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1'''Season 4, Episode 11'''
2!If-Then-Else
3
4-> '''Finch:''' We need a strategy.\
5'''Root:''' A little help, please.\
6'''The Machine:''' [[AC:Evaluating strategies...]]\
7'''Reese:''' It's a hell of a time for your Machine to go on the fritz, Harold.\
8'''Finch:''' Give it a second. It's got a lot on its [[BulletTime miiiiiiiiiind...]]\
9
10Samaritan launches a cyber-attack on the New York Stock Exchange, leaving Team Machine with no choice but to embark on a possible suicide mission in a desperate attempt to stop a global economic catastrophe. When Samaritan's operatives corner the team, The Machine begins evaluating exit strategies.
11
12
13* AIIsACrapshoot: Once again, averted by the Machine. It tries its best to protect its assets, just as Harold taught it.
14* [[AllJustADream All Just A Simulation]][=/=]FissionMailed:
15-->'''The Machine:''' [[AC:Simulation terminated. Resetting to real time...]]
16** ResetButton: After every individual simulation fails, the Machine returns to the conversation at the top of the page and considers another possibility.
17* AmbiguousSituation: Martine raises her gun on a fallen Shaw, they fade from sight, and a final sound is heard, which simultaneously sounds like both a gunshot and the slamming of the elevator door.
18** SchrodingersGun: The writers noted that we now essentially have Schrödinger's Shaw. As Creator/SarahShahi was pregnant, she had to be removed from the show, but her "death" scene was explicitly kept ambiguous enough to allow her to return.
19* ArcWords: [[LastStand "Remember the Alamo."]] Also, "[[YouAreNotAlone You're not alone]]" makes a reappearance.
20* ArtisticLicenseHistory: Finch gives an account of the history of the TabletopGame/{{Chess}} queen involving Queen Isabella taking offense to the weakness of the piece corresponding to her and the court immediately changing the rules to the modern version. While some scholars agree that the change was first described in Spain in the late 15th century, the rest of the story is pure speculation.
21* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: Finch is distracted by a valuable painting. "What's the point of saving the world if you can't appreciate it?" The Machine agrees, for it gets Root to save the picture in reality after it keeps getting damaged in the simulations.
22* AwesomenessByAnalysis: The entire episode.
23* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther: Root coaxes a reluctant admission from Shaw that she would be interested in Root, [[OverlyNarrowSuperlative if they were the last people on Earth]].
24* BadassNormal: Fusco isn't an ex-CIA assassin, a genius hacker, or the analog interface of an AI. He still gets by with courage and street-smarts, and his skill set succeeds in places where Harold and Reese make critical mistakes. His marksmanship also allows him to keep up with the others in neutralizing multiple Samaritan Assets. All this means he's the only member of the team to stay alive in all three simulations.
25* BatmanGambit: Lambert worries that Samaritan creating the financial crisis will attract attention. [[LuredIntoATrap Greer is counting on it]].
26* BigDamnHeroes: In the real time implementation of the third strategy, Reese gets wounded and the team's chances of survival are at 1% and dropping. Then Shaw arrives and their chances increase rapidly.
27* BittersweetEnding: Team Machine successfully foils the operation Greer and Samaritan were running and kills almost all of their assets who were involved. However, Shaw is riddled with bullets in her attempt to facilitate the team's escape.
28* BlahBlahBlah: An interesting variation occurs as the Machine accelerates the third simulation, and the characters describe their dialog rather than delivering it:
29-->'''Reese:''' Coolly delivered sadistic warning.\
30'''Fusco:''' Self-deprecating inquiry into the time necessary to infiltrate system.\
31'''Root:''' Funny yet insightful retort.\
32'''Finch:''' Mildly agitated declaration of mission completion.
33* BloodKnight: Martine.
34-->'''Greer:''' And Martine?\
35'''Martine:''' Sir?\
36'''Greer:''' Enjoy yourself.\
37''[Martine gives a [[PsychoticSmirk psychotic smirk]]]''
38* BreakingTheFourthWall: Fusco in the third simulation.
39** LeaningOnTheFourthWall: The entire episode, basically.
40* BulletTime: Most of the episode is this. Time flows in milliseconds as the Machine tries to figure out a strategy for its assets. The simulations, each of which really take a couple of seconds to complete, take up most of the screen time.
41* BolivianArmyEnding: All but one of the simulations end this way.
42* CallBack:
43** Kisses between main characters in this series [[Recap/PersonOfInterestS03E09 tend to be bad for their health.]]
44** The way Root holds on to the mesh fence on the elevator door at the end visually calls back to Finch [[Recap/PersonOfInterestS03E06 locking her in the Faraday Cage]] and some of the shots where she is seen to grasp the mesh.
45* CameraSpoofing: Team Machine pull a simple version by having Reese deactivate the camera manually, just as Harold and Root are pretending they're techs come to fix the problem.
46* CasualDangerDialogue:
47-->'''Reese:''' Sorry, I'm busy making death threats to Samaritan operatives.
48* CatastrophicCountdown: In a twist for this trope, the Machine counts down in ''milliseconds'' until "Time to Asset Destruction."
49* ChekhovsGun: The bomb vest.
50* ChekhovsLecture: Finch teaching chess to the Machine. It learns not to over-analyse the situation, just to go with the best possible scenario, then adapt to circumstance. And it learns not to value one piece over another, but to use all together to win.
51* ChessMotifs: [[DefiedTrope Defied]]. Despite Finch teaching the Machine strategical thinking through chess, he warns the Machine not to think of one person as more valuable than another, or to think of people as pieces to be sacrificed in a game.
52** Though Finch's discussion of the history of the queen--a weak piece that was transformed into the most powerful one on the board by a rule change--is [[CallForward a neat parallel]] to Root's transformation into the "analog interface."
53** The Machine tries its best to save everyone but didn't predict Shaw rising to the occasion and sacrificing herself just as Finch had sacrificed his queen in the game of chess.
54* ChronicHeroSyndrome:
55** Reese has it big time at this point and the Machine knows it. In the second simulation, he pushes Fusco into another room and fights Lambert one on one. Lambert gets the upper hand and kills Reese, but neglected to realize that [[PercussivePickpocket Reese had stolen his grenade]].
56-->'''Reese:''' Lionel, remember the Alamo?\
57'''Fusco:''' Yeah, what about it?\
58'''Reese:''' Well, you're gonna miss it.\
59''[Reese pushes Lionel to safety in another room and locks him out]''\
60'''Fusco:''' ''[banging on the door]'' Hey, what about you?\
61'''Reese:''' Somebody's gotta be the hero.
62** In the reality, Reese notices Lambert aiming for Finch and jumps in front of him, taking the bullet for Finch. Reese tells Finch, "I'm all right, Harold," in a tone of voice which implies that it doesn't matter if he dies. Saving Finch was enough.
63** Finally, Shaw stays back at the end to push the elevator override button and is shot multiple times by Martine.
64* ContinuityNod:
65** This exchange between Fusco and Martine:
66-->'''Martine:''' FBI; drop your weapons or we'll shoot.\
67'''Fusco:''' [[Recap/PersonOfInterestS04E09 I thought you were DEA?]]\
68'''Martine:''' [[DeadpanSnarker What does it matter? We'll shoot either way.]]
69** Harold's appreciation for art is shown again. This time though, he's in a middle of a combat situation.
70* CrazyPrepared: The Machine knew that Samaritan would try to wreck the economy, and had a failsafe built to counteract it.
71* CurseCutShort: The subway passenger with the bomb vest.
72-->'''Trader:''' His name's Greg.\
73'''Gary:''' It's Gary, you pathetic piece of sh-\
74'''Shaw:''' Okay, alright, Gary.
75* DefiantToTheEnd: Root's death in the simulation. She gives Shaw an AnguishedDeclarationOfLove then is shot down as she tries cutting an important wire, not even paying the Samaritan hit squad any mind.
76* DownerBeginning: Finch dies. It's a simulation, but there's no onscreen text that states this (at least in the first simulation), and people who hadn't read promotional articles, seen trailers, read spoilers, or picked up on the SpoilerTitle were hit harder, thinking the death was real. (The show does have a tendency to almost never pull NotQuiteDead.) The image itself is a TearJerker, real or not.
77* DownerEnding: Shaw dies. [[NeverFoundTheBody Apparently.]]
78* DyingDeclarationOfLove: Inverted; in a simulation, Root calls Shaw to get one from ''her'', but she's the one dying.
79* EasterEgg: Intentional or not, the clock face in the room with Team Machine when the Machine begins the simulations says 3:09, referencing the episode number of "[[Recap/PersonOfInterestS03E09 The Crossing]]", the previous MidSeasonTwist WhamEpisode in which a main character dies. (Although Shaw's death is ambiguous in this case.)
80* EverythingIsOnline: Averted, at first; the building's camera system is closed-circuit, so neither the Machine nor Samaritan can get access ... [[ZigZaggingTrope until Finch routes them to give The Machine access]].
81* FaceDeathWithDignity: Root doesn't cry or beg in simulation 2 where Martine and her assets corner her.
82* {{Foreshadowing}}:
83** Root's farewell call to Shaw in the second simulation, and the simplified version in the third, closely predict their exchange in the reality when Shaw is arriving for her BigDamnHeroes moment:
84-->'''Root:''' Hey, sweetie. You busy? ("Overly affectionate greeting.")\
85'''Shaw:''' A little. ("Greeting.") Skip the verbal foreplay, Root, why are you calling? ("Annoyed attempt to deflect subtext.")\
86'''Root:''' Can't a couple of gals take a little break from work to catch up? ("Transparent rationale for conversation.")\
87'''Shaw:''' No, we do ''not'' have time to catch up. ("Mildly embarrassed defensiveness bordering on hostility.")\
88'''Root:''' There's no time like the present, Sameen. Why are you so afraid to talk about your feelings? ("Overt come-on.")
89** In the flashbacks, The Machine is practicing its strategy routines, with an interface similar to the present day Machine's strategies. And then Finch captures its queen and the Machine panics:
90-->'''The Machine:''' [[AC:[!] No valid options]]
91** "If you want to die, okay. But die for something that you love."
92* ForWantOfANail: The only way that Team Machine can stay alive long enough to restart and reach the elevator to escape is if Shaw can talk down the man in the bomb vest. The only way that happens is if Fusco is the one to talk to her when she calls for advice; the only way ''that'' happens is if Team Machine all go to the server room together.
93* GroundhogDayLoop: The majority of the episode is presented and structured like one of these (through the Machine's simulations), where the Machine is the main character experimenting with events & attempting to find a favorable outcome through them.
94* HandWave: Shaw's BigDamnHeroes [[TookAShortcut into a sealed basement]] is put down to that old AirVentPassageway trick.
95* HeroicSacrifice: It varies, depending upon the particular simulation. Reese and Root in the second simulation, Reese and Shaw in the reality.
96* HomoeroticSubtext: The Machine calls out the subtext directly when needing to simplify dialogue in the simulation:
97-->'''Root:''' Overly affectionate greeting.\
98'''Shaw:''' Greeting.\
99'''Root:''' Transparent rationale for conversation.\
100'''Shaw:''' Annoyed attempt to deflect subtext.
101* HopeBringer: Shaw in the end, you can practically see the Machine exhaling in relief as the team's chance's of survival start to rise.
102* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: Samaritan's Agents must attend this academy, as four people are able to take out a small army of them simply because they can't shoot straight and Team Machine can.
103* InterruptedSuicide: Shaw has to stop a broker from [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything jumping out of a window after the market crash]].
104* JustSoStory: This episode explains how The Machine learned to make high-speed decisions.
105%%* KindaBusyHere: PlayedForDrama or ShipTease.
106* LockDown: Once Team Machine have been LuredIntoATrap, Samaritan activates a lockdown designed to keep people ''out'' in the event of a terrorist attack.
107* LuredIntoATrap: Team Machine falls for this.
108* MadeOfIron: Lambert has to shoot Reese several times, then punch, headbutt and then use even more bullets to subdue Reese in simulation 2.
109* {{Meaningful Title|s}}: In most programming languages, "If-Then-Else" is the most basic decision-making statement. [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin It's what the Machine does for almost the whole episode.]]
110* MediumAwareness: In-universe. Fusco, after kissing Root says, "Why not? We're in a simulation."
111* TheMenInBlack: Martine's team are the first Decima/Samaritan employees who finally live up to this trope, but seemingly only in the simulations. At the end of the episode Shaw and Root manage to slaughter them all with gunfire and explosives leaving only Martine and Lambert alive. It is Martine and Lambert who shoot Reese, Root and Shaw.
112* MoreDakka: Martine and Greer's strategy for this episode is simple. Bring more firepower than Team Machine does to the New York Stock Exchange building, lock it down, and riddle them with bullets upon cornering them.
113** Lambert empties half the magazine of his Glock 19 just to subdue Reese in simulation 2.
114* NeverSplitTheParty: In the first two simulations, the Machine splits the group into two teams and sends one to the server room to stop the financial crash and the other to the generator room so they can bypass the controls on the elevator. However, the server room team cannot accomplish its task without triggering an alarm and being overwhelmed when Lambert's team responds. The generator room team is either ambushed on the way there or will be wiped out when Martine tracks them down. Only by keeping the group together can they get to the server room without triggering the alarm and thus activate the failsafe without engaging in a major firefight, since by keeping everyone together, Fusco will have the time to give Shaw advice on how to talk down the suicide bomber, which prevents her from being arrested and gets them the security codes to the server room. This unfortunately will leave them having to fight both Lambert's and Martine's teams at the elevator, but it is the only method by which everyone stays alive long enough to reach that point.
115* NeverTrustATrailer: No, Finch wasn't shot, Reese didn't detonate a grenade, and Root wasn't shot multiple times by Samaritan operatives. It was [[AllJustADream All Just A Simulation]]. Shaw was shot, though. And is taken by Samaritan.
116* NoodleIncident: In the flashbacks, [[DidntSeeThatComing Harold captures The Machine's queen, seemingly paralyzing the AI's strategies]]. The flashbacks afterwards continue off at a point where The Machine has already checkmated Finch anyway. Though that is explicitly a different game, as Finch checkmates the Machine (knocks over its King) in the earlier one.
117* NoOSHACompliance: The only way to operate the elevator at the end of the episode is to push an override ''outside'' of the elevator, forcing someone to make a HeroicSacrifice to operate it. Not great in the event of a fire, given it's one of only two possible ways out of a sealed underground complex. Not great for security, either, given that it still allows all but one member of an invading force to escape.
118* NotSoStoic:
119** Root absolutely loses it when Shaw shoves her back into the elevator, seals it off and goes to press the activation button, dooming herself to be taken out by Martine.
120** ''The Machine's'' own reaction is on par with Root's.
121* NowOrNeverKiss: The third simulation has Fusco kiss Root right before the team goes to the server room, even lampshading that it's not weird because they're in a simulation. In reality, Shaw gives one to Root after deciding to save her and the rest of the team by going over to the elevator override button.
122* OhCrap:
123** Lambert and his portion of the Decima/Samaritan hit-squad get this when Reese snatches a hand grenade and disengages the pin.
124** The Machine [[InterfaceScrew outright freaks out]] when Shaw gets gunned down by Martine in reality.
125* OnThree: Martine and a squad of Samaritan agents are getting ready to burst into a room to kill Team Machine, who are about to go through another door to the elevator room to make their escape.
126-->'''Martine:''' Shots to the head and center mass. On my mark, one--\
127'''Reese:''' ''(peering through door window)'' --two, three!
128* ParalysisByAnalysis: In the flashbacks, the Machine suffered from this.
129-->'''Finch:''' There are more possible games of chess than there are atoms in the universe. No-one can possibly predict them all, not even you. Which means that the first move can be terrifying. It's the furthest point from the end of the game, there's a virtually infinite sea of possibilities between you and the other side... but it also means that if you make a mistake, there's a nearly infinite amount of ways to fix it. So you should simply relax, and play.
130* PetTheDog:
131** Simulation 2 has Martine being surprisingly polite and having her unit hold off on killing Root before she's said her farewell message to Shaw. Martine even looks a tiny bit choked up about it and has to take a second to adjust the grip on her gun before pulling the trigger.
132** When the team turns the corner in real life and is immediately shot at by Samaritan's operatives, Reese's first instinct is to shove Root behind cover before taking cover himself or opening fire. Granted, saving people has always been Reese's [[ChronicHeroSyndrome thing]], but it's still a nice way to show how the relationship between the two of them has evolved from what [[TheRival it]] [[SitcomArchnemesis was]].
133* PlayingTheHeartStrings: The DownerEnding. Root's complete breakdown is muted out and Shaw's usually uptempo theme turns slow and somber. The scene also plays in slow motion.
134* PlotDrivenBreakdown: The elevator.
135* PlotTailoredToTheParty: Subtly done, each member of Team Machine has skills critical to mission success and to escape, it's a matter of making sure each one is in the right place at the right time.
136* PyrrhicVictory: Much like the second episode of the Endgame arc a season and two episodes ago, Team Machine succeeds in their mission, but at great cost.
137* RealLifeWritesThePlot: Sarah Shahi got pregnant with twins, so it was either Shaw [[HideYourPregnancy developing an affinity for holding basketballs and fruit baskets]] or her being ''removed'' from the plot. (There was some discussion of doing a WrittenInInfirmity, but they decided there was just no way that pregnancy would fit Shaw's character.)
138* RobotsThinkFaster: The entire episode is based around this trope.
139* RuleOfThree: There are three individual simulations.
140* RunningGag: The Degas painting is always destroyed. Until Root saves it at the end.
141* SaveScumming: In effect, the Machine is doing this in its simulations.
142* SeeYouInHell: Reese indulges in this in one of the simulations.
143-->'''Martine:''' Last time I saw you was in church. You should have prayed a little harder.\
144'''Reese:''' I go to hell, I'm {{taking you with me}}.
145* ASharedSuffering: How Shaw [[TalkingDownTheSuicidal talks down the bomber]].
146* SheatheYourSword: Team Machine only succeeds when Shaw talks down the man wearing the bomb vest.
147* ShipperOnDeck:
148** Even while trying to stop the destruction of the global economy and get its assets out alive, The Machine also finds time to indulge in this. Root, Shaw and Fusco are the victims.
149** Even Martine gets in on the act somewhat. She lets Root say a rambling farewell message to Shaw, looks pretty choked up and has to take a second to adjust her grip on her sidearm before opening fire.
150* ShipTease: Shaw finally confirms that she finds Root attractive. She just doesn't think [[DestructiveRomance them getting together is a good idea]].
151* ShootOutTheLock: Subverted as this always alerts the guards inside the server room. It's only when Shaw gets the access code that the simulation ends successfully.
152* ShoutOut:
153** Root says "Turn left" at the beginning of the first and third simulations, as well as the reality. Intentional or not, this is a nice allusion to a 2008 ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode which also revolves heavily on making choices that affect the outcome of situations.
154** The Machine's simplified simulation seems to allude to [[http://bash.org/?23396 this bash.org quote]].
155* ShutUpKiss: Shaw to Root, just before her HeroicSacrifice.
156* SlowMotion: Used to show the start of each simulation, and for Shaw getting shot.
157* SmallRoleBigImpact: The security firm employee that has the passcode. He has one line, but it's ultimately Shaw getting the code from him that saves the team. The simulations where Shaw did not talk down Gary resulted in Reese/Fusco/Root having to shoot the lock, drawing Samaritan's operatives' attention, which in turn resulted in the predicted deaths of the characters.
158* SmartPeoplePlayChess: They may play it, but empathic people might not enjoy it. After having taught chess to the Machine in 2003, Finch notes that he dislikes the game because it comes from a time where people thought pawns were worth less than kings. Presumably he got over it.
159** A bit of FridgeBrilliance kicks in. The only other time we see Finch playing chess is against Elias. At the time, Elias was ''exactly'' the kind of person Finch said "deserved to lose." Or at least that's what Finch thought. [[Recap/PersonOfInterestS04E09 He is later shown to be a man of honor, loyal to his friends.]]
160* SpoilerTitle
161* SpreadingDisasterMapGraphic: Greer is monitoring the worldwide financial crisis on Samaritan's main screen.
162* StraightForTheCommander: Lambert always aims for Finch.
163* TakingTheBullet: Reese, in the reality, when Lambert aims for Finch.
164* TakingYouWithMe:
165** The market crash convinces one investor to do this to his broker with a bomb vest.
166** John threatens Martine with this in the first simulation, then pulls it on Lambert in the second.
167* TemptingFate:
168** Finch says, "For a second, Ms. Groves, I thought all might be lost." Lambert comes up from behind and shoots him.
169** Fusco says that maybe Root was right to send them to the server room. That idea doesn't work, either.
170** Finch teaching the Machine chess. "You'll encounter far more capable opponents than me."
171* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: The Decima/Samaritan employees use a large amount of bullets just to kill the members of Team Machine. A prime example is what they do to Root in simulation 2.
172* TropeName: In simulation 3, the Machine replaces Team Machine's dialog with generic templates to accelerate the simulation's processing. See BlahBlahBlah.
173* {{Understatement}}: Yes, your artificial super-intelligence can be said to have "a lot on its mind" when it's evaluating ''over 830,000'' possible options.
174* UnspokenPlanGuarantee: Averted. After The Machine finishes its last simulation, we see its strategy play out in reality pretty much exactly the same way it did in the simulation (or at least the parts The Machine had time to simulate play out exactly the same) with only the exception of some small variances in dialogue (though there are a few cuts in the middle to speed things up).
175* UselessSecurityCamera: When the Machine has to pick the best scenario and go with it. The plan fails because of the elevator stop button, [[RewatchBonus which isn't in the viewpoint of any security camera]].
176* WalkInChimeIn: Used for a BaitAndSwitch. Root is making her final phone call to Shaw, as per the simulation, when suddenly Shaw walks into their midst for a BigDamnHeroes.
177* WhamEpisode: Shaw appears to die.
178* WhamLine:
179-->'''The Machine:''' [[AC:[!] No valid options]]
180* WhatHappenedToTheMouse:
181** Each time Reese and Fusco encounter the fake janitors/Samaritan agents, they commandeer the Colt M4-A1 assault rifles the agents had been using. However, in both the simulations and the real world, the rifles have vanished without a trace by the time Reese and Fusco make it to the server room.
182** If all Samaritan operatives are carrying a hand grenade as standard issue, why don't they use them in the elevator room shootout? Or on future occasions, for that matter.
183* YouShallNotPass: "There’s an override button. Someone’s got to get to the button and hold them off."
184* YouWillKnowWhatToDo: Root says this to Finch, who when he gets to the elevator room finds a generator he can modify, thanks to his days tinkering with cars.
185----
186-->[[AC:[[TheStinger [!] No valid options\
187Undesired outcome\
188Recap article: Terminated\
189Simulation Terminated\

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