MacPherson (Warehouse 13)

"MacPherson" is the Twelfth episode of the first season of the Syfy television series Warehouse 13. It first aired September 22, 2009, and was written by Jack Kenny and was directed by Stephen Surjik.

"MacPherson"
Warehouse 13 episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 12
Directed byStephen Surjik
Written byJack Kenny
Original air dateSeptember 22, 2009 (2009-09-22)
Guest appearances

MacPherson engages in a scheme to secretly sell off Warehouse artifacts, leaving a trail of clues that lead Artie, Pete, and Myka directly to him. Claudia is a traitor. She is together with McPherson.

Artifacts

The Phoenix: Main artifact of the episode. Protects it's holder from fire by burning those around it.

Elagabalus's Goblet of Severan: Rubbing it's rim causes loud noise resulting in deafness of those around it.

Timothy Leary's Reading Glasses: Replica of original artifact, causes LSD like sensations while wearing.

Harriet Tubman's Thimble: Bends light allowing the wearer to resemble anyone they wish.

Erik Kluger's Eggshell Bomb: Hypersensitive to touch, contains promethium, explodes with nuclear force.

Tuning Fork: Cancels out effects of sound artifacts, restores hearing.

Crystalline Diamond Necklace: Contains a trace of an element called Palladium that neutralises the violent properties of the reaction between the Painite walls of the Warehouse and the substance injected in people to banish them from the Warehouse. A person injected briefly glows red when the necklace is worn.

Bronze Sector: Houses the world's most dangerous criminals and preserves them for all eternity. It contains a machine that cryogenically freezes people and coats them in bronze. Their existence is not found in the manual, meant to preserve the sector's relatively clandestine nature.

Reception

This episode drew 2.23 million viewers[1]

References

  1. Seidman, Robert (September 23, 2009). "With broadcast competition at full strength, Syfy's Warehouse 13 ends its freshman season on a low note". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on January 28, 2010. Retrieved March 18, 2010.
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