The Finder is an American procedural drama television series created by Hart Hanson that ran as a midseason replacement on Fox from January 12, 2012, to May 11, 2012. The series originally aired on Thursdays at 9:00 pm, and moved to Fridays at 8:00 pm beginning April 6, 2012. It is a spin-off of another Fox television series, Bones (also created by Hanson), where the backdoor pilot, a season-six episode entitled "The Finder", aired in April 2011. It is loosely based on The Locator series of two books (The Knowland Retribution and The Lacey Confession) by Richard Greener. On May 9, 2012, Fox cancelled the series after its one limited season. It would be one of Michael Clarke DuncanâÂÂs final screen appearances before his death in September 2012, four months after this seriesâ final episode.
Fox developed a quasi-spin-off series for Bones that was built around a character introduced in the sixth season. The series was created by Bones creator/executive producer, Hart Hanson, and based on The Locator series of two books written by Richard Greener: The Knowland Retribution and The Lacey Confession. The eponymous Locator, changed to Finder for the television adaptation, is Walter Sherman; Walter is an eccentric, but amusing recluse in high demand for his ability to find anything. He is skeptical of everything. He suffered brain damage after being the sole survivor of a roadside bomb explosion, which explains his constant paranoia and compulsion to find things ("I was looking for an insurgent bomb maker. My job was to find him⦠he found me first⦠the explosion⦠killed six good men⦠now I either find it, or I die trying.")and for asking offensive, seemingly irrelevant questions to get to the truth. Production on the episode began in early 2011.
Creator Hart Hanson posted on Twitter (in a humorous manner) regarding the notes he got from the network, "I received studio notes on the Bones spin-off idea. They want it to be better. Unreasonable taskmasters. Impossible dreamers. Neo-platonists."
The characters make their base at The Ends of the Earth bar, on the fictional Florida Keys island of Looking Glass Key. Geoff Stults was cast as the lead character with Michael Clarke Duncan and Saffron Burrows (as Ike Latulippe, bartender and pilot) in supporting roles. The three characters were introduced in episode 19 of season 6.
The Finder was picked up for the 2011âÂÂ12 season on May 10, 2011, with an order of 13 episodes. The series premiered midseason 2012, airing on Thursdays at 9:00 pm ET, occupying the Bones time slot when it was on hiatus.
Saffron Burrows did not appear beyond the backdoor pilot episode, leaving the series, because the network decided to reconceive the role. Mercedes Masöhn and Maddie Hasson joined the cast as the two female leads. Masohn plays Isabel Zambada, a deputy U.S. marshal; and Hasson plays Willa, a juvenile delinquent who helps with their investigations.
In Canada, the show was simsubbed against the Fox broadcast in most areas on the Global Television Network from January 12, 2012. It premiered in New Zealand on TV3 NZ on March 22, 2012, in Australia on Network Ten from June 25, 2012 and in the UK on the Universal Channel on July 11, 2012 Australia's Network Ten only aired three episodes before pulling the series from the schedule, and lost broadcast rights in March 2016 without airing the remaining episodes.
The order of the episodes that aired differs from the order produced and intended. This does create some discontinuity in the events of the show, such as Timo and Leo meeting for the first time in the episode "The Conversation", despite the two having met and conversed in previously aired episodes; the mention of Willa not having access to the internet in the same episode, despite her probation officer allowing it two episodes before; or the creation of an "honor jar" for paying one's bill, since Willa is not permitted behind the bar, when Willa was behind the bar (and the honor jar present) in earlier episodes.
The series was released on Disney+ on May 20, 2022.