Miss this show so damn much


I actually caught a few episodes from S1 when they first ran. My very first episode was, believe it or not, "Three Men and Adena," which is an unorthodox way to come into the show, but wow, what a tour de force.

I watched it mostly when it aired in reruns on Lifetime, of all places. I remember how they did promos for it that made Howard look like a more central character than she was. I remember watching as the show got a bit less and less art house with each season, but I still loved the characters so much.

I really regret that it's not streaming right now, and that it's hard to find reasonable box sets (although I do have every episode)--I'd like to recommend it to friends and have an easy way to share it.

I miss Yaphet Kotto prowling around like a lion; I miss Frank's anger and even Bayliss's pain. I miss Munch's theories, the Abbott and Costello act of Bolander and Meldrick, and the bittersweet hopeless partnership of Howard and Felton. I miss the whiteboard, the box, and the breakroom, I miss it all.

And I cry every time Pembleton salutes Crosetti. Every single time.

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Yes it was a really good and underrated show.

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Me too. It stands up remarkably well for its age. When it aired, it was so different and ahead of its time. Try the Wire, SouthLAnd and Line of Duty. I also loved and miss the Shield.

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I deeply love all those shows (except The Wire which I've only seen one ep of). Southland is severely underrated and we really enjoy Line of Duty a lot, too. I've argued that the final season/arc of The Shield actually surpasses the series finale of Breaking Bad in terms of how airtight it is, climaxing with a horrifying finality. Eventually I'll get back to The Wire. Someday, lol.

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Cool. It took me a few episodes to really get into the wire; trust me, it's worth it. Once it sets the stage you are immersed into crime ridden Baltimore once again, just like homicide, only more realistic. I prefer homicide, but the wire is a better show

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I'll definitely keep that in mind! We were just so horribly bored by the first episode we watched (and honestly, we can take some quiet development to get a show started) that we never went back to it. I'm also generally not interested in plotlines with journalists or local politicians, so I've had my doubts if I would be interested in later seasons of The Wire (if I understood the structure correctly), but it's so very highly regarded that I know I'll have to come back to it. :-)

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