Visited By a Friend - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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On the Steps of Justice - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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Stepped Briefcase - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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Leading the Protest - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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Towering on the Courthouse - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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Am I Next - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL Season 1 Episode -- "Point & Shoot".
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Surprising the Judge - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL -- "Point & Shoot" Episode 106 -- Pictured: Michael Querin as Judge Haynes
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Setting Up the Judge - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL -- "Point & Shoot" Episode 106 -- Pictured: Malcolm-Jamal Warner as Dustin Atwood
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Mason's Meeting - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL -- "Point & Shoot" Episode 106 -- Pictured: Emidio Lopes as Mason Hill-Jones
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Reading the File - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

THE IRRATIONAL -- "Point & Shoot" Episode 106 -- Pictured: Karyn Mott as Hannah Styles
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Point and Shoot - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 6

Alec faces off with an old nemesis on The Irrational. "Point And Shoot" is the sixth episode of the show's first season.
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Juice Them Up - The Irrational Season 1 Episode 5

The Irrational Season 1 Episode 5 -- Lucky Charms.
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The Irrational Quotes

Marisa: That ability you have to completely divorce emotion from reason is both why I married you and...
Mercer: ... why you're longer married to me.

People are irrational. But predictably so. They're more afraid of flying than driving, and the fact is, driving is much more dangerous. We know we should eat healthy food, but then we give in to temptation. Buy things we will never, ever use. We assume people are making rational decisions, weighing the pros and cons. For most of the time, we're not. Instead, we rely on instincts, which are almost always wrong. Sometimes, dangerously wrong. One error in judgment leads to another.

Mercer