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Jedi
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Well, the CSI episode was less insidious...it was good television, just a bad precedent for the show. If it weren't CSI I would have liked it.
I never claimed it was totally realistic. They have more resources than most crime labs to make the plots possible, and the distribution of crimes isn't accurate, but let's put it this way.
Here's the average CSI crime. A husband walks in on his wife cheating, kills the man, and they engage in some creative coverup. Now, this might not happen as often as less cinematic crimes, but I can imagine people in real life doing this.
Here's the average Law and Order: SVU crime. Some super-insane super-evil person who believes he is above the human race rapes women who look like his dead wife and kills them to swallow their souls to enhance his own power so he can transcend to a higher plane.
Which one is easier to suspend disbelief for?
CSI was very plausible in the first couple seasons, but has become less and less plausible.
I'm not saying CSI is realistic, I'm saying it's *plausible*. And it's easier to get into because...well, characters aren't so full of themselves as the CSI: Miami lead character is, for one. And the suspects and victims are easier to identify with because they act like you can imagine real people acting in that situation.
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| Posts: 1783 | Location: Around Boston. | Registered: 24 February 2005 |    |
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"Forum Moderator" Jedi
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Of the detective shows you mention, I only watch CSI and SVU with any degree of regularity. I like the latter mainly for the acting and the characters (although they've made Ice-T and Belzer into cartoons recently) and the former for the cool effects and weird science. I think the finale of CSI was certainly overblown, but I wasn't surprised or bothered by it so much as I just chalked it up to trying to up the ante for the most popular show on TV.
Honestly, given the amount of super-sick sex crimes, I don't find many of the SVU cases that outrageous. Many of the crimes aren't sex crimes, per se, but crimes against children. I find both shows equally plausible, and both of them generally entertain me. They are two of only a handful of shows that my wife and I watch together regularly each week.
I think most shows lose plausibility as they age. Take ER. It was a very good, medically-minded, drama for several years. But the storylines became thinner (and the focus shifted from the medicine to the personal dramas) and even repetitive. And it strikes me as really as plausibility problem that EVERY PERSON who has ever worked in Cook County General Hospital has been stabbed, shot, mugged, or assaulted in some way shape or form.
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| Posts: 3875 | Location: ATL, GA | Registered: 25 May 2004 |    |
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Participant
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CSI is over the top anyway. Where are you getting this down to earth stuff from?
The Tarentino finale were the best episodes in the shows history.
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Enthusiast
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For me to get into detective shows, the two most important things are plausible crimes, and an engaging cast.
The Tarantino episode was a great episode, but it bothered me that it didn't have a plausible crime.
Out of the CSIs, I think Vegas and New York have plausible crimes (In general), but only Vegas has an engaging cast.
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"Forum Moderator" Super Bad-Ass Jedi
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I agree with Elle's post from over a year ago that Veronica Mars is the best detective show on TV. Way better than the standard procedural crime drama.
----- I’ll be Ben Gazzara, you’ll be Gena Rowlands.
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| Posts: 5176 | Location: Michigan | Registered: 19 June 2005 |    |
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