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The Wire (1 Viewer)

And I have no problem with Lester and McNulty forgiving Kima. They both knew that they we ending their careers when they propogated the serial killer story. They had plenty of time to come to grips with that. They love Kima, who I see as Bunk's parallel in her generation (Sydnor = McNulty), they got the bust they wanted, no need for them to bear grudges. Besides McNulty & Lester weren't the whole Blue Line of silence type of cops to begin with.
I disagree with that completely and don't see what you base that comment on. They both felt their was a risk in getting caught but to say they went into it knowing they were going to get caught I don't agree with. It was just the episode before were Mcnulty is asking Lester "to get him out of this mess" so I don't see who he had come to grips with getting busted and they both seemed pretty upset at the news that they had been caught. With regards to getting the bust they wanted they did not get that either since Marlo was the bust they wanted and he walked. When Lester got the news he could no longer practice real police work he seemed most bothered by the fact that Marlo was going to walk. So in the end Kima ratting them out cost them not only their careers but it cost them their big fish in Marlo.
 
And I have no problem with Lester and McNulty forgiving Kima. They both knew that they we ending their careers when they propogated the serial killer story. They had plenty of time to come to grips with that. They love Kima, who I see as Bunk's parallel in her generation (Sydnor = McNulty), they got the bust they wanted, no need for them to bear grudges. Besides McNulty & Lester weren't the whole Blue Line of silence type of cops to begin with.
I disagree with that completely and don't see what you base that comment on. They both felt their was a risk in getting caught but to say they went into it knowing they were going to get caught I don't agree with. It was just the episode before were Mcnulty is asking Lester "to get him out of this mess" so I don't see who he had come to grips with getting busted and they both seemed pretty upset at the news that they had been caught. With regards to getting the bust they wanted they did not get that either since Marlo was the bust they wanted and he walked. When Lester got the news he could no longer practice real police work he seemed most bothered by the fact that Marlo was going to walk. So in the end Kima ratting them out cost them not only their careers but it cost them their big fish in Marlo.
While I don't think they we're okay with ending their careers, I do agree with the sentiment. Lester and McNulty know that she is "real police." And they respect that. Also, she has always been the moral compass for that group.
 
snitwitch said:
Chaka said:
the moops said:
Chaka said:
Daywalker said:
Wish the guy who wrote the Bubbles story got the pulitzer or whatever award the white guy got. The other guy getting the award was silly.
I think that's what makes the wire so great. The good guys don't always win.
You could throw us one bone though.
I think they threw us several, particularly with Bubbles.
Daniels, Namond, and Prez are three others
Lester, Pearlman, Carver and Herc too (even if Herc is working for a slimeball).ETA: I forget, did Cutty work into the final montage?
I didn't see him. That would mean the last we saw of him was that scene with him and Dookie?
Ya that was it for cutty. Disappointing but I understand they had to focus on others.
 
Chaka said:
Daywalker said:
Wish the guy who wrote the Bubbles story got the pulitzer or whatever award the white guy got. The other guy getting the award was silly.
I think that's what makes the wire so great. The good guys don't always win.
You could throw us one bone though.
I think they threw us several, particularly with Bubbles.
Considering the real Bubbles died from AIDS complications, hell yes they did.
 
Christo said:
menobrown said:
Chaka said:
And I have no problem with Lester and McNulty forgiving Kima. They both knew that they we ending their careers when they propogated the serial killer story. They had plenty of time to come to grips with that. They love Kima, who I see as Bunk's parallel in her generation (Sydnor = McNulty), they got the bust they wanted, no need for them to bear grudges. Besides McNulty & Lester weren't the whole Blue Line of silence type of cops to begin with.
I disagree with that completely and don't see what you base that comment on. They both felt their was a risk in getting caught but to say they went into it knowing they were going to get caught I don't agree with. It was just the episode before were Mcnulty is asking Lester "to get him out of this mess" so I don't see who he had come to grips with getting busted and they both seemed pretty upset at the news that they had been caught. With regards to getting the bust they wanted they did not get that either since Marlo was the bust they wanted and he walked. When Lester got the news he could no longer practice real police work he seemed most bothered by the fact that Marlo was going to walk. So in the end Kima ratting them out cost them not only their careers but it cost them their big fish in Marlo.
While I don't think they we're okay with ending their careers, I do agree with the sentiment. Lester and McNulty know that she is "real police." And they respect that. Also, she has always been the moral compass for that group.
:unsure:
 
snitwitch said:
corpcow said:
Chaka said:
Evilgrin 72 said:
dancingbones said:
I finally stared watching this show in time to see about 4 or 5 episodes. :kicksrock:

Who can point me to where I can go back and watch the rest of the series?
Get a Netflix or Blockbuster Online account and put the whole series (seasons 1-4) in your queue. All of season 5 is On Demand right now.
Go with Blockbuster, Netflix will be out of business before too long.
Oh? Not to derail the thread, but I really think this was a silly comment :) Blockbuster has a 500m market cap, Netflix has a 2b market cap. Both are up today, but NFLX is doing some innovative things around streaming (partnering with LG for their TVs, rumors of releasing something to enable this over consoles like PS3 and X360).
This is the next race IMO, who can deliver this stuff sans physical media.
Yes - but that race won't be relevant for another 5-10 years. Gotta get folks to ditch their DVDs and go to home media players that don't take discs. Saying netflix will be going out of biz soon is kind of silly.The vast majority of folks I know prefer DVDs to streaming or data-only mediums.

I completely agree, though, that DVDs will start to run the course of Cds or VCR tape players - I just don't see it as "soon."

:hijacked:

 
Finally caught up. I have never seen a TV show that can elicit the full gamut of emotions like this show did. Brilliant writing, acting, producting, directing. It will be missed. A few observations:

1) Hated Omar getting the Boba Fett treatment at first. I came around a bit on this but I still envisioned a grander exit or perhaps Michael doing the job

2) The kid actors in this show were amazing. Glad to see their stories wrapped up for the most part in season 5. I thought the progression of the lives of the 4 main kids, in particular, was really well written.

3) Loved the McNulty fake wake

4) Marlo becoming the new Stringer Bell while still maintaining the Avon side was great.

5) Speaking of Avon, I was disappointed to not see he and Brother Mouzone at the end.

6) I'd rank the seasons: 4,3,1,2,5

Oh and the new mayor was HOT

 
the moops said:
Chaka said:
Daywalker said:
Wish the guy who wrote the Bubbles story got the pulitzer or whatever award the white guy got. The other guy getting the award was silly.
I think that's what makes the wire so great. The good guys don't always win.
You could throw us one bone though.
I think they threw us several, particularly with Bubbles.
Daniels, Namond, and Prez are three others
DA lady (Richmond?) becomes judgeCarver gets promoted.
 
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Chaka said:
Shaft said:
Chaka said:
Shaft said:
Anybody think Sydnor is going to be the new McNulty?
I don't think they could have hit us over the head harder on that one.Kima = Bunk

Dukie = Bubbles

Michael = Omar

Carver = Daniels

etc.
Bunk is still Bunk, no? And I think Dukie could turn into either Bubbles or Sharrod. Carver might be the new Lester.
The Kima parallel is probably a stretch but they hit us with so many I might just have lumped that one in. I just decided to connect the fact that they both refused to play along with McNulty on the serial killer and I could imagine a younger, less seasoned, Bunk going upstairs with that information like Kima did.I think Sharrod was not a significant enough character for Simon to try to make that connection.

Lester got busted down to pawn detail for 13 years (and four months), doesn't seem like the career track that Carver is on he seems to have been most influenced by Bunny and Daniels.

Syndor looks to be the one carrying the torch for McNulty and Lester.
The Syndor/McNulty mirror was hammered home in the scene with the judge that screwed over McNulty - esp. when he says "keep my name out of it." That was what got McNulty thrown on the boat in season 1.
 
also I am pretty sure that Scott is not going to get caught. gus is the guy thats going to be on the outside when its over not scott. its rare that a wrong is righted on this show/in life.
:blackdot:
;)Scott got caught, Gus was not on the outside.Gus was exactly where he was when we were introduced to him.The upper management folks at the newspaper simply didn't care that Scott got caught - they were more interested in getting awards for his writing and sweeping the faked quotes under the rug.
 
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Finally caught up. I have never seen a TV show that can elicit the full gamut of emotions like this show did. Brilliant writing, acting, producting, directing. It will be missed. A few observations:1) Hated Omar getting the Boba Fett treatment at first. I came around a bit on this but I still envisioned a grander exit or perhaps Michael doing the job
And it looks like they "got" the kid that shot him. At least that was the implication I took from a homicide detective standing there when the cops were cuffing that kid.
5) Speaking of Avon, I was disappointed to not see he and Brother Mouzone at the end.
Well, Avon anyway. Avon was still in jail where Weebay and Chris were. I figured we'd see him in that scene.
 
also I am pretty sure that Scott is not going to get caught. gus is the guy thats going to be on the outside when its over not scott. its rare that a wrong is righted on this show/in life.
:thumbup:
:thumbup:Scott got caught, Gus was not on the outside.Gus was exactly where he was when we were introduced to him.The upper management folks at the newspaper simply didn't care that Scott got caught - they were more interested in getting awards for his writing and sweeping the faked quotes under the rug.
Gus got demoted, right?
 
If he was demoted some time in there, I certainly missed it. They took Scott's story and ran it through the State desk because Gus wouldn't take it through the Metro desk.

 
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If he was demoted some time in there, I certainly missed it. They took Scott's story and ran it through the State desk because Gus wouldn't take it through the Metro desk.
Gus was moved to the copy desk. I think that dude that wrote the story on Bubs was the new Metro editor.
 
Finally caught up. I have never seen a TV show that can elicit the full gamut of emotions like this show did. Brilliant writing, acting, producting, directing. It will be missed. A few observations:1) Hated Omar getting the Boba Fett treatment at first. I came around a bit on this but I still envisioned a grander exit or perhaps Michael doing the job
And it looks like they "got" the kid that shot him. At least that was the implication I took from a homicide detective standing there when the cops were cuffing that kid.
5) Speaking of Avon, I was disappointed to not see he and Brother Mouzone at the end.
Well, Avon anyway. Avon was still in jail where Weebay and Chris were. I figured we'd see him in that scene.
Part of me thought (like Gekko said) that we'd see Brother Mouzone and maybe even Avon join with Omar to get Marlo. Beacuse of the references to Marlo's ruthlessness in taking people out, even by the streets' standards. I thought for sure the little tastes of Avon we got in the beginning of season 5 introducing Marlo to the Greeks would lead to more. Oh well.
 
snitwitch said:
corpcow said:
Chaka said:
Evilgrin 72 said:
dancingbones said:
I finally stared watching this show in time to see about 4 or 5 episodes. :rant:

Who can point me to where I can go back and watch the rest of the series?
Get a Netflix or Blockbuster Online account and put the whole series (seasons 1-4) in your queue. All of season 5 is On Demand right now.
Go with Blockbuster, Netflix will be out of business before too long.
Oh? Not to derail the thread, but I really think this was a silly comment :) Blockbuster has a 500m market cap, Netflix has a 2b market cap. Both are up today, but NFLX is doing some innovative things around streaming (partnering with LG for their TVs, rumors of releasing something to enable this over consoles like PS3 and X360).
This is the next race IMO, who can deliver this stuff sans physical media.
Yes - but that race won't be relevant for another 5-10 years. Gotta get folks to ditch their DVDs and go to home media players that don't take discs. Saying netflix will be going out of biz soon is kind of silly.The vast majority of folks I know prefer DVDs to streaming or data-only mediums.

I completely agree, though, that DVDs will start to run the course of Cds or VCR tape players - I just don't see it as "soon."

:lmao:
They're doing it today. You can stream to your computer, and they are working on disks you can put in your Xbox 360 or PS3 and instantly stream to your console. It's a DVD that "plays" on these internet-connected devices.
 
If he was demoted some time in there, I certainly missed it. They took Scott's story and ran it through the State desk because Gus wouldn't take it through the Metro desk.
Gus was moved to the copy desk. I think that dude that wrote the story on Bubs was the new Metro editor.
Hmm. You might be right on that.If so, my bad.
Yep, that's what happened.When he told Alma she would write herself out of county in no time, she said "just like you'll edit your way off the copy desk". And the dude who wrote the Bubbles story is seen saying "3 minutes" like Gus used to say.
 
also I am pretty sure that Scott is not going to get caught. gus is the guy thats going to be on the outside when its over not scott. its rare that a wrong is righted on this show/in life.
:lol:
:thumbdown: Scott got caught, Gus was not on the outside.

Gus was exactly where he was when we were introduced to him.

The upper management folks at the newspaper simply didn't care that Scott got caught - they were more interested in getting awards for his writing and sweeping the faked quotes under the rug.
He wasn't fired, but he was demoted. He went from being the city editor to the copy editor.I guess we've established that.

 
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Any show coming up that is going to take The Wire's place on HBO?
David Simon has two things going on:1) A mini-series on the Iraq war from a soldier's perspective. It's called Generation Kill and I think it will be on HBO.2) HBO has ordered a pilot he's doing on New Orleans musicians re-starting their lives after Katrina. The last I read was there was a pilot, but nothing else so far. I just looked this stuff up yesterday, so I could be wrong on either or both.
 
Any show coming up that is going to take The Wire's place on HBO?
David Simon has two things going on:1) A mini-series on the Iraq war from a soldier's perspective. It's called Generation Kill and I think it will be on HBO.2) HBO has ordered a pilot he's doing on New Orleans musicians re-starting their lives after Katrina. The last I read was there was a pilot, but nothing else so far. I just looked this stuff up yesterday, so I could be wrong on either or both.
i read something about a new show called true blood, about vampires.
 
1) The best thing about the finale was Mcnultys wake. Absolutely fantastic television.

2) Looking back, the final dialogue between Stringer and Avon on the roof - and Stringers ultimate death in the next scene - was my favorite highlight of the show. They were two of the most fascinating, complicated and compelling characters. I was actually a bit disappointed that Avon was never reintroduced more in season five (I thought that maybe he would ante up the $10M to buy the connect from Marlo).

Kind of sad that its over - one of my favorite shows ever.

 
Any show coming up that is going to take The Wire's place on HBO?
David Simon has two things going on:1) A mini-series on the Iraq war from a soldier's perspective. It's called Generation Kill and I think it will be on HBO.2) HBO has ordered a pilot he's doing on New Orleans musicians re-starting their lives after Katrina. The last I read was there was a pilot, but nothing else so far. I just looked this stuff up yesterday, so I could be wrong on either or both.
i read something about a new show called true blood, about vampires.
Yeah, that's being run by Alan Ball, the creator of Six Feet Under.
 
interview with dominic west

http://www.calendarlive.com/tv/cl-et-wiret...0,4859916.story

Washea hard character to let go of?

Yes and no. Well [laughs] we're trying to get the movie made; we're trying to persuade David Simon, and he doesn't need persuading -- he just needs a story. Because Wendell [Pierce], who plays Bunk, and Sonja [sohn], who plays Kima Greggs, are really pushing to get a movie made because it would be great, so David said, "Well, it would have to be a prequel." And I said, well, in that case I would have to have surgery, and you would have to write in that McNulty looks astonished the whole time. So I don't know, I don't feel like I've really said goodbye yet.

:lmao:

Was it tough that it was an abbreviated season with only 10 episodes this time around?

Yeah, I think it was a mistake. I think HBO must've thought it was a mistake when the writers strike came along as well. [Laughs] There was no question, I felt it most in the first three episodes where my character had to cover a lot of ground to get into the story line. A lot of shortcuts had to be made where had we 13 hours I think would've been played out more thoroughly. Again, he did an amazing job, but he always had 13 in mind and had to lose three hours somehow.

 
interview with dominic west

http://www.calendarlive.com/tv/cl-et-wiret...0,4859916.story

Washea hard character to let go of?

Yes and no. Well [laughs] we're trying to get the movie made; we're trying to persuade David Simon, and he doesn't need persuading -- he just needs a story. Because Wendell [Pierce], who plays Bunk, and Sonja [sohn], who plays Kima Greggs, are really pushing to get a movie made because it would be great, so David said, "Well, it would have to be a prequel." And I said, well, in that case I would have to have surgery, and you would have to write in that McNulty looks astonished the whole time. So I don't know, I don't feel like I've really said goodbye yet.

:goodposting:

Was it tough that it was an abbreviated season with only 10 episodes this time around?

Yeah, I think it was a mistake. I think HBO must've thought it was a mistake when the writers strike came along as well. [Laughs] There was no question, I felt it most in the first three episodes where my character had to cover a lot of ground to get into the story line. A lot of shortcuts had to be made where had we 13 hours I think would've been played out more thoroughly. Again, he did an amazing job, but he always had 13 in mind and had to lose three hours somehow.
A movie would be fantastic, but I'll bet it never gets done. Despite it's popularity, there's still a relatively small percentage of the population that would be interested enough to go to the theaters to see it. I can't see the budget being offset by the box office/video rentals on that.
 
interview with dominic west

http://www.calendarlive.com/tv/cl-et-wiret...0,4859916.story

Washea hard character to let go of?

Yes and no. Well [laughs] we're trying to get the movie made; we're trying to persuade David Simon, and he doesn't need persuading -- he just needs a story. Because Wendell [Pierce], who plays Bunk, and Sonja [sohn], who plays Kima Greggs, are really pushing to get a movie made because it would be great, so David said, "Well, it would have to be a prequel." And I said, well, in that case I would have to have surgery, and you would have to write in that McNulty looks astonished the whole time. So I don't know, I don't feel like I've really said goodbye yet.

:popcorn:

Was it tough that it was an abbreviated season with only 10 episodes this time around?

Yeah, I think it was a mistake. I think HBO must've thought it was a mistake when the writers strike came along as well. [Laughs] There was no question, I felt it most in the first three episodes where my character had to cover a lot of ground to get into the story line. A lot of shortcuts had to be made where had we 13 hours I think would've been played out more thoroughly. Again, he did an amazing job, but he always had 13 in mind and had to lose three hours somehow.
A movie would be fantastic, but I'll bet it never gets done. Despite it's popularity, there's still a relatively small percentage of the population that would be interested enough to go to the theaters to see it. I can't see the budget being offset by the box office/video rentals on that.
Doesn't strike me as the type of film requiring a particularly large budget.Not an A-list actor or actress in the bunch.

 
In re: a movie, I think The Wire would have an audience somewhere between the X-Files movie and the Firefly movie (Serenity)

I think the Twin Peaks movie is the best the studios could hope for- is that worth it for them? How did that movie do?

 
How about they just write more episodes and see if another network will pick it up.

The "ending" really wasn't an ending. It would be quite easy to continue with the story.

 
How about they just write more episodes and see if another network will pick it up.The "ending" really wasn't an ending. It would be quite easy to continue with the story.
I think the enticement of a movie over a network picking them up is an additional zero at the end of their paychecks.
 
http://blog.nj.com/alltv/2008/03/the_wire_..._simon_q_a.html

I was talking more about more stories with these particular characters. There's clearly, at least based on the last names and the bios on the HBO website, a connection between Randy and Cheese (NOTE: the bios essentially state that Cheese is Randy's dad, a fact Simon would publicly confirm a few days after we spoke), and that's something you never really got into on the show.

Actually, that is something that we were going to play a little bit of that and reference that in season five if we had had a little bit more room. But ultimately it would have been incremental. It would not have added to the overall theme or to either of those characterizations of Cheese or Randy. It would not have resolved in any unique way that would have revealed anything more about the character than we otherwise revealed. It would have just been more story and more scenes. So at a certain point, on a practical basis, you have to ask what you're accomplishing if you go further

 
Marlo was on Jericho last night. A soldier in uniform and all
Hilarious. I was literally just watching that, the scene came on, I saw those eyes, and this thread was immediately the first thing that just popped in my head. I sit down to post, and see this notification. Marlo is a soldier - see, we even have cross-show symbolism :shock:
 
Was watching the episode from last season where McNulty comes home at 1 AM and gets caught by his girl using mouthwash in the bathroom to cover up the smell of him drinking. She makes the comment that he always smells like Listerine and Jameson.

Being the smart cop he is why not keep a bottle of mouthwash in his car? I know girls IRL who are smart enough to do this so how isn't McNutty?

 
I have never watched the show so i never read this thread, so sorry if its been already said, but on HBO on demand they will be soon beginning with season 1. I cant wait to catch up on this.

 
Heard a good interview last night on NPR's Fresh Air Weekend with Terry Gross. She interviewed Richard Price in the first half hour, and David Simon in the second half hour.

Richard Price wrote Clockers, which David Simon freely admits was the inspiration for The Corner, and in many ways, for The Wire. In fact, Price shares writing credits for the following episodes of The Wire:

Season 3, episode 2 "All Due Respect"

Season 3, episode 8 "Moral Midgetry" (The one where Stringer reveals to Avon that he had D'Angelo killed)

Season 4, episode 3 "Home Rooms"

Season 4, episode 8 "Corner Boys"

Season 5, episode 7 "Took"

Anyway, Price has a new book out called Lush Life that's getting good reviews. Here's one:

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Master of the Bronx and Jersey projects, Price (Clockers) turns his unrelenting eye on Manhattan's Lower East Side in this manic crescendo of a novel that explores the repercussions of a seemingly random shooting. When bartender Ike Marcus is shot to death after barhopping with friends, NYPD Det. Matty Clark and his team first focus on restaurant manager and struggling writer Eric Cash, who claims the group was accosted by would-be muggers, despite eyewitnesses saying otherwise. As Matty grills Eric on the still-hazy details of the shooting, Price steps back and follows the lives of the alleged shooters—teenagers Tristan Acevedo and Little Dap Williams, who live in a nearby housing project—as well as Ike's grieving father, Billy, who hounds the police even as leads dwindle. As the intersecting narratives hurtle toward a climax that's both expected and shocking, Price peels back the layers of his characters and the neighborhood until all is laid bare. With its perfect dialogue and attention to the smallest detail, Price's latest reminds readers why he's one of the masters of American urban crime fiction.
Heard another interview with Price today on NPR with another host. Price said that one of the current projects he is working on is co-writing on a screenplay that Ridley Scott is apparently attached to. Here's a recent article on the movie:Link

Fox 2000, Scott Give Birth to Child 44

Source: Variety April 17, 2007

Fox 2000 has optioned screenwriter Tom Rob Smith's debut novel Child 44 for Ridley Scott to direct and the filmmaker's Scott Free to produce, reports Variety.

Smith's yet-to-be published novel, due out in 2008, was sold at auction in the U.S. to Warner Books in a two-book deal that contemplates a sequel. Simon & Schuster will publish in the U.K.

Set in Stalinist Russia, the thriller revolves around an officer in the secret police who is framed by a colleague for treason. On the run with his emotionally estranged wife, he stumbles upon a series of child killings and launches his own rogue investigation, even though it means risking his own capture.

Smith, a Cambridge graduate, has written for several British television shows, including "Doctors" and "Dream Team." He also penned the story for Cambodia's first-ever soap opera for the BBC World Service Trust.

Scott's next directing project is Penetration, a political drama about modern-day intelligence and terrorism that he begins shooting in August. Leonardo DiCaprio will star in the William Monahan-scripted film.
 
Was watching the episode from last season where McNulty comes home at 1 AM and gets caught by his girl using mouthwash in the bathroom to cover up the smell of him drinking. She makes the comment that he always smells like Listerine and Jameson. Being the smart cop he is why not keep a bottle of mouthwash in his car? I know girls IRL who are smart enough to do this so how isn't McNutty?
Because he is an ### and a drunk.
 
the moops said:
Was watching the episode from last season where McNulty comes home at 1 AM and gets caught by his girl using mouthwash in the bathroom to cover up the smell of him drinking. She makes the comment that he always smells like Listerine and Jameson. Being the smart cop he is why not keep a bottle of mouthwash in his car? I know girls IRL who are smart enough to do this so how isn't McNutty?
Because he is an ### and a drunk.
So you know that Listerine *IS* mouthwash right? :)
 
For those of you who have been watching March Madness, Joey Dorsey of Memphis is from West Baltimore, straight out of The Wire territory. 4realz.

 
Shrek said:
Heard a good interview last night on NPR's Fresh Air Weekend with Terry Gross. She interviewed Richard Price in the first half hour, and David Simon in the second half hour.

Richard Price wrote Clockers, which David Simon freely admits was the inspiration for The Corner, and in many ways, for The Wire. In fact, Price shares writing credits for the following episodes of The Wire:

Season 3, episode 2 "All Due Respect"

Season 3, episode 8 "Moral Midgetry" (The one where Stringer reveals to Avon that he had D'Angelo killed)

Season 4, episode 3 "Home Rooms"

Season 4, episode 8 "Corner Boys"

Season 5, episode 7 "Took"

Anyway, Price has a new book out called Lush Life that's getting good reviews. Here's one:

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Master of the Bronx and Jersey projects, Price (Clockers) turns his unrelenting eye on Manhattan's Lower East Side in this manic crescendo of a novel that explores the repercussions of a seemingly random shooting. When bartender Ike Marcus is shot to death after barhopping with friends, NYPD Det. Matty Clark and his team first focus on restaurant manager and struggling writer Eric Cash, who claims the group was accosted by would-be muggers, despite eyewitnesses saying otherwise. As Matty grills Eric on the still-hazy details of the shooting, Price steps back and follows the lives of the alleged shooters—teenagers Tristan Acevedo and Little Dap Williams, who live in a nearby housing project—as well as Ike's grieving father, Billy, who hounds the police even as leads dwindle. As the intersecting narratives hurtle toward a climax that's both expected and shocking, Price peels back the layers of his characters and the neighborhood until all is laid bare. With its perfect dialogue and attention to the smallest detail, Price's latest reminds readers why he's one of the masters of American urban crime fiction.
Heard another interview with Price today on NPR with another host. Price said that one of the current projects he is working on is co-writing on a screenplay that Ridley Scott is apparently attached to. Here's a recent article on the movie:Link

Fox 2000, Scott Give Birth to Child 44

Source: Variety April 17, 2007

Fox 2000 has optioned screenwriter Tom Rob Smith's debut novel Child 44 for Ridley Scott to direct and the filmmaker's Scott Free to produce, reports Variety.

Smith's yet-to-be published novel, due out in 2008, was sold at auction in the U.S. to Warner Books in a two-book deal that contemplates a sequel. Simon & Schuster will publish in the U.K.

Set in Stalinist Russia, the thriller revolves around an officer in the secret police who is framed by a colleague for treason. On the run with his emotionally estranged wife, he stumbles upon a series of child killings and launches his own rogue investigation, even though it means risking his own capture.

Smith, a Cambridge graduate, has written for several British television shows, including "Doctors" and "Dream Team." He also penned the story for Cambodia's first-ever soap opera for the BBC World Service Trust.

Scott's next directing project is Penetration, a political drama about modern-day intelligence and terrorism that he begins shooting in August. Leonardo DiCaprio will star in the William Monahan-scripted film.
Thanks for this, sounds awesome. As does the Penetration flick they mention in the last paragraph.
 
they are showing the simon iraq war commercial during John Adams

looks like ziggy from season 2 is one of the main "characters"

 

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