Dean: Herrera, heads up.
Vasquez: It’s Vasquez.
Dean: You took Herrera’s spot; you take her name.
Vasquez: You think us Latinos are all the same?
Dean: Hilarious.
Vasquez: I forgot it’s all PC, kumbaya crap here on the A shift.
Vic: We prefer A team, actually.
Vasquez: I’m sure you do. Over on the B shift, we call you guys “The View” because there’s one of everything. There’s two of you though.
Jack: At what point are well allowed to hit this guy?

Dean: He looks like a sex offender.
Maya: The new chief is a cop?
Dixon: Former cop, not sex offender.
Dean: Um, I thought that was live because news conferences are usually live.

Vic: Can I move in with you when I get fired?
Dean: I just called him a sex offender.

Maya: Why are you acting like you didn’t get picked for prom king? Huh, I didn’t take you as the kind of guy who would let the disillusion of our brief romantic relationship affect our ongoing professional one.
Jack: Maya, we dated for months.
Maya: Dated? I must have missed the part where we were having brunch and shopping for towels. We had sex – abundant and skilled sex – but it was just sex. Jack, seriously there was barely even pillow talk.

Vasquez: I know you’re new at this, but when the lights and sirens are on, you know, the streets are just a suggestion.
Ben: You can’t save anybody if you show up dead, and I’m not new.

Everybody walk out. Seattle Fire. Sir, you need to evacuate right now. Put that candy down and walk outside. Hey, everybody out. Attention shoppers, this is the Seattle Fire Department. If you haven’t noticed there is currently an ongoing fire here at Roger’s Five and Dine. In an orderly fashion, please make your way to the front of the store and out the exit doors. Everything’s pretty cheap, so please leave your stolen goods where you found them.

Travis

Jesse: I see shootings on the news every day, and at school, the lockdown drills – lock the doors, lights out, stay quiet. I always knew I would be in one of these eventually; I knew it, I knew it. My brother also told me, ‘Jesse, it’s statistically unlikely,’ but I know. I know. I don’t even go to the movies anymore. Every time I go to the grocery store, I check for all the exits. I didn’t even want to come here to try on this suit, but my sister’s getting married, so I had to get a suit, and now I guess if I die here, they’ll bury me in this suit.
Travis: Hey, hey, hey, Jesse, Jesse. You’re not going to die; you’re not gonna die. I mean eventually, we all are going to die, but you are not dying now, not in this store, not in that suit.

Travis: And yes, there are bad people out there with a crazy number of guns, but there are good people too, kind people, people who fight for justice and take care of their neighbors and build houses and plant trees. Ignore the fear mongering or rise above it. So, don’t waste your energy worrying you’re going to get shot. Use it to fight for the world you want to be a part of. Use all that energy to make your fully functional legs lift you up out of this pee-stained suit and march you toward the world you want to live in.
Jesse: You should run for office or something.
Travis: Nah, I like my job.

Ryan: You know Andy, whatever happened with you and your dad …
Andy: He called me a slut.
Ryan: Oh, what?
Andy: I mean, not in some many words, but yeah.
Ryan: Were you being a slut? Hey, sluts have all the fun. I am pro slut. Is it Jack?
Andy: No.
Ryan: Sullivan?
Andy: How did you know that?
Ryan: I know you. I see things. Your captain though, yeah, that would piss your dad off.
Andy: My dad accused me of crapping where I eat, which is an expression I would be happy to never hear again in my life. This thing with Sullivan, it’s something I’ve never felt before. It’s like a feeling I can’t shake or get over unless I hate him, but you can’t hate your captain and function, and that is what makes my dad right, which is what is so enraging.
Ryan: So you love him? You crapped where you eat.

I thought I was done being mad at Ripley for dying, but here I am, pissed at a dead guy.

Vic

It’s been a while. It’s been too long. Last time I saw you I was still a … I think I was doing anesthesiology. Anesthesiology’s dull; it’s boring. I put away all that adrenaline chasing that put you here, and I … I learned to like crosswords and spent my days watching people sleep and waking them up. I think I did that because I couldn’t wake you up. Anesthesiology, surgery, everything I do in my life it all comes back to you. I’m trying to save you, to put your skull back together. I’m a firefighter now – first on the scene – and I still hear your mom’s voice in my head whenever I run toward danger.

Ben

Andy: What happened in San Diego?
Ryan: Jenna cheated on me.
Andy: Ouch. How’d you find out?
Ryan: Oh, she told me.
Andy: She told you.
Ryan: Yeah, she wanted to hurt me.
Andy: Why would she want to do that?
Ryan: Well, the day before she asked me if I was still in love with my ex.
Andy: Oh.
Ryan: And I said yes.
Andy: Oh.

Station 19 Season 3 Episode 2 Quotes

Dean: He looks like a sex offender.
Maya: The new chief is a cop?
Dixon: Former cop, not sex offender.
Dean: Um, I thought that was live because news conferences are usually live.

Dean: Herrera, heads up.
Vasquez: It’s Vasquez.
Dean: You took Herrera’s spot; you take her name.
Vasquez: You think us Latinos are all the same?
Dean: Hilarious.
Vasquez: I forgot it’s all PC, kumbaya crap here on the A shift.
Vic: We prefer A team, actually.
Vasquez: I’m sure you do. Over on the B shift, we call you guys “The View” because there’s one of everything. There’s two of you though.
Jack: At what point are well allowed to hit this guy?