The Wire: The Life Cycle of The Game

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июн 2024
  • This video essay analyzes HBO's The Wire and how the characters in West Baltimore perpetuate the same cycle by playing "the game" year after year. If you want to understand the cycle from child to adult in the Wire's game, then watch this video essay.
    FAIR USE NOTICE:
    This video may contain copyright material; the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. This material is made available under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made "fair use" for the purposes such as criticism, comment, review, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that otherwise might be infringing. All rights belong to its owners.
    Music used:
    Beatbox Lighter by Kwon
    Shining Moon by Robert Meunier (Shutterstock)
    Some Distant Lights by Big Score Audio (Shutterstock)
    The Ark by Cosmo Lawson (Shutterstock)
    Remarkable Ride by Oliver Lyu (Shutterstock)
    Serenading Strings by Evan Macdonald (Premium Beat)
    &
    "Lotus" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    Timestamps:
    0:00 Intro
    1:21 Just a Child
    5:04 Enter the Game
    6:57 Prison and Life After The Game
    #thewire #bodie #videoessay
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Комментарии • 712

  • @LucLB01
    @LucLB01 Год назад +1108

    I can honestly say The Wire is one of the only works of fiction that actually changed my view on some of its themes.

    • @michaelsilver253
      @michaelsilver253 Год назад +35

      Super interesting man, love when art is able to do that for people. If I may ask, how old are you, when did you watch the show, where are you from and most importantly- what exactly changed?

    • @LucLB01
      @LucLB01 Год назад +131

      @@michaelsilver253 I am 17, I watched the show last year, live in eastern France where a lot of the same issues apply, and I’d say it got me to understand how everything is connected and how you can’t solve one issue without stumbling on a thousand others a bit better. And I’m probably a bit less quick to judge some of the guys at school, particularly after season 4, which I’d say impacted me the most, some scenes being really close to things I’ve actually seen without having the full context and while I already did have some clues, I’d say getting things laid down in front of me helped to, let’s say organise thoughts I already had.

    • @DoYouEvenRift
      @DoYouEvenRift Год назад +75

      @@LucLB01 you are smarter at 17 than most people I know at 27.

    • @tuntejaable
      @tuntejaable Год назад +6

      This was great read. Thanks guys.

    • @transformersrevenge9
      @transformersrevenge9 Год назад +72

      It's embarrassing to admit, but as a young man growing up in a mostly white country, I had some really negative ideas about black people and crime in America. The Wire showed me how wrong that type of mindset is. Now I know better.

  • @Maw0
    @Maw0 Год назад +573

    I kinda liked the finale of The Wire. Nothing too over the top. No need for a dramatic conclusion, it just ends the way life does. Corruptness and violence and children getting screwed over and over and over again. It just doesn't stop, it just continues as long as the Earth rotates.

    • @metalfan4u
      @metalfan4u Год назад +50

      It's very fitting, unlike most police shows where the bad guys are taken down for good, in the wire it just continues, new faces, same game the cycle continuing just like in real life its a brutal ending but also the best one it could have had

    • @Maw0
      @Maw0 Год назад +41

      @@metalfan4u I will say, The Wire is probably the most realistic scripted show I have ever seen. I honestly could see it pass for a documentary.

    • @M1lesJames
      @M1lesJames Год назад +31

      I like it too. The last shot focuses on the city of Baltimore, which is really the main character in the show

    • @Maw0
      @Maw0 Год назад +5

      @@M1lesJames You know, it really is.

    • @chrisquinn3377
      @chrisquinn3377 Год назад +5

      Yeah its like, we've shown you everything there is to see and the wheels just keep rolling

  • @TheFrogEnjoyer
    @TheFrogEnjoyer Год назад +381

    One of my favorite things about the series is it's cyclical nature and how things don't really change (Dukie becoming Bubbles, Michael becoming Omar etc.)

    • @bruno87022
      @bruno87022 Год назад +33

      The little boy who kills Omar maybe Will be a new Marlo,same psycho.Maybe Randy will be like Preston

    • @artsy38
      @artsy38 Год назад +31

      Dukie is a intresting character , in that world he was always gonna end up at the bottom , however if he could have escaped he had the attributes to achieve in the real world. Guess it's hard to leave what u know without someone putting u on their shoulders , like Ervin Burrell did for the other kid.
      The game was never letting a kid like micheal leave, in the same way a private school wouldn't let their star student leave education.

    • @leahsundvall5894
      @leahsundvall5894 Год назад +2

      It’s not cyclical, it’s survival.

    • @LordHollow
      @LordHollow Год назад

      ​@@bruno87022 Lenard is going to jail.

    • @aaronjones8094
      @aaronjones8094 Год назад

      @@bruno87022I forgot who was Preston the fat boy?

  • @heatherbdmv
    @heatherbdmv Год назад +281

    Bodie…the soldier’s soldier. The only death scene on The Wire that makes me cry every single time.

    • @stevendog40
      @stevendog40 Год назад +39

      He went out so true to himself. Stayed on his corner and fought til the end.

    • @chrilmill2964
      @chrilmill2964 11 месяцев назад +6

      bodie’s death scene will forever haunt me. michael shot him in the back of the head. twice.

    • @jasonmoore9894
      @jasonmoore9894 11 месяцев назад +22

      It was actually O dog, Chris said it should be someone the boy don't know for his first time

    • @sj3695
      @sj3695 11 месяцев назад

      That shit was so whack getting him from behind too idc marlos a bitch for that he went out like a real g🐐Tony Montana style fr

    • @jasonvoorhies6431
      @jasonvoorhies6431 10 месяцев назад +20

      For me that scene was when Dukie went to shoot up…you wanted to drag him back from going.

  • @pyropulseIXXI
    @pyropulseIXXI Год назад +319

    I saw the Wire for the first time in 2011; totally blew my mind at how amazing it was. Literally my favorite show of all time

    • @Maw0
      @Maw0 Год назад +8

      I started seeing it after hearing of Michael K. Williams' death.

    • @isaiahayers1550
      @isaiahayers1550 Год назад +5

      Not sure why "literally" was necessary here but it's easily my favorite show of all time. I don't think any other show comes close. Everybody should watch this show.

    • @powertrip8676
      @powertrip8676 11 месяцев назад

      I can’t get past season 2 it’s insanely boring

    • @isaiahayers1550
      @isaiahayers1550 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@powertrip8676 I've never heard anybody who got past episode 3 of the first season call this show boring. My only guess is that maybe a lot of what's going on is getting past you. You have to really pay attention closely and look at all the details. There's a ton going on and they don't spoon feed you. It is by far the best show ever but it's not meant to be mindlessly entertaining. It's meant to be elite story telling and world building.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@isaiahayers1550 it isn't literally my favorite show of all time. I used 'literally' in a figurative sense

  • @ninocrown3247
    @ninocrown3247 Год назад +159

    In a strange way, Marlo did win the game. He didn’t go to prison, he survived all the threats, sold the plug for millions and flipped legit. But based on that last scene, seemed like Marlo won’t be able stay walking the straight & narrow. He loved the game and thrived off the competition and drama.

    • @foreverfendi1037
      @foreverfendi1037 Год назад +73

      Marlo is the biggest loser. He crossed the finish line but turned around and ran backwards. Everyone else could not even finish and if they had they may have never looked back.

    • @jonathanneal1319
      @jonathanneal1319 Год назад +48

      Marlo didn't win according to him, he won according to you.
      He went back to the hood to prove that he was still a winner to his block but found the corners empty; he was proving himself to no one but himself.
      He wanted to be on top of the game b, but he was on top of nothing.
      He wasn't invited to the meet where Slim came out on top of the game, but he wasn't.
      He didn't want what Stringer wanted and achieved it so easily.
      You want to, I'm sure, secure a future for yourself.
      I think you're talking more about you.

    • @james4238
      @james4238 Год назад +23

      Marlo was after a unachievable goal, he didn't want money or respect, he wanted everyone to fear him, but no matter who you are or where you are, not everyone will be scared, some won't even know who he is and therefore not even know why they should be scared

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад +39

      @@james4238 and marlo's name was forgotten..the kids on the corner he fought at the end, were talking about omar they didn't know who marlo was..he lost!

    • @heatherbdmv
      @heatherbdmv Год назад +21

      Slim Charles was the winner. Started from the bottom and made it to the top.

  • @osman732
    @osman732 Год назад +174

    The show (and this essay) is an insightful portrayal of how much of our lives are socially-determined. The ways that we understand the world, our place in it, all of the choices we make - everything emerges through our social context. The drug trade has consumed everybody that you have bonds with: your caregivers, your community, every source of love that you've ever known. To not play the game, to go to school and become (e.g.) a pay lawyer, is as distant and ludicrous as being an astronaut.

    • @thepunisherxxx6804
      @thepunisherxxx6804 Год назад +1

      If you're a easily influenced moron who doesn't independently think for themselves then maybe. Everyone has agency over their life, and their lot in life is mostly the result of their actions. These guys could have moved out at anytime, could have focused on school, learned a trade, made a living that way. Many don't want to put in the work, so they are in this situation in most cases because its the easiest way to make a living and even greater if they progress enough.
      Culture does play a role though, and I see these issues as mainly American cultural vs institutional. Certain cultures are more practical and better than others. Asian culture for instance encourages good grades, music, discipline, goal oriented, TWO parents with the kid. Family values. You need a framework for your life to live it properly and progress yourself.
      Change needs to come from within that culture, an acknowledgement how some of it is toxic and produces people like what we see in the wire in the US...

    • @osman732
      @osman732 Год назад +11

      ​@@thepunisherxxx6804 Just curious - when you watch Season 4, do you come away thinking that the kids' failure to escape the drug war is because they lack independent thought or are unfocused at school?
      Rugged individualism as a solution to these problems is facile. It ignores how humans actually work.

    • @the_local_bigamist
      @the_local_bigamist Год назад +23

      Yep. Hence why those with a kind of "free will", "anyone can be a billionaire", conservative or neoliberal types will never get this show, assuming they would even give it a chance. It is too realistic and cuts through the arguments of the right, without being preachy in any kind of political way. It is basically a sociological drama.

    • @thepunisherxxx6804
      @thepunisherxxx6804 Год назад +4

      @@osman732 Keep coming up with excuses. Its fucking fiction, he didn't do anything to get out to service the story.

    • @thepunisherxxx6804
      @thepunisherxxx6804 Год назад

      @@the_local_bigamist Plenty of people who got out of the hood and made it big. Stop treating yourself like a victim and things are out of your control. Hell some of them just stay in because its easier and a life they know. They don't care about breaking the law.
      Its not white peoples fault, its not the governments, its yours. take accountability for your lot in life and stop blaming others. Its pathetic.

  • @kylecruel
    @kylecruel 9 месяцев назад +17

    This should be required viewing in many schools in urban areas to show kids how futile that path is. Adding another video for alternative options would go a long way to planting the seed on how choices can make our break your life plans.

  • @silviavalen1402
    @silviavalen1402 Год назад +76

    The Wire is a master class in how to make a good tv show; it is also a great conversation starter. It’s, at its core, Shakespearean.

    • @binatreides8203
      @binatreides8203 Год назад +10

      No bro, it’s Dickensian. They literally call itself that in season 5.
      Also the director himself says it’s more like the stories of Ancient Greek tragedians.

    • @honeymarku5
      @honeymarku5 Год назад +6

      @@binatreides8203 season 2 though, is a Shakespearean family tragedy.

  • @filmreviewer117
    @filmreviewer117 Год назад +133

    Poot was the really lucky one in that he survived all these changing of bosses and was able to still make it out young. Where he could then build some life away from the street and the game.

    • @norfnorf3819
      @norfnorf3819 Год назад +4

      Poot?

    • @aymacaymacunt814
      @aymacaymacunt814 Год назад +72

      I think Poot's main trait was apathy. Not disloyal but completely non-ambitious, he didn't care about anything other than money and women. The truest pawn of them all. One way to survive in the game I guess.

    • @filmreviewer117
      @filmreviewer117 Год назад

      @@norfnorf3819 my bad it autocorrected

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад +15

      Poot was a wise soldier unlike bodie who was too obtuse and fell in love with the lies of the game.

    • @norfnorf3819
      @norfnorf3819 Год назад +6

      @@afrosamourai400 bodie wasn’t obtuse. he just only knew The Game as a way to make it so he played it loyally.

  • @CJPosh
    @CJPosh 11 месяцев назад +16

    I recently rewatched the Wire, still one of the best drama out there. Season 3 and the way the writers brought systematic issues full circle to viewers was incredible.

  • @NaZtRdAmUs
    @NaZtRdAmUs Год назад +694

    "The game is rigged, but you cannot lose if you do not play." - Marla Daniels.

    • @romeogray5667
      @romeogray5667 Год назад +76

      I think you missed the whole point of the video. *To play or not is a choice but it doesn’t feel like an option*

    • @treychambers4154
      @treychambers4154 Год назад +20

      terrible quote

    • @bradhorowitz2765
      @bradhorowitz2765 Год назад

      To be fair as someone already wrote “the choice to not play dis t seem clear.” There are reasons why the kids of Baltimore end up doing what they do.
      But the show makes it clear that entering the game is a sunk cost fallacy. You may be on top in the drug war, but it’s only a matter of time before you fall. And it ain’t just the drug war-it’s all the institutions. The politicians play the game if being inefficient and corrupt jsut so the can get power. The cops use cronyism, racism, brutality to enchants their open power over the community-notice how mcnaulty DISNT actually make long term changes-he May be effective but he essentially got fired. The only one of the cops who truly shined was prezbo and that’s only because he RESIGNED after shooting A kid. Prez wasn’t this innocent; he was corrupted by the game but he left. And even then peez’s influence as a good teacher was limited-not because of anything he did but how the school system fails the kids.

    • @William-Gregory
      @William-Gregory Год назад +32

      @@treychambers4154 , it was a great quote for the context in which it was said. I don't know why the person posted it here.

    • @brightoneasterling9304
      @brightoneasterling9304 Год назад +5

      I got bills to pay

  • @abosworth
    @abosworth Год назад +145

    This series was a masterpiece. The ending left me feeling a bit broken. I definitely need to watch it again. Last time I watched was in 2015. Thanks for another great video.

    • @talkswithvigy7860
      @talkswithvigy7860 Год назад

      Ending perfectly sums up what violence does to you…Marlo might be alive but he is as good as dead

    • @Alvarez38006
      @Alvarez38006 Год назад +5

      I just finished it again for the 10th time last night. I forget how good the show is .

    • @artsy38
      @artsy38 Год назад +2

      I just finished it , might be a few yrs before my Mrs puts up with it again 😅... Best show ever

  • @cHAWNsHINN
    @cHAWNsHINN Год назад +26

    Bodie to Michael- "What you wanna be when you graduate? A astronaut?" 🤣🤣😂😂

    • @juanpablomersuglia6883
      @juanpablomersuglia6883 Год назад +2

      Early in the show when he went to juvenil judge and got Back to the hood he mention a few careers and laugh about it. About having the potential being a doctor or a lawyer ir some other good shit 😂

  • @reallyamir23
    @reallyamir23 Год назад +73

    This is really beautiful and does such a wonderful job of putting to words one of the big themes of the Wire. You did a great job on this.

  • @ArtemisUnderscoreJ
    @ArtemisUnderscoreJ Год назад +202

    Marlo was truly ahead of his time. No wonder he was the only one that “got out”. Thank you for the content!!

    • @christopherwalker8397
      @christopherwalker8397 Год назад +90

      Did Marlo really get out tho? I wouldn't think so. He was almost out but if the show had continued, he'd be right back in the game if you go off how his arc ended

    • @grimgoreironhide9985
      @grimgoreironhide9985 Год назад +17

      @@christopherwalker8397 He would end up in prison.

    • @oltimer3159
      @oltimer3159 Год назад +40

      @@christopherwalker8397 season 5 was written as a finale so no, his ending would have been the same. You can take the man out of the game but you can’t take the game out of the man.

    • @williamwallace7651
      @williamwallace7651 Год назад +21

      he only got out thanks to an illegal wire tap that his lawyer was lucky to catch with help of former criminal defense investigator who i bet levy had misgivings on hiring🤣🤣🤣🤣
      sure marlo had certain qualities that got him ahead but other weaknesses that would have brought him down one day

    • @DerekGnarGnar
      @DerekGnarGnar Год назад +70

      Marlo may have “got out” but it seems like he suffered a fate worse than death, at least for him. Through the whole show, Marlo was cool and in control except for one scene: when he found out people were talking about how he was too scared to step up to Omar. That was the one time he lost his composure and showed anger and vulnerability (which by the way, superb acting) and I feel like that’s indicative that death and violence doesn’t scare Marlo- it’s losing power and respect that scares him. In his final scene, you hear everyone on the street talking about the legend of Omar. But the new kids on the corner don’t even know who marlo is and they try to jump him. The streets left Marlo behind and the finale ends by showing him as a man damned to forever be trapped between two worlds

  • @vertexedits1806
    @vertexedits1806 6 месяцев назад +4

    This show is so good deserves all the praise it gets

  • @HighTableEntertainmentMENACE
    @HighTableEntertainmentMENACE Год назад +19

    That Marlo and Kennard comparison 😮🔥

  • @vishalpatil-vk7ub
    @vishalpatil-vk7ub Год назад +37

    This series is a rollercoaster of EMOTIONS ❤️😭

  • @introvertedjock
    @introvertedjock Год назад +27

    Wow. I just finished watching the Wire after 20 years of putting off watching it😂 Your explanation of the show and how it applies to the gamble of life is spot on.

  • @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN
    @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN Год назад +273

    _The Wire_ is not just unequivocally the greatest television show across any culture ever produced, nor is it just categorically the greatest work of modern North American art, but it is one of the greatest pieces of fiction ever concieved.

    • @Mrhorrible97
      @Mrhorrible97 Год назад +11

      What are you smoking??

    • @willt1936
      @willt1936 Год назад +30

      I agree, it’s simply one of the best pieces of art ever made

    • @Maw0
      @Maw0 Год назад +33

      It definitely is the most realistic scripted show I have ever seen.

    • @joaosantos5503
      @joaosantos5503 Год назад +19

      Easy there, cowboy. It's a pretty good show, but nowhere near the "greatest television show across any culture" lmao.

    • @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN
      @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN Год назад +6

      @@joaosantos5503 yikes lmfaoo 😂🤣🤡☠️

  • @hamsicle
    @hamsicle Год назад +6

    This was really good. This is the ultimate point of the wire as David Simon shows in the last montage. Different players, same game.

  • @appie.pittsen
    @appie.pittsen Год назад +21

    Probably the best video on The Wire on RUclips. Love how you explained the life path by using different characters to showcase it, and I loved those cut images of which characters "became" the "next" Marlo or Omar!

    • @kurthellis
      @kurthellis Год назад +5

      the images suggest michael is the next omar.... and that the kid who shot omar was the next marlo.. interesting selections

  • @ChevyChase301
    @ChevyChase301 Год назад +20

    One of the restaurants carcetti goes to in dc in the later seasons was being cleaned by my dad at the time! He also met a lot of people who worked on the show in west Baltimore

    • @Maw0
      @Maw0 Год назад

      Lucky!

  • @theredlogician4743
    @theredlogician4743 Год назад +44

    Damn good job, sir. Such an incredible show and it needs this type of appreciation and analysis

  • @VfaDD
    @VfaDD Год назад +47

    Was waiting to see this show on your channel. One of the best crime dramas ever made.

    • @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN
      @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN Год назад +11

      "One of the best crime dramas ever made."
      Bruh... It's literally *the best* . It is to crime dramas -- and television as a whole -- what Lionel Messi is to football.

    • @King-wl6zj
      @King-wl6zj Год назад +4

      The best*

    • @BlackHippy313
      @BlackHippy313 Год назад +3

      @@SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN this and the sopranos. Most shows take this shows approach too story telling while at the same time basing their MC around tony soprano

    • @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN
      @SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN Год назад

      @@BlackHippy313 that’s true!

    • @raymondsims7042
      @raymondsims7042 Год назад +1

      @@SUPERRRSAIYANNNNN for sure lad💯

  • @ALEX-eh6qk
    @ALEX-eh6qk Год назад +102

    You did a great job with this thanks. Often as a black person of middle class income I get into conversations trying to explain the reality of people in this situation. It’s tough trying to humanize your ethnicity in another eyes but this video is a Succinct resource to help.

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад

      Specially when dumbass middle class don't know about sociology and keep acting like poor people everywhere from every race(mexico, brazil, italy, england, east europe..) don't make poor decisions, like every ethnicity and races in usa didn't have their gangs (irish, italian, greek, jewish, chinese, latin etc)
      One fun racial fact about the show is, first season had less audience than the second because there were white actors..the second season clearly shows that crime is related to poverty not race...but people don't care about sociology it's easier to use stereotypes right?

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic Год назад +6

      What a weird comment

    • @pinkii6132
      @pinkii6132 Год назад +12

      You probably shouldn't be hanging around people that you have to humanize your ethnicity to it's weird as hell

    • @ALEX-eh6qk
      @ALEX-eh6qk Год назад +25

      @@pinkii6132 If I don't, then who will?
      In higher education or while meeting people from other countries some of these people I meet have never met a black person before myself. So in these specific scenarios, I try to help someone understand what being black is and what it is like. Before I met that person the only catalyst for these people to render a concept of a black person is through what they see on the news, social media, movies, etc.
      Of course, that begs the question of what they see.
      They see black people characterized as creatives and athletes but at the same time, we have also been characterized as not trustworthy, dangerous, violent, intellectually incompetent, and hedonistic heathens.
      these are our stereotypes. I find stereotypes often turn into generalizations that people who lack knowledge or experience use to satiate their need for understanding.
      it can be annoying at times but we have to tell others our story because even if they have met a black person before just meeting someone tells you almost nothing of how the world is through their shoes.
      and if we don't do it no one will.

    • @fearless798
      @fearless798 Год назад +3

      I get what you're saying bro

  • @rosemerritt1035
    @rosemerritt1035 Год назад +5

    You guys are blowing my mind. Please keep making what you’re making. You are articulating everything that needs to be said.

  • @johnnysilvercloud4470
    @johnnysilvercloud4470 Год назад +55

    Bodie is definitely the face of this video, given the context.

    • @JustanObservation
      @JustanObservation  Год назад +18

      True. I changed the thumbnail

    • @johnnysilvercloud4470
      @johnnysilvercloud4470 Год назад +23

      @@JustanObservation That's awesome. Yeah, Bodie is the embodiment of the Blue-collar worker trying to do it all by all the rules, but is caught in a hamster wheel.
      Great choice on featuring him a lot in this one.

  • @johnhenrytenorio490
    @johnhenrytenorio490 Год назад +5

    What a great video, it captured perfectly the essence of The Wire, the way the enviroment plays a great role in the life of everyone in the game. Some get lucky, some get caught, or some get killed, and they cant choose, they just can roll the dice.

  • @King-wl6zj
    @King-wl6zj Год назад +26

    The best tv show and probably the best piece of fiction of all time. We need more Wire videos.

  • @bluesbrother99
    @bluesbrother99 Год назад +9

    this is easily the greatest video of the wire on youtube, incredible work!

  • @boomann3999
    @boomann3999 11 месяцев назад +14

    This was great, it was like you were telling the story of 1 person yet it told the story of everyone in the series 💪

  • @truthserum6808
    @truthserum6808 Год назад +7

    While I love The Wire and believe it’s one of the greatest shows ever made, my biggest concern I see here in the comments are the erroneous belief that West Baltimore is a microcosm of Black American communities. The Black community is NOT monolithic. It would be awesome if more videos or TV shows were created that went to middle-upper middle class predominantly Black areas such as, many sections of Prince George’s County & Charles County MD, suburbs of Baltimore, suburbs of Philly, suburbs of NYC, huge swathes of the Atlanta suburbs, parts of Raleigh-Durham, many neighborhoods in SE Queens NYC (Cambria Hts, Rosedale, etc), Baldwin Hills-LA, Southern suburbs of Chicago, Cedar Hill & DeSoto TX (DFW), parts of Houston, etc…and the list goes on-and-on.
    Unfortunately, the media (and hip-hop) only shows the “hood” so people get a biased/inaccurate perception. Most Black people in the USA DO NOT live in abandoned run-down slums and are not living in poverty!!! While it’s true there is a higher poverty rate amongst Black Americans than any other group (minus Native Americans), the average Black American is middle class.💯

  • @ohmyglob1934
    @ohmyglob1934 Год назад +8

    This episode gave me goosebumps. The observation makes so much sense. Thank you!

  • @nizarmessaoudi8214
    @nizarmessaoudi8214 Год назад

    thanks for making sure the video is speaking your words consistently over the whole 13 minutes using the wire scenes. simple and effective!

  • @marknelson8545
    @marknelson8545 Год назад +1

    All of the videos I've seen of yours are compelling takes on The Wire and its stories.
    Also, I appreciate how you understand the correct time to use the word "an."

  • @Reck
    @Reck Год назад +4

    This is one of the best videos i have ever watched. Incredible insight.

  • @truefluekiller
    @truefluekiller Год назад +7

    This sums up the essence of The Wire really good. Well done

  • @Amy4000
    @Amy4000 Год назад +3

    Thank you for care and empathy you displayed in this video!

  • @tyanaichigovera7308
    @tyanaichigovera7308 Год назад +5

    This is a pretty comprehensive highlight and summary of The Wire.
    This should be studied in film and literature with its contemporary view and critique on American society in the city.

  • @kazachskijmolodiec
    @kazachskijmolodiec Год назад +23

    Man, I love your takes on those movies and series, charakters, politics, ethics, everything. You're not doing good job. It's exceptional!

  • @fitforfreelance
    @fitforfreelance Год назад +2

    Good analysis. I like the side by side portraits of the game repeating itself

  • @GM-it5rj
    @GM-it5rj Год назад +1

    This was the best vid Ive seen you do by far, so far...

  • @capablehandle
    @capablehandle Год назад +8

    I am so glad I found your channel. Every single video I've watched has been exquisite. I'm looking forward for future content.

  • @ronnanrodas7508
    @ronnanrodas7508 Год назад

    Wow. Bravo. Excellent walkthrough of the most gripping story ever told on TV!

  • @HighLordBlazeReborn
    @HighLordBlazeReborn Год назад +7

    I'm a Sri Lankan- I left home in 2011 to go attend uni in the UK, a year after finishing high school. I was already someone that was very interested in this idea of 'fairness', and had isolated ideas of what was wrong with the world around me, esp. hot on the heels of what was going on in SL politically at the time, as well as certain feelings I had about Sri Lankan society.
    I watched The Wire in 2013 or 2014, I think. Long after I'd watched the fan favourites: Sopranos, Breaking Bad, Deadwood etc. I watched this show for 5 seasons and came out someone that was finally able to connect those isolated ideas I had, developed and (imo) as near a complete picture as it was possible to get for me. It's why I will always rank this show as the greatest ever- those other shows are good, they're fucking great shows, but this- this has the power to change your entire worldview if you pay attention and follow close.
    The Wire isn't just about Baltimore- a lot of people make the mistake of thinking it's about what's wrong with that one city or the US. Nope, it's pretty damn universal. It's about the human condition keeping societies locked in misery, as told through the POV of systems: failing institutions in Baltimore. Things like personal ambition, for instance, is the cause for a lot of problems in TW: but there's no true solution for this. This is why I always say this and The Sopranos are so much more than just drama: they both examine the human psyche- Sopranos from the individual level, and The Wire from a more collective/systemic view.

  • @Sui_Generis0
    @Sui_Generis0 Год назад +4

    So excited to see a video on The Wire

  • @vanmckinley7936
    @vanmckinley7936 Год назад +16

    This show is still blowing my mind...rewatched last week and just realized Randy was Cheese's son 😳

    • @FlickBrown
      @FlickBrown Год назад +1

      When was that revealed?

    • @vanmckinley7936
      @vanmckinley7936 Год назад

      @@FlickBrown it wasn't... I notice they're last names were the same... it's an easter egg.. google it.

    • @Al-Neri
      @Al-Neri Год назад +7

      @@FlickBrown They have the same surname. It could be a coincidence but The Wire isn't that kind of show.

    • @onelyfemusic6213
      @onelyfemusic6213 Год назад +2

      Apparently they were gonna write it into season 5, but it got cut short

    • @PeterBagjuice
      @PeterBagjuice 11 месяцев назад

      Wait.....what?😮

  • @WriteHookTV
    @WriteHookTV Год назад +2

    Man, you have really, really good analyses. Bravo.

  • @Uconnspartan
    @Uconnspartan Год назад +2

    Man this broke down all the layers of the show, so well. Shoutout to Just an observation.

  • @lordjm7265
    @lordjm7265 Год назад +6

    We definitely need more The Wire content sir!

  • @MeuFilho-EL
    @MeuFilho-EL Год назад +9

    Great vid.
    My humble opinion... i agree with the statement that circunstances dictates action, that is also stated by machiavelli's book, art of war. Soldier has 04 choices.
    But even bjj has taught me that in disadvante position, while harder, can be inverted. All attacks opens defense for counter. And transitioning from position to position is how humans beat rigged games.
    Such is the art of war by sun tzu also.
    I believe in allingnment and convergence as method against games. Works in politics and game theory.
    Godspeed. Tks and merry c.

  • @emiliodelbozo3155
    @emiliodelbozo3155 Год назад +1

    we need more videos on this show, amazing vid on an amazing series

  • @thelasvegassportstalk
    @thelasvegassportstalk 11 месяцев назад +1

    This was very good. You hit the nail on the head. I don't think anyone could say it better then you.

  • @karamali174
    @karamali174 Год назад +5

    Man this video is unbelievable 🔥🔥🔥

  • @Sebadee80
    @Sebadee80 Год назад +3

    What a pity there's only 3 of these on The Wire, what a great observation!!!

  • @jimmyboe8246
    @jimmyboe8246 3 месяца назад +1

    what a master piece of video you make.

  • @dubszn1211
    @dubszn1211 3 месяца назад

    This was an awesome breakdown. Great job man!

  • @whateverman4945
    @whateverman4945 Год назад +1

    Powerful description. Great vid.

  • @fordeycent1
    @fordeycent1 Год назад +3

    Spot on, even though I love the show it still surprises me how deeply layered and smart it is. Great vid👍

  • @octaviusmitchell897
    @octaviusmitchell897 Год назад +2

    I love the way you broke this down 💪🏾

  • @CozumelTy
    @CozumelTy Год назад +3

    This is one of the best observations I have ever seen of this show. I love the Wire, its my fav show ever and the one that the most close to my reality.

  • @Chocolatepain
    @Chocolatepain Год назад +4

    I'd love to see you do a series on the characters of the wire!

  • @ohnoitisnt666
    @ohnoitisnt666 Год назад +1

    What a brilliant video. Good work Sir.

  • @mikemcgowan7278
    @mikemcgowan7278 Год назад

    Brilliant video. Sums it up perfectly.

  • @oscarNL
    @oscarNL 9 месяцев назад +3

    This is very, very well done.

  • @naphtaliyisrael9608
    @naphtaliyisrael9608 Год назад

    I was taught the game is to be sold not told. Big ups to the makers of this series and the in-depth breakdown of it’s nuances. RESPECT

  • @DrtyALGreen
    @DrtyALGreen Год назад +7

    Best show ever. I watch it 2-3 times every year, the whole series. Shout out to We Own This City as a spiritual sequel, but a 100 percent true Baltimore story. With many of the same contributors.

    • @RagggedTrouseredPhilanthropist
      @RagggedTrouseredPhilanthropist 9 месяцев назад +1

      Don't forget 'The Corner', as a prequel. Same writers, lots of the same actors, also set in Baltimore, and also centred around the drug trade.

  • @MultiFulhamFan
    @MultiFulhamFan Год назад +1

    Excellent video. Please make more on the Wire. Thanks!

  • @farenzeks437
    @farenzeks437 Месяц назад +1

    Yo your videos on the wire have all been dope af man keep doin your thing 👍

  • @sueannwashere
    @sueannwashere Год назад

    This video made me TEAR UP. This channel is too good and this show was revolutionary!

  • @RoninOnTheStickz
    @RoninOnTheStickz 7 месяцев назад

    Just finished my rewatch of The Wire a couple of weeks ago. Vid came right on time!

  • @mesha76
    @mesha76 Год назад +2

    Congrat man for this work of poetry
    Wonderful prose dude

  • @typic937
    @typic937 4 месяца назад

    wow, this was a amazing analysis definitely going to have to rewatch the wire in the future.

  • @sundevils4953
    @sundevils4953 Год назад +8

    Great breakdown. This series is almost educational with how it teaches people about generational poverty and gang culture.

  • @kris662
    @kris662 Год назад +8

    Bodie dying always gets me he had the most growth and could have done anything if he figured the game out quicker or had a better upbringing

  • @jacryder735
    @jacryder735 Год назад +9

    best vid you’ve done. well written and I can see other ppl agree

  • @bigdaddypiggy
    @bigdaddypiggy Год назад +3

    I think it was Slim Charles who said “The game ain’t changed,it’s just gotten more fierce”…..truer words are seldom spoken 😞🖤🥶y’all be safe

  • @joevaughnbrooks5844
    @joevaughnbrooks5844 11 месяцев назад +2

    You broke that down to T I watched the series a plethora of times but this is genius

  • @dnnni
    @dnnni Год назад +1

    great video. the wire is truly an amazing show

  • @jon62314
    @jon62314 Год назад +12

    Your videos never fail to entertain and educate!

  • @Sangria
    @Sangria Год назад

    Beautifully done

  • @atlanta1290
    @atlanta1290 6 месяцев назад +1

    What a superb analysis.

  • @kazachskijmolodiec
    @kazachskijmolodiec Год назад +41

    One of the best series

    • @elsu1004
      @elsu1004 Год назад +1

      breaking bad, peaky blinders, sopranos, Narcos.

    • @Rucker1980
      @Rucker1980 Год назад +6

      Imo the best

    • @nicolasclermont893
      @nicolasclermont893 Год назад

      @@elsu1004 breaking bad is major cringe and sopranos is one of the shows of all time

    • @Sui_Generis0
      @Sui_Generis0 Год назад +1

      @@elsu1004 the wire is better than all of these shows

    • @cr0be
      @cr0be Год назад +5

      @@elsu1004 no way you put peaky blinders on that list 😂🤣😂

  • @abffyf3r
    @abffyf3r Год назад +1

    This is a great description of our city and how we grew up

  • @heretohear1847
    @heretohear1847 Год назад +2

    If your Latino, the wire is the black, urban, and televised version of Cien años de soledad, the characters due to culture and the system around them are sucked into a cycle of drug dealing, murder, and jail time, even understanding the system is faulty doesn't save the last Buendia in the end, his people were always doomed to 100 years of solitude

  • @WesMontrose
    @WesMontrose Год назад +4

    I loved this video, but there was one omission I feel could have been addressed - Bubbles. In the finale, the show closes with a montage of all the characters we have come to know continuing on with their lives, with a sense that the game continues on without our watching it. But then after the montage, we get a final scene with Bubbles being invited up out of his sister's basement to join her and her family for breakfast. I have to believe the decision to end on this note was intentional to show us that though the game goes on uninterrupted, people can and do escape it. Everything about the series tells us that the game will be there and there's no escaping it, however I believe that this decision to end on this positive note shows that there is hope for all the players seeking a way out. It is a long and difficult rode (few characters are jerked around by the game and the system more than Bubbles), but escape is possible

    • @SkylineFTW97
      @SkylineFTW97 11 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly. It's hard and most people choose not to, but that doesn't mean that you have no choice but to take part. There are always ways out for someone who wants it bad enough. Bubbles found his way out, another good example is Dennis (Cutty). Not only does he make a honest living as a landscaper, but he devotes his spare time to running the boxing gym and being the positive influence many of the hoppers need to keep from going down the same path he did. Poot also eventually extracts himself and manages to find an honest living.
      And although he gets killed by Stringer due to fear of him snitching, D'Angelo was also actively seeking to straighten himself out after getting disillusioned with the game when he saw what happened to Wallace. I believe he would've walked the straight and narrow path had he lived.
      I think far too many people use poor circumstances as an excuse for bad behavior when it is absolutely not. We can simultaneously acknowledge that we should seek to remedy the circumstances that lead to cycles of violence while also acknowledging that those who "play the game" are the largest part of it. Their choice to carry on such a tarnished legacy is what ultimately keeps the cycle going, and while you can feel some sympathy for them growing up, they still knowingly subjected the next generation to the same thing, and that is not something that should be overlooked

  • @isaiahayers1550
    @isaiahayers1550 Год назад +2

    What an awesome video!! And an absolute masterpiece of a series. The Wire is the best TV show of all time and it's not even close.

  • @jayl.c.6890
    @jayl.c.6890 Год назад

    This was an amazing analysis of the game. Definitely accurate. May have to go back and watch the wire again sometime soon.

  • @silviavalen1402
    @silviavalen1402 Год назад +5

    I would love to see JAO’s analysis of Bubbles’s story. In my opinion he has the true heroes journey arc

  • @danielshaye18
    @danielshaye18 Год назад +1

    This is a great work

  • @lougehrig1786
    @lougehrig1786 Год назад +1

    the best video essay on the wire ever.

  • @geckobrah4201
    @geckobrah4201 Год назад +5

    The Wire is classic “entertainment” for us living outside that world, but more importantly shows how the destructive cycle self perpetuates. The underlying cause: poverty and illegal drugs. IMO, the only solution is to legalize and regulate drugs to take the gang element out of it. We’re never going to be able to stop drug use, but perhaps it can be regulated in a way that does not result in such despair and death.

  • @JovhonteFirstOfHisName
    @JovhonteFirstOfHisName 5 месяцев назад

    Being from Baltimore and being there while they were filming when I was a teenager was truly a privilege time of doing best with what u have.

  • @cameronwilliams61
    @cameronwilliams61 11 месяцев назад +2

    Growing up in west Baltimore from 10 - 26 I can definitely say that The Wire is the best depiction of what Baltimore is. Definitely top 5 in my series list

  • @EddyTheMartian
    @EddyTheMartian Год назад

    So happy you’re making videos on THE GOAT!!!

  • @AdaptiveApeHybrid
    @AdaptiveApeHybrid Год назад

    This was beautiful dude

  • @GQBouncer
    @GQBouncer Год назад +2

    Really good video. There were a lot of great things about The Wire that I liked. Even "the game" that the police/government were caught up in was presented in that show. I really liked at the end of the series, when that guy was shoot for the sake of "honour" rather than the gangs rallying around him as a new source of income. He was shot for the sake of revenge. It was a great way to communicate both "honour among thieves" and how the "unwritten rules" keep people in a perpetual cycle. You can parallel that moment with how capitalists/business people/politicians/etc. kept their mind capitalist-orientated and didn't have honour but neither did they have "beefs" to such an extent where violence was required because of that. All round great show, good video man.

  • @lc9245
    @lc9245 Год назад +2

    My favourite TED talk of all time is Steven Levitt's comparing how corporate America, or McD, is run and crack cocaine gangs. At the end of it, he not subtly compare "the game" to corporate America corruption through asking gang leaders why they always get themselves paid even when business is tough. The gang leader replied that they can't look "weak and shit" when people are out there eyeing their job. It's just astounding how profound it is, and how much it reflects why things just can't change. The gang ladder and the corporate ladder are similar. It's the illusion of success that lured innocent souls in and let theirs be consumed by the race to the bottom. There's so many cold, hard economics that speaks to life in gangs: Why don't you just walk away? Sunk cost.