I liked that Sarah walked away without trying to talk him out of what she knew he was going to do, because she realised it wasn't her place. She's a chick he likes. Peter can talk him out of it without realising precisely what he's doing (although he suspects). I'm sure El could talk him out of it too, or maybe even June.
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Yes, Sarah went up in my estimation for her reaction being "I can't be a part of this" and not "I have to stop him".
I also liked that Mozzie said it would be hard to be smiling at Mr. and Mrs. Suit while knowing Neal was breaking into their place. I feel like he wouldn't have said that not too long ago.
Yeah, I appreciated that from Moz. And he called them the Burkes!
He did, didn't he? That slipped past me.
Yes, yes, Neal's crisis of faith, but OMG JONES IN DRESS WHITES?!??ELEVENTY!!!!
Also, Neal in dress whites is wibble-tastic too. EVERYONE IN DRESS WHITES ALLA THE TIME, please make a note of it White Collar costume crew.
and I was not mad at Jones in that fight. Hubba!
um. that may have been my law enforcement fetish rearing its ugly head.
I'm glad we got a Jones-centric episode, got some good background on him!
(And I loved that Buzz-the-technician on The Closer got featured in one of the disaster-strewn Provenza and Flynn plots this week.)
Oh, me too. They were excellent.
EVERYONE IN DRESS WHITES ALLA THE TIME, please make a note of it White Collar costume crew.
Yes. Also any other costume crews.
BBC America teams with 'Oz' creator for ambitious cop series
by James Hibberd
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After expertly repackaging UK content for years, BBC America just announced its first original scripted series: A New York City crime drama, with a twist.
Copper is about an Irish immigrant patrolling the streets of New York — in 1860 (sort of Gangs of New York meets NYPD Blue). The character has to navigate the unruly Five Points Irish neighborhood, while also navigating uptown Manhattan high society and the emerging black community in Harlem.
Veteran writer Tom Fontana (Oz, Homicide, St. Elsewhere) will head up the writing-producing duties on the ambitious show, with 10 episodes planned for next summer.