“You think the job is gonna save me? You think it’s gonna
save you?
Last
summer, I worked at a job (actually, an internship: I didn't get paid) that I really hated. I
didn’t specifically “hate” anyone in my office, but something about the
combination of rigid bureaucracies, people unconcerned with anything but
themselves, and the everyday monotony of work just ate at me. It’s a pretty
universal experience: hating your work. What’s so amazing about “The Wire” is
that it deromanticizes just about everything we’ve come to believe is…well,
romantic. Our image of criminality is horrifying, sure, but there’s a seductive
appeal to criminality. We think cops are Bruce Willis and Mel Gibson (well,
maybe “The Wire” shows us they are Mel
Gibson). In reality, they’re Ron Livingston from Office Space.
The
“hustling” in this episode pretty much all occurs within the police and
Barksdale organization. Herc and Carver are trying to pass their Sergeant’s
exam, Stinkum is due for a promotion once he kills a local nobody, and
Lieutenant Daniels has to shut down the wire so Deputy Burrell doesn’t torpedo
his career. Heck, Stringer Bell is even trying to get a degree to move up in
his career, in a way. Everyone is just doing their job, and looking forward to
moving up the ladder.
On
another note, let’s talk about minor pet peeves (smooth segue, right?) The one
thing that always gets me in this episode is that Stringer is taking a
macroeconomic class, when it’s obvious that what he is (and should) be taking
is microeconomics. He doesn’t need to know about monetary policy, government
spending effects, etc: he needs to know about consumer/producer decision-making…Rant
over. Regardless of the poor naming, the business classes will be a recurring theme
of Stringer Bell’s career in the drug game, as he tries to play everything
hyper-rationally. It also shows us why he’s advanced so far in his career: he’s
got ambition, as even a smirking McNulty has to acknowledge.
These
classes, in a way, explain why he would advocate for a truce with Omar. He’s
trying to play a long-game, and he understands that on the way there he may
have to hold back on vengeance and other goods. Avon is less cerebral and more
visceral: Omar stole from him, murdered his men, and he needs to kill him not
only because it’s right, but because he’ll look weak if he doesn’t. Avon and
Stinger’s partnership works best in moments like these, when their
corresponding strengths and weaknesses balance each other out, and it’s good to
see just how damn good their decision-making apparatus is, especially compared
to, say, the police.
Speaking
of which, what a mess those cops are. Deputy Burrell gets mad at Daniels for
investigating the state senator’s aide found with 20,000 dollars (the aide is
played by Donnell Rawlins, best known for “Chappelle’s Show.” You may remember
him best as either “Ashy Larry” or the guy who yells “I’m Rich, Biotch!” at the
end of every episode.”) The police’s industrial complex is massive, and there
are so many political forces at way that it’s no surprise that getting stuff
done is difficult (unlike the two-headed dictator leading the Barksdale
organization).
Bunk,
meanwhile, decides that pulling the old McNulty with a random girl at the bar
as the real McNulty covers for is wife is a damn good idea. It ends poorly:
Bunk, out of guilt, burns his clothing to get rid of all the evidence, and
McNulty is forced to take him home. Bunk mutters a drunk comment about how
McNulty is bad for those around him, one of those “too true to say aloud”
moments that happen usually under the influence of alcohol. Although I’d like
it if one of our cops could stay faithful to their significant other, the
plotline largely works by building on the solid foundation Bunk and McNulty
have set up.
And I’ll
end with the standout scene of the episode, although it is very much in keeping
with “The Wire’s” sense of anticlimax that it doesn’t end the episode. Stinkum,
about to receive his promotion, and Wee-Bay are ambushed by Omar. Stinkum drops
dead pretty much immediately, while Wee-Bay takes one in the leg and limps off.
Omar is pure menace in this scene, and it’s just flat-out awesome. He also gets
the money line of the episode, a lesson that Stringer should learn in his
economics class but probably won’t:
“Come at the king, you best not miss.” – Omar
Big Miss
n
Easier choice than usual this week: Judge Phelan’s
pulling of rank on Deputy Burrell. It’s getting a little too easy to just use
the Judge as a deus ex machina to keep the wire going, and I don’t think the
character beats make a lot of sense. Why on earth does the guy care so much,
and why would someone listen to him again and again? And why does McNulty keep
coming to him begging (implicitly) for help if he’s going to be so pissy about
it as he does it? There are reasonable answers to both questions, but the
acting underwhelms.
1 comment:
Two cents on the Stringer in class rant.
I think the mis-calc on his choice in class is just another way of illustrating his inability to truly operate in either world he wants to('the game' or the business world). He desperately wants to be a business man, but as we see later with the developers, he's a bit clueless as to what it takes in that realm. His disconnect with 'the game' I think is more obvious. I think this speaks to your previous point on choice/circumstance. String wants to be something he isn't, and likely never had access to be when he was growing up. He's desperately trying to become a real business man, but he just too far out of that realm to successfully make the transition.
All that being said, String is a bitch.
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