The Drug War Has to End: David Simon on "The Wire" & Over-Policing of the Poor
Democracynow.org - In his acclaimed TV show "The Wire," David Simon
captured the city of Baltimore from the angles of street-level drug
dealers, beat police officers and journalists covering corrupt
politicians. Earlier this year, President Obama described "The Wire" as
"one of the greatest, not just television shows, but pieces of art, in
the last couple of decades.” Simon said he aimed to portray how "raw,
unencumbered capitalism" devalues human beings. Nearly a decade ago in
Slate, Jacob Weisberg wrote: "No other program has ever done anything
remotely like what this one does, namely to portray the social,
political, and economic life of an American city with the scope,
observational precision, and moral vision of great literature."
In
his acclaimed TV show "The Wire," David Simon captured the city of
Baltimore from the angles of street-level drug dealers, beat police
officers and journalists covering corrupt politicians. Earlier this
year, President Obama described "The Wire" as "one of the greatest, not
just television shows, but pieces of art, in the last couple of
decades.” Simon said he aimed to portray how "raw, unencumbered
capitalism" devalues human beings. Nearly a decade ago in Slate, Jacob
Weisberg wrote: "No other program has ever done anything remotely like
what this one does, namely to portray the social, political, and
economic life of an American city with the scope, observational
precision, and moral vision of great literature."
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