Analyzing Evil: Marlo Stanfield From The Wire

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
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    Hello everyone and welcome to the one hundred thirty-sixth episode of Analyzing Evil! Our feature character for this video is Marlo Stanfield from The Wire. I hope you enjoy, and thanks for watching. If you have any feedback or questions feel free to let me know below!
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    #thewire #hbomax #evil

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Haul98900
    @Haul98900 Год назад +1698

    when you realize that the most sympathetic character on marlo's team is chris partlow, who is one of the scariest killers in any media, you realize how evil these guys are

    • @Discipleofthelordandjesus
      @Discipleofthelordandjesus Год назад +132

      😂😂 yeah monk was cold… had lil Kevin in that suv like a sack of potatoes.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +164

      Marlo’s gang was ran more like the military maybe due to Chris. That’s why they seem so cold bc they’re like real soldiers

    • @ndogg20
      @ndogg20 Год назад +200

      Chris was calm. cool, professional in an eerie way. Treating his victims like a dentist would "now relax, I'm going to take good care of you".
      His relaxed demeanor when committing murder creeped me out every time.

    • @targetegrat
      @targetegrat Год назад +60

      @@ndogg20 The actor that plays Chris is nice in real life. I assumed he was playing himself in the Wire kinda like Snoop. But this was not the case.

    • @michaelulloa2179
      @michaelulloa2179 Год назад +16

      Please do a video on Franklin Saint.

  • @IMold363
    @IMold363 Год назад +1106

    So true about Avon’s generation having the privilege of having grown up in connected and active communities. Avon and his people are shown operating in store fronts, funeral homes, and don’t forget the basketball scene. Marlo is always shown hanging around abandoned buildings and dilapidated areas. That’s where his generation was created: in the wreckage of what Avon’s generation slowly created through their greed.

    • @thesecondYouTube
      @thesecondYouTube Год назад +108

      Avon and Stringer Bell were the ultimate Gen X children. Abandoned latch keys kids but still with connections.

    • @HBK_Mook
      @HBK_Mook Год назад +9

      🤯

    • @sanyatesGRIA
      @sanyatesGRIA Год назад +16

      Strong point 💯💯💯

    • @Dilomight
      @Dilomight 11 месяцев назад +6

      Awesome comment

    • @LycanVisuals
      @LycanVisuals 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yup, great. 💯

  • @smittywerbenjagermanjensen9809
    @smittywerbenjagermanjensen9809 Год назад +1488

    I always felt like the reason Marlo doesn't have a backstory is because he isn't real. He's an idea, an expression of the streets, something that takes, only giving enough to entice the vulnerable into it's web. Then chewing them up and spitting them out when it has what it wants. Marlo is a metaphorical representation of evil in it's purest form.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +167

      Marlo was based on a real person in Baltimore named Black.

    • @BenHopkins1000
      @BenHopkins1000 Год назад +31

      Hell won’t be a surprise to men like Marlo

    • @kb4903
      @kb4903 Год назад +60

      He’s the best and worst of the streets. The best player but that means the worst human being.

    • @chriswrangler5680
      @chriswrangler5680 Год назад +136

      He's literally based off of a real dude named Timmirror Stanfield who ran a crew in South Baltimore Westport in the mid 1980s. Young 25 year old guy, this why the wire will always standout as one of the greatest crime shows cause of how real and raw the depiction of Baltimore is. Recommend watching We Own This City which was made by the same creators of the Wire and based off of real events with the Gun Trace Task Force

    • @LoneWolf_Cub_Ogami_Itto
      @LoneWolf_Cub_Ogami_Itto Год назад +8

      I feel like a man like him exists today IF not then.

  • @MrKeepItGoing
    @MrKeepItGoing Год назад +1431

    I been waiting on a Marlo analysis since 2022. A man who valued the weight of his name versus a clean escape from the game. He didn’t even have to be killed off, the loss of his reputation was a big enough bullet for him.

    • @Discipleofthelordandjesus
      @Discipleofthelordandjesus Год назад +198

      That last sentence was a mind opener… Omar got the bullet , Avon got the pen , Marlo lost the rep. All 3s biggest nightmares.

    • @KevinJohnson-cv2no
      @KevinJohnson-cv2no Год назад +100

      A lot of people mistakenly think that Marlo valuing the weight of his name was him chasing clout. If anything, Marlo's temperament & approach to life shows how little he values clout & being "the center of attention"; I think his valuing of his name is more from a base drive of respect, and likely even more important, effective rulership. One of the primary things tyrants have done throughout history is use their name to instill fear into their subjects, thus guaranteeing a firm & stable rulership over their territories. Anyone who tried to shatter this blanket of fear would be dealt with immediately, as the currency of fear keeps the kingdom flowing & can't be threatened.

    • @cal2127
      @cal2127 Год назад +50

      ​@@Discipleofthelordandjesus stringer ended up being just a thug in a suit like he kept trying to run from

    • @baconsarny-geddon8298
      @baconsarny-geddon8298 Год назад +60

      The contrast between territory-obsessed, reputation-obsessed Marlo ("My name is my NAME!!"), vs The Greek, doing everything to AVOID having a rep, and willing to vanish into the wind ("They have my name... but my name is not my name...") was done beautifully.
      It was like the first season "businessman vs gangster" thing between Avon and Stringer, but dialed up to eleven.

    • @brianstanton2721
      @brianstanton2721 Год назад +8

      ​@@KevinJohnson-cv2noI agree I really think Marlo couldn't care less about respect, respect is earned! He cared about compliance, you don't have to earn this, you can take this through bloodshed and brute force. Marlo's wheelhouse lol

  • @rafaelgustavo7786
    @rafaelgustavo7786 Год назад +687

    The last scene of Marlo is a Symbol: Marlo managed to reach the level of acceptance, wealth and (possible) influence that Stringer so dreamed of, but that's the difference between the two characters: Stringer's dream was Marlo's nightmare (who lived and "breathed" the "game" of the streets).

    • @jancarlosmanon4556
      @jancarlosmanon4556 Год назад

      acceptance? no, those wealthy white men just saw a bag of money, they wanted to steal every penny from him, they saw him as the same they saw stringer, a thug from the ghetto

    • @brianstanton2721
      @brianstanton2721 Год назад +21

      BRO BIG FACTS!! THIS IS WITHOUT A DOUBT THE BEST SHOW EVER MADE

    • @LoneWolf_Cub_Ogami_Itto
      @LoneWolf_Cub_Ogami_Itto Год назад +2

      Well said.

    • @XanderShiller
      @XanderShiller Год назад +35

      The Sopranos did this..when Chris dreamed of a life as a screenwriter/actor, Tony did everything to kill that dream and then kill Chris..while his son who couldn't care less just "gets a job" and it happened to be in showbiz. Sad.

    • @Cobra2323
      @Cobra2323 Год назад +13

      Like Avon said, "I bleed red. You bleed green".

  • @isaiahdaddys9379
    @isaiahdaddys9379 Год назад +573

    Marlo’s ending was brilliant. Buddy pulls up to a corner wearing a suit (like String always wanted), starts a fight and claims the corner for himself. He knows nothing else…

    • @ogre7737
      @ogre7737 Год назад +122

      Watch that scene again, those Corner Boys was talking about Omar while he was walking up.
      And they look right past him saying ‘who are you’

    • @chris-vr5pm
      @chris-vr5pm Год назад +71

      @@ogre7737I liked that detail as well, Marlo whole thing was ensuring his name rings out in Street like Omar or Avon, just for it to wither away.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +25

      @@ogre7737you missed his point. Marlo took a corner by himself in a suit with no gun. Thats boss shit

    • @stansmith5019
      @stansmith5019 Год назад +40

      ​@@BigA678prolly got shot in the head the next day tho

    • @LeftHookDeadly280
      @LeftHookDeadly280 Год назад +9

      ​@@stansmith5019he got shot in the Arm in the process 😂

  • @tacoenvy
    @tacoenvy Год назад +497

    Marlo was amazing, every scene he was in, he stole it. Jamie Hector did such a phenomenal job with this character.

    • @cliffbooth4826
      @cliffbooth4826 Год назад +20

      He was so cold one wonders if the actor is like that lol

    • @Gabriel-br4qe
      @Gabriel-br4qe Год назад +26

      @@cliffbooth4826 that's how good the guy is at his job cause he seems like a pretty chill dude

    • @chriswest8389
      @chriswest8389 Год назад +1

      Yes. Like that one thug from boardwalk Empire. Now do we have an actor playing a thug or a thug playing a thug?

    • @chriswest8389
      @chriswest8389 Год назад

      ​@@cliffbooth4826METHod acting off the roof

    • @ethanmiles5544
      @ethanmiles5544 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@cliffbooth4826 Check him out in We Own This City, also by David Simon. Completely different character. Great actor.

  • @tobtob831
    @tobtob831 Год назад +312

    Marlo always had that look on his face when he watched someone die, like it was the highest form of pleasure. Life didn't mean a thing to him, and that's what makes me remember his character. Also despite his antisocial tendencies, he's still able to function in social settings, like when he went to the card game with those old heads. A true psychopath.

    • @lugebeatzz8747
      @lugebeatzz8747 5 месяцев назад +1

      He doesn't open his mouth unless there is something for him. My guess is Marlo was a hopper before he made his way to the top.... The best way of solutions for him is eliminating the threat. He doesn't give warnings.... He just eliminates

    • @madgavin7568
      @madgavin7568 4 месяца назад

      Contrary to what was said in the video, Marlo is absolutely, 100% a sadist.

  • @thestrangah9690
    @thestrangah9690 Год назад +230

    Love his ending in the show. He’s just another forgotten name. He truly won the game but lost so much

    • @cliffbooth4826
      @cliffbooth4826 Год назад +14

      I'll take the 10mil lol

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +15

      @@cliffbooth4826facts I rather be rich than famous

    • @bethanyreynolds7270
      @bethanyreynolds7270 Год назад +60

      ​@@BigA678That's not the point. Marlow wanted the respect and the power from the beginning. In the end he doesn't get that.

    • @LyleGibbs
      @LyleGibbs Год назад +5

      @@bethanyreynolds7270he got it and more… just because to corner boyz possibly from the east side don’t know him his rep is gone? A man responsible for countless bodies… yeah ok

    • @miekgg
      @miekgg Год назад +3

      @@bethanyreynolds7270we all already understood that lol, we’re just saying either way we’d be satisfied with the outcome bc of the money…. 🤦‍♂️

  • @XanderShiller
    @XanderShiller Год назад +320

    That scene where Marlo walks into a foreign bank with full confidence and says..
    "Y'all got my money?" Was organic comedy 😂

    • @gerardsloan1593
      @gerardsloan1593 Год назад +19

      I can't imagine him buying nice clothes for a trip to some exotic place lol. Have a good day reader.

    • @aharris82
      @aharris82 Год назад +24

      Girl: *asking for his ID in french*
      Marlo: WHAT???
      XD

    • @raskolnikov7049
      @raskolnikov7049 Год назад +10

      "Yo who the fuck is Lex?"

    • @XanderShiller
      @XanderShiller Год назад +3

      @@raskolnikov7049 almost like a modern raskolnikov minus the consciousness.

    • @raskolnikov7049
      @raskolnikov7049 Год назад +10

      @@XanderShiller You're probably the first person in existense to draw parrarels between Marlo and Raskolnikov, but yeah, I guess they have the same idea, that they're special and allowed to do what they want.

  • @RiVer-Parish
    @RiVer-Parish Год назад +1016

    This dude was a true definition of a ruthless villain.

    • @chasehedges6775
      @chasehedges6775 Год назад +27

      Another good kind of villain

    • @Discipleofthelordandjesus
      @Discipleofthelordandjesus Год назад +54

      He was niccolo machiavelli the prince from Baltimore… straight evil . As long as he got his point across he felt justified.

    • @Argos-xb8ek
      @Argos-xb8ek Год назад +13

      ​@stockton546 but he was too emotionally charged. And he got lucky when it came to beating others because people constantly overestimated him believing him to be more than a violent savage as Prop Joe found. Marlo had no line he wouldn't cross

    • @PuchuKt
      @PuchuKt Год назад +15

      ​@@DiscipleofthelordandjesusMachiavelli wouldn't have killed the security guard, like the other comment said, too emotional, too prideful

    • @brandontaylor2772
      @brandontaylor2772 Год назад +8

      You gotta do Franklin Saint from Snowfall. That’s a great character.

  • @hunzren
    @hunzren Год назад +245

    Stephen King said that Snoop is the most terrifying TV villain, but for me it is Marlo. Dude was dead inside. It is so interesting seeing Jamie Hector play a cop on Bosch, because he is so different in that role. Dude is a talented actor.

    • @stevendog40
      @stevendog40 Год назад +41

      SK said snoop was the most terrifying female villian on TV

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад +5

      Snoop was worse than marlo.

    • @timothybrown8424
      @timothybrown8424 Год назад +41

      ​@afrosamourai400 Snoop was more callous, but Marlo was callous AND calculating. He could have led a damn special forces team with his strategic mind.

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад +31

      @@timothybrown8424 snoop was the only one among marlo and chris who really liked to kill people including innocents or civilians.

    • @BilsonBoi
      @BilsonBoi Год назад +17

      Favorite scene is her buying the nail gun

  • @skyman2204
    @skyman2204 Год назад +240

    You did miss one thing. Marlo didn't just kill Junebug, he killed Junebug and his entire family (save the child who escaped when Michael didn't shoot).

    • @willstaywinning
      @willstaywinning Год назад +21

      And the other kid that hid in the closet. Or was that the same kid?

    • @skyman2204
      @skyman2204 Год назад +44

      @@willstaywinning Good catch. I don't think it was the same kid that ran out the back, seeing as how the one in the closet is what causes Greggs to go back home and read to her and her partner's kid.
      I might be remembering it wrong but I think one of the women killed was pregnant as well.
      Either way Marlo wasn't just ruthless, he was deranged. It's no wonder his organization fell apart as fast as it did.

    • @Cheese23145
      @Cheese23145 Год назад +2

      @@skyman2204 no, I don’t think so I found no mention of the girlfriend being pregnant

    • @tylerchambers6246
      @tylerchambers6246 10 месяцев назад +2

      Well he was talking that sheeet

    • @mistasofly
      @mistasofly 10 месяцев назад +12

      Actually he didnt kill Junebug's whole family. They killed Junebug, Junebug's girl, and I believe 2 of his homeboys that were in the house. The 2 children were spared.

  • @cellperfecto421
    @cellperfecto421 Год назад +93

    When he corners those two boys in his final scene, there is ambiance noise as he makes a little scoff, almost laughing at the situation, while the camera pans out away from him and he sighs. It is such a cool scene because you could interpret so many different things, but this is my take.
    Marlo is resigning at his new situation with an ironic laugh. Once the dopamine rush of scaring those boys runs out, he realizes that he simply can't live without "the game." He can't have a normal life where he becomes a successful businessman because that isn't his world, but at the same time, he knows that he is going to spend the rest of his life in jail if he steps out of the line or even get killed without his associates covering his back. This dilemma is turning him apart inside because he knows he can't do anything else than a life of crime but he knows that if he tries to do that he could lose everything. It creates this ambiguous situation where the audience asks themselves: what is Marlo going to do next? Resign himself to an unhappy life or risk his own to keep his lifestyle going?
    Honestly, this is really smart writing. The character doesn't get punished by death or by jail but by the loss of the meaning of his own life.

  • @MasterFatness
    @MasterFatness Год назад +147

    The Wire had surprisingly few truly psychopathic characters, but Marlo was most definetely one of them. He facilitated the murder of people who he didn't really have to kill, one of whom was Michael, who proved himself too smart to take the fall. He had no definitive proof that Michael had betrayed him, but he still elected to deal with him, on the off chance that he was right about him, and to negate the risk that he would betray him in the future. This series was booming with killers, but I do believe that Marlo was the coldest of them all.

  • @_The_Archive_
    @_The_Archive_ Год назад +275

    Fun Fact: Many of the minor characters are played by real-life police officers, politicians and former criminals. In fact, many of the former criminals who act on the show were previously arrested by the real-life cops who act on the show.

    • @baconsarny-geddon8298
      @baconsarny-geddon8298 Год назад +55

      Yeah, "The Reverend", who featured heavily in the "Hamsterdam" storyline was the real-life inspiration for Avon- The biggest dealer in West Baltimore in the 70's.
      And Butchie's associate "Donny", who armours Omar with magazines, and delivers him a shank, when Omar's in county jail, was the real-life inspiration for Omar- who made a living robbing heroin dealers. The "some Spiderman shlt" jump from a 4th floor balcony was based on a real experience he had.
      Also Snoop was basically playing herself, as a character- She'd served time for murder, and worked as pimp, before The Wire.
      And the "Sgt Mello" character ("don't get captured") was the real Jay Landsman, who was a Baltimore cop, when Simon was a crime reporter.

    • @crazychase98
      @crazychase98 Год назад

      Isn't marlo based off the guy who was a hitman/drug dealer that in the 80s used a van do grab people and kill them in the van. Just made them disappear

    • @HILAL19564
      @HILAL19564 Год назад

      @@crazychase98 I think you mean wayne silk perry with the murder van. Alpo Martinez's hitman one of the most ruthless and prolific gangsters operating out of DC Washington with a 100+ bodies on his name. but if so it's usually Omar little people say he's based on. Look up wayne silk perry.

    • @HILAL19564
      @HILAL19564 Год назад +7

      @@crazychase98 of course not operating anymore the guy is serving 5 life sentences in the worst prison in america..he operated just like Omar Little people feared him so much he extorted big time drug dealers in washington dc back in the 80s 90s where Washington DC had the highest murder rate in america he extorded them just like taking candy from a baby exactly like Omar did and wayne Perry was even more feared didn't even had to use a gun in most cases dealers were handing bags of money to him so feared was he. If there any was a television character based on that guy it has to be Omar based on Wayne silk Perry.

    • @crazychase98
      @crazychase98 Год назад +2

      @@HILAL19564 I knew it was one of the characters and could remember parrys name

  • @WW-bc1bq
    @WW-bc1bq Год назад +112

    My favorite quote from Marlo, "You want it to be one way, but it's the other way." There's something universal about that quote. We've all been in positions where we want things to be one way -Just, Honest, Fair, Noble, Equal, but the harsh reality is that things are another way and by that point you're another victim of a cruel reality.

    • @LyleGibbs
      @LyleGibbs Год назад +5

      Quote you can use in everyday life. And to me the best Villain on any series. He was so good people try to make it as though his reign was forgotten 😂

    • @WW-bc1bq
      @WW-bc1bq Год назад +4

      @@LyleGibbs I agree 💯. It's true most ppl see his reign as a failure or at the very least underated. If it had to be described in one word I would say his reign was brutally efficient. Marlo was willing to use anyone or anything in his disposal in the most efficient way possible. As a villain he accomplished almost everything he set out for it was only until my second watch that I realized he lost in the way that matters most to him.

    • @joebeast15
      @joebeast15 Год назад +4

      Great quote. I use that one too. It’s simple, vague but impactful.

    • @pepperypeppers2755
      @pepperypeppers2755 Год назад +4

      It's always cruel people that justify cruel actions with this kind of logic. Don't mistake nihilism for wisdom when it's used as an excuse for antisocial behavior

    • @Akkbar21
      @Akkbar21 6 месяцев назад +1

      Classic Gen Z mindset: always a victim

  • @onyxthegemlord2847
    @onyxthegemlord2847 Год назад +239

    If only Marlo knew of Manta Sleep, he'd have become the most noble gentilest soul that Baltimore had ever seen

  • @rallerallesson408
    @rallerallesson408 Год назад +57

    One of the more cold, calculated and ruthless villains ever. He also felt realistic, that what made his precence so chilling.

    • @lugebeatzz8747
      @lugebeatzz8747 5 месяцев назад

      He felt like a gangstar.... Avon and Stringer bell were so human...

  • @Dethmaster64
    @Dethmaster64 Год назад +129

    Marlo proved how the new game would be ruthlessly playing checkers on a chess board

    • @lewis4774
      @lewis4774 Год назад +4

      Well said

    • @blksheep176
      @blksheep176 Год назад +8

      As much as I’ve thought about the chess analogy in the wire, I’ve never considered the kind of king marlo truly is.

    • @goodetodd5731
      @goodetodd5731 Год назад +1

      Or playing chess on checker board, meaning the streets is a checker board , with no winners.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +1

      @@blksheep176he was the embodiment of Machiavellianism and 48 laws of power

    • @blksheep176
      @blksheep176 Год назад +3

      @@BigA678 i thought that at first too, but when you rewatch the show you notice how he gets a lot of lucky breaks as well.

  • @oviniciussiqueira
    @oviniciussiqueira Год назад +144

    Marlo represented a twisted version of the American Dream. Starting his business from nothing and stopping at no costs to achieve his goals.

    • @zucchinigreen
      @zucchinigreen Год назад +51

      That IS the American dream.

    • @alwayyssgone
      @alwayyssgone Год назад +4

      Right he talking bout twisted

    • @kevinkarbonik2928
      @kevinkarbonik2928 Год назад

      It was not a business... it was crime...

    • @maxwelljenkins2904
      @maxwelljenkins2904 Год назад +12

      @@kevinkarbonik2928 What "business" that's successful doesn't have crime or corruption in it's ranks & file?

    • @Akkbar21
      @Akkbar21 6 месяцев назад

      @@maxwelljenkins2904this is such bs. This is how chumps who get their news from twitch streamers think

  • @RyanHarris77
    @RyanHarris77 Год назад +130

    Marlo is an example of a villain that is feared, but not respected.

  • @myronsanders4563
    @myronsanders4563 Год назад +179

    It's both comical and kinda tragic that there are groups of people online who praise Marlo's character. Even saying that by having his freedom and around $10 million in cash that he "beat the game" and was the sole winner of the show. The final scene w/ him shows that he suffered the worst punishment of anybody of the show. Here you have Marlo, w/ Levy in a room with billionaires and decision makers. This is a dream that anybody who grew up in rough conditions and who wants an out in that lifestyle dreams of. Marlo, for the 1st time on the show, feels uncomfortable by being in this setting. He's not a businessman, as he suggested while selling the drug connect. He's a criminal to his core. He was bred to be the way, and it's the only life he knows. So if Marlo indeed won, why does he needlessly go on a Street Corner when he had his out at the Gala earlier? Why did he attack 2 Corner Boys because they didn't know who he was? Because it was never about the money for Marlo. If it was he would have stayed at that party and networked his way to a better life. Those 2 things proved that he was an average Joe in both of these Worlds. His whole mission statement was his power and name to ring out. And with getting nearly shot in the head and stabbed on a street Corner, and seeing a Gun and Knife at his feet, he has a dillema: Either try to go back to a life he was forbidden by law to never go back to, or to live the rest of his remains days as an average nobody, which he's not interested in. This series showed there are no true winners in life. So it made no sense having the only person to make it out be a sociopath Drug Dealer. It's tragic. There are folks online who now praise his character. When the characters' existence was a cautionary tale of an inability to escape a life. And how some folks are forced to repeat a cycle that has severe consequences

    • @PortCityBalrog
      @PortCityBalrog Год назад +35

      You nailed it cold right there. When the game is rigged there truly are no winners, some just lose slower than others...

    • @johnsabin1235
      @johnsabin1235 Год назад +22

      The people praising him would be the ones in those abandoned houses, the soviets termed those kinda people as “useful idiots”

    • @woahblackbettybamalam
      @woahblackbettybamalam Год назад +20

      Stringers dream was Marlos nightmare 😂

    • @TheBfutgreg
      @TheBfutgreg Год назад +12

      It's like Patrick Bateman worship or something....anything to aspire to, it's fucking sad man

    • @Dilomight
      @Dilomight 11 месяцев назад +1

      Freaking nuts to even try to think about. I can’t wrap my mind around a person being that enthralled about being violent. It’s like a fantasy for some people to be like that but it stops there. This guy was apparently legit

  • @jarrodjohnsonlegend
    @jarrodjohnsonlegend Год назад +184

    The Wire was very tough on my mental and emotional well-being. Just goes to show how privileged I am to have avoided the harsh realities of urban hopelessness, crime and destitution. Dukie’s story crushed my soul

    • @FYPNLP
      @FYPNLP Год назад +9

      Same. I was devastated.

    • @ThePissedOffOwl
      @ThePissedOffOwl Год назад +14

      I was a kid when The Wire was airing but didn’t watch the whole thing until a few weeks ago and I was thinking from my personal experiences , yeah this show is pretty realistic about low income school systems and how ruthless gangs are, thankfully I got away from all that later on

    • @KevinJohnson-cv2no
      @KevinJohnson-cv2no Год назад +15

      There's some merit in the harsh realities of the street. Most people born in it are posers tbh, but the values of toughing it out through struggle in a hostile environment can be projected unto the entire world.

    • @SimianScience
      @SimianScience Год назад +13

      i was told this show was a huge hit in the UK because it exposed them to how awful the american ghettos really are.

    • @lucasb7705
      @lucasb7705 Год назад +1

      You sweet as hell lmao

  • @imVIDOL
    @imVIDOL Год назад +37

    This actor has crazy range, just saw him in the show We Own This City. Plays a good cop, total flip you wouldn’t have guessed is the same person!

  • @ShaneMichealCupp
    @ShaneMichealCupp Год назад +31

    Maurice Levy would be a good one to analyze. We covered the villains with the guns but the villains with the briefcases often do more damage, and never get caught.

  • @paulkingMotion
    @paulkingMotion Год назад +98

    Marlo (the actor playing him is amazing) actually gave me legit chills watching him. Absolutely ruthless and cold.

    • @heeleyez1260
      @heeleyez1260 Год назад +6

      Jamie Hector

    • @BScott7220
      @BScott7220 Год назад +4

      @@heeleyez1260 and he's fantastic as a totally good guy (a cop!) in Bosch.

    • @sethwick8348
      @sethwick8348 10 месяцев назад +1

      Now go watch Bosch where he's a prissy cop more focused on his real estate side hustle than detective work. He's completely different than Marlo in every way. Jamie Hector is incredible.

  • @MarleyMan17
    @MarleyMan17 Год назад +31

    Marlo had something that many of the other kingpins lacked: blind loyalty. Through the reputation of his enforcers (chris and snoop), no one dared step to Marlo. That is why he conquered west Baltimore, and eventually all of Baltimore so easily.

    • @MaxPotentialGreatness
      @MaxPotentialGreatness Год назад +8

      Yup his subordinates never questioned him

    • @marokanetc
      @marokanetc Год назад +6

      Same reason why he lost it

    • @_JM-
      @_JM- 5 месяцев назад +1

      at the end of the day every boss in everything they do needs a person or two they can trust who’s gonna be blindly loyal to them. it’s how the boss makes sure everything is run how it should be

    • @jameshw9751
      @jameshw9751 4 месяца назад

      Omar stepped to him.

  • @Crimson28
    @Crimson28 Год назад +57

    I really wanted Marlo to get gunned down by anyone towards the end of the series. But I found satisfaction knowing the one thing he cared about (his name) didn’t mean much on the street while Omar’s name was still being talked about after his death. Dude obtained the thing Stringer wanted and I suppose that’s a prison in and of itself.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +11

      Most g’s die (Omar,Joe)or go to prison (Avon, Chris) so even if the streets don’t know him he’s up 10m and free. Think.. is that really a L?

    • @jayyjack8683
      @jayyjack8683 Год назад

      @@BigA678I never thought about it that way

    • @Crimson28
      @Crimson28 Год назад +15

      @@BigA678 Good point. From our point of view, he won. He got $10 million, Levy was introducing him to some white collar upper class people. Possibly to help turn Marlo into an investor and make 20 times what he has. BUT like the video said, in Marlo’s mind, he felt he lost the thing he wanted the most which was the streets, the crown, and his name.

    • @jacobnapkins1155
      @jacobnapkins1155 Год назад +1

      ​@@BigA678it's supposed to be him metaphorically dieing in the same way McNulty losing his career was also him metaphorically dieing. Same with the hamsterdam cop and Avon mirroring string bells death even though they didn't actually die.

    • @skavanagh2778
      @skavanagh2778 Год назад +3

      ​@@BigA678marlos already got all the money he wants before the deal. the only thing that actually matters to him is his name. he's got nothing left

  • @QuirkyAfricanHistory
    @QuirkyAfricanHistory Год назад +16

    Marlo is the kind of dude that you know would have been badass in whatever era he was born in. He just has the aura of a conquerer. A ruthless, brutal, iron-willed conquerer.

  • @jerryramey1849
    @jerryramey1849 Год назад +30

    Your Mantasleep segway was perfection, just completely smooth. A bad night's sleep can make anyone a villain or vile,

  • @TuskyBaby
    @TuskyBaby 2 месяца назад +2

    Loved the slow build up around Marlo. At first he's a third party, just some new young face on the corner acting tough. Then you slowly watch him take over the whole game from the shadows, despite actually staying in a completely visible, outdoor area most of the time.
    He's what the new generation of gangsters needs to be in this new age to be successful. People talk all series about the young kids coming in having no code and being unhinged, and Marlo is the embodiment of that. Even before he ever appeared onscreen, before his name was ever muttered, we were already waiting on a guy like him to show up.

  • @MaxPotentialGreatness
    @MaxPotentialGreatness Год назад +14

    Marlo reminded everyone in the game that there are no “ rules “ . There is no “ code “ . This is streets . Where anything goes . He was the personification of that . Wasn’t much of talker either . A little of marlos background was that he was being investigated for killing a state witness . The police department couldn’t find anything to stick on him so they gave him an alias , Black .

  • @ronartez1289
    @ronartez1289 Год назад +5

    Marlo was the perfect Villan at the perfect time. He and 50 cent had the same persona during that period, which helped propel each others image

  • @KenyaTheMighty
    @KenyaTheMighty Год назад +13

    When I watched Marlo in The Wire for the first time, I immediately knew how ruthless he was and that he was going to be a force to be reckoned with. In my opinion he's the epitome of a drug kingpin that shows immense apathy and has no qualms about his ways of handling his adversaries, his reputation, and his business. And you're not wrong about Marlo's lack of empathy, it's grandly paramount and sends a proverbial chill down the spine. Jamie Hector did a superb job in portraying him. And as always, you've made an excellent video. Bravo!

  • @RVBFan182
    @RVBFan182 Год назад +47

    This show is SO GOOD! Your episode on Stringer Bell got me to finally watch it and I regret waiting so long lol. Would love to see something on The Shield or Sons of Anarchy next

    • @cyclonic8496
      @cyclonic8496 Год назад +2

      Never seen the shield but SOA was amazing. I just didn’t to much care for the ending.

    • @syntheticreality549
      @syntheticreality549 Год назад +4

      @@cyclonic8496I’m legitimalty (and respectfully) interested to know why you didn’t like the ending? I honestly think the ending of SOA is literally a perfect hour of tv, even though the last season isn’t great

    • @syntheticreality549
      @syntheticreality549 Год назад

      YO did you finish the wire??

  • @dpax2195
    @dpax2195 Год назад +21

    This is wild. I started watching The Wire a couple of months ago and didn’t imagine I would get one of these for an older show, at least not my current one being watched!

    • @90boyle
      @90boyle Год назад +1

      Hes done one on Stringer Bell too.

  • @fox_e_crow3276
    @fox_e_crow3276 Год назад +15

    The show takes pains to show us that Marlo is not “pure evil.” Some are more subtle than others. I’ll cite the obvious one: he employs a disabled kid from the neighborhood to keep his pigeons, and he is very encouraging to this kid, praising the quality of his work. He also shows affection to the pigeons themselves. Showing a character demonstrating kindness to animals is one if the most clichéd ways of telling the audience that a character, at the very least, has *some* kindness in their heart. And like I said, that’s not the only example.
    I am kind of torn, here. I don’t know if it makes sense to use words like ‘good’ and ‘evil’ to describe characters in a show like this. Have a good weekend, everyone…

    • @jaiharvey520
      @jaiharvey520 4 месяца назад

      Nah he was a straight psychopath he did show a bit of love for his pigeons but the disabled kid he didn't care he was disabled he overlooks that

    • @user-jy2tt9gc9b
      @user-jy2tt9gc9b 4 месяца назад

      They are all oppressed by a racist society who enslaved their ancestors . In a sense they are all victims .

  • @ImRichYourPoor
    @ImRichYourPoor Год назад +55

    Marlo is a pure sociopath. Even if he wasnt born in the hood he would have problems

    • @anonymousperson6119
      @anonymousperson6119 Год назад +22

      Sociopaths are shaped by their environment, Marlo I would consider a psychopath given his near total lack of empathy and emotion. They’re wired differently they have diminished capacity in areas like the amygdala that control emotion, fear, etc. Sociopaths adapt to antisocial lifestyles out of necessity (think someone raised in a gang or terrorist cell) but still experience empathy and emotion, they’re able to suppress it enough to do what they do. There’s quite a few sociopaths in this show but Marlo’s the one character I would consider a psychopath

    • @MrLp1980
      @MrLp1980 Год назад +2

      I wish they gave us a back story to how Marlo grew up. The commentator is spot on. His parents had to emotionally, Mentally, and even physically abuse to him. He saw the street life as his way out his environment. He was probably recruited to the drug game by someone older which explains why he respected Mike. I knew a guy I grew up with who was similar to Marlo traits and that was upbringing. He was killed in the streets.

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад

      I definitively doubt it

    • @krisgrym
      @krisgrym 11 месяцев назад +3

      Psychopath*

    • @mcfrisko834
      @mcfrisko834 3 месяца назад +2

      @@anonymousperson6119 I fully agree. Who on the show would you personally consider to be sociopaths?

  • @tariqpittman
    @tariqpittman Год назад +23

    The vile eye wanted it to be one way…. But it’s the other way. I’ve finally gotten the requested video since the beginning, Marlo is my favorite character in The Wire now. He’s the embodiment of fear and power that could exist in reality.

  • @manniking233
    @manniking233 Год назад +8

    Stringer basically opened the way for Marlo to rise. Had he been defensive of territory, Marlo would have clashed with the Barksdales far earlier, too early for his own good. While he has extreme violence, Avon, having many hitters from all across the country, would have been able to order for Marlo to be eliminated when he had less resources and real estate. Stringer starting the co-op, ceding territory and feeding independents meant Marlo, an independent, could soak up power and real estate quickly and undetected till he got so big that he couldn't be ignored anymore. The co-op had a lack of sense of territory and a reluctance to defend it, making it too easy for Marlo's violent tactics to work spectacularly well. The era of Stringer and Prop Joe involved weakness disguised as business and Marlo was the best placed to punish that weakness and exploit it to his full benefit.

  • @EarsTotheStreetsMedia
    @EarsTotheStreetsMedia Год назад +11

    I think the best part of Marlo’s character is he has no backstory whatsoever, by the time we’re introduced he’s already taken up most of the territory on the westside of Baltimore, and has a conglomerate of efficient, and ruthless killers under his control. We have no idea why or how he became the way he is, he just is… We can only assume his feats are well respected considering soldiers like Chris, and Snoop follow his lead, yet we see none of them over the course of the show.

    • @Stonewall2
      @Stonewall2 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah we never do get a true background story on him. For some reason I always thought Marlo never grew up from Baltimore but was from somewhere like Virginia or New York and saw an opportunity in Baltimore to be king and went for it.

    • @DoubleStudentLoans
      @DoubleStudentLoans 3 месяца назад

      @@Stonewall2he had a ny vibe

  • @ilovemesomme
    @ilovemesomme Год назад +15

    Marlo also gambled to show solidarity with his crew and contemporaries, in that world it’s almost seen as a duty for the leader. Tony Soprano gambled in a similar manner.

  • @nellyville69
    @nellyville69 Год назад +22

    Marlo was one of the most persuasive talented smooth villains ever 💥

  • @mtk2fitness208
    @mtk2fitness208 Год назад +9

    I honestly love these videos because it doesn't just break down the character of choice but breaks down the environment that these characters are a part of. Fantastic breakdown of every character youve done thus far.

  • @martincurran4985
    @martincurran4985 Год назад +25

    You should break down Adebisi and Schillinger from Oz. They're both insane!

    • @alexinsinger2196
      @alexinsinger2196 Год назад +7

      Yes you wouldn't have the wire without Oz being created hell half the actors in the wire come from Oz.

    • @tapset
      @tapset Год назад +1

      Adebisi hell yeah

    • @afrosamourai400
      @afrosamourai400 Год назад +2

      Damn adebisi was such a monster..

    • @dumbage
      @dumbage 9 месяцев назад

      hell yeah

    • @JayCity10
      @JayCity10 3 месяца назад

      Adebesi vs Chris Partlow

  • @JustTooDamnHonest
    @JustTooDamnHonest Год назад +7

    The Wire had a big impact on show culture and their characters were very well thought out and well done and VE is showcasing the reason why this show is worth a watch.

    • @Dhips.
      @Dhips. Год назад +2

      I'm not into cop shows at all, but The Wire is my favorite show, knocking down Breaking Bad to my number 2 after watching it. It kind of spoiled me on what I think is "good tv" though. I get the sense if I did like cop shows it would be really hard to going back to Law and Order after something like The Wire.

  • @mybdchoodrockstarr343
    @mybdchoodrockstarr343 Год назад +10

    WOW!!! That was DEEP: You went into Race, The Police, Government, etc. As A Black Man, your Social Commentary actually stirred something within me… I have to subscribe, after that.👏🏽🙏🏽💯

  • @SnakeRoadComicsOfficial3677
    @SnakeRoadComicsOfficial3677 Год назад +11

    That ad segway was pretty funny "He wouldn't be so evil if he had a good night sleep." Love it.
    Analysis Suggestion: The Devil Hulk Persona from both the Marvel Comics and Hulk Ultimate Destruction would be interesting.

  • @ethanhawkins3391
    @ethanhawkins3391 Год назад +8

    One of the coldest villains from one of the greatest shows ever produced. The way he had that security guard iced was downright evil. So glad he was chosen for this episode as your analysis is of the highest quality, Vile!

  • @bartolomeestebanmurillo4459
    @bartolomeestebanmurillo4459 Год назад +5

    Jamie Hector described the essence of Marlo in that he didn't care about money but power and prestige, that's why you see him smile in his last scene.

  • @jamesthomison4356
    @jamesthomison4356 Год назад +73

    Killing Junebug for calling him a dicksuck wasn’t enough for Marlo…HIS WHOLE FAMILY HAD TO DIE.
    One of the most terrifying villains in history

    • @italianwaterice9594
      @italianwaterice9594 Год назад +4

      thats not what june said

    • @johnyoyo6141
      @johnyoyo6141 10 месяцев назад

      Plz watch Narcos szn 1 n 2....Escobar makes Marlo look like a boy scout

    • @Kingwalkk187
      @Kingwalkk187 Месяц назад

      ​@@johnyoyo6141 Pablo was so over the top in that show he had more power but, wasn't terrifying to watch check out, el patron de mal

    • @Kingwalkk187
      @Kingwalkk187 Месяц назад

      ​@@johnyoyo6141 the show is good, but they are in two different worlds, plus he acts like a comic book villain nothing really scary about him, there are Marlo's everywhere though in the streets

  • @mr.paleface5962
    @mr.paleface5962 Год назад +9

    I dont comment often, just wanted to say this channel has consistently been one of the best channels in my life. Always hitting the mark with consistency and entertainment. Thank you Vile Eye!

  • @Infinite_Guide04
    @Infinite_Guide04 Год назад +7

    Baltimore is rough. I remember in an interview, the famous boxer Gervonta “Tank” Davis said the people he grew up with in his boxing gym are dead. He was the only one to make it. Sad man

    • @marlom7882
      @marlom7882 Год назад

      Yea sounds about right. My best friends little brother said he met a friend after high school and his friend said a lot of their classmates are gone. To be entirely honest I’m not sure how many of my classmates are still alive

  • @MADGUNSMONSTER
    @MADGUNSMONSTER Год назад +8

    This channel is easily turning into one of my faves. Great work!!
    "HE TALKED BACK". Truly chilling.

  • @gphjr1444
    @gphjr1444 Год назад +16

    It's so funny seeing Marlo in a room of Baltimore's elite, something Stringer would've given anything or anyone to be there, and he literally walked away to go back to the streets. He doesn't know how to be anything else and doesn't want to know.

  • @luisrael7624
    @luisrael7624 Год назад +7

    No lie probably the best villain I’ve ever seen in a TV series and the actor portrayed his sociopathic and narcissistic personality perfectly and I mean even physically his eyes look dead like there is no soul in him

  • @GodlessScummer
    @GodlessScummer Год назад +23

    Thanks so much for doing this.. Marlo is one of my favourite TV villains ever.
    Please cover Omar Little and do a video on whether Omar is evil or not.

    • @cal2127
      @cal2127 Год назад +4

      omar had a code. mans got to have a code.

    • @crazychase98
      @crazychase98 Год назад +3

      ​@@cal2127He did do some evil shit in the earlier seasons. Like give heroin to a young mother. You cant tell me thats moral on any level. I feel like in later seasons he become a better guy for story reasons

    • @cliffbooth4826
      @cliffbooth4826 Год назад +4

      omar is definitely not evil. evil is to kill without reason. omar never did that

    • @HILAL19564
      @HILAL19564 Год назад

      I'm not entirely sure but didn't he do Omar or I'm being mixed up with another channel

    • @GodlessScummer
      @GodlessScummer Год назад

      @@HILAL19564 no he did Stringer on thia channel.

  • @Crusade11722
    @Crusade11722 Год назад +4

    Was just watching a bunch of marlo videos too, perfect timing. Dude was the human embodiment of the cold hard streets.

  • @Nefville
    @Nefville Год назад +2

    I love that scene in the 5th season where Marlo gets arrested and everyone is sitting in that one cell trying to figure it out. It starts will all the noise of the jail in the background but the entire jail goes dead quiet when after 3 seasons Marlo finally shows some emotion and gets really upset. Then all you hear is his voice. Probably the best written show of all time.

  • @gerardsloan1593
    @gerardsloan1593 Год назад +8

    Despite what is thought of him, I loved this character's ending. I enjoyed his story, even the way he is casually introduced in the third season. We can see he gets "lucky" on a few occasions which is all part of the fun. He is ruthless and without a conscience, I would love to see what becomes of him after his final scene (whatever that would be - personally I would be happy if I retired with millions lol). I also found the scene where he is among civilized people (before he visits his offshore account) with summer gear on quite amusing. He looked most uncomfortable when he was around civilized people which is also telling. A very interesting (and terrifying) character. I'm sure his kind can be found in those impoverished inner city slums. Have a good day reader.

  • @pissedoffnation
    @pissedoffnation Год назад +19

    I sometimes see marlo as more of an embodiment of the evil of the streets this reckless emotionless heartless ambition and great disregard for anyone. He is pure street evil

  • @tayXbay
    @tayXbay Год назад +7

    After watching They Cloned Tyrone, this character study fits nicely into the idea that our society breeds clones of the worst of us to maintain the status quo.

  • @CineRanter
    @CineRanter Год назад +1

    Marlo had zero redeeming quailities. Completely ruthless and heartless.

  • @teflonson718
    @teflonson718 Год назад +10

    Thanks for keeping this show alive

  • @river7874
    @river7874 Год назад +9

    My theory is that Marlo was once like Kenard. Then he crossed the wrong person, and he was given that scar. Then he became the Marlo that we know today.

    • @user-sk4wf3ve6z
      @user-sk4wf3ve6z Год назад +3

      Kenard is alot more like bird imo

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад

      @@user-sk4wf3ve6zbird didn’t even say two sentences in this show please elaborate. I see Kenard as Marlo

    • @user-sk4wf3ve6z
      @user-sk4wf3ve6z Год назад +2

      @@BigA678 they share an agressive attitude and they act on impulse and not on thought.marlo would have been a smart corner boy,working his way up and only being ruthless when it was needed to elevate himself up the ranks until he had his own corner.kenard would be muscle when he got older because he wouldn't be smart enough to lead.marlo had no convictions apart from humble stuff and he was a gang leader.he even got out of previous murders by outsmarting the police and getting to the witnesses first.bird loved killing so much he held onto the gun he used because he got a thrill out if it.classic signs of a psychopath.kenard put gasoline on a cat because he enjoyed it and killed Omar because he wanted too and it would be a thrill.stinkum says 'bird be loving this shit' just before stink got killed which meant bird didn't kill because it was a job but because he loved killing people

    • @SupportGamin2024
      @SupportGamin2024 Год назад

      ​@@BigA678Kenard isn't like Marlo at all cut the bullshit

  • @grantmck9659
    @grantmck9659 Год назад +16

    There is one scene with marlo and a youngster who is intellectually challenged who Marlo pays to look after his pigeons. It is the only scene where he could be said there is a glimmer of empathy support and even pride in the boy who he provided the opportunity and can see how good of a job he is doing.

    • @michaelmcfadden396
      @michaelmcfadden396 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah. Exactly. It is the only scene where he gives praise. Quite jarring. I think it catches Chris off guard too in that scene.

  • @clarkbruce_exmuslim
    @clarkbruce_exmuslim Год назад +5

    The way Marlo's described now reminds me of young 50 Cent (and Stringer reminds me of old Queens kingpin Supreme). Only difference is 50 had no problem leaving the streets behind. That said, you should rewiew "Get Rich or Die Tryin" and/or "Raising Kanan".

  • @stevendog40
    @stevendog40 Год назад +3

    Jamie Hector absolutely killed this role. Fanstastic actor.

  • @James-vc1kc
    @James-vc1kc 7 месяцев назад +1

    I know we don't have enough information to make a strong video about the greeks, but the dichotomy between Marlo and them has always fascinated me. Marlo's pursuit for the crown would be meaningless if nobody knew his name, whereas the greeks thrive on remaining unknown. "Many names, many passports" as Vondas says. Then again, "my name is not my name," so we can't even be sure who he is. Their levels of power and corruption are also vastly greater than what most crime syndicates could dream of: supplying chemicals to Colombians that they know are using them for terrorism, having an FBI agent on their payroll. Who knows what else they're capable of?

  • @ddog22
    @ddog22 Год назад +3

    a video on Franklin Saint from Snowfall would probably be one of the best videos ever made on this channel.

  • @ahmedomar4173
    @ahmedomar4173 Год назад +1

    i literally screamed out YES as soon as i saw this post. When you did the Stringer analysis, I was patiently waiting for the Marlo one. Thank you Vile Eye!

  • @SirNxgroUnChained
    @SirNxgroUnChained Год назад +3

    “Yall wanted it one way,,, But its the otha way.”
    Mannn, Keep up the great work Evil Eye!

  • @hgbugalou
    @hgbugalou 5 месяцев назад +1

    Marlo shows some empathy to the pigeons in that one scene on the roof. 🤣

  • @Marlo_Stanfield_
    @Marlo_Stanfield_ Год назад +5

    Finally, my time to shine. 😎

  • @ChristopherStone
    @ChristopherStone Год назад +1

    I just finished The Wire for the first time this morning so timing of this video is perfect. That last scene at the corner was so good.

  • @ImFakeAsf
    @ImFakeAsf Год назад +11

    Very unpopular, but this guy wasn’t evil: he truly embodied the game, word for word and looking back on it he was literally doing EXACTLY what he should have been doing for someone in his position. People just jump the bandwagon and say he’s evil to sound like a good person or just because it’s entertaining. Or because he isn’t Avon. “Nobody got heart out here.” An underrated quote from him truly. I’m paraphrasing.

    • @cliffbooth4826
      @cliffbooth4826 Год назад +10

      but others in his position had a semblance of mercy.. Marlo was a straight psycho. it would have led to his downfall eventually

    • @SDuce3
      @SDuce3 Год назад +23

      He killed that security guard and delivery lady. He was evil don't play.

    • @BigA678
      @BigA678 Год назад +7

      People don’t realize there is no honor amongst thieves. Even Avon was evil

    • @dontdiscriminatehateeveryo9263
      @dontdiscriminatehateeveryo9263 Год назад

      The more bodies you catch, the bigger target you have on you, so killing for reasons that are not legitimate (even in street pharmaceuticals) is gonna get you caught up eventually, and it is psychotic. You must not know much about the streets or psychos.

    • @chrisb7831
      @chrisb7831 Год назад +3

      Marlo is evil. Avon was capable of evil acts but also was capable of showing love and empathy in his own way. As Bodie said "he kills people just because he can"

  • @nana10967
    @nana10967 Год назад +2

    The Vile Eye has official gotten in to my top 10 favorite RUclips channels!🔥🔥🔥

  • @JuanTonSoupXP
    @JuanTonSoupXP Год назад +5

    Could we please get an analysis of Franklin Saint from “Snowfall”

  • @chrise8275
    @chrise8275 Год назад +2

    Tbh, one of the reasons I started watching The Wire was to watch the videos on Stringer Bell And Marlo Stanfield, and they did not disappoint!!!

  • @Chief-et6xk
    @Chief-et6xk Год назад +3

    Thank you I have requested for so many videos ❤

  • @Xainfinen
    @Xainfinen Год назад +3

    9:08 This confirm the word in the streets that Marlo is a Necromancer, and Christ & Snoop are his Zombies Masters.

  • @nephimcknight5832
    @nephimcknight5832 Год назад +3

    Always been one of my favorite characters from what I consider the best show to ever air on HBO

    • @amerc870
      @amerc870 Год назад

      It's the best ever, not just on hbo.

  • @samfields3086
    @samfields3086 Год назад +2

    This is really cool for you to analyze Marlo in The Wire 🙏

  • @reycesarcarino4653
    @reycesarcarino4653 Год назад +3

    "The Point is they Wore it,
    Now it's my Turn"-Marlo

  • @offworld_coop
    @offworld_coop Год назад +1

    This thumbnail just inspired me for another painting, one of my favorite villains, thanks.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Год назад +5

    I love this series! Your previous video on it was pure fire! Love your work man!😊😊😊😊😊😊🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @jrgenvellesen7800
    @jrgenvellesen7800 Год назад +4

    A episode covering Ivar the Boneless from Vikings would be interesting. Especially considering the growth his character goes through.

  • @heeleyez1260
    @heeleyez1260 Год назад +5

    Marlo was the man… my name is my name… classic

  • @AlinJ.
    @AlinJ. Год назад +2

    Man, I've been waiting a while for this one. Thanks :)

  • @Black_Blow_Fly
    @Black_Blow_Fly Год назад +5

    The final image of him in the finale is that of a man who lost his street cred getting beaten by thieves who had no idea what his name was. 😂

    • @SimonLee-ds3ku
      @SimonLee-ds3ku 6 месяцев назад

      Who got beaten by thieves? Marlo easily destroyed both of those armed dealers while barehanded. 😂 Stop coping about the situation

    • @Black_Blow_Fly
      @Black_Blow_Fly 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@SimonLee-ds3ku I know it hurts…

  • @BluetheRaccoon
    @BluetheRaccoon Год назад +1

    I grew up in Baltimore in the 90s, and the facts pointed out here are why I moved to Oregon.

    • @businessman6104
      @businessman6104 Год назад

      Smart decision. Like Chief Keef sometimes smartest move is to move away

  • @Mylènecmoi
    @Mylènecmoi Год назад +4

    That was really interesting,I would really enjoy a video on Humbert Humbert from Lolita as he is a very complex multifaceted and interesting villains

  • @wowsadowsa
    @wowsadowsa 3 месяца назад +1

    I always felt Marlo’s a tragic character. He inherited a struggle and the techniques to survive; however, he learned none of the lessons. He may have reigned, but no one cared. His name rings the lightest compared to everyone he defeated. He wanted a reputation so much that it was the lost the moment he left the corner.

  • @naturallymemarie9650
    @naturallymemarie9650 Год назад +4

    Please do a video on Bishop from the movie Juice, played by Tupac Shakur. That character was a supreme psychopath. Would make a great video!!

  • @lucascasimirusrex
    @lucascasimirusrex Год назад +1

    Great video, especially ending thoughts. I like the idea that main character of the series is the city itself, so this episode could be named Analyzing Evil: Baltimore From The Wire.

  • @StainsStainsStains
    @StainsStainsStains Год назад +5

    Marlo would have had a much harder time on his way up if he didn't have Chris Partlow with him. I always wonder what Marlo did to earn Chris's respect. Chris himself is interesting too. No flash, no profile, a ruthless killer with clear military training.
    In my head canon, Chris is former military, thrived in an environment where he was following direct orders from superiors, got his first taste of bloodlust in Afghanistan or Iraq, and came home to the same dirty streets he came from, looking for someone to give him orders and found Marlo who directed him to kill. He has the appearance of a soldier who doesn't have a drill instructor yelling at him to tuck in his shirt and he's not interested in the street fashion of the time. I wonder if his character was intended to be a critique of the streets to military back to streets pipeline that exists in the US.

    • @terrenceshumate3161
      @terrenceshumate3161 Год назад +3

      Such an interesting take on his character. I think Chris' relationship with Marlo runs deeper than him just needing someone to give him orders. The loyalty that Chris and the rest of Marlo's team had for him was something that even Avon or Omar never had. Every single member of his team was in lock step. I would venture to say Chris knew Marlo and was loyal to him long before his military days. Marlo may have even waited for Chris to return from the military before taking over West Baltimore, which would explain why he didn't do it much sooner, like when Avon first went to prison.

    • @BIGGEST5LATT
      @BIGGEST5LATT 11 месяцев назад +2

      I think Marlo when on his first body with Chris that’s probably why

    • @Stonewall2
      @Stonewall2 7 месяцев назад

      I agree 100 percent that Chris was former military. I think also and this is just a blind guess as we don’t know but when Chris was molested as a kid, Marlo took him and was there for him in his most vulnerable and desperate time which tied Chris’s loyalty to Marlo forever.
      I also think that Marlo had a lot of loyal soldiers that didn’t question him was because
      1. Marlo became a heavyweight out of nowhere in the game and went after the biggest gangsters and crew in Baltimore without fear
      2. Through all of Marlo’s faults I think Marlo was not greedy. I don’t think he even really cared about money at all. He was only about wearing the crown and his name forever ringing out

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Год назад +2

    An incredible video for such a character. Love your work man! You really are a master of the craft!
    ❤❤❤❤❤❤for a true fan!

  • @HILAL19564
    @HILAL19564 Год назад +12

    Aaron Stampler from primal fear played by Edward Norton would be a good one to analyze. Am hoping for a while for that one or the crooked cop community from the movie Copland would be awesome as well.. Love this channel btw and like how some people in the comment section give additional theories other people might never heard of about one of the evil people analyzed

    • @lh7325
      @lh7325 Год назад +5

      Good suggestion. I watched that a few months back and was surprised that was Edward Norton's first film.

    • @HILAL19564
      @HILAL19564 Год назад +3

      ​@@lh7325Norton's first movie appearance indeed and what an appearance he played it masterful with that twist.. Pretty much ahead of its time and weird I never hear people talking about it. A bit of a forgotten gem.

  • @greenlad821
    @greenlad821 Год назад +3

    can't wait for an analysis of Saruman the White from lord of the Rings or Sauron the Necromancer.