from time magazine's 100 best tv shows ever

topic posted Fri, September 14, 2007 - 11:01 AM by  kͶød
www.time.com/time/specia...2752,00.html

Through a sprawling, Balzac-ian network of cops, their targets, and the politicians and bureaucrats around them, The Wire tells the story of a declining industrial city—Baltimore, but it could be many others—and the people struggling amid, or profiting off of, its downfall. In The Wire's view, the world is not divided cop-vs.-robber or black-vs.-white so much as machine-vs.-individual; officer, teacher, drug soldier or pol, people are screwed by institutions that discard them when they're used up and reward inertia over innovation. (The best chance, The Wire suggests, is for free agents like its unlikely hero, the street bandit Omar, who robs drug dealers and answers to no one.) Yet the series—which, by the way, is also a fantastically realistic cop show—is also funny and the opposite of nihilist, giving everyone from detectives to junkies dignity. Occasionally, it even offers a glimpse of something like hope, which is all the sweeter for being harder earned.
posted by:
kꦿd
  • Re: from time magazine's 100 best tv shows ever

    Fri, September 14, 2007 - 2:29 PM
    Good synopsis. I'm not sure how that clip in the article is supposed to sway someone to watch though. How about a tender Bubbles / Johnny moment, or Namond talking to Wee-Bay through prison glass, or Snoop buying the nail gun @ the hardware store.

    Fuck. When is Season 4 out on DVD, anyway?

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