
Murder as the Endpoint of Distorted Hope
“The Hope Distortion” reframes this week’s Law & Order episode, “Remedies,” not as a procedural about a murdered wellness influencer but as a study in how hope bends judgment until good intentions become dangerous. In this telling, everyone—Carol Massey (Stephanie Szostak), Lauren Massey/Hope (Georgia Waehler), and even Nolan Price (Hugh Dancy)—suffers from the same affliction: the kind of hope that narrows vision so sharply that consequences disappear.
Emily Starr (Tess Marshall), a charismatic wellness influencer, is shot at point blank range. The brutality signals something intimate, something fueled by belief rather than impulse. When Lt. Brady and Det. Theo Walker trace the weapon to suburban mom Carol Massey, the case shifts from a whodunit to a why would she.
“Remedies”– LAW& ORDER, Pictured: (l-r) Mike McGowan as Roger Massey, David Ajala
as Det. Theo Walker, Maura Tierney as Lieutenant Jessica Brady. Photo by: Will
Hart/NBC @
2026 NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Carol’s motive is rooted in a mother’s terror: her daughter Lauren abandoned chemotherapy for Emily’s “natural healing” gospel. Emily encouraged Lauren to cut out doctors, treatments, and even her own parents—framing them as “negativity.” Carol’s hope that she could save her daughter calcified into certainty, and that certainty hardened into violence.
Her legal defense—“defense of others due to imminent threat”—isn’t just implausible; it’s a window into her distorted worldview. She truly believed Emily was killing Lauren. She truly believed she had no choice.
Hope, in Carol’s hands, becomes a weapon.
Lauren’s Hope as Surrender
Lauren’s arc is quieter but equally tragic. She isn’t naïve; she’s exhausted. She knows what chemo feels like. She knows what radiation does. Emily’s promise of healing without suffering is a lifeline she desperately wants to believe in.
Her hope is a retreat from fear. It costs her her health, her relationships, and nearly her life. She is the episode’s most sympathetic figure precisely because her hope is so understandable—and so dangerous.
Price’s Hope as Moral Clarity that Falters
Nolan Price enters the case with prosecutorial confidence, but his mother’s death from breast cancer destabilizes him. She, too, chose natural remedies. She, too, believed in hope over medicine. And it cost her a year of life.
Price’s hope is subtler: he wants the law to feel clean. He wants justice to be straightforward. He wants to believe he can separate personal grief from professional duty. But Lauren’s story hits too close, and for a moment, he loses his footing—offering Carol a plea deal out of empathy rather than strategy.
“Remedies”– LAW & ORDER, Pictured: Stephanie
Szostak as Carol Massey. Photo by: Will Hart/NBC @ 2026 NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All
Rights Reserved.
His myopia isn’t violent like Carol’s, but it’s still a distortion. Hope blurs his prosecutorial boundaries.
The Lie that Exposes Every Distortion
When ADA Samantha Maroun (Odelya Halevi) uncovers that Emily never had cancer—that her entire wellness empire was built on a fabrication—the episode reveals its central irony: the woman who sold hope was a fraud, and the people who bought it paid the price.
“Remedies”– LAW& ORDER, Pictured: (l-r) Odelya Halevi as A.D.A. Samantha Maroun,
Megan Elyse Robinson as Ashley Dennison. Photo by: Will Hart/NBC @ 2026
NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Price wants to expose the lie in court. Maroun stops him. The truth isn’t exculpatory. It would only inflame the jury. The law demands clarity, not catharsis.
Her restraint is the antidote to everyone else’s distortion.
A Closing Argument that Restores Focus
Price’s closing argument is the episode’s strongest moment. He puts up the photo of Emily’s body and reframes the case with devastating simplicity: Emily was the only person in imminent danger when Carol pulled the trigger.
It’s a return to legal clarity after an hour of emotional fog.
The jury convicts. Justice is served, but Price feels no victory. Emily was a fraud. Carol was a mother in pain. Lauren was a victim of both.
Maroun Offers Price a Final Correction
“A good person killing a bad person is still murder.”
It’s the line that snaps the episode back into focus. Hope may distort, but it cannot absolve.
Final Thoughts
“Remedies” has a predictable structure but is thematically coherent when viewed through the lens of distorted hope, with a closing argument that elevates the hour.
So, friends, how do you think Price absorbed Maroun’s final comment? Did it ease the weight he was carrying, or did it sharpen his sense of the tragedy at the heart of the case? Share your thoughts in the comments.
Overall Rating: 7 out of 10
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Lynette Jones




