The Rookie bans 'live' weapons on set after fatal shooting on Alec Baldwin film

The showrunner of The Boys also pledged not to use guns with blanks on any of his sets again.

The characters of the ABC police drama The Rookie might still come out guns blazing, but the actors will no longer be wielding real firearms.

EW has confirmed that the series has banned "live" weapons on set, effective immediately, in the wake of the fatal shooting accident on the Santa Fe set of Alec Baldwin film Rust.

As first reported by The Hollywood Reporter, the Nathan Fillion-led series will only use realistic-looking airsoft guns and add computer-generated muzzle flashes in post-production. Airsoft guns fire nonlethal BBs or pellets instead of blanks or bullets.

Showrunner Alexi Hawley announced the change in a memo that went out to all cast and crew Friday. "The tragic events in New Mexico yesterday have shaken us all, and our hearts go out to the friends and family of Halyna Hutchins and Joel Souza," he wrote. "There will be no more 'live' weapons on the show. The safety our cast and crew is too important. Any risk is too much risk."

THE ROOKIE
Nathan Fillion on 'The Rookie'. Eric McCandless/ABC

Hawley also encouraged cast and crew members to report anything that they witness on set that feels unsafe or concerns them.

The decision comes on the heels of the Rust accident, in which cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed and director Joel Souza wounded when a prop firearm was discharged by Baldwin, a cast member and producer on the film. The incident is under investigation by local authorities, and the production company behind the film said it will conduct an internal review.

Hawley isn't the only showrunner pledging to change the use of firearms on their productions. Eric Kripke of The Boys tweeted Friday that he will never use guns with blanks on any of his sets again.

"Someone hurt or killed on my set is my worst nightmare," he wrote. "Sending love to Halyna Hutchins' family, @JensenAckles, cast & crew of 'Rust.' I'm so sorry. In her memory, a simple, easy pledge: no more guns with blanks on any of my sets ever. We'll use VFX muzzle flashes. Who's with me?"

Many movie and television sets have already opted for muzzle flashes and gun effects created with CGI, but it remains to be seen how many more in the industry will commit to making that the new standard.

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