Jun. 14th, 2011

shadowkat: (Ayra)
Is anyone getting email notifications of responses to their own journal posts?? I get email notifications of responses to responses that I've made to other people's journal posts and to posts I make in DW, just not to posts I do in LJ.

(I have to check the Review Recent Comments to see who has made comments and the stupid thing will only allow unpaid users to see up to 10 comments, which invariably include my own. Is this yet another ploy to get me to pay for an lj account? Because not going to happen. I refuse to pay for this.)
shadowkat: (Default)
Briefly...That was one of the most brilliant pieces of television that I've seen. And the best Cop Show/Criminal Procedural bit I've seen. It was better than Homicide.

There's three brilliant sequences in this episode. Actually four. No, make that five. The writing in this show - that is how you write a police procedural dialogue folks. If you want to know how to write good television scripts and not paint by numbers? Rent The Wire.

A really famous bit, that is so realistic that it blew me away. (An aside - while in law school and prior to law school, I did a lot of internships such as orders of protection, public defender, housing authority, legal aid, etc.) Two homicide detectives come to a crime scene, and figure out how a woman was shot. The only word of dialogue stated is variations of "fuck". The scene is exactly how cops do investigative work. And it's entertaining. I was riveted. I kept rewinding.

Watch The Wire - and you will understand why I can't watch any of the police procedurals on television which include Bones, CSI, NCSI, Castle, Law & Order, Criminal Minds, etc..all of which repeat the same formula, same dialogue, same situations, same mysteries and never take any risks.

Whoa. Just Whoa. That episode blew me away. And Lester is my new favorite character.

How is it possible for a tv series to just get better with each new episode? Usually it's one good one, one okay one, one good one, one so-so, one good one, one horrifically bad one.

Although HBO tends to be fairly consistent. There is something to be said for just doing 10-13 episodes a year as opposed to 22. Cheaper, and the writer's don't get burned out as quickly.

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