| # | Air Date | Episode Name | Watched? |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | Sep 13, 1996 | ||
| E2 | Sep 20, 1996 | ||
| E3 | Sep 27, 1996 | ||
| E4 | Oct 04, 1996 | ||
| E5 | Oct 18, 1996 | ||
| E6 | Oct 25, 1996 | ||
| E7 | Nov 01, 1996 | ||
| E8 | Nov 08, 1996 | ||
| E9 | Nov 15, 1996 | ||
| E10 | Nov 22, 1996 | ||
| E11 | Dec 06, 1996 | ||
| E12 | Dec 13, 1996 | ||
| E13 | Jan 13, 1997 | ||
| E14 | Jan 24, 1997 | ||
| E15 | Jan 27, 1997 | ||
| E16 | Feb 07, 1997 | ||
| E17 | Feb 28, 1997 | ||
| E18 | Mar 07, 1997 | ||
| E19 | Mar 14, 1997 | ||
| E20 | Mar 21, 1997 | ||
| E21 | Mar 28, 1997 | ||
| E22 | Apr 04, 1997 |
Renegade remains a definitive pillar of action-adventure television, having concluded its influential run on the USA Network. The series, starring Lorenzo Lamas as Reno Raines, captured the quintessential 1990s aesthetic of the outlaw hero seeking justice in a corrupt world. It successfully blended the lone-wolf archetype with a modern motorcycle subculture, creating a visual and thematic identity that resonated deeply with international audiences. By utilizing the fugitive-on-the-run trope popularized by earlier classics, the show established a gritty yet accessible narrative structure that allowed for both episodic bounty-hunting adventures and a compelling overarching quest for exoneration.
Today, the legacy of the show persists as a rewatch staple due to its earnest embrace of high-octane stunts, iconic theme music, and the chemistry between its core trio of Reno, Bobby Sixkiller, and Cheyenne Phillips. It serves as a time capsule for a specific era of first-run syndication where charismatic leads and straightforward morality plays dominated the airwaves. Fans return to the series not just for the nostalgia of the Harley-Davidson imagery, but for the escapist quality of its storytelling, which continues to influence contemporary procedural dramas that favor rugged protagonists operating on the fringes of the law.