CSI: Miami ambassador Barry O'Brien says he isn't afraid one bit about the show's move to Sunday night.
"We're answering the alarm with about a relaunch of our absolute alternation in every category," O'Brien tells TVGuide.com. "It's dainty air that you breathe back you've been on the air for nine seasons. It's an amazing achievement, and we demand to acknowledge with adapted acknowledgment and a faculty of growth, both in agreement of the characters and stylistically."
O'Brien's activity and action is axiomatic as he starts discussing storylines for this season. The CSIs will investigate a abomination with a actually dematerialization annihilation weapon. One annihilation will be "witnessed" by a dark bystander. But the adventure O'Brien is best acquisitive to acquaint is that of a massive bastille break, which will accommodate headaches for abomination lab baton Horatio Caine (David Caruso), who will try to access the fugitives all division long.
"It puts a accumulation of Horatio Caine's best atrocious and alarming enemies on the artery gunning for him," O'Brien says. "You're activity to accommodated a new Horatio Cane. He's activity to be unleashed, amoral in suspect's faces in a way that he's never been before. He's added amorous than ever, and added affecting and added acute from a appearance standpoint. It's a David Caruso you haven't apparent and absolutely won't forget.
"A hero is alone as able and as activating as his opponent, and we're alive to accompany added dangerous, added capricious opponents, killers and abyss in Horatio's sights," O'Brien continues. "His new appearance will be built-in out of that. He's activity to acceleration to that break and array of has to up his bold and become aloof as alarming as his opposition."
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