Negativity towards US law enforcement by the wokesters continues
Thursday’s debut of a re-vamped Law & Order brought back actor Sam Waterston’s popular character, DA Jack McCoy, but it also refocused the series with a more critical view of police work with its “ripped from the headlines” stories.But of course it is. Specifically, his dream to focus on a leftist vision:
The series, which was canceled in 2010 after 20 seasons, is back for season 21 to “continue where the show left off,” series producer Dick Wolf said. Wolf added, “There are very few things in life that are literally dreams come true. This is mine.”
The series will return with several previous cast members, including Waterston, Camryn Manheim as Lieutenant Kate Dixon, and Anthony Anderson as Detective Kevin Bernard. But while the show will retread its typical format, there are some new tweaks to its content, especially a more critical take on the police.This is already way too stupid for words. And honestly, what good does it do to revive this monstrosity of the past 3 decades when one of the former leading cast members, Chris Noth, has since been accused of sexual assault? There's just no point in continuing this futile charade anymore. The original series wasn't all that different from how it handles things today, by making almost every criminal in the stories a white antagonist, and even lacing them with only so much leftism. Let's hope revival this gets cancelled soon, but I've got a bad feeling it won't be.
Anderson recently told Entertainment Tonight, “What we’re doing on the show is going to reflect the changes in society, the changes in police work.”
He added that the series will address the “new reality” of contemporary woke controversies. “I think people, you know, are interested in seeing and being a part of those stories that are being told and being a part of history.”
Indeed, in the show’s debut episode on Thursday, “The Right Thing,” detectives Kevin Bernard (Anderson) and new character Frank Cosgrove (Jeffrey Donovan) clash as Cosgrove is revealed as the sort of police officer who immediately imagines black kids are guilty of any particular crime. Meanwhile, Det. Bernard proves to be the sober, more competent and conscious member of the pair. The differences cause conflict right away.
Labels: misogyny, Moonbattery, msm foulness, sexual violence, showbiz, United States