OMG đ± From Season 1 Badges to Final Bows: Blue Bloods Cast Then & Now â 14 Years of Aging Gracefully (and Not So Quietly)
Scroll past an early Blue Bloods promo shot and then a 2024 PaleyFest red carpet photo and it hits you like a punch to the gut: the Reagans aged right along with us. In 2010, Tom Selleckâs mustache was almost the only salt-and-pepper thing on screen. By the time the series wrapped its 14th and final season in December 2024, the cast carried real lines, real loss, and real-life career pivots behind those familiar Sunday dinners.
âThen & nowâ isnât just about wrinkles and hair dye. Over 14 years, careers shifted, side hustles exploded, and an entire TV universe expanded into spin-offs. With Boston Blue now officially launched and already renewed for Season 2, the Blue Bloods family has quietly turned into a franchise, not just a show.
Letâs sit down at that long wooden table and look at how the faces â and fortunes â of the Blue Bloods leads have changed between 2010 and 2024, and where theyâre going next.

Tom Selleck Then & Now: From Magnum Heartthrob to Weathered Patriarch Fighting for His Ranch
In the early Blue Bloods artwork, Tom Selleckâs Frank Reagan looks like the perfect bridge between Magnum P.I. swagger and old-school authority: tall, broad-shouldered, dark suit, barely-lined face.
Fast-forward to the final season marketing and PaleyFest 2024: the mustache is the same, but the man behind it looks different.
The cheeks are leaner, the posture a little heavier. Fans didnât just watch a commissioner age; they watched an actor carry a network drama for 14 years straight. At 79, Selleck admitted that the showâs cancellation wasnât just emotional â it was financial. He openly worried he might not be able to afford his 63-acre California ranch now that his steady CBS paycheck had ended.
That ranch, with its avocado trees and long horseback rides, became part of his public narrative: Frank Reagan by day, semi-retired cowboy by weekend. Interviews around the cancellation had him blasting CBS for axing a still-strong performer and musing about retirement while quietly looking for the next move.
Now, post-finale, heâs stepped away from weekly TV for the first time in over a decade, working selectively (including a new project teased in recent reports) and guarding that ranch like itâs his own private Reagansâ table.
Donnie Wahlbergâs 14-Year Glow-Up: From Hot-Headed Cop to Boss of the Blue Bloods Universe
In 2010, Donnie Wahlbergâs Danny Reagan looked like exactly what he was: a boy-band alum turned gritty TV detective, with a close-cropped haircut, leather jacket, and permanent squint that screamed âI donât need backup.â
By 2024, the edges have softened. The hair is shorter and grayer, the face more lived-in, but thereâs something warmer behind the eyes.
Off-screen, Wahlberg leaned fully into being the beating heart of the showâs fandom, live-tweeting episodes and calling viewers the âBlockhead/Blue Blood family.â He juggled the series with New Kids on the Block tours, social media antics with wife Jenny McCarthy (yes, including that infamous âbaste, all over the placeâ Thanksgiving dance), and producer credits.
And then came Boston Blue. What started as a general âfranchise extensionâ pitch morphed into a full-blown spin-off built around Danny relocating to the Boston PD, with Wahlberg not just starring but executive producing alongside Jerry Bruckheimer. His 2010 look said âhot-headed cop.â His 2025 self â leading a new ensemble, fielding questions about recasting Sean, and shepherding long-awaited Danny/Baez romance â says âfranchise boss.

Bridget Moynahanâs Quiet Power Play: How Erinâs Actress Turned Into a ProducerâDirector
When we first met Bridget Moynahanâs Erin Reagan, she had the crisp blowout, sharp suits, and icy composure of a textbook network attorney. She looked like sheâd stepped out of a glossy magazine spread and into a courtroom.
Across 14 seasons, Erinâs hair softened, her wardrobe broadened, and Moynahanâs off-screen rĂ©sumĂ© quietly expanded.
By the time Blue Bloods was wrapping, she wasnât just starring â she was moving into producing and directing, and, crucially, she didnât stop when the series ended.
Right after the finale, Moynahan signed onto California Skate, a 1970s roller-disco indie film co-starring Brooke Shields and Henry Winkler, with Bridget listed not only as a star but also as a producer.
Filming wrapped by late 2024. In 2025 she added another twist: sheâll guest-star and direct an episode of Boston Blue, keeping one polished Reagan shoe in the franchise while testing the other in indie cinema.
Her âthen & nowâ arc isnât just a style glow-up; itâs the shift from network ensemble player to multi-hyphenate power player.
Jamie & Eddie Then vs Now: The Jamko Glow-Up Fans Didnât See Coming
Back in 2010, Will Estes looked almost boyish as Jamie Reagan â all clean lines, wide eyes and a uniform that seemed just a bit too crisp, like graduation-day photos youâre slightly embarrassed of later.
Enter Vanessa Ray in later seasons as Eddie Janko. Her early episodes show a chatty, tough, almost chaotic patrol cop with long hair and a mischievous grin; by the end of the series sheâs Eddie Janko-Reagan, married, more grounded, but still the one whoâll crack an inappropriate joke at family dinner.
On-screen, their âJamkoâ arc aged them in real time: from flirty patrol partners to spouses juggling joint cases and married-life politics. In the final season, Eddieâs storyline about bonding with a young girl after her motherâs murder nudged her toward motherhood, leading to Jamie and Eddie deciding to try for a baby â and, by the finale, expecting one.
Off-screen, Estes and Ray spent finale press reflecting on how much theyâd learned from one another and talking about life imitating art, with Ray openly embracing a new chapter beyond the show while promo headlines teased her ânext chapterâ and real-life focus on family.
Their âthen & nowâ isnât dramatic scandal â itâs slow-burn maturity, two actors who literally grew into their charactersâ skin.

Marisa Ramirez and the Baez Effect: How a âTemporary Partnerâ Became the Franchiseâs Secret Weapon
Marisa Ramirez didnât start with the Reagans. When she joined as Detective Maria Baez in Season 3, her look screamed âstreet-smart outsiderâ: leather jackets, tight ponytails, skeptical eyebrows aimed squarely at Danny Reagan. Over time, as Baez moved from âtemporary partnerâ to emotional anchor, Ramirezâs on-screen style softened â slightly warmer makeup, looser hair, but always that edge.
By the finale, Baez became part of the showâs biggest emotional payoff: after years of fan longing, Danny finally asked her out for pizza, and their relationship quietly shifted from partnership to something more.
In Boston Blue, her ânowâ look and career move are even more striking. Ramirezâs Baez appears as Dannyâs long-distance girlfriend, turning up in Boston for surprise cameos, elevator kisses, and, in a recent episode, a full-case team-up that had fans losing it on social media.
Sheâs confirmed as a recurring guest, with showrunners promising sheâll âreturn multiple timesâ and Ramirez teasing that fans should be just a little worried about how tough long-distance love can be.
From late-season addition to franchise-linking love interest, her trajectory is the definition of âslow but steady wins the game.â
Behind the Camera Then & Now: The Showrunners Who Rewired the Reagan World
âThen & nowâ doesnât only apply to the faces in front of the camera. Blue Bloods was created by Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess (of The Sopranos fame), but they left after Season 1. What you think of as classic Blue Bloods â the rhythm of Sunday dinners, the balance of case-of-the-week and family drama â is largely the product of Kevin Wade, who took over as showrunner in Season 2 and stayed through the finale.
Wade is the one who steered the show through culture wars, changing views on policing, and a TV landscape that shifted under his feet, all while keeping it a Friday-night ratings anchor and a streaming workhorse on Paramount+.
The ânowâ belongs to Brandon Sonnier and Brandon Margolis, the duo behind Boston Blue. They took the Reagan DNA, moved it to Boston, recast Sean to mark a new life chapter, and openly framed the spinoff as a âfresh chapterâ rather than a comfort-food copy.
In creator terms, the glow-up is this: from a traditional network procedural created by HBO veterans to a small, expanding universe run by showrunners who grew up on franchise TV.

14 Years, One Legacy: What Their Changing Faces Secretly Tell Us About Blue Bloods
Look at a 2010 promo image of Tom, Donnie, Bridget and Will lined up in front of the NYPD logo, then compare it to the 2024 PaleyFest group shot with Vanessa and Marisa linking arms with an older, softer-spoken Selleck.
The jawlines have changed, the hairlines have shifted, but something else has, too: their place in the industry.
Back then, they were launching a new Friday-night cop show. Now, theyâre:
A veteran star fighting to protect his ranch and legacy.
A boy-band alum turned spin-off lead and executive producer.
An ADA actress turned producer, director, and indie film player.
A pair of partners who aged into fan-favorite couple status.
A late-arrival detective who became the emotional bridge to a new series.
A team of writers who turned one family drama into an entire âBlue Bloods universe.â
Maybe thatâs why fans are still obsessively sharing âthen & nowâ photos on Facebook and Reddit. Because if the Reagans can grow older, change careers, fall in love again, fight their bosses, and still show up for Sunday dinner â maybe we havenât done so badly ourselves since 2010 either.
And with Boston Blue now carrying the torch, the real suspense for fans isnât just whoâll guest-star next. Itâs this: when we look back again in another 10 or 14 years, what will the âthen & nowâ of this universe â and our own lives watching it â look like?