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	<title>HBO &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<description>The Best of Baltimore Since 1907</description>
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		<title>&#8216;The Wire&#8217; 20 Years Later: How Does &#8220;The Greatest Television Show Ever&#8221; Hold Up?</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/the-wire-twenty-years-later/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2022 14:00:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore drug war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gun Trace Task Force]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[war on drugs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[We Own This City]]></category>
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<img alt="THE AUDACITY OF DESPAIR: The first episode of <i>The Wire</i> aired 20 years ago this month. When the show ended its run, David Simon said he wanted his portrayal of Baltimore judged against the future. So how does the greatest show in television history hold up?" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/TheWire_WebSpread.jpg"/>


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By Ron Cassie
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<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.5rem;">
Photography by J.M. Giordano
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<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.5rem;">
Illustrations by Alex Fine</p>


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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Arts & Culture</h6>

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<h5 class="text-center">The first episode of <i>The Wire</i> aired 20 years ago this month. When the show ended its run, David Simon said he wanted his portrayal of Baltimore judged against the future. So how does the greatest show in television history hold up?</h5>

<hr/>


<p class="unit text-center" style="font-size:1.5rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">By Ron Cassie</p> 
<p class="text-center" style="font-size:1.25rem;">Photography by J.M. Giordano</p>
<p class="clan text-center" style="font-size:1rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0;">Illustrations by Alex Fine</p>

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<h6 class="thin uppers text-center" style="color:#23afbc; text-decoration: underline; padding-top:1rem;">June 2022</h6>
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<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
“YOU CAN’T EVEN THINK OF CALLING THIS SHIT A WAR.”</br>
“WHY NOT?”</br>
“WARS END.”
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.25rem; text-align:right; color:#ffffff;">
—DETECTIVES CARVER AND </br>
HAUK WITH DET. GREGGS. </br>
<i>THE WIRE</i>, SEASON 1 
</p>

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<p>
<b>THREE RIVULETS OF BLOOD</b>, illuminated by flashing
blue lights, seep from a body lying face-down in the
middle of a dark street. In the background: the wail of
a squad car siren, the whirl of a helicopter, the howl of
a neighborhood dog. A cop picks up a shell casing and
places it into a plastic bag. Static voices blurt out from
a police radio. Three school-age girls silently take in the
scene from their rowhouse stoop. On the steps of a vacant
home on the same block, a white Baltimore homicide detective
turns to the young Black man seated next to him,
bundled in a hoodie and winter coat, blankly staring at
his just-murdered buddy.
</p>

</p>
<blockquote class="nurses">
<p>“So your boy’s name is what?”</p>
<p>“Snot.”</p>
<p>“You call a guy Snot?”</p>
<p>“Snot Boogie. Yeah.”</p>
</blockquote>

<p>
The cold opening to what many consider the greatest
television series ever is a repurposed story David Simon
overheard in the back of an unmarked police car in 1988.
That was the year Simon took leave from <i>The Baltimore Sun</i> and embedded with a BPD detective unit. The experience
produced his acclaimed nonfiction account,
<i>Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets</i>, which filmmaker
Barry Levinson and writer Paul Attanasio adapted
for television into a long-running cop procedural. A
dozen years later, that reporting (along with another
year Simon spent observing the corner of Fayette and
Monroe streets in West Baltimore) would also inspire
many of the characters and stories he brought to <i>The
Wire</i>, including the opening, featuring fictional detective
Jimmy McNulty. In fact, that scene and the dialogue,
which Simon transcribed almost verbatim, was
filmed just blocks from where he had heard the very
real Baltimore homicide detective, Terry McLarney,
recount the sad story of Snot Boogie’s death. TV critics
called it “authenticity.” Simon calls it “stealing life.”
</p>
<blockquote class="nurses">
<p>McNulty: “Doesn't seem fair...you know, he forgets his jacket, his nose starts runnin', and some asshole, instead of giving him a Kleenex, he calls him Snot. So he's Snot forever. Doesn't seem fair."</p>
</blockquote>

</p>
<blockquote class="nurses">
<p>Snot Boogie's Friend: "Life just be that way I guess."</p>
</blockquote>

<p>
McNulty wants to know who shot Snot Boogie, but
any probing queries are shut down. “I ain’t going to no
court.” Still, the friend shakes his head. “Motherfucker
didn’t have to put no cap in him though.” We soon
learn, as Simon had learned from McLarney, that Snot
had a habit of snatching the pot from a regular Friday
craps game he played in. He received a beating every
time he was caught, which was often. Except, this
time, someone took it personally.

</p>
<blockquote class="nurses">
<p>McNulty, now curious: “If Snot Boogie always stole the money, why'd you let him play?".</p>
</blockquote>

</p>
<blockquote class="nurses">
<p>Snot Boogie's Friend: <i>"Got to. This America, man."</i></p>
</blockquote>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
David Simon near his home and office in Balitmore this April. Photography by Mike Morgan
</h5>

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<p>
<b>TERRY MCLARNEY HAD</b> laughed as he shared the saga
of Snot Boogie’s murder and it seemed almost an afterthought
in <i>Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets</i>, tucked
as it was late in the book. But it stuck with the 28-year-old
Simon when he returned to <i>The Sun</i> and began working
the police beat again. The words would continue to
resonate over time for the still-evolving journalist. <i>“Got
to. This America, man.”</i> Simon had joined the big-city daily
in 1982 right from The University of Maryland, where
he’d served as editor-in-chief of <i>The Diamondback</i>. He
wore a ponytail and a diamond earring, indulged in a
joint now and then, and his politics were generally those
of the anti-Reagan, anti-Thatcher, punk-informed young
left of the day. He’d grown up in a liberal Jewish household
in Bethesda that believed deeply in the civil rights
movement. He had been covering the cops and courts for
four years, but he wasn’t necessarily opposed to the War
on Drugs when he planted himself inside the homicide
unit. Almost no one was. That same year, when former
Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke became the first elected
official to <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/health/thirty-years-ago-kurt-schmoke-openly-advocating-for-decriminalization-of-marijuana/">call for decriminalization and a public health
approach to illegal drug use</a>, he was vilified.
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2" style="background-color:#000000;">

<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
THE DRUG WAR IS A HOLOCAUST
</br>
IN SLOW MOTION.
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.25rem; text-align:right; color:#ffffff;">
— DAVID SIMON
</p>

</div>
<p>
Simon’s follow-up 1997 book, <i>The Corner: A Year
in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood</i>, which he co-wrote
with former detective and future <i>Wire</i> collaborator
Ed Burns, was a 180-degree turn from <i>Homicide</i>. As
was the Emmy-award winning HBO series, <i>The Corner</i>,
which he co-wrote with fellow <i>Diamondback</i> alum, the
African-American writer David Mills. Directed by Baltimore
native and accomplished ex-offender-turned-actor
Charles S. Dutton, <i>The Corner</i> was a depiction of a family
in the throes of addiction and a Black community where
the promise of living wages—Baltimore lost more than
100,000 manufacturing jobs between 1950 and 1995—
had been replaced by opportunity in the drug trade.
The show remains a must-watch precursor to <i>The Wire</i>,
standing up as a heart-wrenching, deeply empathetic
examination of crack cocaine and heroin addiction amid
the poverty and decay of a once-thriving, if always segregated,
neighborhood.
</p>
<p>
With the success of <i>The Corner</i>, which was filmed in
a decidedly non-glamorizing, almost documentary style,
Simon’s storytelling ambitions expanded further. Over
nearly two decades in Baltimore, he had witnessed the
drug war and the incarceration rates metastasize, with
the effects causing increasingly more harm than good
in the city’s majority-Black neighborhoods. (Reagan announced
plans to radically expand the War on Drugs by
creating 12 new task force units and hiring 1,200 additional
prosecutors in 1982, the same year Simon had
arrived at <i>The Sun</i>.) Across <i>The Wire’s</i> five seasons, he
folded the brutish futility of the drug war, the bungling
BPD, the loss of union jobs, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/cleaning-up-city-hall-inside-baltimores-history-of-corruption/">the dysfunction at City Hall</a>, the overmatched public schools, and the decline of the corporate-owned
<i>Sun</i> into a broader narrative of failing institutions in a
downwardly spiraling city. “All the pieces matter,” the wise fictional
Det. Lester Freamon foreshadowed in the first season. As
Schmoke had tried to tell those in attendance at the U.S. Conference
of Mayors in 1988, and Simon now recognized, America’s
drug “problem” was not a criminal issue at its core. It was a public
health issue, a policing disaster, and a cruel social justice crisis.
</p>
<p>
“What drugs have not destroyed,” Simon explained to <i>Salon</i> in
an interview 20 years ago this month, as <i>The Wire</i> first hit televisions
screens, “the war on them has.”
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Bodie’s corner: while the original location, the northeast corner of barclay and lanvale, has been torn down, honey carry-out, a half-a-block south, is still a local shop, resembling the infamous season four set down to the red paint.
</h5>

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<p>
<b>IN BALTIMORE</b>, specifically, in the early and mid-2000s, Mayor
Martin O’Malley and the police department escalated the drug
“war” efforts to unprecedented heights. With an eye on the Governor’s
Mansion, and, as we came to see, the White House, O’Malley
was willing to go to any lengths to bring down the city’s horrific
homicide rate and claim even a small victory. The “broken windows”
and “zero tolerance” policies that he imported from New
York led to a staggering 704,895 arrests during his seven years in
office—a figure, incredibly, that surpassed the entire population
of Baltimore. (Schmoke, who admittedly had run out of ideas to
quell violent crime when he declined to seek a fourth term, did,
however, warn there would be fallout from O’Malley's “tough on
crime” platform as the then-Councilman campaigned for office.)
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2" style="background-color:#000000;">

<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
WE’RE BUILDING SOMETHING HERE
</br>
DETECTIVE...ALL THE PIECES
</br>
MATTER.
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.25rem; text-align:right; color:#ffffff;">
— DET. FREAMON, </br>
<i>THE WIRE</i>
</p>

</div>

<p>
Tellingly, only 2.6 percent of the arrests made during
O’Malley’s tenure represented a violent crime charge. Just another
7.3 percent of arrests represented a property crime allegation.
The vast majority of arrests each year, according to Department
of Justice data, were listed under “drug abuse”—meaning possession
or intent to distribute—and “undefined” minor code violations,
the single largest category by far. Additionally, more than
70,000 arrests were made for loitering, disorderly
conduct, open container violations, and trespassing from 2000
to 2006. With Central Booking beyond capacity, O’Malley went
as far as to push the state courts to install a seven-days-a-week
judge at the Baltimore jail intake center to deal with the backup
and delays that his policies had created. Each year, tens of thousands
of charges were not worth prosecuting, and by 2005, the
City State’s Attorney Patricia Jessamy’s office declined to move
forward on a full third of all arrests. Worse still, the zero-tolerance
policy—which meant clearing corners with loitering arrests—
was ruining the BPD’s ability to investigate serious crimes.
As overall arrests skyrocketed under the O’Malley administration,
arrests for murder, violent offenses, and property crime
fell dramatically each year. All this, coincidentally, took place as
O’Malley’s doppelgänger, Mayor Tommy Carcetti, was coming to
power in <i>The Wire</i>. In fairness, albeit in line with a national decline in homicides, the murder toll in Baltimore had dropped in
O’Malley’s first year, but over the next six years, it steadily ticked
back up, stubbornly remaining among the highest rates in the
country, as it does today.
</p>

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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/TheWire_Crime-Stats.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">Charts: Sources from Top: Brennan Center for Justice; Prison Policy Initiative from 2010 U.S. Census; Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; Prison Policy Initiative.</h5>
</div>
<p>
In other words, Simon, Burns, and <i>The Wire</i> writing
team were scripting the folly and brutality of
the drug war in real time: cops pointlessly clearing
the same corners, cuffing the same people on bogus
charges day after day; interrogating and threatening
children and beating people up for no good reason;
taking bribes and cash from drug dealers and raking
in copious amounts of overtime. All enabled by
higher-ups who fudged the stats to prove that the polices
were working. Naturally, the supply of drugs, let
alone the demand, was rarely interrupted.
</p>



<p>
But as bad as the Baltimore police department appears
in <i>The Wire</i>, the show did not chronicle anything
like the number of illegal searches and seizures it
conducted, or the endemic lying, false testimony, and
wrongful convictions of the era, or the extent of the
police department’s barbarism. In the entire five-year
run of the series, a single bumbling cop fires his weapon.
Yet, as a London reporter who did a job exchange
with former <i>Sun</i>, now <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/baltimore-banner-will-rival-the-sun-can-it-prove-sustainable/"><i>Banner</i></a> reporter Justin Fenton
in 2009 highlighted—the show was a huge hit in the
U.K.—Baltimore police had already shot 16 people,
including a 14-year-old robbery suspect, by the time
he’d arrived in October of that year.
</p>
<p>
Afterward, when the show concluded its run in
2008, Simon told local journalist Lawrence Lanahan,
in a piece for the <a href="https://archives.cjr.org/cover_story/secrets_of_the_city.php"><i>Columbia Journalism Review</i></a>, that he
wanted his depiction of Baltimore judged against the
future. “What I saw happen with the drug war, a series
of political elections, and vague attempts at reform in
Baltimore . . . What I saw happen to the Port of Baltimore,
and what I saw happen to <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>—I
think it’s all of a piece,” he said. <i>The Wire</i>, Simon believed,
was about more than even the drug war; it was a
snapshot of the decline of the American empire: “Consider
it a big op-ed piece and consider it to be dissent.”
</p>

<p>
<i>The Wire</i>, Simon continued, was a premonition
of a darker future, for Baltimore, and by extension,
for America—“more gated communities and more
of a police state.” Should it come to pass, and if
people were to claim no one saw it was coming, he
said back in 2008, someone could pull DVDs of <i>The
Wire</i> off the shelf and say, “Don’t say you didn’t
know this was coming. Because they made a fucking
TV show out of it.”
</p>

<p>
Which raises the question: How has Baltimore
fared in the two decades since the city first got a
long, hard look at itself on HBO? And how has <i>The
Wire</i> held up? If Simon or someone else had another
60 hours to remake <i>The Wire</i> today—not just the
roughly six hours he’s given in the new miniseries
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/we-own-this-city-david-simon-hbo-bring-corrupt-gun-trace-task-force-to-television/"><i>We Own This City</i></a>, based on a book by the same
name by Fenton on the corrupt Gun Trace Task
Force—what would that look like?
</p>
</div>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Vincent sreet: this tiny pigtown street gave maj. Bunny colvin the idea for “hamsterdam,” a free drug area overseen by sgt. Ellis carver. The area around the fictional “vincent street” is being renovated.
</h5>

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<p>
“At the time, I thought, yeah, <i>‘This is America,
this is Baltimore,’</i> things happen and sometimes
you pay the ultimate consequence like Snot Boogie,”
says DaJuan Prince, a then-18-year-old production
assistant, who played the uncredited role
of the Snot Boogie corpse. (“David told me to lie
there and keep my eyes open but look dead.”)
Prince had grown up in the Lexington Terrace
housing project, the real-life “towers” where <i>The
Wire’s</i> Barksdale gang controlled the heroin distribution.
“The scene wasn’t hard for me to grasp.
The whole thing of him stealing the money and
still letting him play. I’ve lived on blocks where
people stole people’s stashes and came back to
actually buy more drugs. They let them, because
what can you do about the lost stash? He has money
this time so let him just go in and buy the product.
Other times, you get caught in the act. Sometimes
you pay the ultimate consequence. That’s
the game. That’s the way I saw it.
</p>
<p>
“When I got older, though,” continues Prince,
who went on to a career in costume and wardrobe
for television and film, including Simon’s new
HBO series <i>We Own This City</i>, “I realized it’s only
the people on the street level that pay the ultimate
consequence [of poverty, of the drug war, and gun
violence]. Some people don’t pay any consequence,
like the cops, the politicians, the prosecutors, the
lawyers. Those are the people getting away with
stuff and who are still getting away with stuff.”
</p>
</div>
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<h2 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">THE WIRE CAST</h2>
<p class="text-center"><b>THEN & NOW</b></p>

<p>
After adapting <i>The Corner</i> for HBO (1997), which won three Emmys, and creating <i>The Wire</i> (2002-2008), considered one of the best TV shows in the history of the medium, David Simon moved beyond Baltimore and has become one of the most successful writers and producers in series television. Since <i>The Wire</i> wrapped, he’s created or co-created <i>Generation Kill</i> (2008), <i>Treme</i> (2010-2013), <i>Show Me a Hero</i> (2014), <i>The Deuce</i> (2017-2019), and <i>The Plot Against America</i> for HBO (2020), all of which have been critically acclaimed. Similarly, the cast of <i>The Wire</i> has gone on to rich careers—in some cases, as with Idris Elba and Michael B. Jordan—major stardom. Here’s a brief rundown on some of their subsequent efforts:
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Bubbles</h4>

<p>
Andre Royo has remained
busy in both film and television
since his memorable
portrayal of a heroin addict
in <i>The Wire</i>, including
playing Thirsty Rawlings
in the hit series <i>Empire</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Det. Jimmy McNulty</h4>

<p>
Dominic West, the English-born
actor, earned Golden
Globe nominations for his
work in <i>The Hour</i>, and for
his role as Noah Solloway
in the long-running television
series <i>The Affair</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Snoop</h4>

<p>
Felicia Pearson, the
former drug dealer,
became an actor after her
appearances in <i>The Wire</i>,
including roles in Spike
Lee’s <i>Da Sweet Blood
of Jesus</i> and <i>Chi-Raq</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Lt. Cedric Daniels</h4>

<p>
Lance Reddick,
the Baltimore-born
actor who was also in
<i>The Corner</i>, went on to
roles in <i>Oldboy</i>, <i>John
Wick</i>, <i>Bosch</i>, and <i>One
Night in Miami</i>.
</p>
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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">D’Angelo Barksdale</h4>

<p>
Lawrence Gilliard Jr., who
attended the Baltimore
School for the Arts, went
on to star in <i>The Walking
Dead</i>, <i>The Deuce</i>, and
the acclaimed film
<i>One Night in Miami</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Det. William “Bunk”
Moreland</h4>

<p>
Wendell Pierce, a New
Orleans native, played
trombonist Antoine
Batiste in HBO’s <i>Treme</i>,
among many TV, film,
and stage projects.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Lester Freamon</h4>

<p>
Clarke Peters appeared
in <i>The Corner</i> before
playing the wise detective
in <i>The Wire</i>. Among other
roles, he starred in
<i>Treme</i> and the Spike Lee
film <i>Da 5 Bloods</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Stringer Bell</h4>

<p>
Idris Elba became a
major film male lead
after <i>The Wire</i>, starring in
Ridley Scott’s <i>American
Gangster</i>, the series
<i>Luther</i>, and <i>Mandela:
Long Walk to Freedom</i>.
</p>
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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Herc</h4>

<p>
Domenick Lombardozzi,
who started his career
in <i>A Bronx Tale</i>, played
Anthony “Fat Tony”
Salerno in <i>The Irishman</i>,
and returned to Baltimore
in <i>We Own This City</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Det. Kima Greggs</h4>

<p>
Sonja Sohn has directed
two HBO documentaries,
<i>Baltimore Rising</i> and
<i>The Slow Hustle</i>, which
investigated the
death of BPD officer
Sean Suiter.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Mayor Tommy Carcetti</h4>

<p>
Aiden Gillen, from Dublin,
has gone from playing the
mayor of Baltimore
to roles in the films
<i>Calvary</i> and <i>Bohemian
Rhapsody</i> and the TV
series <i>Game of Thrones</i>.
</p>

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<h4 class="gabriela-stencil-black text-center">Wallace</h4>

<p>
Michael B. Jordan,
just 15 in <i>The Wire</i>,
has become one of
Hollywood’s top leading
men, starring in
<i>Fruitvale Station</i>, <i>Creed</i>,
and <i>Black Panther</i>.
</p>
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Cutty's gym: operated by Dennis “Cutty” Wise, Cutty’s fictional Eastside gym continues to go to ruin 20 years after it was used as a season three set for <i>The Wire.</i>
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<p>
<b>THE POPULARITY OF</b> <i>The Wire</i>, let alone its cult status,
is a strange phenomenon. Critically praised when it
aired, the series never won an Emmy and it never garnered
anything like the ratings of the show that it is
most frequently judged against today, <i>The Sopranos</i>.
The epic Italian-American family drama, centered on
a suburban New Jersey crime boss, drew more than
four times as many viewers on average than <i>The Wire</i>
did in its best season and ten times as many viewers
as <i>The Wire’s</i> final season.
</p>

<p>
With its star-making lead performance by James
Gandolfini, <i>The Sopranos</i> was easier to follow than <i>The
Wire’s</i> sprawling, slowly unspooling saga, which was
built around a huge ensemble of largely unknown, if
extraordinarily talented, Black actors. (At times, the
graphic depiction of heroin use and violence was also
simply painful to watch.) Simon had to fight every
year with HBO to avoid cancellation, and the show’s
fourth season didn’t begin for almost two years after
the third season had ended. Ultimately, <i>The Wire</i> became
a global phenomenon after it was released on
DVD and word-of-mouth began to spread. Podcasts
and Facebook and Twitter accounts dedicated to the
series abound to this day. It’s an old cliché, but nonetheless
true: If you’re from Baltimore, you’ve most
likely been asked if the city is really like <i>The Wire</i>
when you’ve traveled out of state or out of the country.
In March, Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, of all
people, when sentenced to an additional nine years in
prison, tweeted a quote from show: “Well, as the characters
of my favorite TV series, <i>The Wire</i>, used to say:
‘You only do two days. That’s the day you go in and
the day you come out.’ I even had a T-shirt with this
slogan,” Navalny added, “but the prison authorities
confiscated it, considering the print extremist.”
</p>
<p>
If most U.S. television viewers were not paying
attention from the jump, Baltimoreans were, especially
those at City Hall. Focused on the perception
of the city, as they often are, Baltimore’s elected
leaders were not appreciative of <i>The Wire’s</i> portrayal
of their fair town. After the first season, then-Councilwoman Catherine Pugh crafted a resolution,
initially supported by 12 co-sponsors, called “Let’s
Not Just Imagine a Better Image for Baltimore.” The
proposed resolution concentrated on the negative
references about the city in various reviews of <i>The
Wire</i>, and “called for the creation of a committee of
volunteers from business and the film industry to
create a series of television ads to showcase
positive things about Baltimore.”
</p>
<p>
The ever-combative Simon responded
with a letter to then-Council President
Sheila Dixon, threatening to change filming
locations before the second season.
The potential switch, likely to Philadelphia,
would’ve cost the city tens of millions
of dollars in lost revenue and more
than 125 crew-member jobs. Eventually,
after phone calls to Council members by
Simon and advocates from the Maryland
film industry, support for the resolution
fell apart. The pushback did not end there,
however, and it soon became increasingly
hard to tell where art was imitating life
and life was intimating art in Baltimore.
</p>
<p>
After the second season, O’Malley informed
Simon that the city wanted “to be
out of <i>The Wire</i> business,” while threatening
to refuse filming permits. O’Malley
was claiming to have reduced crime by
30 percent and demanded to know why
the show didn’t highlight the 1,000 more
treatment beds that he was funding. (As
far as the perception of Baltimore goes,
the city didn’t need an HBO series to generate
bad press: Dixon was indicted on 12
felony and misdemeanor counts less than
a year after the last episode aired, and
more recently Pugh was forced to resign
as mayor because of corruption charges.)
</p>
<p>
The Baltimore police got into the act
during filming as well, pulling over cast
and crew more than once after late-night
shoots for no other reason than driving
while Black. One of the people victimized
was Prince. After picking up 10 police
uniforms for the next day’s shoot,
he was pulled over for an alleged traffic
violation on his way to a small cast get-together
in Remington. When the police
searched him and then the trunk of the
car and found uniforms, they thought
they’d hit the jackpot, handcuffing and
hauling the wardrobe assistant off to
Central Booking. Even after Prince made
a phone call to his HBO supervisor, who
verified his story and came and grabbed
the uniforms, they impounded Prince's
car and kept him locked up overnight.
</p>
<p>
Still, Simon repeatedly tried explain
that <i>The Wire</i> wasn’t about Baltimore, per se, or designed to stick it to the city. “Give or take an inside
joke or two, these were stories relevant to any number of forgotten
places in post-industrial America,” he wrote in <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/down-to-the-wire/">an essay
in this magazine in 2008</a>. “The problems depicted are
profound, complex, and national.”
</p>
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<p class="text-center clan" style="color:#ffffff;"><b>BEHIND THE SCENES: THE WIRE COSTUME SUPERVISOR</b></p>
<h3 class="text-center gabriela-stencil-black" style="color:#ffffff;">DONA ADRIAN GIBSON</h3>

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<p>
<b>AFTER FASHION</b> school in Atlanta and
a union wardrobe gig in local Baltimore
theater, designer Dona Adrian Gibson
got her television break in <i>The Corner</i>,
which won a Primetime Emmy for
Outstanding Miniseries in 2000. That
led to a long-running job on <i>The Wire</i>,
where she rose to costume supervisor
for seasons 3-5, and steady work in
television and film ever since. From
<i>The Wire</i>, the Gwynn Oak native went
on to serve as costume supervisor for
such series as <i>Army Wives</i>, <i>Treme</i>, <i>The
Walking Dead</i>, and <i>She’s Gotta Have It</i>,
among other projects. More recently,
she served as costume designer for
<i>Justified: City Primeval</i>, directed by
Michael Dinner and Quentin Tarantino,
and <i>We Own This City</i>.
</p>
<p>
“I had read the book, <i>The Corner</i>,
by David Simon and Ed Burns, about a
year before getting hired and I really
wanted to work on the project and felt
like I was fortunate just to get hired
as part of the crew,” Gibson recalls.
“Then, the first day that I got there,
the background costume said to me,
literally in the first two hours after I
arrived, ‘If you want my job, you can
have it. I don’t want it.’ And that’s how
my career got started.”
</p>
<p>
In terms of creating wardrobe,
Gibson says, it’s necessary to envision
the character in their setting, as well
in context with their makeup, props,
and dialogue, etc. “I would say you can pretty much identify who a person
is when they walk into the room by
what they have on, in many ways,”
she says. “You know if they’re villainous,
if they’re not.” For <i>The Wire</i>,
with its massive ensemble—as many
as 70 characters overall, and as
many as 45-50 characters to outfit
in a single episode—the sheer logistics
of locating, buying, and making
wardrobe was a challenge. And when
a specific place—Baltimore in this
case—becomes a central character,
it brings other challenges, which are
generally fun to tackle, Gibson adds.
For example, Baltimore’s street fashion
changes much faster than, say,
trends at City Hall or the Clarence M.
Mitchell Jr. Courthouse, she notes.
</p>
<p>
“One year, all the young guys
are wearing the long white T-shirts.
There’s the story of the Air Force
One basketball sneakers that were
popular here and almost nowhere
else,” she recalls. “The oversized
sweat suits and jeans happened and
whatnot. It’s funny, because all that
has changed in Baltimore since <i>The
Wire</i>, but as far as the way political
people dress, that hasn’t really
changed that much. Maybe now
it will post-COVID? That’s potentially
interesting. Street fashion just
changes a lot more. It goes through
such a quicker evolution than the
political class or business class.”
</o>


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Prop joe’s: a pedestrian symbol faintly resembles a chalk outline in front of Prop Joe’s shop in highlandtown. Now a delicious-looking bistro, the location is surrounded by cuisines from all over central america and mexico along eastern avenue.
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<p>
<b>THAT SAID</b>, it’s impossible for anyone from here not to take a
parochial view of <i>The Wire</i>. More than an inside joke or two,
the show leaned into its Baltimore cred. Police commissioner
Ed Norris played a homicide detective. Still in the midst of the
show’s run, mind you—he admitted to misappropriating up
to $30,000 from police funds and was convicted of a felony
and fraud. Governor Bob Ehrlich, who was sued by <i>The Sun</i> in
2005 for prohibiting state employees from talking to two of
its journalists, took a turn as an Annapolis state trooper. Former
Mayor Schmoke got a bit part as the city’s health commissioner,
ironically warning the show’s Black mayor he would be
vilified as “the most dangerous man in America”—words once
hurled at Schmoke—if he went along with a plan to create a de
facto decriminalized drug zone in the city. Rev. Frank Reid III of Bethel A.M.E. basically played himself as a
politically influential West Baltimore pastor.
Columnist Michael Olesker and other journos
and ex-journos, including Simon’s wife, the
reporter-turned-author Laura Lippman, had
walk-on roles in <i>The Sun’s</i> newsroom in season
five. Two other ex-<i>Sun</i> newspapermen,
Rafael Alvarez and Bill Zorzi, were writers on
the series.
</p>

<p>
A lot of credit for <i>The Wire’s</i> Baltimore
bonafides has to go to <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/seeing-red/">Pat Moran</a>, a former
John Waters “Dreamlander” and an assistant
director on his 1972 cult classic, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/pink-flamingos-john-waters-divine-celebrates-50th-anniversary/"><i>Pink Flamingos</i></a>.
She cast the series, so it’s not surprising
some of the most indelible characters were
created by professional actors who are also
natives. Lawrence Gilliard Jr. played the conflicted
middle management dealer D’Angelo
Barksdale. Lance Reddick portrayed the ramrod-straight police colonel Cedric Daniels.
</p>
<p>
Robert Chew, who taught drama at the city’s
Arena Playhouse, starred as the colorful east
side entrepreneur-kingpin Prop Joe. And who
can forget “Ziggy” Sobotka, the weird, immature,
drug dealer-wannabe son of the stevedore
union leader, played by James Ransone.
All went to area high schools.
</p>
<p>
Then there are “Little Melvin” Williams
and Felicia “Snoop” Pearson, who are in a
class unto themselves. Williams was a heroin
and cocaine trafficker in Baltimore in the
1960s, ’70s, and early ’80s, and someone
<i>Wire</i> co-creator Ed Burns had pursued as a
Baltimore detective. Williams, who is credited
with helping quell the 1968 riots in West
Baltimore—such was his status at the time—served as part of the inspiration for the character
Avon Barksdale, <i>The Wire’s</i> notorious
west side kingpin. He played, however, a
charismatic pastor known as The Deacon in
the series. The tomboyish and fierce Pearson,
who grew up in terrible circumstances,
had been convicted of murder at 16. She was
discovered at a Baltimore club by Michael K.
Williams, the late actor who portrayed the
openly gay stickup man Omar Little, who invited
Pearson to the set. Her portrayal of the
nail-gun toting hitwoman, also known by her
real-life nickname Snoop, became one more
of the show’s unforgettable characters. Novelist
Stephen King called Pearson’s character
“perhaps the most terrifying female villain to
ever appear in a television series.”
</p>
<p>
Further below the surface are other uplifting,
surreal, and tragic links between
<i>The Wire</i>, real Baltimore, and Simon’s and
Burns’ work, <i>The Corner</i>. Famously President
Obama’s favorite character, Omar is partially
drawn from stickup artist Donnie Andrews,
who had a heroin addiction and made his living
robbing drug dealers. He eventually surrendered
himself to Burns for performing a
contract killing because it was against his
“code.” In prison, Andrews became an anti-gang
mentor to younger guys. Following his
release, which Simon and Burns had supported,
they introduced him to Fran Boyd, the
real-life drug-addicted mother portrayed in
<i>The Corner</i>, whom Andrews helped get clean
and married. (Although there are similarities
between Andrews and Omar, the gay aspect of
Omar’s character was borrowed from someone
called Billy Outlaw, another local stickup artist.) Meanwhile, Boyd’s real-life son, De’Andre McCullough, whose teenage struggles were the central
story of <i>The Corner</i>, played the assistant to hitman
Brother Mouzone in <i>The Wire</i>. Sharp, observant, and
funny—he once told Simon he’d helped him with his
research for <i>The Corner</i> because he looked “so out of
place that I felt sorry for you”—McCullough died of a
drug overdose in 2012. His father had died from an
overdose shortly before <i>The Corner</i> aired. At the time
of his overdose, McCullough was being sought on warrants
related to two armed robberies of pharmacies.
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2" style="background-color:#000000;">

<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
WORLD GOIN’ ONE WAY,
</br>
PEOPLE GOIN’ ANOTHER.
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.5rem; text-align:right; color:#ffffff;">
— POOT, THE WIRE
<i>THE WIRE</i>
</p>

</div>

<p>
The main character in <i>The Wire</i>, of course, is the
city itself, which, despite the controversies and anxiety
from the powers-that-be, generally embraced the
show. Seth Gilliam, who played the young hard-nosed
Det. Ellis Carver, said that filming on the streets of
Baltimore every day felt like making an independent
movie, in a good way, meaning residents often took
an interest and became part of the backdrop. The
physical locations were obvious to Baltimoreans—
the courtyard at the McCulloh Homes housing project,
where D’Angelo Barksdale managed the low-level
dope dealing from an iconic orange sofa, sits just off
Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, mere blocks (and a
world away) from downtown. The Port of Baltimore’s Seagirt Marine Terminal starred in season two as fictional
labor leader Frank Sobotka fights to get the harbor
channel dredged. (Sobotka, by the way, enlists the
services of a political insider named Bruce DiBiago,
clearly modeled on Bruce Bereano, the real-life lobbyist
once convicted of mail fraud, to garner support
in Annapolis.) The old Locust Point grain pier, which
Sobotka pushes to get reopened, got redeveloped
into the Silo Point luxury condominiums a year after
<i>The Wire</i> wrapped—a merging of fact and fiction that
underscores the opposing trajectories of Baltimore’s
working class and the city’s “Gold Coast” white collar
professionals. When it came to the rowhouses, vacant and otherwise, the Korean corner stores and storefront
Black churches, the dive bars, the slang and accents,
the cemeteries, and hundreds of other local references—Faidley’s crab cakes at Lexington Market and
Chaps Pit Beef on Pulaski Highway to name two—who
other than Baltimoreans could understand their true
significance? The actors and portrayals were so good,
sometimes Baltimoreans mistook those for the truth,
too. There was one time Andre Royo, who played the
heroin-addicted character Bubbles, was walking over
to the food service area from the set when someone
came up to him and said, “They’re giving out free testers,”
and handed him drugs. Royo called it his “Street
Oscar” moment.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The port of baltimore is one of the country’s busiest ports, and the southeast baltimore waterfront, cranes, and cargo boxes were the landscape in the wire's second season.
</h5>

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<p>
Lines between fact and fiction continued to blur.
The Ritz Cabaret, the South Broadway strip club—
which stood in for the drug dealer-owned money laundering
strip club Orlando's in <i>The Wire</i>—was seized by
the feds as the HBO series was being shot. The owner
of the Ritz was convicted of laundering suspected
drug money and hiring illegal immigrants as dancers.
</p>
<p>
Simon, however, emphasized the show was fiction,
comparing it to a Greek tragedy. But he never
convinced everyone in Baltimore because so many real people, crimes, and even real homicides are referenced,
if obliquely. For example, the killing of three-year-old James Smith III, who was shot while waiting
with his mother to get his hair cut at a Pigtown barbershop
in 1997, leaving the entire city in grief.
</p>
<p>
“David Simon isn’t fooling anybody,” well-respected
Councilman Kenneth Harris said in 2004. “<i>The
Wire</i> is more documentary than it is drama.”
</p>
<p>
In the end, both sides were probably right. <i>The
Wire</i> is documentary and drama. The part of the equation
that is troubling for others, is that the show is
also entertainment. “I never watched <i>The Wire</i>,” says
Ray Kelly, an ex-offender, longtime criminal justice
activist, and a founder of the No Boundaries Coalition,
which builds community across race, class, and
neighborhood in Central West Baltimore. “I wouldn’t
dare. I live two blocks from where some of that was
shot and watched them film that shit every night. Blatantly
imitating what they saw and recording it. Every
day. And then they pay actors to portray addicts. So,
no, I’ve never seen an episode of <i>The Wire</i>.”
</p>
<p>
Harris, a 45-year-old father of two, was killed during
an armed robbery outside the popular New Haven
Jazz Lounge in northeast Baltimore in 2008.
</p>
</div>
</div>

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<h3 style="color:#ffffff;">We Own This City</h3>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin" style="color:#ffffff;">
A Q&A WITH CRIME REPORTER
JUSTIN FENTON ON WATCHING HIS BOOK
ABOUT THE BPD’S CORRUPT GUN TRACE
TASK FORCE GET ADAPTED FOR HBO.
</h5>

</div>
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<p>
<b>BASED ON THE 2021</b> book by former <i>Sun</i>
now <i>Banner</i> reporter Justin Fenton, which
chronicled the crimes of the BPD’s infamous
Gun Trace Task Force, HBO’s six-episode
series <i>We Own This City</i> wrapped May 30.
Developed by David Simon and George
Pelecanos, and directed by Reinaldo Marcus
Green, the series brings the horrific corruption
within the Baltimore Police Department
to the screen, going back to <i>The Wire</i> era and
following the disastrous prosecution of the
drug war to the present day.
</p>

<p>
Former BPD homicide detective Ed
Burns and former <i>Sun</i> assistant city editor
Bill Zorzi—both <i>Wire</i> alum—joined Simon
and Pelecanos in the writers’ room for
<i>We Own This City</i>, along with <i>New York
Times</i> best-selling author D. Watkins. Also
returning from <i>The Wire</i> are numerous
actors, most notably Delaney Williams,
who portrays former police commissioner
Kevin Davis, and Jamie Hector, who portrays
former detective Sean Suiter, whose
controversial death, one day before he
was scheduled to testify in front of a grand
jury about police corruption, was ruled a
suicide. Baltimore native Josh Charles (<i>The
Good Wife</i>) plays former rogue GTTF officer
Daniel Hersl. Jon Bernthal (<i>The Walking
Dead</i>) is in the lead role as the brutal GTTF
leader Wayne Jenkins. Both Hersl and Jenkins,
among other Gun Trace Task Force officers,
remain incarcerated. Wunmi Mosaku
(<i>Lovecraft Country</i>) stars as a composite Department of Justice attorney who led the
investigation into the BPD that became the
police department’s current operating consent
decree with the DOJ.
</p>
<div class="picWrap4">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/TheWire_we-own-this-city.jpg"/>
<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>We Own this city extra.</center></h5>
</div>
<p>
<b>How close does the HBO series hew to
the reporting in your book?</b> There are an
awful lot of scenes that are word-for-word,
actual dialogue. Some of that is from wiretap
conversation, and [other dialogue] somebody
said to me in an interview, or it’s something
that was said at a press conference. Certainly,
there are other scenes that we know, generally,
what happened from different participants,
but we weren’t there in the room with
a microphone recording. And then, there are
other characters who are sort of a mashup of
different people...but it’s all rooted in real-life
events.
</p>
<p>
<b>The series goes back to the start of Wayne
Jenkins’ career in the early and mid-2000s.</b>
The show, to my delight, tracks with the book.
It does not just catch up with these guys in
2015, 2016, while they’re robbing people. It
jumps back to Jenkins and his career choice,
and back to 2003 when he’s a rookie—what
he’s being told to do and what he’s observing
in others about how the department works.
</p>
<p>
<b>David Simon had suggested that you write
a book based on your Gun Trace Task Force
reporting.</b> He follows what is going on in the
city and at some point I met him, probably in
2009. We’ve been in touch occasionally, but
yeah, he contacted me during the trial. I’m a
newspaper reporter. I’m trying to think about
what my next story is going to be, what my
week is going to be, and maybe how I can tell
this in a narrative format for the paper. He
said there’s interest from HBO [as the GTTF
crimes were unfolding]. I know George Pelecanos
was interested, and he said, you need to
write a book and we’ll option it.
</p>
<p>
<b>What do you think Baltimoreans will take
away?</b> I hope that Baltimoreans, who experienced
this [criminal behavior from the police
department], feel validated, and there’s some
perspective on how the police department
works and doesn’t work. Hopefully, it’s illuminating.
There are people who think this stuff
doesn’t happen or can’t happen or people are
lying [about being victimized by police]. You
know, we just need to support police without
any reservation. This is a look at what was
happening right under our noses, all the time.
</p>

<p> Read our full conversation with Fenton, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/we-own-this-city-david-simon-hbo-bring-corrupt-gun-trace-task-force-to-television/">here.</a></p>
</div>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Silo point: the renovated grain elevator is virtually unrecognizable. Silo point played an integral role in the wire’s season two, which focused on the city’s white working class.
</h5>

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<p>
<b>TWENTY YEARS AFTER</b> <i>The Wire’s</i> premiere, we have
a clearer view of the War on Drugs and its effect on
Baltimore. If Simon wanted his groundbreaking series
to be judged by the future, it has proven prescient—if
anything, it didn’t go far enough. And why has Baltimore
been so particularly victimized by the War on
Drugs? To put it plainly: Because Baltimore is a hyper-segregated,
majority-Black city, whose low-income,
redlined, under-resourced Black neighborhoods have
been both target and battleground of the 50-year war.
</p>

<p>
In her 2010 book, <i>The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration
in the Age of Colorblindness</i>, civil rights litigator
and law professor Michelle Alexander documented
how racism was always at the heart of the War on
Drugs. From her research, Alexander found that incarceration
rates have little correlation with crime
rates, which have fluctuated since Richard Nixon first
coined the term “the war on drugs” a half-century
ago. National crime rates were in fact at a low point in
1982 when Ronald Reagan first escalated the crusade.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The sun: the dark portals of the former baltimore sun’s building on calvert st., now ironically home to the bpd’s central district offices. In season five, the paper came under fire for writing about a fictional “serial killer” created by det. Jimmy mcnulty to boost homicide numbers.
</h5>

</div>
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<p>
Since the early 1970s, the incarcerated population
in the U.S. has quintupled, with two million people in
jail and prison today, far outpacing population growth
and crime. Although the U.S. has five percent of the
global population, it holds more than 20 percent of
the world’s prison population. It’s been driven by the
drug war’s focus on urban, lower-income communities
of color, longer and racially disproportionate
prison sentences—100 to 1 for crack versus powder
cocaine, for example—parole revocations for non-violent
drug offenses, and record police, prosecution,
and prison spending. Those factors have not only led
to the highest rate of incarceration in the world, but
also a grossly disproportionately rate of imprisonment
for Black men.
</p>
<p>
“It is no longer socially permissible to use race,
explicitly, as a justification for discrimination, exclusion,
and social contempt,” writes Alexander. Instead,
the U.S. utilizes the criminal justice system to label
Black and Brown people “criminals” and then “legally”
discriminates against ex-offenders in almost
all the ways it was once legal to discriminate against
African Americans prior to the civil rights reforms of
the 1960s. In a city that’s nearly two-thirds Black like
Baltimore, with thousands of returning citizens each
year, the practice is crippling for ex-offenders, but
also for our majority-Black communities as a whole.
“Once you’re labeled a felon, the old forms of discrimination—
employment discrimination, housing discrimination,
denial of the right to vote, denial of educational
opportunity, denial of food stamps and other
public benefits, and exclusion from jury service—are
suddenly legal,” Alexander adds. Once a convicted felon, “you have scarcely more rights, and arguably
less respect, than a Black man living in Alabama at
the height of Jim Crow.”
</p>
<p>
Nationally, one out of every three Black male
children born today can expect to go to prison in his
lifetime, according to the ACLU, as can one of every
six Latino boys—compared to one of every 17 white
boys. This is despite the fact that illicit drug use and
drug dealing are basically equal across ethnicities.
One study in Maryland found that while white people
comprised the majority of Marylanders in drug treatment,
African Americans represented 90 percent of
the state’s drug prisoners. Similarly, a 2020 ACLU
research report revealed that although Black people
represent a little more than 60 percent of Baltimore
City’s population, between 2018 and 2019, 96 percent
of all marijuana possession charges were filed against
Black people in the city.
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap2" style="background-color:#000000;">

<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
THEY FUCK UP, THEY GET
</br>
BEAT. WE FUCK UP. THEY
</br>
GIVE US PENSIONS.
</p>
<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.25rem; text-align:right; color:#ffffff;">
— DET. CARVER,
<i>THE WIRE</i>
</p>

</div>
<p>
Ultimately, the drug war destroyed what little trust
remained in Baltimore between the Black community
and the BPD, especially after the 1968 riot. In the
early and mid-1960s, following outrage over police
brutality—and a damning two-year investigation by
the International Association of Chiefs of Police—the
sitting Baltimore police commissioner was ousted.
His replacement, Donald Pomerleau, who had consulted
on the investigation, described the BPD at the
time as “the most corrupt and antiquated in the nation,
and had developed almost no positive relationship
with the city’s Negro community.” Two decades
before, there had been a massive uprising in the city
against police brutality after a white officer killed an
unarmed Black soldier on leave from Fort Meade, and
it wasn’t until the end of the 1950s that the police
department began to integrate.
</p>
<p>
The corruption and police brutality simply never ended.
In 1973, there were at least six different city, state, and
federal investigations into the police department. In January of the same year, in a brazen theft that would’ve made the GTTF officers in <i>We Own This City</i> blush, some 1,250 bags of heroin, worth an estimated $100,000, went missing from the Baltimore police department’s evidence control room. (Also
in the 1970s, Black officers founded the Vanguard Justice
Society, to represent their rights and interests, and help
Black officers move up the chain of command.) By 1980,
the NAACP had again called for a federal investigation into
police brutality, and it wasn’t until 1984 that then-Mayor
William Donald Schaefer appointed Bishop Robinson as
Baltimore’s first Black police commissioner.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, the 515-page outside report commissioned by
the city and released earlier this year, “Anatomy of the Gun
Trace Task Force Scandal: Its Origins, Causes, and Causes”—essentially the backstory of <i>We Own This City,</i> Simon’s current
HBO series about the BPD—makes it difficult to imagine a
golden age of Baltimore policing ever existed.
</p>
<p>
Jenny Egan, chief attorney in Baltimore’s Office of the
Public Defender, says improvements have been made in
the police department since the signing of the consent decree
with the Department of Justice in 2017. That the General
Assembly decriminalized small amounts of marijuana
in 2014, and that the overall number of arrests in the city
are way down, is significant, she says. There are miles to
go, however.
</p>
<p>
“There is so much left to be done if you look at that report,
and no one in the City Council or state legislature has talked
about addressing the rampant problems of false testimony by
police, that police officers regularly and routinely lie, according
to the report,” says Egan. “Their whole job is to testify under
oath and to tell the truth right off. I don’t understand how
any of those arrests or convictions are viewed as legitimate by
any stakeholder in the system, given the report.”
</p>
<p>
So, yes, 20 years after <i>The Wire</i> launched, Simon’s premonition
of a darker future for the city has proven all too true. In
Baltimore, the drug war and mass incarceration became something
akin to a jackhammer pounding away at our de facto segregated
and under-served Black neighborhoods. ("Simon has
historically framed the drug war as a war on the underclass,
not as intentionally racist policy, while readily recognizing its
disproportionate impact. In a 2021 tweet, he acknowledged:
“The drug war is racist in its origin, its execution, its maintenance
and its intent and purpose.”)
</p>
<p>
Per capita homicides in the city, which jumped after the
death of Freddie Gray from injuries sustained in police custody
and the subsequent uprising, have risen from 37 per 100,000
in 2002 to more than 57 per 100,000 today—the second highest
in the country behind St. Louis. Drug and alcohol-intoxication
deaths, which were falling during <i>The Wire’s</i> run, have exploded
from 152 in 2008 to more than 1,000 last year, driven
by the prescription opioid epidemic and the poisoning of the
heroin supply by the deadly synthetic drug fentanyl.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, despite the dramatic reduction in arrests,
there remains an extraordinarily high number of people still
in prison, Egan notes, including from the O’Malley years. At
the same time, overdose deaths don’t receive anything like
the attention given to gun violence, even though drugs are a
potentially preventable public health crisis. “When we think
about overdose deaths versus murders today, which they outnumber
3-1 in the city, we don’t seem to get the same sort of
‘crisis’ headlines,” she says. “Isn’t this what a War on Drugs
was supposed to be about?”
</p>
<p>
In fact, inequality in the historically segregated areas of
the city that Morgan State University public health professor
Lawrence Brown coined the “White L” and the “Black Butterfly”
has significantly widened over the past 20 years.
</p>
<p>
The city’s overall poverty rate has remained consistent
over the past two decades, at just over 20 percent. But only because
poverty has been falling in gentrifying, formerly working-class white neighborhoods as fast as it’s been climbing in
the many Black neighborhoods in Baltimore. In the “White L,”
poverty fell dramatically from 2000 to 2014-18, in neighborhoods
including Canton (from 11.5 percent to 4.3 percent),
Woodberry (13.6 to 5.6), and Locust Point (9 to 4.1).
</p>
<p>
Over the same period in the “Black Butterfly,” poverty shot
up in Johnston Square (19.6 to 49.1 percent), Harlem Park (34
to 50.6), and Sandtown-Winchester (43.3 to 50.8).
</p>
<p>
“We’ve started to coin the phrase ‘enduring divergence,’”
says <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/gamechangers/seema-d-iyer-baltimore-neighborhood-indicators-alliance-vital-signs-data-report/">Seema Iyer</a>, who oversees the Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators
Alliance at The University of Baltimore’s Jacob France
Institute. “Some neighborhoods are getting everything, and
some neighborhoods are continuing to atrophy month after
month. That becomes self-reinforcing. The neighborhoods
that grew in population and the neighborhoods that lost population
between 2010 and 2020 are basically the same neighborhoods
that grew and lost population between 2000 and
2010. It’s not random. There is a clear pattern.”
</p>
<p>
Today, the themes of a series like <i>The Wire</i> would no doubt
be different. Arrests in Baltimore, which peaked at 114,071
in 2003, had fallen by 56 percent to 50,314 by 2014—at least
in some part due to a 2006 lawsuit brought by the ACLU and
NAACP. In 2019, the last pre-COVID year, the number was
down to 20,100, and in 2020, to 14,022.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Edward tilghman middle school in season four played off the name of the real tench tilghman elementary/ middle school,
Which sits almost on the edge of patterson park.
</h5>

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<p>
Police violence, in the age of smartphone videos and the
Black Lives Matter movement, would likely be front and center.
Earlier this year, Baltimore police shot and killed an unarmed 18-year-old driver named Donnell Rochester
who was wanted on outstanding warrants. Wrongful
convictions would also likely be front and center. Several
real-life detectives from <i>Homicide</i> and <i>The Wire</i>
have seen decades-old cases fall apart, as a <i>New York
magazine</i> article recently documented. Since 1989,
25 men convicted of murder in the city have been exonerated,
according to the National Registry of Exonerations.
In 22 of those cases, official misconduct was
present. “The history of BPD officers and detectives
withholding exculpatory evidence from the accused,
coercing and threatening witnesses, fabricating evidence,
and intentionally failing to conduct meaningful
investigations is decades long,” wrote attorneys
for Clarence Shipley, a Baltimore man who spent a
quarter of century in prison for a murder he was exonerated
of in 2018.
</p>
<p>
Safe consumption sites for hard drugs to reduce
overdose deaths might replace the “Hamsterdam”
decriminalized zone of <i>The Wire</i>. The futility of the
BPD’s drug corner “street rips” might switch to the
current focus on illegal gun possession. The increase
in Hispanic immigration and subsequent ICE policing
was something Simon said he would’ve addressed
with the next season of <i>The Wire</i>, had he been given
six seasons. City Hall corruption, the influence of
developers—i.e. the Port Covington tax break—those
things would just need an update.
</p>
<p>
Having grown up in West Baltimore in the ’70s and
’80s, Lawrence Gilliard Jr. remembers what it was like
coming back to the city to film <i>The Wire</i> in his role
as D’Angelo Barksdale. “All the communities where
we shot, when I was a kid, were vibrant communities
with kids playing and neighborhoods flourishing,”
Gilliard recalls. “We lived at Franklin Square,
although I played Little League football for the Lexington
Terrace squad, and I remember traveling to
the McCulloh Homes neighborhood to play. They all
had recreation centers, and kids were out in the street
game playing in the summertime.”
</p>
<p>
After having lived in New York for many years,
the city looked vastly different when he returned to
shoot the show. “I would hear from my family and my
younger siblings, who were still in Baltimore, about
how things were changing over the years. I’d go back
to my neighborhood, too, and I could see it declining.
</p>
<p>
“The way drugs were pumped into the communities,
that played a big part of breaking down communities,
breaking down working households,” Gilliard
continues. “But the War on Drugs, which broke down
communities further, it was a false war, in my opinion.
That was a made-up thing.”
</p>
</div>
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<h2 class="text-center gabriela-stencil-black" style="color:#ffffff;">MICHAEL K. WILLIAMS</h2>
<h3 class="text-center" style="color:#ffffff;">(1966-2021)</h3>

<img decoding="async" class="singlePic"  style="dislplay: block; padding-bottom:1rem; padding-top:1rem;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/TheWire_Michael_K_Williams.jpg"/>



<h5 class="captionVideo thin" style="color:#ffffff;">Photography by Jesse Dittmar</h5>

<p>
<b>WHEN THE BELOVED</b> actor Michael K. Williams died of an
overdose last September, the loss was deeply felt among
fans across the country, but especially in Brooklyn, where
he was born, and in Baltimore, which he considered a second
home. And, of course, the loss was acutely felt among
his <i>Wire</i> family. Williams worked mostly as a dancer until
a bar fight on his 25th birthday left him with a long,
distinctive facial scar—the result of being slashed with
a razor—that changed the course of his career. He soon
was being asked to audition for “thug roles,” he told NPR,
eventually landing the role of Omar Little, the fiercely
loyal, openly gay, heavily armed robber of drug dealers—the most memorable character in what many consider the
greatest television show ever.
</p>
<div class="QuoteWrap">

<p class="clan" style="font-size:1.8rem; color:#ffffff;">
“AN IMMENSELY
TALENTED MAN...
PORTRAYING THE
LIVES OF THOSE
WHOSE HUMANITY
IS SELDOM ELEVATED
UNTIL HE SINGS
THEIR TRUTH.”
</p>

</div>
<p>
“He was fearless, he was outspoken. He suffered not even a little bit from
social acceptability. He didn’t care what anyone thought about him, except the
ones he loved,” Williams said of Omar in a 2020 <i>GQ</i>interview. “And he had a
huge moral compass, and he wasn’t afraid to express it. I was the complete polar
opposite. I was frightened a lot of times growing up. I had a very low self-esteem
and a huge need to be accepted. The only thing I knew that I shared with Omar
was his sensitivity and his ability to love, and his ability to love deep. I knew that
I had that in me.”
</p>
<p>
After <i>The Wire</i>, Williams’ star kept rising despite recurrent troubles with
drug addiction that at times had also been a problem during his breakthrough
portrayal of Omar. He went on to roles in numerous award-winning television
shows and films, including the HBO biopic <i>Bessie</i>, the Netflix series <i>When
They See Us</i>, and most notably, the long-running HBO series <i>Boardwalk Empire,</i>
where he starred as Chalky White. He earned five Emmy nominations before
his death at 54.
</p>
<p>
“The depth of my love for this brother, can only be matched by the depth of
my pain learning of his loss,” Wendell Pierce, who played Det. “Bunk” Moreland
in <i>The Wire</i>, posted on Twitter after Williams’ death. “An immensely talented
man with the ability to give voice to the human condition portraying the lives of
those whose humanity is seldom elevated until he sings their truth.”
</o>


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</div></div></div></div>
</div>
<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/the-wire-twenty-years-later/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>John Oliver Features Catherine Pugh Scandal on Last Week Tonight</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/john-oliver-features-catherine-pugh-scandal-on-last-week-tonight/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Evan Greenberg]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Apr 2019 10:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catherine Pugh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Healthy Holly]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Oliver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Last Week Tonight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[University of Maryland Medical System]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=25210</guid>

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			<p>The <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/catherine-pugh-resigns-university-maryland-board-book-controversy">scandal surrounding Mayor Catherine Pugh</a> and her “Healthy Holly” children’s books gained more national attention last night.</p>
<p>A segment on HBO’s <em>Last Week Tonight with John Oliver</em> devoted almost five minutes to breaking down the events of the past week surrounding the mayor and <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/catherine-pugh-resigns-university-maryland-board-book-controversy">money she received </a>from the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS) as part of book deals over the past several years.</p>
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<p>Oliver poked fun at the content of the books and Pugh’s misspelling of one of her main character’s names. He also lampooned a press conference Pugh gave in which she discussed her idea for a Healthy Holly kids’ clothing line. </p>
<p>Watch the segment below, where Oliver calls the scandal “truly remarkable.” (As a warning, there is some explicit language.)</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/john-oliver-features-catherine-pugh-scandal-on-last-week-tonight/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>What’s Next for The Case Against Adnan Syed?</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/whats-next-for-the-case-against-adnan-syed/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christine Jackson]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Apr 2019 14:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adnan Syed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[amy berg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[documentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hae Min Lee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ivan Bates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Justin Brow]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marc Steiner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rabia Chaudry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the case against adnan syed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[true crime]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=25248</guid>

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			<p>The latest chapter in the saga of the murder of Hae Min Lee and conviction of Adnan Syed for the crime came to a close last night with the finale of HBO’s <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/case-against-adnan-syed-documentary-hbo-amy-berg" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><em>The Case Against Adnan Syed</em>, which director Amy Berg and her team worked on for three-and-a-half years</a>.</p>
<p>Through interviews, research, and a team of private investigators and experts, Berg has constructed a solid argument for Syed getting a new trial, if not his innocence. Before the final episode, <a href="https://www.hbo.com/the-case-against-adnan-syed/part-4" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">“Time is the Killer,”</a> aired on HBO, the Landmark Theatre in Harbor East hosted a premiere of the finale featuring a panel discussion with Berg, attorney C. Justin Brown, and former Baltimore City prosecutor Ivan Bates, moderated by Marc Steiner.</p>
<p>For those attempting to keep track of the twists and turns of a case that has now stretched across 20 years, here’s some of the key points we learned from the finale and post-show panel. Many, many spoilers ahead.</p>
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<h5>The fingerprints<br />
</h5>
<p>Fingerprints left on Hae Min Lee’s car did not match Syed, or anyone else whose prints are in the system. This means whoever they belong to has never been booked by law enforcement.</p>
<h5>The autopsy</h5>
<p>Fulton County, Georgia, medical examiner Jan Gorniak examined the autopsy report and other details regarding Lee’s body and posited that she may have been somewhere other than Leakin Park for eight to 12 hours before she was buried. This change in the timeline is based primarily on a phenomenon called “lividity” during which blood settles in the body differently depending on how it is positioned.</p>
<h5>Jay Wilds’ testimony<br />
</h5>
<p>Wilds declined to be interviewed for <em>The Case Against Adnan Syed</em>, but according to Berg, when they spoke he discussed several points that contradict his previous statements (Wilds has contradicted himself many times before), including that the police coached him to say that he first saw Lee’s body in the parking lot of Best Buy and that Syed had asked him to provide 10 pounds of marijuana, which Syed then allegedly used to blackmail Wilds into helping bury Lee’s body.</p>
<h5>Hae Min Lee’s car</h5>
<p>Turf physiologist Erik Ervin’s testing and analysis of the grassy area where Lee’s car was parked was not conclusive. But Ervin did state that, based on the freshness of detritus on the tires and the turf below it, he believed the car had been there for a week at most. This hypothesis is supported by interviews private investigators hired by Berg conducted with a longtime resident of the area where the car was parked.</p>
<h5>What comes next<br />
</h5>
<p>The series ends with the March 8 ruling in the Maryland Court of Appeals that reinstated Syed’s conviction, meaning that his hopes for a new trial are on hold for the moment. But this is not the end of Syed’s legal fight.</p>
<p>“Other courts have found ineffective assistance of counsel when an attorney fails to contact an alibi witness who was neutral and who provided an alibi for the time of the murder. So it was absolutely stunning to us that Maryland is now the outlier on this issue. We did not see that coming,” said Justin Brown following the March 28 premiere at the Landmark. </p>
<p>When asked where completing the series has left her, Berg also stated her surprise over the ruling. “I mean, we expected to be in a different place tonight, so it&#8217;s hard to kind of imagine,” said Berg. “This turn kind of casts a dark light on the story. So, we’re not done obviously.”</p>
<p>The same day the finale premiered in Harbor East, the results of DNA tests mentioned in the film were also released. Several pieces of evidence previously went untested, partially due to concerns from the defense team that Syed’s DNA could be present Lee’s car or on her person because they had remained friends after their breakup. “If anyone has been holding it back, it has been me, because I have been concerned that it could potentially be misinterpreted,” said Brown. “But finally an opportunity arose to do it.” None of the recovered evidence contained DNA matching Syed’s.</p>
<p>Brown said that the team would go as far as the Supreme Court to try to get Syed his new trial and was met with a roar of applause from the packed theater, which included the filmmakers, Syed’s legal team, Rabia Chaudry, Syed’s friends and family, and many of those interviewed for the documentary series. Brown followed with another promise.</p>
<p>“If the Supreme Court doesn’t hear it, then we&#8217;ll try to go to federal court, and if the federal court doesn&#8217;t hear it, we’ll go back to Baltimore City Circuit Court, and we’ll keep going,” he said. “As long as we have support, as long as we believe in Adnan and we believe in his innocence, there’s no reason we’re going to stop.”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/whats-next-for-the-case-against-adnan-syed/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Director Discusses Adnan Syed Documentary Coming to HBO</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/case-against-adnan-syed-documentary-hbo-amy-berg/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christine Jackson]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2019 10:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adnan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adnan Syed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[amy berg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hae Min Lee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rabia Chaudry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Serial]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the case against adnan syed]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=25283</guid>

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			<p>Almost exactly 20 years ago, Hae Min Lee’s body was found in Leakin Park on a sunny February day, and the details of how she ended up there still remain unclear. It’s a case that was first made famous by <em><a href="https://serialpodcast.org/season-one" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Serial</a> </em>and continues to fuel podcasts, Reddit threads, and groups of armchair sleuths across the world.</p>
<p>Adnan Syed was convicted of first degree murder, robbery, kidnapping, and false imprisonment in 2000 and sentenced to life imprisonment plus 30 years for the crimes. But there are many who say the case was, at best, mishandled and, at worst, a possible wrongful conviction. The case is <a href="https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2018/11/29/adnan-syed-subject-serial-face-marylands-top-court/2146961002/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">currently being considered by the Maryland Court of Appeals</a>, but the latest development in <em>The State of Maryland v. Adnan Syed</em> comes not from the courtroom, but from HBO.</p>
<p>The new documentary series <em><a href="https://www.hbo.com/documentaries/the-case-against-adnan-syed" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Case Against Adnan Syed</a>, </em>set to premiere March 10 and directed by Academy Award nominee Amy Berg, both revisits the sources those following the case have come to know (Rabia Chaudry, Asia McClain, Kristi Vincent) and explores new information and developments in the case, such as cell phone record inaccuracies and unexplored leads. Perhaps its greatest strength is the complete picture it paints of many lives impacted by the case, including the one often lost in discussion of the new developments: Lee herself. Berg has taken great care to bring Hae Min Lee’s voice into the story, using her journal and animation to make Lee feel present in her own story, even though she can no longer speak for herself.</p>
<p>We spoke with Berg about revisiting the case, finding balance in the story, and where she would like Syed’s case to go from here.</p>
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<p><strong>This is a case so many people are invested in and familiar with. Why did you want to add your voice to the conversation?<br /></strong>I was approached by Working Title Films, and they had optioned the rights to <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Adnans-Story-Search-Justice-Serial/dp/1250087104" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Rabia Chaudry’s book.</a> I had listened to the podcast and was really interested in knowing more. It’s an unsatisfying case in a lot of ways, and I wanted to dig in and see what else I could figure out. I also thought there was a great need for a visual depiction of this story, because it was all in audio online. Baltimore is such a unique place and there was really a lot to dig into visually for me.</p>
<p><strong>The series feels different than other true crime documentaries I’ve watched in that the victim, Hae Min Lee, feels very present. Was there an intention to give her more of a voice?<br /></strong>There’s a balance that we need to comprehend, especially in documentary in true crime cases, because there are two sides to the story. There’s a family on both sides that I want to respect. When I started speaking to Hae Min Lee’s friends, and when we spoke to her family’s representative, I realized there was so much more to Hae than what I had known previously. And I was lucky enough to have her journal from the original trial case file. I just wanted to make sure she had a voice, because obviously if there was an injustice in Baltimore, Hae Min Lee would have wanted the truth to come out as well just based on the way her friends described her and who she was. </p>
<p>It would be nice if there was a way to find closure for both sides of this family, of this story. I’m sure that there was a certain status of closure in 2000 for Hae’s family. But I’m sure that the more issues that keep coming up, it probably creates more pain for them. It’s difficult, but if there was a wrongful conviction, it has to come out. The case that was out forth doesn&#8217;t fit the evidence that was presented. So there’s a problem to begin with.</p>
<p><strong>One of the ways you do that is through animation of some of her diary entries and experiences. Can you tell me a little about how those scenes came to be?<br /></strong>I had recently seen this film <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3172532/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><em>The Diary of a Teenage Girl</em></a> and I was really moved by the animations in that film. So when I started thinking about how to bring Hae to life, I reached out to the woman who did the animations for that film and found this incredible partner in telling this story. She stayed on the project for three and a half years with me, and we really created a great narrative for Hae together.</p>
<p><strong>You’re dealing with a story that’s 20 years in the making and one that has been analyzed by so many people. How did you begin when crafting your own version?<br /></strong>We began in November 2015, and I started with the case file and the state’s case to convict Adnan Syed, as well as the wealth of resources I was able to establish with both friends of Hae and Adnan. I just started with that and let the story expand from there. We brought in some private investigators to help us when we had a strong comprehension of the case and elaborated from there, but I wanted to keep it true to the people who know it.</p>
<p><strong>How did you go about sourcing the series and gathering some of these new voices?<br /></strong>We started with the case and the people closest to Adnan and Hae, and then we tracked the current day events starting from the [post-conviction relief] hearing to the most recent appeal. And then our investigation led us to people who were new to this case, to people who maybe heard <em>Serial </em>or heard about the case and knew someone later in life. So we did have access to new voices in the film.</p>
<p><strong>Was there a part of your investigation that really surprised you?<br /></strong>I think the true travesty in this three-and-a-half-year journey that I took, and I guess it’s very similar with many other cases where there might be a wrongful conviction, is the absence of the actual prosecutors and detectives that tried the case originally. I don’t understand. Prosecutors are supposed to be seeking justice, and I don’t understand this lack of interest in trying to find the truth. I think it’s really unfortunate. Maybe it’s not that surprising, but I think it’s wrong.</p>
<p><strong>Why do you think people have remained so interested in this case?<br /></strong>The case leaves you with so many questions. It’s not satisfying in that sense. It didn’t feel like the detectives or the case did a thorough deep dive into this murder to see what really happened. And things just don’t line up. And when things don’t line up, you want to understand what really happened.</p>
<p><strong>Is that the goal of </strong><strong><em>The Case Against Adnan Syed</em></strong><strong>, to understand how this all happened?<br /></strong>A beautiful young woman was murdered. She left school and was never seen or heard from again. So understanding and hopefully putting closure to this whole story for many people would be very satisfying. But you know, I’m not sure that will ever happen.</p>
<p><strong>In an ideal world, what happens next in this case? <br /></strong>Well, in an ideal world, Adnan Syed would get a new trial. He’s won a new trial twice now in two courts. But my fear is that that will never happen and the film will become the trial that he didn&#8217;t ever receive. So that’s the kind of reality of it. But it would be nice if he could get a new trial so that he could actually get exonerated if the case goes that direction. Because with the evidence that is available to the public, there just isn’t enough evidence to convict somebody today.</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/case-against-adnan-syed-documentary-hbo-amy-berg/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>&#8216;The Case Against Adnan Syed&#8217; comes to HBO</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/the-case-against-adnan-syed-comes-to-hbo/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Christine Jackson]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2018 12:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Adnan Syed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[documentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rabia Chaudry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sarah Koenig]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Serial]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=27219</guid>

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			<p>HBO is teaming up with Sky for new documentary series <em>The Case Against Adnan Syed,</em> which will revisit the 1999 murder of Baltimore County teen Hae Min Lee and the trial of her ex-boyfriend, Adnan Syed. </p>
<p>Whether or not Syed committed the crime has been a topic of public debate since Sarah Koenig launched the <a href="{entry:13716:url}">hit podcast <em>Serial</em></a><em>, </em>which chronicled the story of the murder and trial, in 2014. Syed was convicted in 2000 and sentenced to life in prison. However, The Maryland Court of Special Appeals ruled in March that Syed&#8217;s attorney failed to call a key alibi witness and ordered that his conviction be thrown out. Prosecutors are now asking the Maryland Court of Appeals to reverse the lower court&#8217;s ruling, and it could be months before a decision is made as to whether the conviction will stand or Syed will receive a new trial.</p>
<p>Throughout his trial and during his imprisonment, attorney and family-friend <a href="{entry:31832:url}"></a><a href="{entry:33620:url}">Rabia Chaudry</a> has remained a staunch supporter of Syed. It was Chaudry who originally brought the story to Koenig, and it seems she&#8217;s on board with director Amy Berg&#8217;s new look at the case.</p>
<p>&#8220;There are no coincidences: it was  Amy Berg&#8217;s documentary <em>West Of Memphis</em> that I watched one night on Netflix, turned off the TV &amp; got online to search for a reporter to investigate Adnan&#8217;s case,&#8221; Chaudry tweeted after the HBO announcement was made. &#8220;I found that reporter same night, Sarah Koenig. Now Amy is directing this series.&#8221;</p>
<p>Berg is also known for her 2006 documentary <em>Deliver Us from Evil</em>, about sex abuse cases in the Catholic Church, which was nominated for an Academy Award.</p>
<p>In production since 2015, the documentary series claims to present &#8220;new discoveries, as well as groundbreaking revelations that challenge the state&#8217;s case&#8221; and will feature exclusive access to Syed and his family, the defense team, friends and teachers of Syed and Lee, and Baltimore law enforcement per HBO. It will also feature original music from Nick Cave and Warren Ellis.</p>
<p>The series&#8217; air date has not yet been released.</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/the-case-against-adnan-syed-comes-to-hbo/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Book Reviews: May 2018</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/book-reviews-all-the-pieces-matter-the-wire-musical-maryland/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 May 2018 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Billie Holiday]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eubie Blake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peabody Institute]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
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			<h4><em>All the Pieces Matter: The Inside Story of The Wire</em></h4>
<p>Jonathan Abrams (Crown Publishing Group)</p>
<p>In the first season of <em>The Wire</em>, methodical veteran detective Lester Freamon (Clarke Peters) tells a young cop he is mentoring that in an investigation “all the pieces matter.” Apply the same to Jonathan Abrams’ collection of oral histories behind the groundbreaking show’s unflinching depiction of inner-city America and the war on drugs. The firsthand accounts from co-creators David Simon and Ed Burns, as well as the actors, directors, writers, and HBO brass, are not to be missed by fans of the show.</p>

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			<h4><em>Musical Maryland</em></h4>
<p>David K. Hildebrand and Elizabeth M. Schaaf  (Johns Hopkins University Press)</p>
<p>“O we’re full of life, fun, and jollity . . . we’re all crazy here in Baltimore.” Such is a song verse to celebrate the laying of the first stone of the B&amp;O Railroad. You might find yourself singing along as you flip through Musical Maryland, a survey of the musical heritage of the Old Line State, spanning some 300 years in time, up to the late 20th century. If you read music, even better. The book is peppered with images: old-timey photographs (like The Peabody Orchestra rehearsing in Peabody Concert Hall circa 1880), colorful and beautifully drawn covers for musical scores, and, yes, small snippets of sheet music. From slave songs to the legendary stories of Eubie Blake and Billie Holiday, from the Baltimore Opera Society (in existence long before the Baltimore Rock Opera Society) to the Baltimore Orioles festival marches, and, of course, our country’s national anthem—this book is thorough and makes a great addition to any music lover’s bookshelf. And though it’s the story of our music, the music is a story of ourselves, Marylanders—sailors, artists, activists, and dreamers.</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/book-reviews-all-the-pieces-matter-the-wire-musical-maryland/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>New HBO Documentary Chronicles the Baltimore Uprising</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/new-hbo-documentary-chronicles-the-baltimore-uprising/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michelle Evans]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Oct 2017 15:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Rising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Uprising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[documentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freddie Gray]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin Davis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kwame Rose]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mikayla Gilliam-Price]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sonja Sohn]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=28509</guid>

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			<p>Most notably known as Detective Kima Greggs on HBO’s hit series <em>The Wire</em>, Sonja Sohn couldn’t leave Baltimore behind when the show ended in 2008. Her deep connection to the community led her to begin her nonprofit, <a href="http://rewired4change.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">reWIRED For Change</a> in 2009 to help at risk youth and families and now she’s poised to debut her documentary <em><a href="https://www.hbo.com/documentaries/baltimore-rising" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Baltimore Rising</a> </em>on HBO on November 20.</p>
<p>The 90-minute documentary follows eight local figures—activists Kwame Rose, Dayvon Love, Adam Jackson, Makayla Gilliam-Price, community leader Genard “Shadow” Barr, Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, Lt. Colonel Melvin Russell, and police detective Dawnyell Taylor—in the aftermath of the April 2015 riots following the death of Freddie Gray in police custody.   </p>
<p>Filming for <em>Baltimore Rising </em>began in September 2015 and chronicles everything from the first day of trials for the officers charged in Freddie Gray’s death to the release of the Department of Justice’s scathing report of the Baltimore Police Department a year later.</p>
<p>In April 2015, Sohn was in Los Angeles working on a project when she heard what was happening in Baltimore. She wasted no time getting back to the place that held a special place in her heart to help pick up the pieces in any way she could.</p>
<p>“I was moved just like everybody else in the middle of everything happening,” she said. “Any time I can find myself in a position to be useful, I try to do so.”</p>
<p>She met with a few local activists and began discussing the possibility of creating a documentary that would provide an in-depth look into the work being done in the community. Just four months later, Sohn pitched the idea to HBO, and the rest is history.</p>
<p>“I really wanted to highlight the indomitable spirit and intelligence of the Baltimore grassroots community,” Sohn told <em>Baltimore</em>. “You don’t really see all the work that goes into the change they are trying to make—I wanted to make sure the world could see that.”</p>
<p>Rose is a central figure of the documentary, which we got to preview in an advanced screener, following him from his first arrest through his trials and his relationship with his family. Viewers will also get to know young activist Gilliam-Price, who struggles with what her future should look like. Another memorable scene is Davis addressing a room full of community leaders to combat the recent violence as a result of the riots. (Noticeably absent in the documentary is any mention of former BPD Commissioner Anthony Batts). </p>
<p>“There’s the artist activist, there’s the policy activist, there’s the protester, and there’s the police all trying to fight for change,” Sohn said. “That’s the story we wanted to tell—a more detailed story about how we got here. The Freddie Gray situation is a part of that, but we all understand that it was a part of something even bigger.”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/new-hbo-documentary-chronicles-the-baltimore-uprising/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>David Simon Discusses New HBO Series The Deuce</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/david-simon-discusses-new-hbo-series-the-deuce/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michelle Evans]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2017 16:23:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George Pelecanos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Franco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maggie Gyllenhaal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Deuce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=28845</guid>

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			<p>When we think of pivotal shows like <em>The Wire </em>and <em>Homicide: Life on the Streets,</em> only two things come to mind: Baltimore City and David Simon. Now the prolific writer and director is back with another HBO series—this time diving into the origins of prostitution and pornography in 1970s New York City.</p>
<p>In anticipation of the September 10 premiere of <em><a href="http://www.hbo.com/the-deuce" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Deuce</a></em>, we talk to Simon about his creative process, addressing misogyny, and what he’s working on next.</p>
<p><b>How did you come up with the concept for <em>The Deuce</em>?<br />
</b>This one was unique. We didn’t really go looking for this one—it came to us. A fellow named Marc Johnson, location person on <em>Treme</em>, had been talking to this guy who had been in a mob front, and his family had been involved with a lot of stuff on 42nd Street (nicknamed the Deuce), including the rise of the sex industry.</p>
<p>He kept saying, ‘You gotta talk to this guy. The whole world of 42nd Street when this thing blew up, it’s crazy. The characters are amazing, the story is amazing, you’ve gotta talk to him.’</p>
<p>Finally, [writer] George Pelecanos and I meet this fellow. After about two or three hours, the guy’s stories were so tragic, and comedic, and human. It opens up a world I hadn’t really thought about. George felt the same way, so we looked at each other and said, ‘Man, we’re going to have to do a porn show.’</p>

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			<p><strong>Your background in journalism and love of research is evident in each of your projects. Take us through the process of making the show authentic.<br /></strong>We did the usual thing: A lot of reading, and we walked whatever ground was left. There’s very little left at Times Square obviously, it’s all been cleaned up by the city.</p>
<p>We started to talk to other people who were survivors of that time who could relate and also got in touch with people who could be great consultants. We started to talk to people at length in the process of developing a show.</p>
<p><strong>How were you able to write a series about the layers of the sex industry without running the risk of being too risqué?<br /></strong>Well that’s the trick. That’s the real guts of the struggle. It can’t be prurient, you can’t use porn to tell a story about porn, or you’re indulging in the same thing you set out to discuss and critique.</p>
<p>At the same time, it can’t be puritan. If we only imply things and don’t address them—given that the dynamic here is misogyny—eventually you find yourself making <em>Pretty Woman</em> or something like that. So in some ways you have to be blunt, but the trick is to be blunt in such a way that you’re not indulging yourself or any audience coming there looking to be titillated. You basically try to stay on a fence of prurient and puritan, and not fall off either side.</p>
<p><strong>You say that the dynamic is misogyny. How were you able to find that balance between the men and women portrayed?<br /></strong>We were very careful on this show and very willful about staffing it with women throughout. Nina Noble, executive producer, was involved in every creative element.</p>
<p>Maggie Gyllenhaal is acting, but became a producer for that very reason. She wanted to have input in what we were building here.   </p>
<p>Four of the eight episodes had female directors, including the pilot and the season finale—they were directed by Michelle MacLaren, so she set the tone. This could not be the boys’ version of what the sex industry on the streets was, that would be a recipe for disaster. We were very careful about opening this thing up so that it was a dialectic between men and women.</p>
<p><strong>What can viewers expect from this pilot episode?<br /></strong>You are arriving in the midtown of New York. The 42nd Street area has always been—going back to the time of Mayor Jimmy Walker and earlier—a little bit dicey, a little bit sexualized, there’s always been a bit of sex trade there.</p>
<p>In the early ‘70s, the country hit a bit of a sexual revolution and came to this moment where what was furtive—what was in a brown paper bag, what was under the counter—was suddenly allowed to be out in the open and a completely legitimized industry </p>
<p>These people that we’re visiting in the early ’70s in the pilot are the pioneers.</p>
<p>Some of these people came from the mob, because that’s who financed it, the New York Cosa Nostra families. Some of them came from the sex trade on the street, which was already vibrant in places like Hell’s Kitchen and around 42nd Street and 8th Avenue.   </p>
<p><strong>Because this series is loosely based on true events, was there less room for re-writes and ad-libbing?<br /></strong>The way it works on our shows is we’re looking for people to stay on book. There’s always a writer on set to consult the director and the actor. So there are changes, but they’re usually organic to how the scene is blocked. Every now and then, an actor or director will think of a great line, or someone will say something late in the scene while the camera is still running, and we’ll look at it and go, ‘Yes, that’s better.’ Just as often we’ll say, ‘No, no, no. Go back to the page.’ We were really telling a story that was delivered to us intact.</p>
<p><strong>Do you have enough source material to go beyond one season of the series?<br /></strong>Three seasons actually. The first one is set in 1971. If we were renewed, we would come back in the late ’70s. Then this storyline finishes in the mid-1980s in New York. That’s what we have, and that’s what we’ve planned, but obviously it’s up to HBO and the audience whether or not we get there.</p>
<p><strong>What project is next for you?<br /></strong>I have a pilot script due to HBO on a political show set in Capitol Hill. In fact, we were thinking of shooting that first before we started shooting the rest of the episodes of <em>The Deuce.</em></p>
<p>The problem, as many problems are in this country right now, was that Donald Trump won the election. We had structured a pilot—Ed Burns and myself, Carl Bernstein, and Bill Zorzi—that presumed either a Hillary Clinton victory, or a Bernie Sanders victory, or a normative Republican victory. We did not expect an unstable element such as Donald Trump to be the President of the United States.</p>
<p>And at that point, you need to rethink—even though it’s not a White House story and the president is not in front of the camera—it’s a story outlining the struggles on Capitol Hill and what the legislative branches have become. But everything has been corrupted, impaired, and changed. So we had to go back and re-report, so we’re prepping to start working on the pilot script again.</p>
<p><strong>You joked on Twitter that “everyone’s job is to make sure that my mom doesn’t watch <em>The Deuce</em>. What has she said about it?<br /></strong>My mom is going to watch it—she’s a grownup.</p>
<p><strong>As the premiere nears, are you nervous about people’s perceptions?<br /></strong>We’ll see. I think we’ve set the right tone, and we were grownups about it. But the proof will be in the pudding. We’ll either be proud of it, as we are with other narratives, or we’ll be apologizing to people for the rest of our careers—or both. [Laughs]</p>

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		<title>The Wire: Where Are They Now?</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/the-wire-where-are-they-now/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2017 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=3188</guid>

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			<p>On June 2, it will be 15 years since HBO aired the first episode of <em>The Wire</em>. A no-holds-barred look at America’s failed war on drugs, the series was beloved by some for shedding light on the dark truths of our forgotten inner cities, and loathed by others (most notably then-mayor Martin O’Malley) for its not exactly tourism-friendly portrayal of Baltimore.</p>
<p>In the end, though, the now cult classic became deeply ingrained in our local culture, its complex and compelling episodes forever intertwined with our city’s name, and its fledgling actors irrevocably tied to their now iconic roles.</p>
<p>Over the years, we still find ourselves watching the small screen, exclaiming, “Look, it’s Omar!” <em>(The Night Of)</em>, or, “Hey, it’s Tommy Carcetti!” (<em>Game of Thrones</em> . . . sorry, O’Malley). Wherever they wind up—be it in the next HBO blockbuster, some big-name movie, or as regular Charm City residents—these actors remain a part of Baltimore, and we’re happy to follow them wherever they go.</p>

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<h6 class="thin">Tap to enlarge. <em>—Infographic by Stephanie Shafer</em></h6></p>
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		<title>Henrietta Lacks Mural Takes Shape</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/henrietta-lacks-mural-takes-shape/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gabriella Souza]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Apr 2017 12:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Henrietta Lacks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Johns Hopkins Hospital]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=29504</guid>

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			<p>The story of Henrietta Lacks has resonated with people around the world—through an award-winning book by author Rebecca Skloot and most recently, through a movie produced by and starring Oprah Winfrey that premieres this Sunday on HBO.</p>
<p>Now, that story will be immortalized further through a mural that Lacks’ granddaughter, Jeri Lacks Whye, and a Philadelphia-based art studio are working together to bring to life. They’ve also enlisted The Johns Hopkins Hospital, and see the process of creating the mural as a way to start <a href="{entry:3951:url}">conversations about the tensions</a> between the storied medical institution and the surrounding community.   </p>
<p>“Jeri always says, ‘I just want people to know my grandma,’” says Lizzie Kripke, co-principal artist at <a href="http://www.megsaligman.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Meg Saligman Studio</a>. “Her grandmother is someone who’s a part of all of us now, in a literal way if we’ve had a polio vaccine.”</p>
<p>On January 29, 1951, Hopkins doctors took a biopsy from Henrietta Lacks—wife of a Bethlehem Steel worker—who had an aggressive form of cervical cancer. Though she passed away eight months later, the tissue, used by researchers without her consent, went on to establish the cell line HeLa—the first immortal human cells ever grown in a culture, which have been invaluable to medicine ever since. </p>

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			<p>“There’s a lot of beauty in the science and in her life and family, along with the darker side,” Kripke says. “If we can cast things in a positive light, and acknowledge what’s gone wrong but also celebrate what’s gone right, I think that’s a different way to present this.”</p>
<p>She and the Lacks family are still deciding the site for the mural, and Kripke expects that the bulk of the work will take place next year.</p>
<p>“We’ll feature Henrietta Lacks, but it’s not going to be just a picture that memorializes her,” she says. “It’s going to pull lots of elements from the area as well as her life and story.”</p>
<p>The process of designing the mural will include getting Henrietta Lacks’ family, community members, and Hopkins doctors and officials in the same room for discussion.</p>
<p>“We can’t overstate what the art will do, as this story touches on so many interconnected issues,” Kripke says. “But I do think art is effective in getting the ball rolling and shifting culture in one way or another.”</p>

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		<title>President Obama Interviews The Wire&#8217;s David Simon on YouTube</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/president-obama-interviews-the-wires-david-simon-on-youtube/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2015 12:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drug war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Omar Little]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The White House]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=69408</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[&#8220;At the front end, I&#8217;ve to tell you I&#8217;m a huge fan of The Wire,&#8221; President Obama tells former Baltimore Sun crime reporter and HBO series creator David Simon. &#8220;I think it&#8217;s one of the greatest, not just television shows, but pieces of art in the last couple of decades.&#8221; The president&#8217;s favorite character? Omar, &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/president-obama-interviews-the-wires-david-simon-on-youtube/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
	&#8220;At the front end, I&#8217;ve to tell you I&#8217;m a huge fan of<br />
	<em>The Wire</em>,&#8221; President Obama tells former <em>Baltimore Sun</em> crime reporter and HBO series creator David Simon. &#8220;I think it&#8217;s one of the greatest, not just television shows, but pieces of art in the last couple of decades.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
	The president&#8217;s favorite character?
</p>
<p>
	Omar, of course.
</p>
<p>
	The White House released a<br />
	<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWY79JCfhjw" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">12-minute video</a> yesterday of the president and Simon discussing the <a href="http://www.hbo.com/the-wire#/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">groundbreaking show</a> based on Baltimore and the fallout of the drug war on local communities.
</p>
<p>
	&#8220;When I came in as a police reporter, the federal prison population was about 34 percent violent offenders,&#8221; says Simon. &#8220;When I left as a police reporter 13 years later, it was about 7 percent.&#8221;<br />
	
</p>
<p>
	Among the highlights,<br />
	<a href="http://davidsimon.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Simon</a> discusses the real-life <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/15/us/donnie-andrews-basis-for-omar-of-the-wire-dies-at-58.html?_r=0" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Donnie Andrews</a>, the model for the character of Omar Little.
</p>
<p>
	</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/president-obama-interviews-the-wires-david-simon-on-youtube/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Q&#038;A with Tony Hale</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/q-a-with-tony-hale/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2015 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arrested Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cameo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tony Hale]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Veep]]></category>
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			<p>	<b>What can we expect from season four of <i data-redactor-tag="i">Veep</i> (premiering April 12)? We know Julia Louis-Dreyfus&#8217;s Selina Meyer is President now.</b> <br />
	Yeah, the nation is in a bad place. The nation is about to experience serious trauma with her at the head. This is a woman who should never, ever be in this position. She should never have been Vice President so the chaos is going to get crazier and she&#8217;s not going to know how to handle it, and she&#8217;s got a bunch of Keystone Cops around her who also don&#8217;t know what they&#8217;re doing. So it is just a complete and utter madhouse, but that&#8217;s what makes it fun. It is craaazy. It goes in wacky directions.</p>
<p>	<b>What does this mean for your character, Gary?</b> <br />
	Gary should be able to step up his game because he is now serving the President. However, he&#8217;s not a huge fan of change. He&#8217;s been with her for longer than he should have been, and he was pretty content with her being Vice President, second-in-command, helping her with her lipsticks, and whatever else she needs. The fact that now the stakes have gotten higher, his anxiety has gotten higher, if that&#8217;s even possible. I think he&#8217;s probably increased his therapy intake, however, that doesn&#8217;t seem to be helping. I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s using any of the tools he&#8217;s learning.</p>
<p>	<b>Well, realistically, when would he even have time to go to therapy?</b> <br />
	Exactly. His entire identity and time is devoted to Selena. So he probably has shame for having therapy. He not only has shame for everything else in his life, he even has shame for even having therapy because he probably feels like . . . the thought of having to talk ill about her or behind her back is just his nightmare. So I think that therapy hour is probably not a fun time for him. However, he probably does phone therapy on his lunch break, if he ever has a lunch break.</p>
<p>	<b>On both <em data-redactor-tag="em">Arrested Development</em> and <i>Veep,</i> you play men who are under the thumbs of domineering women. What gives?</b> <br />
	Well, unfortunately, there&#8217;s a codependent theme in my work. I think I do that very well. It is ironic that those are probably the two roles that I&#8217;m most known for. There are strong similarities. Buster, however, is a little more . . . I think he&#8217;s probably a little more in the severely mentally ill category. Gary potentially needs a 24/7 therapist , but he steps up, whereas, Buster, it takes a lot for him to probably get to the pharmacy. He&#8217;s probably rocking in a corner somewhere. I think if something happened to Selena, Gary would definitely take the bullet.</p>
<p>	<b>Tell me a little bit about the filming of <i data-redactor-tag="i">Veep</i>. It&#8217;s a mix of script and improv, right?</b> <br />
	The way Armando Iannucci works is he shoots a lot of footage, and it&#8217;s a really fun process. We never have a clue how it&#8217;s going to be edited. It&#8217;s such a treat to see it on screen. It&#8217;s a process I&#8217;ve never experienced with television. Typically, you get a script, and then you show up that day, and you shoot the script and then you move on. Typically, in theater there&#8217;s a lot of rehearsal. This is a process where we have two or three weeks of rehearsal before we shoot, and it&#8217;s a time where we get the material. We see if it gels. We find those moments. We come up with bits. The writers create those moments. There&#8217;s such a strong, beautiful foundation to begin with, and, what&#8217;s so great about these writers is they&#8217;re not so precious with the material. They put it out there and allow it to morph and become whatever it&#8217;s going to become. It&#8217;s such a gift. It&#8217;s an environment, which is so open to ideas, everyone&#8217;s input. It&#8217;s a real gift.</p>
<p>	<b>How do you keep a straight face?</b> <br />
	Let me tell you how: I don&#8217;t. Also, Julia has taught me the skill of digging your fingernails into your hand. I don&#8217;t have the nails she has. I&#8217;m closest in proximity to Julia, so I hear the little things she does. The fact of the matter, is I just don&#8217;t keep it together, and she wants to start a drinking game about the many times that I break. Like, I&#8217;ll turn my back to the camera. I&#8217;ll look in the bag. And it&#8217;s all because I&#8217;m laughing. It&#8217;s shameless laughing, and I have no self-control. So she taught me this thing that if you just cannot keep it together and you&#8217;re tired and it&#8217;s late, you just dig your nails into your hand. It&#8217;s just a sad, sad, unprofessional actor trick.</p>
<p>	Both on this and<br />
	<i>Arrested</i>, you&#8217;re working across from these people who are incredibly gifted, and it&#8217;s not human to be able to give it a straight face because it&#8217;s just so frickin&#8217; funny. Even if they do just a glance of the eye or something, it&#8217;s like, &#8216;Whelp, I&#8217;m out. I can&#8217;t.&#8217; My favorite things to watch—I&#8217;m not a person who has watched the episodes over and over—are the gag reels. That&#8217;s what I remember. I remember the laughing. I remember not being able to keep it together. I remember messing up. That&#8217;s the community that I remember, everybody just cracking up, and that&#8217;s what I love to watch over and over.</p>
<p>	<b>Hugh Laurie is guest starring in season four. Who is he playing and how was working with him?</b> <br />
	He&#8217;s got serious comedic chops. He knew all these guys coming into the show, like Armando Iannucci, because he had worked for years before in the comedy realm in the U.K. So it was really fun to see him come and do it. I can&#8217;t really give too much information as to what he&#8217;s going to be playing, but not only is he super funny, but he&#8217;s just a really nice guy. He just has this thing about him that is just—it&#8217;s hard to describe without giving too much away—but he&#8217;s really fun to watch. It&#8217;s just adding to the mix another person who I can&#8217;t keep it together with. I can&#8217;t keep a straight face. Great, just bring in the problems.</p>
<p>	<b>What&#8217;s the outlook for more <i data-redactor-tag="i">Arrested Development</i>?</b> <br />
	Well, it&#8217;s one of those things. The whole cast, we&#8217;re all huge fans of the show and any time Mitch Hurwitz, who created the show, calls and tells us about any opportunity, we just jump at the chance. What&#8217;s so exciting about Arrested is you never know what direction it&#8217;s go to go. It was just a show that was built on surprises, like, &#8216;My hand&#8217;s eaten off by a seal!&#8217; or &#8216;Liza Minelli is my girlfriend!&#8217; So, for an actor, that&#8217;s an amazing dream because it doesn&#8217;t fit any formula. So I just want to do it again because I&#8217;m like, &#8216;What is this guy going to come up with? What is in his brain?&#8217; We all would jump at the chance. Honestly, it&#8217;s just a matter of scheduling. Everyone is doing their own thing and it gets a little crazy. </p>
<p>	<b>And what about season five of <i data-redactor-tag="i">Veep</i>? <br />
	</b>I don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;s funny. I&#8217;ve been doing this for almost 25 years, and I get so used to never knowing. I think I got my first taste of it on <i>Arrested</i> because every year we were like, &#8216;Are we getting cancelled?&#8217; So when I&#8217;m on a job I&#8217;m just like, &#8216;I&#8217;m here. I&#8217;m so thankful that I&#8217;m here.&#8217; If it happens again, that&#8217;s great, but I never have any clue. I would hope and love if there was a season five, but I don&#8217;t know. I just have no clue what the bigwigs are thinking.</p>
<p>	<b>How has it been filming in Baltimore for four seasons?</b> <br />
	Oh my god, I<br />
	<i> love</i> Baltimore. I&#8217;m crazy about Baltimore. It&#8217;s nice to come back. The first year you&#8217;re adapting, you&#8217;re trying to learn the area, and now it&#8217;s so fun to go back to the same places and just have the restaurants that I love. I&#8217;m still such a fan of Woodberry Kitchen, and there&#8217;s even a home store named Trohv in Hampden that I love going to where I get fun gifts. And Golden West, I would go grab lunch. I love Amuse toy store. They did a little book reading <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/18/q-a-with-tony-hale" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">when my children&#8217;s book came out</a>. It is really fun to create these relationships and friendships that I come back to each year. It feels a lot more like home, which is nice. All of us are away from our families. Most of us have kids, so it&#8217;s really tough to be away from them three months out of the year. The blessing of it is that we all really get along and you live this nomadic gypsy lifestyle. You create a community wherever you go. So it&#8217;s so nice to have people around like this cast, and, every now and then I&#8217;ll just walk into Whole Foods because it&#8217;s familiar. So I&#8217;ll just kind of walk around because it reminds me of the Whole Foods in LA.</p>
<p>	<b>Everyone has their own way of coping with homesickness.</b> <br />
	I tend to medicate with grocery shopping.</p>

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		<title>Local Actor Featured in Three Breakout Roles</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/local-actor-featured-in-three-breakout-roles/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jan 2015 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Shakespeare Festival]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Center Stage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eye Candy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Girls]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peter Mark Kendall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Americans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Towson]]></category>
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			<p><b>See that guy sitting in the chair above?</b> Remember that face, because you&#8217;re going to be seeing a lot of it on your TV this month—and likely in the future, as well. </p>
<p>Towson-raised actor Peter Mark Kendall is &#8220;blowing up,&#8221; as the kids say, with appearances on three highly anticipated series set to debut or return this month. </p>
<p>First, he&#8217;ll appear in three episodes of HBO&#8217;s much-lauded dramedy<i> Girls</i>, which returns for its fourth season on January 11. Then, the next night, MTV&#8217;s new cyber-crime police drama<i> Eye Candy</i>, on which Kendall has a recurring role, will debut. Finally, on January 28, the acclaimed spy drama<i> The Americans</i> resumes on FX with Kendall in yet another recurring (and top-secret) role. </p>
<p>And let&#8217;s not even get started on his upcoming appearances in movies with the likes of Jesse Eisenberg, Isabelle Huppert, and Richard Gere. Not bad for a kid from Rodgers Forge. </p>
<p>A talented musician who plays several instruments, Kendall entered McDaniel College thinking he&#8217;d be a music major but found he disliked the almost monastic lifestyle music study required. Having acted at Towson High, he got involved in McDaniel&#8217;s theater program and quickly switched majors. </p>
<p>&#8220;I started resenting music and having to practice for four hours in a room by myself, but I never really felt that way about acting. I couldn&#8217;t really think of anything that I&#8217;d rather do more,&#8221; says Kendall, 28. </p>
<p>After college, he moved to Hampden and began auditioning, supporting himself by waiting tables and walking dogs. Appearances at Baltimore Shakespeare Festival and Center Stage earned him his equity card and then, after auditioning three years in a row, he was accepted into the prestigious Brown University and Trinity Repertory Company MFA acting program. </p>
<p>&#8220;That was a big thing for me creatively and professionally,&#8221; he acknowledges. Now living the actor&#8217;s life in New York, he still returns to visit his parents, who have since relocated to Pikesville. &#8220;I love Baltimore so much. I&#8217;d like to come back more,&#8221; he says. </p>
<p>Somehow, we doubt he&#8217;ll have time.</p>

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		<title>HBO Greenlights New David Simon Project</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/hbo-greenlights-new-david-simon-project/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2014 11:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catherine Keener]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oscar Isaac]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paul Haggis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Show Me a Hero]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Treme]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[David Simon has been in the news a lot&#160;lately. First,&#160;the stunning&#160;Amtrak&#160;tete-a-tete and selfie&#160;with longtime nemesis&#160;Gov. Martin O&#8217;Malley. Then, his &#8220;infinite hope&#8221; piece for&#160;Sports Illustrated on the Orioles&#160;that managed to mix Shakespeare, God,&#160;the Problem of Evil, quantum mechanics, and&#160;Sulawesi crested-macaques into a story about baseball. (Gotta love middle-aged men and their unabashed&#160;sentimentality&#160;for the American pastime.) But &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/hbo-greenlights-new-david-simon-project/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>David Simon has been in the news a lot&nbsp;lately. First,&nbsp;the stunning&nbsp;Amtrak&nbsp;tete-a-tete and <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/7/21/breaking-beer-omalley-and-simon">selfie&nbsp;</a>with longtime nemesis&nbsp;Gov. Martin O&#8217;Malley. Then, his &#8220;infinite hope&#8221; piece for&nbsp;<a href="http://www.si.com/mlb/2014/07/24/baltimore-orioles-david-simon-my-town-my-team2"><em>Sports Illustrated</em></a> on the Orioles&nbsp;that managed to mix Shakespeare, God,&nbsp;<a href="http://www.princeton.edu/~grosen/puc/phi203/evil.html">the Problem of Evil</a>, quantum mechanics, and&nbsp;Sulawesi crested-macaques into a story about baseball. (Gotta love middle-aged men and their unabashed&nbsp;sentimentality&nbsp;for the American pastime.)</p>
<p>But now comes the best news from Simon: HBO has greenlighted a new project for&nbsp;<em><a href="http://www.hbo.com/the-wire#/">The Wire</a> </em>creator&mdash;a six-part miniseries focusing on race relations and politics in Yonkers, NY. Simon will serve as&nbsp;<a href="http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2014/jul/31/david-simon-show-me-a-hero-the-wire-treme-hbo">co-writer</a> with&nbsp;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_F._Zorzi">William Zorzi</a>, a former <em>Baltimore Sun </em>reporter who also worked on <em>The Wire, </em>and<em>&nbsp;</em>Paul Haggis (<em>Crash</em>) will direct.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The miniseries will be based on the 1988&nbsp;nonfiction book,&nbsp;<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/b/belkin-hero.html"><em>Show Me a Hero,</em></a> by Lisa Belkin, according to <a href="http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/catherine-keener-oscar-isaac-star-722343"><em>HollywoodReporter.com</em></a>, and will star Catherine Keener (<em>Being John Malkovich</em>)&nbsp;and Oscar Isaac (<em>Inside&nbsp;</em><em>Llewyn Davis</em>).&nbsp;The story centers around a 1985 judicial decision to desegregate housing in Yonkers&mdash;New York state&#8217;s fourth-largest city and an inner suburb&nbsp;of New York City.</p>
<p>Simon&#8217;s most recent HBO series, the critically acclaimed, New Orleans-based&nbsp;<a href="http://www.nola.com/tv/index.ssf/2014/07/2014_emmy_award_nominations_tr.html"><em>Treme</em></a>, finished its fourth and final season last year, receiving four Emmy nominations.</p>
<p>Of course, we&#8217;d&nbsp;love to see Simon work on another Baltimore-themed project, but we&#8217;re thrilled to hear he&#8217;s back working with HBO again either way.</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/hbo-greenlights-new-david-simon-project/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>20 Events of 2013: VEEP and House of Cards represent at the Emmys</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/20-events-of-2013-veep-and-house-of-cards-represent-at-the-emmys/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Dec 2013 10:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Fincher]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[House of Cards]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Julia Louis-Dreyfus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin Spacey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Netflix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Veep]]></category>
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			<p>A year ago, in this very space, we were already trumpeting the success of HBO&#8217;s <em>VEEP</em>, but were a little uncertain about this whole <em>House of Cards</em> thing.</p>
<p>Sure, the pedigree was unimpeachable: David Fincher as executive<br />
producer, Kevin Spacey as lead. But Netflix? Is the world really going<br />
to take Netflix seriously as a producer of original content?</p>
<p>Oh, what a difference a year makes. Because not only did <em>House of Cards</em><br />
 become a much buzzed about hit (inspiring the popular debate: Is it<br />
better to binge watch your favorite Netflix series or savor the viewing<br />
over the course of a few weeks?), but it got nine Emmy nominations,<br />
winning three (including Fincher for Best Director).</p>
<p>Meanwhile, <em>VEEP</em> continues to be a source of local pride,<br />
garnering eight nominations and wins for Tony Hale (yay!) and Julia<br />
Louis-Dreyfus, the <em>VEEP</em> herself (double yay!). Also, the<br />
adorable moment where Hale (in character, mind you) assisted<br />
Louis-Dreyfus with her speech was one of the agreed upon highlights of<br />
the show.</p>
<h4><em>“Me so happy!!!!!!&#8221;—Julia Louis-Dreyfus after the show&#8217;s big wins, on Twitter</em></h4>

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		<title>HBO series Veep Being Filmed in Baltimore</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/hbo-series-veep-being-filmed-in-baltimore/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DLA Piper]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Donna’s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Julia Louis-Dreyfus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MICA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Belvedere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Ottobar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Veep]]></category>
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			<p>Baltimore isn’t like New York City for a lot of reasons (we’re okay with that), like when we see movie trailers on the side of the road, we’re taken aback and we usually ask someone on set, “What’s going on?”</p>
<p>The answer to that question recently has been <em>Veep</em>, an HBO series starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who plays a Maryland Senator turned U.S. Vice President. The eight-episode season was shot locally and filming wrapped in December.</p>
<p>“Everyone who’s been working on this show said how great the set is, how nice the people are,” says casting director Pat Moran. “This can hopefully give Baltimore a chance to compete in the industry again.”</p>
<p>While Baltimore is acting as a stand in for D.C. (à la <em>Live Free or Die Hard</em> and <em>Enemy of the State</em>), natives will surely recognize Veep’s filming locations when it premieres on HBO in the spring.</p>
<p>A scene in the pilot episode was filmed outside of MICA’s main building. The grand, white-marble stairs were able to mimic D.C.’s architecture. The crew even put a fake metal detector in the entranceway to add to that government feel.</p>
<p>There was also a scene at The Ottobar with about 200 people. Moran couldn’t reveal much, though she said that <em>Veep</em> is a comedy and this was a “big, funny scene.”</p>
<p>Another filming location that got attention (especially as many thought <em>Mad Men</em> was in town) was the Belvedere, which was the backdrop for a law enforcement retirement party.</p>
<p>“The Belvedere is a grand dame,” Moran says. “I don’t care about any standards of any city. It was a perfect place for this over-the-top event. We used many local retired law-enforcement folks for that scene.”</p>
<p>Other locations included Donna’s in Charles Village, a Dillon Street row home in Canton, the offices of DLA Piper, and the show’s soundstage in Columbia.</p>
<p>But Moran stresses that this show means much more to Baltimore than just glitz and glamour.</p>
<p>“In a city like ours, we need the revenue,” she says. “We were once top five in the nation in the film industry. Now people move to New York, New Orleans. Hopefully, this will help bring our crew base back.”</p>

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		<title>Down To The Wire</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/down-to-the-wire/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Feb 2008 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Wire]]></category>
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			<p><p>
	"We want to be out of 
	<i>The Wire</i> business," says the mayor of Baltimore, repeating the affirmation that began this call twenty minutes ago, stalling us in the Safeway parking lot on Boston Street.
</p>
<p>
	I am curbside at the grocery, caught between a cup of carryout coffee and an afternoon writer's meeting, cellphone hard against my ear, playing liar's poker with a politician.
</p>
<p>
	"You're telling me a week before we begin shooting," I explain again. "I'm happy to move the show out-of-town for season three, but I can't do it now. You've waited too long to tell me."
</p>
<p>
	Pelecanos stands beside me, listening to half a conversation, staring across the outer harbor toward the production office to which he can't return.
</p>
<p>
	"Look," I offer the mayor, "we've built our sets in the county and the governor's given us our port locations, which are state property. If we don't get permits in the city, we'll do exteriors in Wilmington or Philly and still get the show done."
</p>
<p>
	I am trying to sound as offhand as I can about the possibility, and Pelecanos, knowing better, is smiling now. With our permits held up by the city film office and city agencies refusing cooperation, we've started scouting other cities should it be necessary to relocate. But it would be a huge hit to our budget.
</p>
<p>
	"That's time and money, but if you aren't going to approve the permits, we'll do it if we have to."
</p>
<p>
	At which point, Martin O'Malley pivots away from the issue of permits, declaring himself to be concerned about the city's image above all, about what this damned television show is saying about us, about how it reflects on the city's response to the relentlessness of the drug trade, on…well…his own response to it. On him.
</p>
<p>
	"I've funded a thousand more treatment beds," he says, his voice coming back to me as a hollow echo.
</p>
<p>
	A speaker phone. He is performing for a coterie of aides, no doubt. Or the councilwoman who poked us with that resolution a few months back, the one about countering the image of the city as depicted in television drama. Or some developers, the fellas who keep wailing their jeremiad in the mayor's ear about what these shows are doing to their property values. Who knows who's in the mayor's suite being entertained by this. I only know my own audience is a solitary Greek stoic, his coffee long gone, wilting in a supermarket parking lot because my cellphone can't be trusted to keep its connection in a moving car.
</p>
<p>
	"Where is that in 
	<i>The Wire</i>?"
</p>
<p>
	"Where is what?
</p>
<p>
	"A thousand new treatment beds."
</p>
<p>
	"Treatment beds?"
</p>
<p>
	"Why don't you put how we've funded more beds?"
</p>
<p>
	As a point of exposition? Or should I have the art department order up the actual furniture. I respond cleverly:
</p>
<p>
	"Um…"
</p>
<p>
	"And we've reduced crime," he declares. "Where is that in the show? Our crime is down 30 percent."
</p>
<p>
	It is now a full-bore stump speech, and I am being oversold. So I settle in, sit on the curb and stretch my legs as the mayor lurches into a monologue on the myriad achievements of his remarkable administration. There is a miracle underway in Baltimore. Everyone knows this. 
	<i>The Wire</i> is missing it.
</p>
<h2><b>I've spent almost my entire professional life writing about Baltimore's problems. It has not been charming, or decorous or particularly generous.</b></h2>
<p>
	A car hound, Pelecanos wanders away to admire a parked Benz coupe.
</p>
<p>
	"Why don't you show what we're accomplishing?"
</p>
<p>
	The owner of the Benz shows up with groceries, and Pelecanos looks back across the lot at me mournfully. I give a theatrical shrug of the shoulders and shake my head.
</p>
<p>
	Sorry, George. Gonna be a while.
</p>
<p>
	I don't mean to make fun of Martin O'Malley.
</p>
<p>
	He has his priorities, his ambitions. I confess to my own and they are necessarily very different from anyone whose job description ever included being a cheerleader for a municipality.
</p>
<p>
	Since 
	<i>The Sun</i> hired me twenty-five years ago, I've spent almost my entire professional life writing about Baltimore's problems in newsprint, in books and on film. It has not been charming, or decorous or particularly generous. The best I can say is that it has been sincere.
</p>
<p>
	And as a further point of confession, let me add that I didn't see all of it coming.
</p>
<p>
	I surely didn't expect a work of journalism, a book of narrative non-fiction I wrote about some city homicide detectives, to be sold to an A-list Hollywood director from this city. I couldn't conceive that Barry Levinson's creation would run for seven seasons on NBC. Nor could I have imagined that out-of-town ownership would devour my newspaper, or that the small-trick, tone-deaf sensibilities of new editors would cause me to flee that newspaper for that television production.
</p>
<p>
	When I wrote a second work of narrative journalism, I certainly didn't expect that, too, to become grist for television drama. Who makes a TV show about life on a drug corner? At what point, when I began that book project in 1993, was I supposed to anticipate the rise of HBO and the possibility of telling a darker, more honest story on American television?
</p>
<p>
	<i>The Wire</i>, I admit, was not quite so clueless. By then, I'd been granted some sense of what was now possible for the medium of television. I could calculate just how much of my own reporting, of Ed Burns' experiences, of the research of real-world novelists such as George Pelecanos or Richard Price or Dennis Lehane might be pulled through the keyhole of premium cable. At that point, we felt we knew a few things that mattered to us, things we needed to say, and incredibly, here was the chance to say them.
</p>
<p>
	Shit got good to us, as they say over westside. So, yeah, we went for it, and having done so, the best we can say for ourselves now is that our intentions were without the guile and calculation of people seeking to simply offend.
</p>
<p>
	We live here. Or most of us do. And those who don't live in Baltimore have spent years writing with commitment about places that are contending with the same problems as this city. Price has his Jersey City; Lehane, his Dorchester; Pelecanos, his Northeast D.C.
</p>
<p>
	If indifferent to the calculations of real estate speculators, civic boosters and politicians looking toward higher office, we are nonetheless fascinated by the other America, the one that usually gets left behind in all the storytelling, never mind the usual political and economic abandonment. That fascination is, if not therapeutic—no story ever constitutes a cure and any writer who claims such is either hack or charlatan—then at least diagnostic. The impulse is not so much to entertain as to inform, and perhaps, to provoke an argument or two.
</p>
<p>
	But 
	<i>The Wire</i> wasn't designed to shove Baltimore's nose into it. Give or take an inside joke or two, these were stories relevant to any number of forgotten places in post-industrial America. The problems depicted are profound, complex and national.
</p>
<p>
	So why Baltimore?
</p>
<p>
	Why not some generic rust-belt location, never named or hinted at? Why not some vague, unspecific Hill-Street-Blues neighborhood: The Heights or The Hill or The Put-Name-Here Housing Project?
</p>
<p>
	Well, it's subtle. But by choosing to tell our story in Baltimore and by showing fealty to the details of Baltimore, we reduce by some meaningful amount the artifice. We create an additional, though tacit argument on behalf of the stories themselves.
</p>
<p>
	No, Omar isn't real. But if he were, it would be in Baltimore where his name would ring out. No, Bubbles is not real. But if he were, it would be in Baltimore where he would cling to fragile humanity. And no, Carcetti is not real. But if he were mayor of an American city, it could well be Baltimore, where precise pressures and counter-pressures would be brought to bear on him.
</p>
<p>
	By choosing a real city, we declare that the economic forces, the political dynamic, the class, cultural and racial boundaries are all that much more real, that they do exist in Baltimore and, therefore, they exist elsewhere in urban America.
</p>
<p>
	The corresponding cost to Baltimore was tangible and understood: We put our town's shit in the street. And for that and that alone we ask apology for the premeditated trespass:
</p>
<p>
	Sorry for that. Really—no sarcasm here—we acknowledge the affront and now at the end, we have the nerve to ask your indulgence.
</p>
<p>
	And further, we admit that the benefits of telling stories in a real city are in no way tangible. Not as tangible as someone's property values, or the number of convention bookings, or whatever else it is we are supposed to have impaired.
</p>
<h2><b><i data-redactor-tag="i">The Wire</i> wasn't designed to shove Baltimore's nose into it. The problems depicted are profound, complex, and national. so why Baltimore?</b></h2>
<p>
	Will viewers be more moved by a story that's more realistic? Will they find the tale more credible, more essential to their view of the world? Will they be inclined to consider problems and their response to problems in a new way? I don't know. It's nice to think a story might have a positive effect on anything.
</p>
<p>
	But saying such things about any form of storytelling—let alone television—sounds pompous and self-serving. And to people who focus on the fact that the people who make 
	<i>The Wire</i> get paid for making a television show rooted in the underclass, it all comes off as ridiculously abstract, maybe even hypocritical.
</p>
<p>
	The poor are still with us. The drug trade endures. The schools, police department, and political leadership are a morass of fraudulent claims, juked stats and naked ambition. Nothing changes and I got paid. We all get paid for making the movie.
</p>
<p>
	But hey, then mark us down as incompetent if it was about the money. Because if the dollars were really the point then 
	<i>The Wire</i> would have had more women with longer legs and larger breasts, and there would have been a car chase or two, and shit would've blown up in a real good fireball in every episode.
</p>
<p>
	Instead of aiming for mass appeal and spinoffs, zeitgeist and action figures, we constructed a show that confounded and abused casual viewers and struggled to grow its audience. As conceived, 
	<i>The Wire</i> required annual feats of genuflection and groveling to be renewed by cable execs as dismayed by the ratings as they were impressed by critical notices.
</p>
<p>
	So before settling on greed as our deadly sin of choice, think again.
</p>
<p>
	Pride, dawg. Pride and maybe sloth, if you've seen me dress. But pride, above all, is the deal breaker here.
</p>
<p>
	Which brings us back to the Safeway lot, where Pelecanos, now counting parking spaces in his head, is beginning to wonder how bad he needs this gig.
</p>
<p>
	I am still sprawled on the curb. And my cellphone hums as the Mayor of Baltimore drones about having fixed the police department, citing a moderate reduction in murders off the previous year's total. I know I should let it go.
</p>
<p>
	"That's kind of like a fat man going on a diet," I blurt out. "I mean, going three hundred murders down to two seventy, two eighty is the equivalent of giving up French fries. The first ten pounds are easy."
</p>
<p>
	Which only brings more hyperbole. Eventually, the mayor is telling me that he's doing everything possible to win the drug war. Wait, he goes further. He 
	<i>is </i>winning the drug war, one corner at a time.
</p>
<p>
	"Mr. Mayor, you are not going to get me to concede that the drug war is anything more than a fraud. I wrote a book about it, you might recall, and though I don't imagine you've read it…"
</p>
<p>
	Shut up, Simon, you asshole. Just let it go.
</p>
<p>
	"I know what it says," O'Malley offers.
</p>
<p>
	"Well then you know I'm not buying into the drug war."
</p>
<p>
	"Well, we have to do 
	<i>something</i>," he counters. "We can't just sit here and do nothing in these neighborhoods."
</p>
<p>
	The good voice in my head, the cheek-turning voice of pious humility, has me hesitate. The bad voice—he starts arranging words into sentences, and sentences into paragraphs.
</p>
<p>
	"Not really, Mr. Mayor," the bad voice says. "Do nothing for the next three or four years and you might actually do a little less damage. And I say this considering the fact that you'll soon be running for governor, which means you're already running on the argument that you've reduced crime dramatically in Baltimore, which means that when the modest declines aren't enough, you'll bang on your police commissioner so hard he'll up and quit. And the half-baked choices, hacks and sycophants you use to replace him? When they can't drop the numbers honestly, then the word is gonna go out to the district commanders, to the shift lieutenants, to the sector sergeants: Crime 
	<i>will</i> go down. Yes, it will. And the knives and handguns are gonna disappear from robbery reports, just as the agg assaults are going to be reclassified into common assaults and crime will definitely go down, so much so that perhaps a few might marvel that you are claiming huge declines in overall crime while the murder rate stays high, that there is no logic to such, that God help us if ambitious politicians ever figure out how to hide the bodies…"
</p>
<p>
	He doesn't hang up. I keep shouting.
</p>
<p>
	"Do nothing and at least we won't be pretending there aren't fundamental disconnects between the school system and the children we pretend to teach, that we aren't teaching the youngest ones to give us a politically gratifying rise in the mandated test scores, while the older ones—too hard to reach, too aware of their real place in this world—show no such improvement on their journey out of the system as suspensions or dropouts . . . .
</p>
<p>
	"Do nothing at all and . . . "
</p>
<p>
	Except I didn't really say any of that. Not a word. Five years ago, on that grocery parking lot, I didn't think half of what I do now. On that day, I admit, what I most remember is looking across the asphalt at Pelecanos. Bored beyond description, he glared at me as if there were horns on my head. So for once I did what does not come naturally: I gave up on the argument and offered some vague platitude I hoped might end the call.
</p>
<p>
	"I'm sure you're doing what you think is best," I said.
</p>
<p>
	Not quite the truth. But it wasn't much of a lie either.
</p>
<p>
	A lot of people have taken to calling 
	<i>The Wire</i> art. I like that, of course. It's very gratifying for an ex-newspaperman to be writing a television show and to have it referenced as art or literature. No lies here; I definitely soak that shit up. Who wouldn't?
</p>
<p>
	But in truth I'm not sure if the work isn't merely journalism.
</p>
<p>
	Not journalism in the sense that it is true; 
	<i>The Wire</i> is most assuredly fiction. But we have stolen liberally, shamelessly from a city we know, from people who we reported on, policed, taught, hated, loved and humored. We have fulfilled the first law of not embarrassing ourselves as storytellers by writing only what we honestly think we know. With no more authority than our standing as an ex-cop and schoolteacher, a couple ex-newspapermen, a handful of novelists and a playwright or two, we have done our best to create a facsimile of post-industrial urban America.
</p>
<p>
	What gives us the right? Seriously, who died and gave us 60 hours on HBO to say these things about a real city? Well, what is it that gives anyone the right?
</p>
<p>
	By what outrageous fortune does the [Chicago] Tribune Company own a subsidiary in this city and through it publish a daily account of what it feels to be relevant and fair? By what absurdity does John Waters exalt the twists and perversities of this bizarre town? By what totalitarian triumph of personal reminiscence does Barry Levinson conjure the Baltimore of his youth and render it as our collective past? Who has appointed Anne Tyler to define the lives of Roland Park, or Robert Ward to depict the hard times of an out-of-work Dundalk steelworker, or Laura Lippman [
	<i>Ed. note: Lippman is Simon's wife</i>] to embrace so much local iconography with each literary murder? Storytelling is rooted in arrogance: Here. Look at me, I've got a story to tell. Pay attention to <i>me</i>.
</p>
<p>
	At its core, what bothers some about 
	<i>The Wire</i> is not so much the content as the medium itself. Speak to these same arguments and themes as a newspaper series, magazine article or novel and no one raises an eyebrow. I know this precisely, having written one book that rendered Baltimore's violence as a mass-production phenomenon, and a second that despaired over the disconnect between our drug policies and the diaspora of addiction so fundamental to our city. Until the film crews arrived, eyebrows definitely went unraised.
</p>
<p>
	But graft those same themes to a television drama and subvert an entertainment medium so that people are rooting for a dope fiend, for a stickup boy, for a drug dealer—and do so in a way that renders the other America as worthy of drama as any other locale? Now you've got people asking about the propriety and utility of simply telling a story.
</p>
<p>
	I get it. I understand that no one expects to watch a television show and be treated to an argument on what ails urban America. I admit that in making 
	<i>The Wire</i> and depicting Baltimore, we took advantage of how thin a membrane can exist between fact and fiction. But for those still genuinely concerned about what Baltimore may have suffered as a result, allow one last consideration:
</p>
<p>
	Gambol freely among American television's many humorous constructs, each living room populated by foolish, lumpy husbands and their smart, attractive and long-suffering mates, their precocious children, their farcical moments. Range further to what passes for drama to find angry, righteous white men beating down men of color inside interrogation rooms or shooting them down in the streets as a thin blue line between us and disorder. Admire the doctors and lawyers, and super-powered heroes whose every dramatized day is an affirmation of their extraordinary, validated lives. Stare without end at the faces of those who are soon to be ascendant as America's next idol, top model, iron chef. Regard for a moment the television universe as a reflection of who it is we actually wish ourselves to be . . .
</p>
<p>
	Is it too much for the other America to see itself reflected in one television drama, to have—amid all the wealth and beauty and self-gratification—a single viewing experience to call their own, a solitary drama that addresses itself to their world? 
	<i>The Wire</i> is the one continuing series set in the shadowland of the ghetto, in the America that we have discarded politically, economically, and emotionally. Are we saying, that for the sake of Baltimore's civic image, that it's one drama too many?
</p>
<p>
	I'm writing this in Maputo, the battered capital of Mozambique, where HBO is filming a miniseries about the war in Iraq. Baltimore can double for many notable locations, but Mesopotamia is not one of them. So the business of filming this project went to Africa, and for the first time, I am not filming at home.
</p>
<p>
	And yes, everything is cheaper here; cheaper and in many ways easier. Having suffered through a decades-long civil war, having their economy and infrastructure in shambles, folks here are unbothered by the idea their capital is doubling for a bomb-cratered, strife-torn Baghdad. Vanities are not pricked by the sight of make-believe Marines in rented humvees patrolling broken streets in pursuit of make-believe fedayeen.
</p>
<p>
	And true, there is safety in playing stand-in to someone else's problems. No one will watch 
	<i>Generation Kill</i> and say to themselves that Maputo needs to embrace urban renewal. But even if we were depicting the betrayals and Cold War gamesmanship that were Mozambique's particular tragedy, I don't sense anyone here would interpose.
</p>
<p>
	In a country where unemployment is over 40 percent and too many people live at the margins within endless squatter camps, the issue of jobs is paramount. A discussion of the film industry's psychic burden on the civic image would be, well, absurd.
</p>
<p>
	On the other end of the spectrum is, say, New York, where no amount of depicted tragedy, crime and corruption can in any way affect the city's self-image. Every season, NBC's 
	<i>Law &amp; Order</i> franchise alone murders more people in Manhattan than are actually slain in that borough and no one cares in the slightest.
</p>
<p>
	It remains for second-tier, First-World cities like Baltimore to fret about image and substance, to worry the calculation between the facts on the ground and civic pride, between film industry cash and tourism dollars. In Baltimore, we're secure enough to care about what we have, insecure enough to know it is not nearly so good as we claim. We recognize our own dirty laundry when it's out there on the line.
</p>
<p>
	On the other side of the ledger is the Baltimore film industry, fledgling and vulnerable, threatened by the give-backs offered by many other states that are luring film projects and crew jobs away. This is infuriating. After all this hard work, Baltimore deserves loyalty from the Hollywood studios, but of course, loyalty is not the means by which capital routes itself.
</p>
<p>
	But going forward, the economics are what they are. I've never been a forceful proponent of incentive programs to lure or maintain any industry; whether it's a professional sports franchise or an auto assembly line, such programs seem to be little more than extortion. And it's unseemly that something as profitable as the film industry should be so treated. Yet once Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Louisiana have started the stampede, there's little for anyone to do but run with the steers.
</p>
<p>
	<i>Homicide, The Corner,</i> and <i>The Wire</i> together brought $300 million in film budgets to Baltimore. And maybe it's fair to claim that a bit more than half of that money—less the salaries of out-of-town actors and directors—stayed in town to circulate. The money, at least, is very real, and the state film commission is quick to cite it in any debate over the relative merits of having a film industry.
</p>
<p>
	But Maryland doesn't have to have a film industry; lots of places don't. And it is also fair to acknowledge that I have no way to gauge what sort of damage was actually done to Maryland tourism as a result of these shows. Neither does anyone else.
</p>
<p>
	Much was made of a $500,000 consultant's report that cited the negative imagery of these shows as damaging to Baltimore's reputation, but actually, no one in any of the focus groups cited the television dramas at any point. The assertion amounted to a single phrase in the report that is, I am told by the consultants, attributable to the concerns of a local developer, who expressed himself at one meeting.
</p>
<p>
	So maybe we didn't do much damage at all. Or maybe the damage done exceeded the benefit. I hope, in retrospect, for the best, of course, but confess again that money and image never mattered to us. We lived by another premise entirely.
</p>
<p>
	Were the stories worth the telling?
</p>
<p>
	And the measure of that came to me on the night when, six episodes into the first season, I went to the FOP lodge and laid cash on the bar, waiting for the police gathered to tell me what they thought of our depiction of a lost drug war and bureaucratic dysfunction. Although I expected the worst, I didn't buy another round that night.
</p>
<p>
	Or when I was eating in Locust Point and a waitress told me she knew Ziggy Sobotka was loosely based on Pinkie Bannon. Or the days spent on set in West and East Baltimore, when Omar or Bubbles or Bunk emerged from a trailer to be swamped by neighborhood folk who would repeat their best lines to them, or tell them how real their journeys seemed, or pose with them for photographs.
</p>
<p>
	For us, this is the validation that matters, the standard by which we judge ourselves, and by which we were, for the most part, judged by other Baltimoreans. In 15 years of filming here, I can count on one hand the number of encounters with everyday folk that were hostile or adverse to our storytelling.
</p>
<h2><b>Seriously, who died and gave us sixty hours on HBO to say these things about a real city?</b></h2>
<p>
	And admittedly, we do not travel light. Despite our best efforts, we sometimes manage to block traffic, to monopolize parking, to make people wait long minutes to simply walk down a sidewalk or enter a building when a camera is rolling.
</p>
<p>
	At our best, we are a mild pain in the ass. And going forward, I have to say that if you happen to see me in a bar and recognition provokes your approach, I will be remiss, if, upon being informed of exactly where and when we ruined one of your days, I do not make amends through the purchase of at least a beer.
</p>
<p>
	Yet throughout it all, we have been more than tolerated and our trespasses, as unending as they were, have been forgiven. And it's in this that our gratitude is limitless and unequivocal.
</p>
<p>
	Baltimore has been kind and generous to host our storytelling, more so than any other city might have dared. This city has proven, if nothing else, that it is open to the pursuit of problematic truths at a time when the country as a whole seems hellbent on avoiding such. As a local here, I share a secret pride in this.
</p>
<p>
	Which brings us back to the relevant sin.
</p>
<p>
	Because a better man than me, a bigger man, a man more acquainted with impulses noble and magnanimous—he might leave well enough alone. Such a man would say his thank you, seek forgiveness for his affronts and find the door before giving any further cause for offense.
</p>
<p>
	But for having stood on that parking lot for 40 minutes being harangued by a politician, I am still too much the newspaperman, too infatuated with my own independent voice to let it be.
</p>
<p>
	What kind of person would rate that single, angry confrontation over all the benign encounters with so many other Baltimoreans? What sort of asshole clings to the one moment where his right to tell a story was questioned, rather than focus on the hundreds of hours of television that were broadcast without interference? Who carries a grudge better than me?
</p>
<p>
	Truth is, after a few hostile shots over our bow, Martin O'Malley became reserved and non-confrontational. His city agencies issued their permits and behaved professionally ever after. The big developers ended their whisper campaign, the city council went back to doing whatever it actually does.
</p>
<p>
	But Christ, I can't resist telling the end of the tale:
</p>
<p>
	"I will move the show before season three," I tell the mayor on that parking lot, going as far as I dare given the show's finances. "And you can explain to the world how Baltimore became the first American city to ever banish a television production because of its content."
</p>
<p>
	People will understand, he argues back. 
	<i>The Wire</i> is too harsh.
</p>
<p>
	"In Los Angeles, they won't. You'll be in the trades for this and you'll be pulling the plug on the industry in Maryland. Now, Mr. Mayor, you don't have to have a film industry here…"
</p>
<p>
	"That's right. We don't," he interrupts.
</p>
<p>
	"…but if you want one, then enough of this bullshit with the council sponsoring resolutions critical of the show, or with you holding up permits because you don't like our story. You can't play that. No one can. You can hate the show personally—you can even say you hate it personally—but you can't have government deciding what stories it will and will not tolerate. You do that and the work will go elsewhere—all of the work, not just the stories you don't like."
</p>
<p>
	I then remind him of the lunch we had at Sotto Sopra a month before I turned in the pilot script to HBO. The city had two bites of this apple—
	<i>Homicide</i> and <i>The Corner</i>, I told him on that occasion, so if you want me to do this new show elsewhere, I certainly can. And the next project suitable for Baltimore, I'll come back here no problem.
</p>
<p>
	"No," the new-minted mayor told me at that lunch, confident in his ability to achieve every goal, to reduce the murder rate by nearly half, to fix a moribund police department, to bring miracles to Baltimore. "Do it here. We're proud of the shows."
</p>
<p>
	I recount all of that and wait.
</p>
<p>
	"We want to be out of 
	<i>The Wire</i> business," he says again.
</p>
<p>
	"No problem. I can move to Philadelphia next year," I counter.
</p>
<p>
	"And then it'll be a story about Philadelphia?"
</p>
<p>
	No, I explain, incredulous. We've already shot the first season. They were Baltimore cops chasing Baltimore drug dealers. There's no way we can change the setting for season two: "The chance to do that was when we had lunch, remember?" Pelecanos returns with a repeat coffee in his hand.
</p>
<p>
	"Well," says O'Malley, after a pause, "we'll reconsider your request for permits." Then he hangs up.
</p>
<p>
	I pocket the cellphone and exhale loudly.
</p>
<p>
	"Well?" says Pelecanos.
</p>
<p>
	A better man than myself would keep the confidence of that call, would allow an adversary the chance to back away from an absurd, embarrassing negotiation. A smarter man, certainly, would worry about some future gubernatorial petulance threatening some future film project; he would contemplate just how threatened the local film industry will be without a state incentive program and how essential the governor's support is. A smart fellow like that would be more calculating and solicitous with possible patrons and allies, more of a politician, for lack of a better word. He's someone, if you think on it, who would not write 
	<i>The Wire</i>. At his best and worst moments, he'd be a shameless, heedless, prideful sonofabitch.
</p>
<p>
	"We're not moving," I tell Pelecanos. "That guy just blinked."
</p>
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