Categories: Television

Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 Used a Predictable Trope To Address A Vitally Important Issue

I called it.

As soon as I learned that Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 involved a woman and her boyfriend getting attacked at a remote campsite, I guessed that the boyfriend would be involved in the attack.

Its predictability wasn’t the point. The episode was a vehicle to discuss the epidemic of domestic violence against women, and it worked.

(NBC/Scott Gries)

Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 Might Have Been Based On The Gabby Petito Murder

One of the reasons it was obvious that Chris attacked Ellie himself was the case’s similarity to the Gabby Petito murder.

The Petito murder was an infamous 2021 case in which a woman who traveled the country in a van with her fiance was murdered by him. The couple posted happy videos of the two of them together on social media during their trip, but in reality, he was abusing her.

(Law & Order Season 21 Episode 3 was also based on this case. However, it really fits SVU better because of the domestic violence aspect.)

If I recall correctly, Petito’s killer took his own life and left a note behind saying that he didn’t want to live without Ellie because she was his whole world.

Additionally, her life could have been saved had some cops who pulled the van over in Georgia done something more about their suspicions of domestic abuse than told Gabby and her fiance to spend a night apart, which also tracks with this episode.

Law & Order: SVU often rips stories from the headlines, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one that followed the real-life case quite so perfectly!

(NBC/Scott Gries)

Benson’s Final Interrogation of Chris On Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 Was Chilling

The detectives became aware of Chris’ guilt fairly early on, and the testimony from the Georgia cops clinched it.

But the most memorable scene on Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 was Benson’s interrogation, in which she masterfully moved Chris from denying involvement to breaking down and admitting he hurt Ellie and tried to kill himself.

Benson: Look what you did to her.

Chris: I didn’t do it.

Benson: Do you always run away from things you didn’t do? Are you going to run and hide in the back of your mother’s truck? Look what you did to her!

Kudos to Mariska Hargitay and Graham Patrick Martin for this scene. Benson’s continually confronting Chris with the photos of Ellie in the hospital gave me chills.

(NBC/Screenshot)

Chris Represented A Serious Problem In US Culture

The United States has a serious issue with a subset of young men who think they are entitled to women’s attention and bodies.

These are the men who write gross and demeaning messages to women on social media. They also may become violent if they don’t get what they want from the women they want it from.

As a society, we need to do more to disrupt this culture before boys grow up to be these kinds of men, but in the meantime, the ones who engage in it need to be held accountable for that type of behavior.

That’s what made Benson’s interrogation of Chris so powerful. She not only got him to confess but confronted him with the fact that what he thought was “love” wasn’t.

(NBC/Scott Gries)

Chris lived a fantasy life online where he and Ellie were the perfect couple, but in reality, he had a bad temper that he didn’t know how to control, was terrified of Ellie leaving him, and became verbally and physically abusive when he was frustrated.

These serious mental health issues contributed to his decision to abuse Ellie.

It escalated to the point where she ended up on life support while Chris clung to the fantasy that he was in some beautiful, loving relationship like the one he put on his carefully curated social media feed for the world to see.

One of the secondary messages of this story was the effect that social media has on young people. It is all too easy to get confused between reality and the perfect life you see on your social media feeds.

That undoubtedly contributes to the difficulty separating fantasy and reality that we see everywhere, with people believing that whatever they want to be true is actually true, the facts notwithstanding.

(NBC/Ralph Bavaro)

Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 6 Finally Gave Silva A Chance To Shine

This was Silva’s first big episode.

She disappeared for so long after she was introduced on Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 1 that for a while, it seemed like SVU needed to mount an investigation to search for her.

Her determination to find the truth in Ellie’s case made her a relatable character, and I loved her interactions with Bruno.

However, I’m sure there is more to her story than her stated reason for switching from Homicide to SVU.

The backstory she shared (which, incidentally, sounded like the urban legend surrounding the death of Kitty Genovese in which 36 neighbors watched her murder through their windows but did nothing to help) explains why she became a cop but not why she switched departments.

Considering that Juliana Aiden Martinez has teased that Silva has a secret in her past related to her decision to change departments, I’m sure there will be more to come.

I’m intrigued. What is she hiding in her past?

(NBC/VIrginia Sherwood)

Random Thoughts

  • The question of whether Ellie should be taken off life support and the doctor’s assertion that her mother was imagining her brain-dead daughter responding to stimuli seemed like a redux of the argument on Law & Order Season 24 Episode 4.
  • Benson calling Agent Clay “Clark Kent” was too perfect.
  • Chris’ mother made it even more obvious her son was guilty by continually trying to block the cops from talking to him.

Over to you, SVU fanatics. What did you think of Law & Order: SVU Season 26 Episode 5?

Vote in our poll to rate the episode, and then hit the comments with your thoughts.

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Law & Order: SVU airs on NBC on Thursdays at 9/8c and on Peacock on Fridays.

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