‘The Fosters’ season 2, episode 18 preview: What’s next for Connor and Jude?
Clearly, there is quite a bit to come on next week’s all-new episode of “The Fosters,” especially based on what we saw tonight. It doesn’t matter if you are talking about Callie putting her future at risk, or Jude and Connor trying to figure out where they go next, and their entire friendship could be at stake.
You can get some assorted highlights of all of this in the promo below, but you can see some other details when it comes to these storylines and much more courtesy of our official ABC Family synopsis:
“Mariana finds it difficult to deal with impending changes at home and focuses her attention on organizing a student protest over an administrative incident at school. Meanwhile, when she learns Kiara is back in town and on the streets, Callie is willing to do anything she can in order to help her friend, even if that means disobeying Stef’s orders and putting herself in danger. Jude finally confronts Connor over the mixed messages he’s been sending, leading to a make-or-break moment in their friendship.”
The Fosters as a whole are now on the verge of crumbling, but somehow, they always find a way to rise from the ashes and figure out that in the end, the love that they have for each other will overcome almost anything. This will be tested more and more as we near the end of this season, but luckily, the series finale is not anytime soon. The show has already been renewed for a third season.
What do you want to see on the next new episode of “The Fosters”? Share your thoughts right now with a comment, and head over here to get some other news related to the series! Also, you can sign up right now to score some additional updates on everything we cover via our CarterMatt Newsletter. (Photo: ABC Family.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9iE19YgUJU
Passer-by
February 26, 2015 @ 2:16 pm
OPINION: Connor is being portrayed as a gay kid living in a homophobic household. Jude is a straight kid living in a homo-accepting household.
Connor is testing the relationship waters, as do all young adolescents, but with his particular desires concerning him, while Jude is still pre-adolescent and mistaking, for homosexual attraction, a normal sociological-development attachment to a male friend – the one friend he seems to have made at school – a mistake probably associated with his home environment.
Not sayin’ that the home attitude is responsible for leading Jude down a path (to cut off the Moral nonsense crowd), just that it allows wider range of options than Connor has open to him.
If this opinion is correct, the message being written into the script would be that the composition of one’s environment puts pressure on the core subject but doesn’t change the the nature of the core subject.
Devin McMusters
February 24, 2015 @ 4:22 pm
That kid that plays Hay-suess is one of the worst actors the world has ever seen. He does play “duh” well though.
Me
February 26, 2015 @ 3:56 pm
I agree, but you spell “hay-suess” Jesus.
Devin McMusters
February 26, 2015 @ 4:08 pm
My savior is Gee-zuss, and the character on the Fosters is Hay-suess.
Me
February 26, 2015 @ 4:19 pm
Jesus is Hispanic,
the Hispanic pronunciation of his name looks like Jesus. J is
pronounced H in Spanish,
which is why it
sounds like Hay-suuess. U has a tilde over it, which is why it sounds
how It does. I’m not being smart, or anything like that, i’m just
telling you what I know. I’ve taken Spanish for a very long time.
Yes, you don’t like
the actor, but show some respect to his culture.