Er, well, in mostly different ways.
More foot fetishism and incest, I suspect.
'Dirty Girls'
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Er, well, in mostly different ways.
More foot fetishism and incest, I suspect.
That was the beginning of my Kevin Spacey love.
But... it's Mike Post!
I know, right?! /not a fan of the L&O's and plethora of other police procedurals he did (that I saw).
Mike Post wrote the Hill Street Blues music. His work is sacred.
WiseGuy definitely had more foot fetishism. I think they're about even on incest. And sometimes Terranova's hair was almost as weird as Profit's, actually.
I still think Roger LoCocco should have had a spin-off. Oh, Roger.
Mike Post wrote the Hill Street Blues music. His work is sacred.Absolutely. (Although I'd have said The Rockford Files.)
I think they're about even on incest.
And heroin use.
People who liked the insanity of Profit should try the Mel Profit arc of WiseGuy. It's just as bizarre, in completely different ways.
Loved that too! So wonderfully wrong.
I was thinking about Profit last night after we watched the commentary. One of the writers (I lost track of who was talking early on, except for Pasdar's lovely voice) mentioned, tongue in cheek, the hero's journey. It made me realize that Profit actually owed more to the old antagonist figure.
Everyone should watch Wiseguy regardless of their Profit-viewing status. (Frank! Frank McPike!)
Everyone should watch Wiseguy regardless of their Profit-viewing status.
Unfortunately, the music rights fiasco on the DVDs has made me hesitant to get them (how can you have the climax of the Sonny Steelgrave saga WITHOUT "Knights in White Satin"!?!??!?).
Everyone should rent Wiseguy and look on the internet to find out when to put "Nights in White Satin" on their stereos.
Seriously, yeah. That's one of the biggest blunders ever in terms of music licensing problems. I've only seen through a certain point on the DVDs because there's a whole arc missing, due to music licensing difficulties.