Qballer wrote:how dare you cheat on Vic Mackey.
benji wrote:I hope she has a happier time in her new job and with her new man, be him Kevin, or Michael.
I don't like declaring things the best ever without qualifications, but it is so very hard not to with The Wire. Oh, indeed. Sheeeeeeeit.
the gay black guy reminded me a lot of tupac.
it's a remake of older similar shows
even some characters are carbon copies of previously used personas.
JoeBeezy wrote:the omar little character in the wire made me think of tupac.
homicide life on the street.
I think the wire is a copshow with the hiphop gangster theme poured over it.
better the lack of originality.
Jackal wrote:So I've been bored and just rewatched the entire show these past couple of months due to the lack of anything halfway decent on television.
Seriously people, believe me when I say this is one of the best shows ever. If you can, watch it. From start to finish...you won't be disappointed.
I felt so bad for Dukie in the before last episode. All of them turned out fucked up cept for Naimond, which was surprising. Randy got all grouphome hard, Dukie probably become a homeless guy and Mike was an on the run gangster. It's really sad how their storyline went. I would've liked to see a bit more of Prez in the last season though.
Tommy turned out to be a total bag of shit more worried about his next position than anything regarding the city, I had such hopes for the man. What an epic show. <3
The accused leaders of the Queens gang, whose arrests were announced yesterday by Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly and District Attorney Richard A. Brown of Queens, mimicked the practice of characters in "The Wire," using disposable cellphones to make it more difficult for the police to eavesdrop on them.
Each time the suspects switched phones, investigators and prosecutors had to go back to court and seek approval for a new wiretap from a State Supreme Court justice, a labor-intensive and time-consuming process, said Sgt. Felipe Rodriguez, a supervisor on the case.
"Believe it or not, these guys copy 'The Wire,' " said the sergeant, who is assigned to the Organized Crime Investigation Division. "They were constantly dumping their phones. It made our job so much harder."
Sergeant Rodriguez said several members of the gang were big fans of the HBO show and talked about it constantly. He said that the investigators could catch up on the latest developments in the show, if they hadn't seen it, when members of the gang talked about it the next day. "If we missed anything, we got it from them Monday morning," he said.
The investigation, which grew out of another drug case in southeast Queens in 2002, led to the seizure of 43 kilos of cocaine, 18 handguns and nearly a million dollars in cash, officials said.
Mr. Brown said the ring, which included a city correction officer and a sanitation worker, annually distributed cocaine he valued at as much as $15 million. Thirteen people have been arrested in the case and charged with felony drug possession, conspiracy and weapons charges, Mr. Brown said.
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