed from a civilian recruit into a fully-realized Inhuman superhero. Then, the addition of characters like Alphonso “Mack” Mackenzie (Henry Simmons) and Elena “Yo-Yo” Rodriguez (Natalia Cordova-Buckley) brought a gravitational warmth to the later seasons that the show needed as its stakes escalated. Among all the fan-favorites the series produced, however, the pairing of Bobbi Morse (Adrianne Palicki) and Lance Hunter (Nick Blood) held a distinct electricity that the writers recognized early by pitching their own spinoff series.
Bobbi and Hunter’s Agents of SHIELD Farewell Is Still Emotional

Ten years ago today, on March 22, 2016, Agents of SHIELD aired “Parting Shot,” the 13th episode of its third season and the formal farewell to both Bobbi and Hunter. The episode sent the pair deep into Siberia on a mission to prevent HYDRA operative Gideon Malick (Powers Boothe) from establishing a military sanctuary for Inhumans under Russian government protection. The operation collapsed when Hunter rescued the Russian Prime Minister, and Bobbi killed the Inhuman Minister of Defense, General Androvich, leaving two dead Russian officials and no diplomatic cover for their actions. To protect SHIELD from an international incident, Bobbi and Hunter accepted disavowal, surrendering their identities as agents and severing all formal ties with the organization that had defined their lives. The episode’s final scene remains one of the most quietly devastating moments in the series, as the entire team gathered separately at a bar, raising silent glasses across the room to two colleagues who could no longer acknowledge them.









