“Covered” sees the New York Field Office racing to find out who sold the files of eight undercover agents, which resulted in one of them being murdered. This is a compelling premise for an episode that quickly evolves into a story about violent activism instead. It’s not the most together episode of the show, but it makes sense from a character standpoint and gets audiences to actually care about Rhodes.
FBI Season 7, Episode 16 Has a Stronger Overall Plot
The Transition From Episode 15 Is Awkward
The initial premise of “Covered” is a compelling one because it has immediately high stakes. Special Agent Gavin Rice is killed while trying to infiltrate the Irish Mob, and Rice’s killer makes an attempt to save himself by confessing that his boss bought the agent’s personnel file on the black market. Truthfully, FBI could have done an entire episode searching for the person who leaked classified information, and running around trying to save other agents without blowing their cover. That’s something with an incredible amount of tension and all kinds of story possibilities. However, the creative team pivots to something easier.
Yet for its characterization flaws, “Covered” at least has an overall story. The last time FBI tried to introduce another partner for Scola, that episode pretty much revolved around Special Agent Sydney Ortiz, and there were plenty of plot contrivances to make Sydney seem like a good fit for the team. In this episode, the arrival of Dani Rhodes is just one piece of a bigger puzzle, and the story is thus much stronger because it’s not serving anyone specifically.
FBI Successfully Introduces Its New Agent Dani Rhodes
Emily Alabi’s Character Gets a Fair Shake

Season 7, Episode 4, “Doubted” was built to make Sydney look as good as possible and also emphasized her total lack of field experience. The victim featured in the story was one of Sydney’s family members, Isobel Castille just happened to have a past with Sydney’s father, and Sydney was the character who made the biggest impact in the case. The entire thing felt contrived, especially Isobel’s choice to offer Sydney a position on the team after Sydney’s own admission that she made a mistake in the field. By contrast, Dani does have a stake in the case — she’s one of the agents whose files were sold — but that’s all she has. There isn’t any connection to the main cast to give her credibility, she’s not the one who has the episode’s “hero moment” (that’d be Maggie), and she’s the one who campaigns for a job on the team.
Dani Rhodes (to Isobel): You guys don’t have a weak link.
FBI Season 7, Episode 16 Revisits OA and Maggie’s Partnership
The Two Share an Important Scene Together
The episode intentionally ends before Maggie answers, but the implication is whether or not she’s going to tell OA what happened in “Acolyte.” That’s something that does deserve to be shown on-screen, because these two have always had an incredible partnership — but that’s because FBI has invested the screen time into letting fans see them have hard conversations together. Viewers have been there to watch them help one another, and not just in the action-packed rescue moments. FBI Season 7, Episode 16 is truly a Maggie Bell episode more than anything else, and OA deserves to be an important part of whatever the writers have planned for his partner.

