Rose, Ward’s wife and Sarah’s stepmom, drugs Sarah to get her on the ship. ▪ The Coastal Venture - The Camerons make plans to ship the cross to another country via the Coastal Venture, a large cargo ship. Through a series of clues deciphered through historical artifacts, the Pogues find the cross, but end up losing it to Rafe and Limbrey. ▪ The Cross of Santo Domingo - The Pogues’ meeting with Limbrey begins the introduction to Season 2’s key plot point: the search for a new treasure, the Cross of Santo Domingo, a priceless heirloom that, like the Season 1 gold, belonged to Denmark Tanny - who is revealed to be one of Pope’s ancestors. The SBI moves into Tannyhill to arrest Ward, but Ward seemingly dies by suicide as he blows up the boat he’s hiding out on. ▪ RIP Ward Cameron - In the midst of the Pogues’ treasure hunting, now-Sheriff Shoupe and a State Bureau of Investigations agent find evidence that Rafe and Ward, not John B, were responsible for Peterkin’s death. The group heads back to the Outer Banks, where John B is (wrongly) arrested for the murder of the sheriff. The still-OBX-based Pogues - Pope, Kiara and JJ - head to Charleston to meet her, resulting with a chance encounter and meet-up with John B and Sarah, who have arrived back on the mainland after narrowly escaping danger and death in the Bahamas. Limbrey, who says she has evidence that can exonerate John B, who is still wanted for the murder of Peterkin. ▪ Pogues, together again - Back on the OBX, Pope receives a letter from C. But the plan doesn’t come without risks, and Sarah is shot by Rafe. Sarah and John B convince the crew to help them intercept the gold, which is being moved by Ward and Rafe from its location at the Camerons’ Bahamian home. ▪ Hello, Bahamas - Season 2 opens with plenty of action, as John B and Sarah arrive in the Bahamas as fugitives and are captured by the crew on the cargo ship that originally brought them to the island country. What happened in Season 2 of ‘Outer Banks’? The boat is seen capsizing, but John B and Sarah somehow manage to survive, then get rescued by a cargo ship headed to the Bahamas - where the gold has been flown by Ward’s pilot. John B and Sarah manage to escape the island using a boat owned by JJ’s abusive father, heading straight into the storm. ▪ Surviving a tropical storm - Season 1 ends with a massive manhunt on the Outer Banks for John B, now wanted for murder, which coincides with tropical storm hitting the area. But as Sheriff Peterkin draws her gun, she’s shot by Ward’s son, Rafe - but after John B flees the scene, Ward calls the cops and says John B killed Peterkin. The local sheriff arrives not long after, telling Ward he’s being arrested for killing Big John. Drama and conflict ensue at the airport runway, as John B tries to stop the plane from taking off using “the Twinkie,” his Volkswagen van. ▪ Who killed Sheriff Peterkin? - Ward retrieves the gold, then makes plans to fly it by private plane to the Bahamas. John B and the other Pogues soon begin their own hunt for the Merchant as they find clues appeared to have been left for John B by his dad. John B’s father, Big John, has been missing for nine months, having disappeared while looking for the Merchant. ▪ The gold - Most of the Season 1 plot revolves around a treasure hunt for a massive amount of gold - $400 million, to be exact - thought to be on-board the Royal Merchant, a ship that wrecked off the OBX coast hundreds of years ago. The groups’ differences, between both teens and adults, exist as a primary source of conflict throughout the series. Most of the show’s main characters - teens John B, Pope, JJ and Kiara - consider themselves to be Pogues, while born-Kook Sarah Cameron becomes more of a Pogue as she begins a star-crossed romance with John B. Two main groups exist on the show’s fictional Outer Banks setting: the Pogues, or the working-class locals who live on “the Cut,” and the Kooks, the rich, upper-class people who live on Figure Eight Island - a nod to the real-life Figure Eight that exists near Wrightsville Beach. Kooks - “Outer Banks” is about a lot of things, including class differences. Series creator Jonas Pate told The News & Observer that the show was inspired by his and his brother’s experiences growing up in North Carolina and visiting the coast, and that the geography of both North and South Carolina “gets thrown in a blender and tossed around” to create a “mythical Carolina coast.”
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