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Apparently it wasn't just me having issues with LJ today? Tried posting a couple of times and gave up.
It's a quiet rainy day, not too hot, perfect. Took the day off to relax, do laundry, buy groceries - before heading back to work. Taking next weekend off too. Can't afford more than that at the moment.

Spent a good portion of the afternoon watching episodes 4-7 of the Wire, S4. No real time to post on it. And am a bit tired anyhow. Brain just won't generate words in a manner that I want it too. Brain wants to sleep for a bit longer.

Impressions? See below the cut.



*I may need to get episodes 5 and 6 on itunes, since the DVD skipped over ten minutes in the middle of both episodes. Or rather it paused and I had to skip to get it moving again.

*Omar has an arc in S4. Marlo and Prop Joe are going after him again. This round Prop Joe set up Omar to convince Marlo that he needed to join the drug co-op, and well, to get rid of Omar. In short, Prop Joe has used Omar twice now to bully another drug dealer, who is giving Joe a headache, into submission. Clever. Omar keeps falling for it. You'd think he'd learn that he can't trust Prop Joe as far as he can throw him. Omar has far too trusting a nature for his own good.

So Marlo frames him for the murder of a nice lady making deliveries. Bunk and McNulty both see through the frame-up, even though the acting homicide detectives refuse to and want to put Omar away for the crime - because that's easier. Bunk - putting himself at odds with his own department, decides to investigate it further. I'm waiting for McNulty to get involved...but I'm not sure he will.

*Bunk misses McNulty...no pal to chase pussy or get blasted with. Lester just is not the same. Lester
is too busy trying to figure out where Marlo is putting the bodies - they aren't in the sewers or at Leakin Park, so where are they.

*The answer to that question lies with Durrell. Michael showed him what Marlo did with the bodies, because Durrell and the other kids were convinced that Marlo's henchmen were creating zombies. But Michael shows them - no dead is dead. Durrell tries to tell Pryz, Mrs. Donnelly, and Herc about it, but does so in a roundabout fashion so they don't really hear him. Rather frustrating sequence actually. Carver calls Homicide to leave a message for Bunk regarding Durrell, but the Homicide cops who are pissed at Bunk for fiddling with their solved case against Omar, throw it out and never give it to Bunk. Herc instead of asking Durrell the right questions, asks all the wrong ones - proving Daniels point later - that most of the cops aren't trained to do more than break down doors and arrest people. Herc has made it all the way to Sgt, and he still doesn't know what the heck he is doing.

*With Pryz - we actually get the most insight into the school and the system. Pryz uses gambling games to teach math - telling a fellow teacher, Ms. Watson, that once he tricks them into thinking they aren't being taught anything, they start to actually learn something. He also discovers that new text books are sitting unused in the school store-room. He yanks them out. (This is all realistic, I've actually read studies in which they tried this and even experienced it myself in the public school system. The problem with our educational system is it relies far too heavily in memorization and not on hands on interaction. Was discussing this with my brother, parents, and sisinlaw - in how my niece learns best when she's provided the opportunity to see how it actually works or it is explained to her, I'm the same way, as is her father. There's a perfect example of this in The Wire. Pryz is teaching the kids fractions by using a formula on the blackboard. It makes no sense to them.

Why invert the integrator? They ask. What's the point? It's just the formula, he tells them. Memorize it. No one learns it. So he changes tactics when he sees them at lunch time playing poker. And he explains how to figure the odds. One of the kids asks if he can do it with dice - they normally use dice. He and another kid find dice in a bunch of board games and he uses that to teach fractions. It makes sense. It's smart teaching. There's a clear application. But I know where this is headed, some nitwit will protest that they aren't using the curriculum or the text-books, and Pryz will get into trouble for teaching gambling and we'll be back where we started. (Ugh - I've deleted five rants so far. I can't talk about our educational system without launching into rant mode. )

*Rather adore the Rawls/Tommy C/Burrell and Mayor Royce political scenes.

Off to pick up laundry, then dinner, assuming it's not raining.

Date: 2011-07-27 01:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] candleanfeather.livejournal.com
I'm of two thoughts with Bunk in regard to his relation with Omar. On the one hand, he goes looking for the real perpetrator of the crime, puts himself at odds with his colleagues who don't want to get too tired on this case, shows honesty in his work. But on the other hand, when he went to see Omar in prison, had Omar not been smart enough to tell him he wasn't respecting his own code by letting the real responsible roam free, he would have let Omar there, doing nothing to prevent his murder, thus betraying his own ideas about every death mattering.

Date: 2011-07-27 11:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
Bunk's mindset is a bit more complicated than that, I think.
In episode 9, the other cops remind Bunk that he is letting a "hitman" out of prison. Sure, maybe, Omar didn't do this crime, but there's ten unclosed/uncleared cases on that wall that he did do and is walking away from including Stringer Bell.

So from Bunk's perspective? Do you free the hitman or hold him on the one murder he is innocent of? What's the better choice? If you free him - you risk that he'll kill more people. If you don't free him, you risk someone else, who actually did commit that murder doing the same -- but keep in mind you may never catch that other person. So now, what, you have two killers on the street, and yet another unsolved case?

It's why Bunk makes Omar promise not to kill anyone else. I'm letting you go - giving you a chance, but you OWE me. You owe me the lives of all the people you are even considering killing. Don't kill anyone. And Omar promises...sort of. (Personally I hope he doesn't keep his promise - since I want Marlo to get it. But from a moral perspective? Bunk is right. )

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