Ben: All right probie, I know you’re new, but uh look this… this can’t have been the worst thing you’ve seen? Oh that’s right, you, uh, saw your battalion chief OD on fentanyl. So it was him. Did you see the syringe? You give him Naloxone?
Emmett: Yeah.
Ben: What’d he even say to you?
Emmett: Well, uh, he said he had a prescription. And he said that this station runs on trust. And if people don’t trust each other, then people get hurt.
Ben: That’s uh, that’s a good one coming from him.

Dixon: So you’re admitting that you knowingly let a civilian go into a critical scene and put his life in danger?
Maya: No, sir. I knowingly allowed a lauded and unanimously respected captain go into a critical scene that was certain death.
Dixon: Bishop, pull yourself together. Don’t make me regret endorsing a woman for captain.
Maya: My former captain knowingly sliced through a roof and fell to his death to save my entire team. These are tears of gratitude and tears of amazement and wonder, and I will not apologize for having them. You think I didn’t cry when I won the gold medal? I did. You watch 250-pound athletes cry when they win Super Bowls, and it doesn’t make them any less heroes. You are asking me to relive a day that my hero died and my team lived. I will not apologize for having feels about that. The ability to care while doing my job is a quality Captain Herrera both modeled and lauded. My ability to care while doing my job is what makes me superior, not inferior to those who can’t.

Hey, we are alive because of Pruitt Herrera. Emmett got to live long enough to come out because of Pruitt Herrera. We get to laugh and… and clap and make chili because of Pruitt Herrera. We get to breathe. We get to live, OK. We all get to live because of Pruitt Herrera.

Vic

You deserve a happy life. You both do. You deserve so much better than you’re getting. You were born into this one life. Your child was born into this one life. You don’t deserve to be hit. You don’t deserve to be scared. You deserve better. Let me help you find it.

Jack

Andy: I’m an orphan. I’m an orphan.
Sullivan: Me too.
Andy: What? Uh, why didn’t I know this?
Sullivan: I don’t talk about it. Plane crash.
Andy: Oh my god. What… that… how old were you?
Sullivan: Um, 16.
Andy: And then you got married, and then your wife died, and then your friend Ripley died. We’re all we have.

Pruitt: If you see a fire put it out, then move on to the next one. Whatever you do, don’t stick around once the fire’s out. There is no life to be lived in the ashes. Let them blow away.
Andy: Good night, daddy.
Pruitt: Good night, Andrea.
Andy: Good-bye, daddy.
Pruitt: See you later.

When I was a kid, my dad used to do this thing when I was sad. He would open all the blinds and let all the light in, and say, ‘Casas brillantes, corazones brillantes.’ Bright house, bright hearts. He was so good at… at pulling me back.

Andy

Station 19 Season 3 Episode 13 Quotes

Pruitt: If you see a fire put it out, then move on to the next one. Whatever you do, don’t stick around once the fire’s out. There is no life to be lived in the ashes. Let them blow away.
Andy: Good night, daddy.
Pruitt: Good night, Andrea.
Andy: Good-bye, daddy.
Pruitt: See you later.

When I was a kid, my dad used to do this thing when I was sad. He would open all the blinds and let all the light in, and say, ‘Casas brillantes, corazones brillantes.’ Bright house, bright hearts. He was so good at… at pulling me back.

Andy