Brooklyn Nine-nine Season 1 2 3 4 5 - Threesixtyp ~repack~ [2026 Release]
: Opens with the "Coral Palms" arc in Florida before the team reunites in Brooklyn. A major shift occurs when Rosa Diaz and Jake are framed by corrupt Lt. Melanie Hawkins, ending the season with both detectives sent to prison : Widely considered "peak" Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Before Brooklyn Nine-Nine , the precinct comedy was either a chaotic free-for-all ( Superstore ’s later brilliance) or a cynical hellscape ( The Office ’s early genius). Then, in 2013, Dan Goor and Michael Schur dropped something radical: a cop show that wasn’t about crime. It was about found family, absurdist heists, and a captain who loved pushing a single red button. Across Seasons 1–5, Brooklyn Nine-Nine didn’t just find its footing — it built a skyscraper of jokes, heart, and Holt-ian deadpan. Brooklyn Nine-Nine Season 1 2 3 4 5 - threesixtyp
Jake and Rosa are framed for bank robbery by their idol, the dirty cop Lt. Melanie Hawkins : Opens with the "Coral Palms" arc in
The "Moo Moo" episode, which tackled serious themes of racial profiling, and the shocking finale that saw Jake and Rosa framed and sent to prison. Season 5: Redemption and The Wedding Then, in 2013, Dan Goor and Michael Schur
Season 4 continues this trajectory of raising the stakes. It introduces the concept of the "night shift," a demotion that saps the squad's energy, serving as a metaphor for workplace burnout. The season culminates in a dramatic arc involving Jake being framed and imprisoned by a corrupt lieutenant. These seasons proved that a comedy could put its characters in genuine peril and emotional distress without betraying the show's optimistic tone.
“The Box” (a bottle episode with Sterling K. Brown as a smug dentist — Holt and Jake’s interrogation duet), “99” (the squad protects a gay Puerto Rican parade from homophobic cops). Why Season 5 matters: It balances the show’s three pillars — absurdity (Gina’s dance crew), procedural tension (the prison arc), and profound warmth (the engagement). And it ends with Jake saying: “I’ve got everything I need.” Cut to the squad dancing in the bullpen.