ABSTRACT

The police drama has been one of the longest running and most popular genres in American television. In TV Cops, Jonathan Nichols-Pethick argues that, perhaps more than any other genre, the police series in all its manifestations—from Hill Street Blues to Miami Vice to The Wire—embodies the full range of the cultural dynamics of television.

Exploring the textual, industrial, and social contexts of police shows on American television, this book demonstrates how polices drama play a vital role in the way we understand and engage issues of social order that most of us otherwise experience only in such abstractions as laws and crime statistics. And given the current diffusion and popularity of the form, we might ask a number of questions that deserve serious critical attention: Under what circumstances have stories about the police proliferated in popular culture? What function do these stories serve for both the television industry and its audiences? Why have these stories become so commercially viable for the television industry in particular? How do stories about the police help us understand current social and political debates about crime, about the communities we live in, and about our identities as citizens?

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

chapter |23 pages

Programming the crisis

The Police Drama in the Post-Network Era

chapter |27 pages

The police drama in transition

Reconstituting the Cultural Forum in the 1980s

chapter |28 pages

Stop making sense

Reflection, Realism, and Community in Homicide

chapter |24 pages

Do the right thing

NYPD Blue and the Making of the Model Citizen

chapter |25 pages

One thing leads to another

Crime and the Commerce of Law & Order

chapter |31 pages

This cop's for you

The Multiple Logics of the 21st Century Police Drama

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion