The set of ABC’s High Potential hummed with electric tension at 2:17 a.m. when showrunner Todd Harthan slammed his script shut. “This isn’t one episode,” he declared. “Rhys stays. Stretch it to two.” Guest star Aiden Turner—fresh off a shirtless reveal that crashed the midseason finale’s servers—grinned from the shadows. “Perfect,” he whispered to Kaitlin Olson. “Because Rhys isn’t just chasing art. He’s chasing her.” Cut to now: Turner’s exclusive Deadline chat confirms the bombshell. His character, the velvet-voiced insurance sleuth Rhys Eastman, isn’t a one-night consultant. Writers extended his arc after test audiences demanded more—turning a heist procedural into a pulse-pounding romance that’s got fans shipping #MorganRhys harder than a stolen Picasso.

It started innocently enough: a $20 million painting vanishes from a sun-drenched LA gallery, pulling in LAPD’s genius mom-consultant Morgan (Olson) and her skeptical partner Karadec (Daniel Sunjata). Enter Rhys—quick-witted, impeccably tailored, with “the tenacity of a prosecutor and the instincts of a detective,” per his bio. Morgan’s hackles rise instantly. “Another consultant? I’m the only one here!” she snaps in the bullpen, sparking banter that crackles like dry lightning. But as they rogue-investigate—sneaking back to the crime scene sans backup—the walls crumble.
Captain Wagner (Steve Howey) benches her for insubordination, leaving Morgan drowning sorrows at a dive bar. Rhys slides in, all brooding charm: “Fancy a chaser?” One drink becomes two. Two become a hotel room. And then? A make-out session so steamy, it fogs the screen—ending with Morgan spotting a gunshot scar on his shoulder. Matching a thief from a five-year-old heist. Cliffhanger city.
Turner spills the tea: “Rhys sort of makes [Morgan] fall in love with him a little bit.” Not the scripted flirtation—the real vulnerability. Writers beefed up his backstory mid-shoot: a working-class kid from trash-collecting roots, finding solace in museums’ marble halls. “He opens up about the bullying, the escape through art,” Turner reveals. “It’s raw. Morgan sees her own underdog fire reflected back.” The extension? Born from dailies magic—Harthan watched their chemistry bloom and hit “expand.” Now, in Tuesday’s “The One That Got Away” (airing Jan. 7, 2026), Rhys’s motives unravel: Is the scar a red herring, or proof he’s the mastermind? A high-speed chase seals the two-parter, blending Thomas Crown Affair cat-and-mouse with High Potential’s brainy twists.

And eye candy? Turner owns it. “I enjoy being the distraction,” he laughs, flexing that Poldark-honed physique. “But it’s the emotional hook that sticks. Morgan’s been armored since Tom [JD Pardo’s ex from Season 1]. Rhys cracks her open—makes her question if love’s just another unsolved case.”
Fans are feral: #RhysIsTheOne petitions hit 150,000 signatures overnight, clashing with #TeamKaradec diehards. Olson teases on IG: “Morgan’s heart? Stolen. Permanently?” Harthan hints at Roman’s (her missing ex) shadow lurking—could Rhys know more?
The heist’s solved. But the real theft? Morgan’s guarded soul. One scar, one kiss, one extended arc—and High Potential just painted romance in shades of suspicion.
Will Rhys return her heart… or frame her for falling?
The gallery lights dim. The chase resumes. And Turner? He’s already suiting up for more.