"Kate Is Enough" is the fourth episode of the American police procedural drama television series Awake.
The show centers on Michael Britten (Jason Isaacs), a police detective living in two separate realities after a car accident.
In this episode, Michael deals with a case where a girl is found after on a hotel top in which she was pushed or jumped from.
Meanwhile, Rex's (Dylan Minnette) racket is broken by his best friend Cole (Logan Miller), which was an accident.
He is very emotional due to Hannah's (Laura Allen) death, according to Dr. Judith Evans (Cherry Jones).
They speak to Cameron Fuller (Eddie Matos) and Darin Knox (Eric Lange) about the case.
They speak to Dora (Angela Elayne Gibbs) about the case, she leads them to Kate Porter's house in the "green reality".
Dr. Jonathan Lee (BD Wong) noted that the "red reality" is real because she shows up in that world first, and in the other the next day.
Michael and Hannah speak about Kate in the "red reality", when he finds out that her sister had died earlier.
Vega says nothing is there, while Michael thinks to his "green reality", and looks in the bathroom for evidence, which was shaving cream in the cabinet.
Rex claimed that he was mad because the racquet was Hannah's, and that it helped him deal with her death in the "green reality".
[1][2] It was teasingly suggested that Isaacs prove his devotion to Kermode and Mayo's Film Review by having his character say "ukulele" onscreen, which was a case of "Challenge accepted!"
The line, "He's not going to be playing the ukulele in heaven", was uttered, while examining a corpse whose fingers had been badly mangled.
Brianna Brown,[5] as Kate Porter, who was Rex's former babysitter,[5] Eric Lange, who played as Darin Knox, Eddie Matos as Cameron Fuller.
[10] It was simultaneously broadcast on Global in Canada, and was subsequently aired on Sky Atlantic in the United Kingdom on May 25, 2012.
[11] It obtained 244,000 viewers, making it the third most-watched program for that week on the channel behind Game of Thrones and Hit & Miss.
[12] Handlen wrote that "Awake benefits from not poking its premise too hard", and "this single-mindedness stems directly from the show's leading man".
[13] McHatton claimed that "It's hard not to wonder if Kate's story, and her pushing of her sister to go through with their little surfing outing that turned deadly, is some foreshadowing of how Britten's accident.