Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.
That drives me nuts about CSI, but ESPECIALLY about Numbers (not that I watch it any more).
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.
That drives me nuts about CSI, but ESPECIALLY about Numbers (not that I watch it any more).
That drives me nuts about CSI, but ESPECIALLY about Numbers (not that I watch it any more).
I choose to believe that it's character development @@. Although I think that sometimes they deliberately try to make other women look unattractive. Other women are usually crying witnesses or spouses of victims or fugitive, or other law enforcement professionals, who never seem to wear makeup or comb their hair)
I choose to believe that it's character development
But that just makes me hate the character.
Men detectives wear suits while women detectives wear tight jeans and tank tops.
I've been really liking the costumes on Dexter with regard to this. Dexter's sister, who got a recent promotion to homicide, started dressing in pantsuits and buttondown shirts-- and they seem sort of low end, and a littl ebit stretchymatching her salary. The men are actually wearing polo shirts or hawaiian shirts (it is Florida). It seems to fit with her character's desire to move ahead in her career, while actually seeming practical and like she could do police work
But that just makes me hate the character.
well, yes. But I've come to terms with hating Megan. I like her better than the first woman they had. Which is not saying much.
did you recognize her in tonight's Law & Order episode?
If it weren't for her voice, I wouldn't have known who the heck she was.
I know!
She needs a Botox Intervention, stat!
Heh. The latest Harper's index points out that the number of murders in the three Law and Orders last season was greater than the number of homicides that actually occurred last year in Manhattan.
Does Cantebury's Law count as a procedural? I like the show, but as someone who grew up in RI, I have to say, Narragansett hospital does not exist and the actor pronounced it weird. Then they showed the sign for Rhode Island hospital, so why not just call it by it's real name in the first place?