Jun. 1st, 2010

gwyn: (kevin alejandro)
The editor in me wants to change
Day 02 - A show you wish more people were watching
to "you wished more people watched". Sigh. Wimpy passive words get me every time.

Anyhoo. I had a hard time with this one as well (I think all of them will be hard, except the miniseries) because I couldn't decide between Fringe and Southland. Neither of which, of course, is airing right now, in June! But I decided on Southland because wow, does this need more love. It's not a perfect show by any stretch, and I think that's one thing that keeps people away from it.

Problems, first: There are some characters in the series who are really quite detestable. And like a lot of shows with sprawling ensemble casts, some episodes may feature them quite a bit, and some episodes, they may be absent for a lot. If you tune in to one where Tammy (the absolute worst of the lot), Sammy (married to Tammy), Sal, Lydia's partner (whose name I can't ever remember), or Dewey are featured prominently (as they all are in the premiere episode), there's a chance you'll back away from the show. Some people also dislike my spiritual fiance, Kevin Alejandro, as Nate, because Nate is partnered with Sammy, and sometimes he's good and sometimes he's a dumbass. But I adore him, so... take that as you will. I think Kevin is hot like burning (see icon) and Nate is just as fucked up as the rest of them, which makes him interesting.

Southland reminds me of two gritty cop shows I loved in their time: Hill Street Blues and the first season of Boomtown. The stories follow detectives, administrators, and street cops, so we see the vast wilderness of policing in south Los Angeles. It has one of the most kickass women on television, Regina King's Lydia Adams, who is so awesome that I want to marry her and have her babies, and I don't ever want to have babies. It also has a canonically gay cop, who is one of the major characters, in John Cooper (played by Michael Cudlitz), who is the training officer for rookie Ben Sherman (played by Ben MacKenzie of OC fame), who is sort of the quasi-central character at the center of the show.

Stories are never ever wrapped up neatly at the end of the episode, and people rarely confess to a crime so the guest stars can have quality acting time. In other words, it's not a cheesefest like all the shows with initials in their titles or pretty much any other cop/detective show on TV.

The thing I love about the show is that it offers a true picture of policing in modern day cities, and they get the details right for the most part -- and when people aren't competent, you see the consequences. The system lets the cops down all the time, the cops often let themselves down, and it's not always an easy show to watch. No, it's not The Wire-quality, but I think that in its new home on TNT, which just renewed it, and took it from stupid NBC after they canceled it, the show will probably only increase in quality as it gets nurtured by a network that's not afraid of it.

I've seen commercials for a new show this summer called Rookie Blue or something like that, and it looks so unbelievably cheesy and crappy and focusing on the exact opposite of everything Ben has learned from John on the job, and I would almost bet it'll be a hit while Southland soldiers on with lower ratings, showing us what these cops' lives are like on the job and off, realistically, and with humanity and insight.

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