Season 12 of Chicago P.D. keeps heating up.
The Intelligence Unit has been pounding the pavement this season, with the fearless Hank Voight (Jason Beghe) at the helm of the rollercoaster action. Between the gripping investigations and precinct pandemonium, the drama has been firing off on all cylinders this season on Chicago P.D., and fans can’t wait to see where the action heads next.
“The funny thing is that, with all the darkness, we goof around the whole time,” Flueger (P.D.‘s Adam Ruzek) told The Hollywood Reporter. “Everyone is so serious, but at the same time, we goof around. Every set says, ‘We’re a family, we’re a family.’ I’ll tell you what: we are a family! Our crew works so hard; they’re there for such long hours that, if we didn’t goof around, I don’t know how it would be survivable.”
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Read on to learn when and where to watch new episodes of Chicago P.D. Season 12.
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The logline for tonight’s Chicago P.D. episode — Season 12, Episode 18 (“Demons”) — reads: “Voight and Chapman work together to uncover Deputy Chief Reid’s shadow dealings as Reid assigns Intelligence to a carjacking case.”
New episodes of Chicago P.D. Season 12 air on Wednesdays at 10/9c on NBC. All new One Chicago episodes are also available to stream the next day on Peacock, NBC’s streaming service.
The logline for next week’s Chicago P.D. episode — Season 12, Episode 19 (“Name Image Likeness”) — reads: “Cook works with a confidential informant for the first time in a robbery-murder case with links to a star college athlete.”
Watch every episode of Chicago P.D. on Peacock. Whether you want to stay caught up with P.D.’s Season 12 cases or relive the Intelligence Unit’s early days, Peacock is the perfect place for a One Chicago marathon.
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“It’s a pretty big [One Chicago] family,” series creator Dick Wolf said in 2019. “Everybody gets along. I mean, there are no squeaky wheels in the cast… I’ve never had anything like it, which is, I think, only visible to the audience by the fact of how good they are together. There are no line counters. There are no ‘Where’s my close-up?’ It’s a remarkably ensemble-like world.”