Cannes Film Festival 2013

'The Wire' Rewind: Season 3, Episode 4 - 'Hamsterdam' (Veterans edition)

McNulty goes rogue, Carcetti announces a plan, and Cutty looks for work.

<p>A tense moment at the MCU on "The Wire."</p>

A tense moment at the MCU on "The Wire."

Credit: HBO

Once again, we're spending Fridays this summer revisiting season three of "The Wire." (You can find my reviews of all the other seasons at my old blog.) Two versions each week: one for people who have seen the whole series and want to feel free to discuss things from first episode to last, and one for relative newcomers who haven't seen all the way to the end yet and don't want to be spoiled past the episodes we're discussing. This is the veteran version; click here to read the newbie-friendly one. (Last week's veteran review is here.)

A review of episode four, "Hamsterdam," coming up just as soon as I have to tinkle...

"Game done changed." -Cutty
"Game the same. Just got more fierce." -Slim Charles

A couple of weeks ago, I noted that season three is unique to this point in the series in that it opens up with Lt. Daniels' unit intact and operational from jump. Four episodes into the season, though, it's now clear that this is a less notable distinction than it seemed at first. Yes, the show doesn't have to spend time on the usual gathering of the team scenes we got in the first two years, but the Major Crimes Unit has accomplished as little as the original Barksdale or Sobotka details had by this point in their respective seasons. They blew the wire on Cheese in episode two (and even there were taking a very roundabout approach towards Stringer), are technically assigned to work Kintell Williamson and are so behind the eightball on the state of the West Baltimore drug trade that they assume Marlo is working for Stringer, not against him.

And that lack of progress eats at McNulty, and at Lester, to the point where the two men nearly come to blows. In many ways, Lester and Jimmy are the same cop, born a couple of decades apart, but age has tamed whatever demons Lester had just enough that he doesn't feel the need to "put fire to everything you touch" the way McNulty does. Backed into a corner, Lester will figure out how to live in that corner, where Jimmy would try to blow up the room.

It's a hell of a scene, very nicely played by both Clarke Peters and Dominic West, and one that plays comfortably in that moral grey area "The Wire" loves so much. McNulty was our point-of-entry character, and he's so smart and charming that we like him in spite of his multitude of flaws. Lester, meanwhile, is the wise old man who is nearly always proven right. When these two fight, and when it gets this ugly, whose side are we supposed to take? Given our investment in seeing the cops take down Stringer, I suppose McNulty - and even Lester comes around as soon as Jimmy and Kima are out the door and it becomes about the case and not Jimmy being an ass - but I love that the show was willing to go there, and to show McNulty unafraid to put even his closest allies behind his personal demons. By the end of the episode, he's seen where he stands with Elena (preferably far away, as far as she's concerned), and learned about the Pearlman/Daniels affair, and he's all alone at a bar with no one to call and nowhere to go at closing time. Lester and Bunk argued last year that putting Jimmy back on real cases wouldn't put out the fire that burns inside him, but might lower it to manageable levels. We see throughout "Hamsterdam" that this isn't entirely the case - that in some ways, in fact, working these kinds of cases only makes Jimmy's extremes even worse.

Jimmy, Lester and Kima aren't the only characters battling frustration in this episode, though. Bunny Colvin suffers through a pointless community relations meeting and at least temporarily quiets the angry crowd(*) by being as candid with them as he is with Rawls at Comstat.

(*) Whose membership includes The Big Man, Clarence Clemmons, from The E Street Band. Steve Van Zandt's not the only member of the band who can hang on HBO, right?

What he can't tell them, though, is that he does have a solution in mind, and unfortunately for him, that solution doesn't work out as well in reality as it did in Bunny's head. Nothing on "The Wire" ever comes easily, or quickly, so of course the slingers and hoppers wouldn't understand or believe the cops' explanation of "Hamsterdam"(**). As Poot tried to tell Stringer in the meeting in the season premiere, and as Fruit tries to tell Herc and Carver here, there's a way that The Game is played, everyone is used to it, and no one is interested in trying anything different. Bunny ultimately scoops up as many street-level dealers as his men can find and tries to explain the new world order to them, but they respect him far less than they do the school principal (quieting only when she addresses them, and then heckling Bunny once he's back at the mic). How does a smart, mature man like Bunny deal with a completely upside-down world that produces these boys? Early in the episode Lt. Mello suggests Bunny's lost his mind, but maybe insanity is the only proper response to West Baltimore.

(**) Interestingly, at one point the episode was titled "Amsterdam" (that's what it's called on the original season 3 DVD set), but is now recorded (on HBO's website, the complete series DVD set, etc.) as the dealer's malapropism.

Cutty, meanwhile, needs only a few weeks to lose patience with his attempt to go straight. It's not that he especially wants to go back to being a soldier, but when even his landscaper boss admits how little reward there is to the honest life for men like them, how can he not backslide? But like Bunny, he seems a man out of time. He let Fruit hustle him out of his homecoming package and is uncomfortable with both the semi-automatic pistol Slim Charles gives him and the pot-fueled bacchanalia Slim and Bodie take him to. He's been in prison a long time, and so he's not unhappy with the two women steered towards him, but he still looks a little lost as the door closes.

Four episodes into this season, this is what amounts for progress: Jimmy gets a phone number for Stringer phone number (as does the equally-clever Lester) that the man only seems to use for legitimate business, Bunny has the real estate for Hamsterdam but no occupants, Cutty has a job in the Barksdale crew he's not sure he wants, and Tommy Carcetti has announced a plan to run for mayor that everyone thinks is as foolish an idea as Bunny's plan to legalize drugs in his district.

But this is David Simon and company laying the usual foundation for what's to come. And, as always, what they're building will begin to take shape quickly from here on out.

Some other thoughts:

  • We know Stringer has always aspired to use drugs as a springboard for more legitimate business, but it's still somewhat startling to see him enjoying a power lunch with Clay Davis and Valchek's developer buddy Andy Krawczyk to talk about developing all the real estate he and Avon were buying in season one. The man does not dream small, does he?
  • Stringer's also smart enough to nip the Donnette situation in the bud before she goes telling someone - say, a member of the actual Barksdale family like Avon, who with Maury Levy's help aces his parole hearing in spite of Ronnie's strongly-worded letter - what McNulty told her. And he clearly finds her attractive enough that it's not a complete ordeal for him to keep her quiet.
  • This one was written by George Pelecanos (but, as it's not the penultimate episode and nothing horrible happens to anyone we care about, it doesn't qualify as a Pelecanos Episode), and he incorporates a bit of detail from his first Nick Stefanos novel, "A Firing Offense," as Bubbs talks about his former life as a stock boy at an electronics store. Even after all his time as a dope fiend, it's nice to see that Bubbs still has a work ethic - and is hustler enough to ask for a bonus on top of his hourly wage in exchange for giving Marlo's tag number to Kima.
  • Our director, meanwhile, is Ernest Dickerson, who goes outside the series' usual house style for the party sequence at the end, which is filmed in a much more impressionist, point-of-view style to illustrate just how alien the place seems to Cutty.
  • In the first season, the Barksdale crew used pagers because Simon and Ed Burns were borrowing liberally from a case Burns worked in the '80s when that technology was still widely-used. By season three, the show's "'yo tech" has essentially caught up to the real world, as we discover that guys like Marlo and Poot are now using pre-paid "burners" that they can throw out when done using, and which are all but impossible to get a tap on.
  • For the sake of the newbies, and any veterans who weren't watching the show at the time the third season originally aired, there was some confusion when this episode aired about whether Theresa D'Agostino, the old classmate Tommy asks to run his campaign, is the same woman he had sex with after the campaign fundraiser in episode three. Though there's some faint resemblance (hair color aside), they are not the same; the redhead at the fundraiser was just a one-night stand.
  • As Bunk continues to get nowhere in the futile search for Dozerman's gun, we see some of the boundaries of the Bunk/Jimmy friendship. The two will help each other pick up women at bars, but Jimm's not going to help Bunk find Omar yet again, having already paid his debt on that subject from the first season. (In fairness to Jimmy, the only way he has to find Omar is via Bubbs, and I doubt Bubbs would do that again after how Omar treated him the last time.)

And now we come to the veterans-only section, where we can talk about how some of the developments in this episode will play out down the line:

  • Poor Stringer. If he only knew how much his new business relationship with slick con man Clay Davis will ultimately cost him.
  • Interesting to see Jimmy and Lester at such odds given that they go in together on the fake serial killer scheme in season five when the brass tries to shut down the Marlo investigation. A commenter last week made the argument that in this case, Lester was responsible for blowing the Cheese wire, and therefore was willing to accept the consequences of his own actions, where in season five he's raging against budget cuts he had nothing to do with.
  • As with his major's pension, Bunny might not want to count on that Hopkins job just yet, alas.
  • Stringer puts Shamrock in charge of Bernard, the man responsible for buying the burners. Not that it will ultimately matter to Stringer, given what we know about what Bernard will do to the Barksdale crew, Stringer might have wanted to more closely supervise that part of the operation.

Coming up next: "Straight and True," in which Bunny has a reunion with Bushy Top, Stringer chairs a meeting, and Santangelo plays tour guide.

What did everybody else think?

Alan-sepinwall-sm
Alan Sepinwall
Sr. Editor, What's Alan Watching
Alan Sepinwall has been reviewing television since the mid-'90s, first for Tony Soprano's hometown paper, The Star-Ledger, and now for HitFix. His new book, "The Revolution Was Televised," about the last 15 years of TV drama, is for sale at Amazon. He can be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com

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  • Default-avatar

    Al

    Funny how Bunk ends up being closer associated with Omar and felt his death more than Mcnulty did near the end of season 5. I wonder if it's because they went to the same school or if they just had more run ins, but I think that speech Bunk gives Omar in an upcoming episode had a lot to do with it. My favourite scene by the way, can't wait to hear your take on it Alan.

    June 25, 2010 at 8:49AM EST Reply to Comment


  • I'm glad someone else caught the "A Firing Offense" reference; it was the first thing I though of watching that scene now that I've read the novel.

    On the topic of the difference in McNulty/Lester now and in S5, I think mostly agree with last week's commenter. Though wasn't MCU effectively Lester's unit by the time of the fake serial killer? Between that and the fact that he's made his 30 by then I'm not surprised he was much more willing to step out then than now.

    I also think it's notable that even at this point in the season Marlo isn't seen as being as big of a deal as he'll end up being. The first time I watched this season I was thinking of the Marlo story as more of a cautionary tale of why Stringer needs someone like Avon around (because not everyone will buy into the "just business" paradigm espoused by Stringer and Prop Joe) than a story of seeing a new kingpin emerge.

    June 25, 2010 at 8:58AM EST Reply to Comment
    • Midnight_run_mca255950_talkback_profile

      sepinwall Lester would have been very close to this 30 at the time of this episode, and he always made more money with the dollhouse furniture than he did from the job, so I don't know that that would have been an issue.

      June 25, 2010 at 9:12AM EST
    • Fair points. I think what I was trying to get at was that the fact that MCU is still Daniels's here is important to Lester.

      I also haven't re-watched S5 since it aired so I don't recall if the wire was actually getting anything when the brass killed it, as opposed to here when I think everyone but McNulty would realize it was dead. I think even that would be secondary to to the Daniels thing though: ultimately Lester has some sense of loyalty that McNulty doesn't.

      June 25, 2010 at 9:37AM EST
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      DVA118 One reason why Lester might have been more willing to take risks in S5 is that he was the one who found the bodies in the vacants, and fought to pull them out despite Landsman wanting to ignore them. Plus those bodies that filled the vacants had at least a few "citizens."

      June 25, 2010 at 1:24PM EST
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      Jess I think the fight between Lester and Jimmy saw it more as Lester's respect for Daniels and MCU than anything else. He also got on Kima's case for not showing Daniels more respect and loyalty.

      July 31, 2010 at 5:17PM EST
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    Andrew

    The Lester-McNulty fight -- clearly written so that McNulty is in the right, even though he's an asshole. That's why Lester gives Kima that instruction as soon as McNulty leaves, and why he and Kima quickly join up with Jimmy's plan. Clearly Lester is just disgusted with McNulty personally, but he does realize that Jimmy's right.

    McNulty's role in the show is as the shit-stirrer, always raging against the unjust state of the world and unwilling to accept the status quo. He's motivated by his own vanity, but that doesn't make him wrong. For McNulty, the case is about McNulty showing everyone he's right (and he usually is right).

    For Lester, the case is about the case. He defies authority to make the case, not to earn a parade for himself. That's why, in Season 5, Lester is drunk and happy when they bring Marlo in, but McNulty feels empty.

    June 25, 2010 at 10:21AM EST Reply to Comment
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      Sloshkosh I could not agree more. In episode 9 of this season Lester and McNulty have another conversation about cases and Lester asks him what he thinks happens after you close a top case.

      "A shining Jimmy-McNulty-day moment, when you bring in a case sooooo sweet everybody gets together and says, 'Aw, shit! He was right all along. Should've listened to the man.'"

      Lester has long since realized that all cases end and the world keeps moving - "The handcuffs go click and it's over. The next morning, it's just you in your room with yourself."

      June 25, 2010 at 10:32AM EST
  • Imgres_talkback_profile

    Scheer_Power

    Given what we know about Bunny in season 4, it's funny to watch him completely clueless around corner kids in this episode. Seeing it now, that scene is probably one of the reasons he takes the job.

    June 25, 2010 at 10:27AM EST Reply to Comment
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      mjrhoff Yeah, I think this episode foreshadows Season 4's education theme quite a bit. The kids in the auditorium start yelling just as Colvin utters the word "learn," and yet in the very next scene we hear Freamon talking about how, when it comes to avoiding wiretaps, the dealers "do learn; every time we come at them, they learn and adjust."

      June 25, 2010 at 11:49AM EST
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    Sloshkosh

    "Backed into a corner, Lester will figure out how to live in that corner, where Jimmy would try to blow up the room."

    That might be the best description of McNulty I've read - he essentially has tunnel vision when he looks at his primary goal and misses everything else going on around him.

    June 25, 2010 at 10:27AM EST Reply to Comment
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    simonash

    I think there's another call back to this episode later - after the Mcnulty/Lester stand-off, Lester turns to Kima and says "And you? I'm surprised at you!" - doesn't she say something similar back to Lester in the final season, before snitching on the serial killer scheme? If she doesn't actually say it, it's certainly an undercurrent.

    June 25, 2010 at 11:39AM EST Reply to Comment
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    David

    Im pretty sure I noticed something on re-watching the scene mentioned above with Cutty and the dudes at the bordello - the second girl in the room at the end, the one that closes the door, is the same girl who Avon chases at his coming home party later this season - and one of the two which Stringer arranges to show up at his pad at the end.

    June 25, 2010 at 12:32PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Paul B. I thought the same thing. I think that was her. She must be a Barksdale groupie.

      June 26, 2010 at 11:14AM EST
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    debbie

    Bunny is one of my favorite characters in the series. He is constantly beating his head against the wall dealing with people, whether it be the Brass, city hall or the school board, who havent an ounce of imagination. Imagine what Bunny could have done if everyone had just gotten out of his way. He'll have to be content with saving Namond. And seeing him so proud, at Namonds debate, that's enough.

    June 25, 2010 at 12:47PM EST Reply to Comment
  • Charlieav_talkback_profile

    dollarbin

    Speaking of the opening scene in the community meeting, I liked the callback to William Gant from all the way back in season one, episode one. "He went downtown and testified. He deader than Tupac today."

    June 25, 2010 at 12:50PM EST Reply to Comment
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    carpediva

    "Backed into a corner, Lester will figure out how to live in that corner, where Jimmy would try to blow up the room."

    jesus that's a nice turn of phrase, Alan. well fucking said.

    June 25, 2010 at 1:37PM EST Reply to Comment


  • Alan, I was going to send you this link on Twitter, but it's too many characters, and I'm presuming a Season 3 veterans' thread is an OK place to put a Season 1 spoiler.

    Where's Wallace? Try here:

    http://s3.amazonaws.com/data.tumblr.com/tumblr_l3s4fnvpjI1qby9iuo1_1280.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=0RYTHV9YYQ4W5Q3HQMG2&Expires=1277580113&Signature=2lmcLJ8HezuwNe6pcbHyJ9BNG5A%3D

    June 25, 2010 at 3:33PM EST Reply to Comment
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      SaneN85 tinyurl.com

      June 27, 2010 at 2:02AM EST
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    Alex

    I remember reading an interview in which David Simon says he got frustrated (and almost came to blows) with a man at a panel discussion who kept asking, "What's the answer? What's the solution?" Drove Simon crazy, since there are obviously no simple answers to the questions raised on The Wire. In this episode, the character played by Clarence Clemons asks the simple-minded question that annoyed Simon so much: "So--what's the answer?" Is that any way to treat The Big Man?

    June 25, 2010 at 3:45PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Chrissy Well, it's got to be a little of both, right? Bunny, my favorite character, is clearly not willing to give up looking for an answer. And he finds one, on a very small scale - he gives Namond stability and encouragement, and Namond thrives in a totally non-criminal way. It's silly to demand an answer of one man making a tv show, but that doesn't make it silly to keep looking for an answer, I don't think.

      June 26, 2010 at 11:32AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Alex That's a fair reading, I think. The show doesn't say that reform is impossible, but it comes pretty close to saying that reform by institutions is impossible. When real reform does occur on The Wire, it's usually dependent on individuals who rely on themselves and a few close friends (the Colvins and Namond, Cutty forcing himself to leave "the game," Bubbles getting sober, etc.)

      June 26, 2010 at 3:21PM EST
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    Charles

    Waaaaaaaaaaait a second...I always thought Cutty looked uncomfortable with the girls at the party because he's gay (reinforced by how uncomfortable Michael feels with his interest next season).

    June 25, 2010 at 4:19PM EST Reply to Comment
    • Tattoo_talkback_profile

      Hatfield Did you miss the part where Cutty is still in love with Grace this season, and then goes on a rampage through the mothers of his boxers next season?

      June 25, 2010 at 4:35PM EST
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      Lou yeah, michael is (understandably) uncomfortable around cutty as well as prez or anyone who's nice to him, "everyone's too motherfucking nice"..

      June 25, 2010 at 4:57PM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Charles He rampaged through the Mom's because they came on to him, he had to keep up appearances.

      June 25, 2010 at 5:08PM EST
    • Tattoo_talkback_profile

      Hatfield Ha, well now you just sound like Michael. Pretty sure he wasn't supposed to be gay.

      June 25, 2010 at 5:29PM EST
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      lztouchthedream I always thought it was implied that Michael was uncomfortable with people who were 'too motherfucking friendly' because his step-dad (Bug's dad, the guy that comes back in the middle of season 4 to live with them) had sexually abused him.

      It's also somewhat implied that Chris was molested too, by the way he loses control and beats Michael's step-dad to a pulp before they can get him in the rowhouse, and in the scene after Michael does his first hit, where he tells him he can now look people in the eye, no matter what they've done.

      June 25, 2010 at 8:16PM EST
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      Norgard "Did you miss the part where Cutty is still in love with Grace this season, and then goes on a rampage through the mothers of his boxers next season?"

      Not to mention that at the end of the season, he hooks up with the nurse from the hospital he was in after getting shot. That'd be some pretty big commitment just to "pretend".

      June 25, 2010 at 10:54PM EST
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    lztouchthedream

    I had my money on either 'right after I have to take a tinkle' or 'right after I prime that bitch three times' for the lead-in line, but I wasn't sure about your policy on profanity, especially that early in the post.

    June 25, 2010 at 8:11PM EST Reply to Comment
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    rhys1882

    I thought this article was relevant to this post. In it, a new political party in Iceland won a bunch of seats in the election and the leader of the party said he'd only form a coalition government with someone who'd watched all five season of the Wire. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/26/world/europe/26iceland.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

    June 26, 2010 at 2:25AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Away

    from the cultural turn of Simon's Ken-Loach-wannabe social realism meets cultural fetishization (a mismatched couple if there ever was one), Treme, and back to political economy and the very literary The Wire.

    Can almost always count on Alan to write something which is commonsensical from the point of view of normal politics that doesn't quite fit The Wire's radical (from the point of view of the current political culture) left politcal critique: "it's nice to see that Bubbs still has a work ethic."

    The Wire must disdain the work ethic, the idea that hard work is a good in itself and is the path to a productive, successful life. How could a show criticizing the domination of social relations by capitalism not disdain the work ethic, Max Weber's famous "spirit of capitalism"? In interviews Simon indicated his contempt for the American mythology of hard work being that which separates societies "winners" from its "losers", the success-based work ethic that is used to valorize wealth and justify the ever-growing inequities of modern industrialized nations. Bodie's is one story that addresses this. He was determined to rise to the top through hard work, by being a good soldier (including the murder of a friend), ignoring the warnings of D'Angelo that he'd just be used. In the end he acknowledges D'Angelos' wisdom and laments, "This game is rigged, man. Be like the little bitches on a chessboard."

    The other side of this is blaming the poor for being poor and demonizing those who cannot find work; worst of all, those who are unemployed are disciplined to despise and devalue themselves: Dukie becomes Bubbles. Bubbles is not saved by a work ethic. His work to make a buck doesn't save him. We know what saves him in the end, the "work" of caring, through which he comes to understand his own value as a human being. It is a rebellion against the valuation of human worth in terms of economic achievements or social ascendancy. Nobody is saved by a work ethic on The Wire. ("The job will not save you, Jimmy.") It is a care ethic that defines what for it, as Simon frequently put, is the only path to "human dignity" and those who chose that path--a necessarily existential choice within the existing social order that exalts the pursuit of self-interest--are The Wire's heroes.

    So it's sad to see that Bubbs has not yet freed himself from shibboleths of The Game, including its work ethic and has much suffering to endure before his freedom from that ethic.

    (Treme addresses the meaning of work but unfortunately that too was compromised by its creators' mythologizing and advocacy of a particular cultural formation.)

    June 26, 2010 at 4:47PM EST Reply to Comment
    • Default-avatar

      Andrew Wow, this is such a misreading of the show. How do you square your assertion that the Wire disdains the work ethic with the show's portrayal of "good police" and "good police work"? Simon and Burns believe that the police bureaucracy no longer values good police work. But the hard work done by Bunk, Lester, McNulty, and other lone wolf obsessive detectives is viewed as solid, worthwhile, and valuable by Simon, Burns, and the audience.

      The show's portrayal of "work" in its other worlds is similar. The work done in the ports, by the journalists, by their teachers, and even by the dealers is a valuable and good thing. It is not highly valued by their institution, and your hard work is not the path to "get you ahead." But "disdain the work ethic"? I don't think so. It's not like the lazy cops get a more positive portrayal than those sucker cops who work hard! Did you take away the message, "Okay, I should be more like Polk and Mahone!"

      Do you really dispute the assertion that a low-level drug dealer who works really hard might not necessarily get recognized for his merit and rise to the top? That perhaps his fate might be determined by larger forces? How about the assertion that "getting ahead" in an office or a bureaucracy often involves large amounts of kissing ass, and that the people who do the best work are not always rewarded for it?

      June 26, 2010 at 9:27PM EST
    • Default-avatar

      nadia ***Can almost always count on Alan to write something which is commonsensical from the point of view of normal politics that doesn't quite fit The Wire's radical (from the point of view of the current political culture) left politcal critique: "it's nice to see that Bubbs still has a work ethic."***

      I frequent this site because I love Alan's reviews and opinions, and it is nice to read intellectual comments from people who also like/support Alan's work, even if they feel differently about a specific view. I suggest you start your own blog, as this was a real (and lengthy) downer to an otherwise positive experience to recapping this episode.

      June 27, 2010 at 12:34AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Chrissy I agree with Andrew; it's not a work ethic that The Wire disdains, but it does recognize the futility of working hard for a corrupt or uninterested institution. What you see as radical I guess I just see as common sense.

      In Bubbs case, a work ethic alone does not save him, but is indicative of the fact that he hasn't totally given up on himself, and that he is still able to examine his own actions, to some extent.

      June 28, 2010 at 12:30AM EST
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      Jess I see it less as good work ethic and more of an object lesson in economic/environmental determinism. Throughout the show Bubbs has always been clever and resourceful, coming up with different ways to make money whether by theft or cons. But once he got some capital investment in terms of regular informant money, he could switch over to selling t-shirts which is a better deal in the sense that he can sell his products to multiple customers whereas you can't repeat the same con on the same person, and many of his ideas for conning or theft came from observing the right opportunity (much like omar in that sense)

      July 31, 2010 at 5:21PM EST
  • Default-avatar

    Jack

    What about the pink shirts? I hate people thinking they know about connections.

    November 9, 2012 at 1:33AM EST Reply to Comment

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