51 out of 77 people found the following comment useful :- After Four Years Of Watching, A Handful Of Observations, 11 December 2006
Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
Well, by now I have watched four years of this show, along with five
years of the first CSI and two years of CSI-New York....and I could say
a lot but will try to condense my thoughts to just a handful of
opinions, namely:
1 - This is the best-looking of the three CSI series on DVD. All of
them look great on disc but the colors in here are the boldest and the
most spectacular of any. Each episode is a tremendous visual treat.
2 - I know David Caruso is a controversial topic among CSI fans because
of the way he delivers his lines, but I personally find it great. It's
so outrageous it's fun. Sometimes I just laugh. Hey, it makes him
different from William Petersen (CSI: Vegas) and Gary Sinise (CSI: NY).
I may be in the minority but I enjoy Caruso's overly dramatic delivery.
3 - This series has gotten better and better. I had some doubts the
first year. It didn't seem half as good as the Las Vegas show, but it
has improved significantly and I now rate it higher than the original
CSI.
4 - As a guy I appreciate all the beautiful Miami women in this show,
and there are tons of them, but I also think the show is geared more
toward the 20-something crowd which leaves me out, being considerably
older than that. Too many of these "kids" are sleazy, too, but that's
what leads to problems and crimes.
5 - All the supporting actors on the show are good, too, as they are in
all the CSI shows. I was sorry to see Rory Cochrane ("Tim Speedle")
quit and hope we don't lose any more of the "team."
85 out of 145 people found the following comment useful :- Superior To The Original, 23 September 2005
Author:
bldsimple2 from Encino, CA
I'm gonna get creamed with e-mails from fans of the original CSI show,
but I can't help it. In my opinion, CSI: Miami is superior to the
original and a good foundation for (the also superior) CSI:NY.
Don't get me wrong, the original is the original, but the fact that the
real Miami/Dade CSI's are cops first allows this show to explode in
gunfire at any moment...and place our lead, David Caruso, at the center
of the action. Now I want to make something clear: Almost 15 years ago
I saw some of Caruso's early work and I was trying to figure out what
all the fuss was about. What makes THIS guy a sex symbol (on NYPD
Blue)? Then, just as fast as he becomes a major star, he exits Blue,
makes two movies that bombed (the really good "Kiss Of Death" and the
laughable "Jade") and he's suddenly poison. It was after seeing Caruso
in Kiss of Death and a previous film, The King of New York" that I
realized we were missing one of the last REAL tough guys.
CSI: Miami has brought him back. Caruso spearheads this show with a
vengeance. Sure his line readings have their own stilted rhythm, but he
did the same thing on NYPD Blue and people loved him then. Caruso with
a gun in his hand looks more natural than anything else I have seen on
TV (and my favorite show is The Shield).
CSI: Miami is action packed. The stories are seedier. The
cinematography is unmatched by any other show. Go watch the DVDs. Tune
in Monday nights. I swear, you'll be a convert.
Then go watch Gary Sinise give the performance of his life in CSI:NY.
You'll be glad you did.
40 out of 64 people found the following comment useful :- Entertaining show that presents itself more in Style than in Content, 27 February 2005
Author:
Elson321 from United Kingdom
CSI Miami is an entertaining show that really has picked up David
Caruso's career up from the Ocean floor. He is very blessed, indeed, to
be experiencing success as a lead actor on a famous show since his NYPD
Blue days.
CSI Miami is more about style than content. Compared to CSI: Las Vegas,
CSI Miami is inferior. However, after watching it from the very first
episode, and until 2004, i was hooked. It did grow on me. It's darker
story lines than CSI: LV, =sunny settings, a cast that gels together
made it different in a good way to CSI:LV. Plus i loved the way
Caruso's Caine knows everything.as wlel as his emotional attachment and
sympathy to the victims of crime.
A major downer since 2004 has been Rory Cochrane's absence in the show.
He was a great character who was cool looking and had smart one-liners.
Without him the show is a tad bit more empty.
The show is currently waring off me, and I am starting to find CSI:NY
much more appealing. I will continue to watch CSI: Miami but not expect
as much from it as I did before.
My score (2007 onwards) = 3/5
65 out of 115 people found the following comment useful :- Not as good as the original, 10 August 2004
Author:
oddtoddnm from Albuquerque, NM
CSI: Miami is a fun show to watch, like the original CSI:. But the
chemistry in the original isn't quite there.
Grissom, in CSI:, is interesting, deep, and can easily be believed to
be as smart as he is. But Horatio in CSI: Miami seems a bit more flat,
and his bright moments seem cheesy and scripted.
Other characters don't seem to grow in CSI: Miami, while there's clear
changes in their CSI: counterparts. Also, the side stories are more
interesting in CSI: than in CSI: Miami.
So, while I'll watch CSI: Miami, it's not growing on me like how the
original did.
16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- Horatio Caine and his crime-fighting sunglasses, 30 August 2007
Author:
Diogenes81
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The original CSI, at the beginning, was fun (before we got love stories
shoved down the throats of the viewers or victims dressed in raccoon
costumes). Preposterous, maybe, but entertaining, and based on an
original idea; a "different" cop show.
CSI Miami, on the other hand, has all the flaws of the original CSI -
like a penchant for overly implausible situations - without the
strengths - like interesting and likable characters and gripping story
lines.
Emily Procter, Adam Rodriguez and the other secondary character are
uninteresting; the best was by far Rory Cochrane as the moody Speedle,
who of course was the first one to go (after Kim Delaney, whose
character, thankfully, was quickly written off).
However, the core of the show is David Caruso, who gives an unspeakably
terrible turn as the smug Horatio Caine; Horatio chews the scenery
shamelessly, acts like a demigod, and is in general so obnoxious,
overblown and outrageously excessive that the viewer doesn't know
whether to incredulously shake his head or to laugh at the sheer
absurdity of this performance.
If you want to give a try to the "CSI" series, go for the first seasons
of the original, Las Vegas.
4/10
29 out of 47 people found the following comment useful :- A show you shouldn't miss!, 8 September 2004
Author:
Patricia Barratt (olive_oil56) from Manchester England
I have watched this show from the very beginning, and wouldn't miss a
single episode for anything in the world. The cast are the best.
The writer has certainly got an unbelievable talent, and how he comes
to his conclusions is just beyond me. I never miss an episode, and I
tape each show, along with Law & Order, which is another great show. It
shows on Saturdays and Tuesdays here in England. David Caruso, well,
he's my idol, he is so sweet and shy looking, He is a brilliant actor.
Each case is detailed and examined, and the results are just
outstanding. C.S.I.Miami is one if my favorites I have even looked up
each character on the Internet and got a better insight to them all. I
hope they keep turning out more shows.
Keep it up Guys!
35 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :- Caruso Shines, 29 March 2004
Author:
RC Copeland from Canada
The redhead that looks at the floor as he talks to his suspects. A
brilliant trademark for a very well written show. From the opening crime
catching scene and into a great 'screaming', remix of The Who's 'Won't Get
Fooled again' open credit sequence, to David Caruso's great acting, this
show is worth at least an hour of your time each week. Caruso makes the
show. He's great to watch as he throws simple single line hooks into his
suspects & catches them off guard with the forensic evidence his team
gathers. We got a glimpse of this guy in 'NYPD Blue' as he played
Detective John Kelly, but Caruso has been a good actor for a very long
time. From 'Proof Of Life' to William Friedkin's 'Jade' to Barbet
Schroeder's 'Kiss Of Death', Caruso has been an actor that has come into his
own. If you have an opportunity to see 'First Blood' you will get to see
Caruso as he plays a young Deputy showing compassion to Sylvester
Stallone's character. The same compassion that he now shows in CSI:M to
victims that are not able to help themselves. A welcome relief to today's
hardened Hollywood leading dramatic actors roles that show no empathy.
This is not to take away from the rest of the cast. They are good and hold
their own, however it's good that the lead actor shines as Caruso does.
Perhaps an Emmy is not out of the question.
12 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- What I dislike most of it is ..., 1 February 2008
Author:
Simeon Vlahov from Sofia, Bulgaria
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
That this show is simply a show, something that is meant to entertain
and not to make you think. This is done American way - as simple as
possible, as impossible as possible, as predictable as possible, as
easy to swallow as possible. Do not and I repeat DO NOT confuse it with
the original series. This is crap to anyone with more than 2 brain
cells of use. The scriptwriters must've been recruited from a primary
school - we cannot otherwise explain the lack of originality and the
whole world of errors that emerge in every single episode. Clues that
appears as soon as they're needed, always stupid suspects that A) are
awaiting for the cops to come and arrest them; or/and B) leaving
crucial evidence of a crime in the crime scene so mighty Horatio (which
is loathsome mockery with the Shakespeare's immortal Hamlet) can
interfere. He is always right, he is carrying head always climbed right
so he can look more intelligent, he is carrying gun with intention to
use it in every possible moment, the feelings of fear are unknown to
him. There are no such things as corrupt cops and always and I mean
really always the suspect is found and captured at the end with
absolutely the right decision. The suspect always confess at the end,
showing every possible remorse a suspect can give, leaving nothing to
the judges to prove just because of the wonderful Horatio's job done.
The evil is punished and the children may now go to bed. An ideal
world, isn't it? The reality - there are plenty of wrong convicted
persons serving time s in prison for crimes they do not commit. Showing
ideal world does not help the society as whole for wrong hopes can do
more harm than just showing crimes.
I wouldn't be so critical if this hadn't been taken itself so
seriously.
Something to avoid. Stick to the original series, at least they do have
more accomplished writers.
11 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Looks good in HD - that's about it., 12 February 2007
Author:
bull-frog from United States
Everything looks really glamorous in CSI Miami. While almost every show
looks better on HDTV, CSI-Miami stands above the others. This show was
made for HD. The landscape is ultra-modern, lush, and sexy. The
interior decors are 22nd century. And the graphics and color
coordinations are top notch. However beneath all that CGI and funky
high tech devices that investigators use, there is little of redeeming
value in this show. When it comes to what really counts, the
characters, CSI Miami falls way short. The acting is wooden and
one-dimensional. The dialog is bland and sometimes cheesy. When I watch
this show, cast members don't even seem human. They just don't seem
real.
CSI Miami is very gritty and serious. The only comic relief comes out
of David Caruso with his big suits, cheesy delivery of lines, and that
oh-so cool handling of deadly situations. He should be handling fine
wines, not investigating crimes.
However, if you like CSI-Miami and have an HDTV, I recommend skipping
cable and receiving broadcasts directing over the antenna. The picture
will blow you away.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- 3 for the price of one, 19 November 2007
Author:
soulassassinx from Sweden
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I guess this is, as much about exploitation of audience as it is about
pleasing all corners of U.S. territory - So the next CSI would be shot
on Hawaii or in Alaska. An more interesting take on the whole
forensic/pathology/ballistics's, etc. idea would for instance to place
it in the Victorian era in London or revolutionary France, where some
of the greatest luxuries would be a ruler or a microscope; that to me
would seem like a greater challenge.
There are three versions. I have chosen to review the Miami one since
this land in the middle of the two others, although all three of them
are equally naive and borderline stupid. If the reason is too present
escapist, fastfood-like plots all three shows actually work quite well
when you're home from work with a cold or suffer a hangover.
This is where all three shows fail on equal basis: 1. Forensic
investigators do not run around with guns, turning the city they work
in, into a Sam Peckinpah shoot out.
2. If any city would spend so much man power on every case, the city's
economy would be ruined pretty quickly.
3. It would ad grit and realism if the CSI-teams failed every once in a
while. When 15 minutes remain of every episode you pretty much loose
interest if you haven't changed the channel already after the mandatory
montage scene with electronica music pounding over the soundtrack while
the investigators use q-tips and coloured liquids in different vials.
Take Note: Laboratories don't look like post-modern night clubs as they
do here.
4. If police employees would treat suspects/witnesses the way they do
in all shows they would get no collaboration. If some muppet-officer
would treat me the same way these teams treat people I would obstruct
justice for the fun of it. They are so unlikeable (all the characters)
you actually root for the bad guys to get away with the crime. They're
all pretentious, rude, cold, unempathetic and unpleasant; had they been
really persons they would never get into any academy unless they tried
out for CCCP's KGB or Gestapo.
5. Why must every team leader pull this strained, cheesy one liner
before every opening credit. If some prostitute is found sliced and
diced in a hotel room the team leader always looks into the camera and
says something like: "That was the last time she charged you an arm and
a leg." No professional treats dead people with such disrespect,
especially not after the victim suffered a violent death.
It's a kids show with over the top, tasteless violence and some really
far-fetched stories.
Free on IMDb

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51 out of 77 people found the following comment useful :-

After Four Years Of Watching, A Handful Of Observations, 11 December 2006
Author: ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
Well, by now I have watched four years of this show, along with five years of the first CSI and two years of CSI-New York....and I could say a lot but will try to condense my thoughts to just a handful of opinions, namely:
1 - This is the best-looking of the three CSI series on DVD. All of them look great on disc but the colors in here are the boldest and the most spectacular of any. Each episode is a tremendous visual treat.
2 - I know David Caruso is a controversial topic among CSI fans because of the way he delivers his lines, but I personally find it great. It's so outrageous it's fun. Sometimes I just laugh. Hey, it makes him different from William Petersen (CSI: Vegas) and Gary Sinise (CSI: NY). I may be in the minority but I enjoy Caruso's overly dramatic delivery.
3 - This series has gotten better and better. I had some doubts the first year. It didn't seem half as good as the Las Vegas show, but it has improved significantly and I now rate it higher than the original CSI.
4 - As a guy I appreciate all the beautiful Miami women in this show, and there are tons of them, but I also think the show is geared more toward the 20-something crowd which leaves me out, being considerably older than that. Too many of these "kids" are sleazy, too, but that's what leads to problems and crimes.
5 - All the supporting actors on the show are good, too, as they are in all the CSI shows. I was sorry to see Rory Cochrane ("Tim Speedle") quit and hope we don't lose any more of the "team."
85 out of 145 people found the following comment useful :-
Superior To The Original, 23 September 2005
Author: bldsimple2 from Encino, CA
I'm gonna get creamed with e-mails from fans of the original CSI show, but I can't help it. In my opinion, CSI: Miami is superior to the original and a good foundation for (the also superior) CSI:NY.
Don't get me wrong, the original is the original, but the fact that the real Miami/Dade CSI's are cops first allows this show to explode in gunfire at any moment...and place our lead, David Caruso, at the center of the action. Now I want to make something clear: Almost 15 years ago I saw some of Caruso's early work and I was trying to figure out what all the fuss was about. What makes THIS guy a sex symbol (on NYPD Blue)? Then, just as fast as he becomes a major star, he exits Blue, makes two movies that bombed (the really good "Kiss Of Death" and the laughable "Jade") and he's suddenly poison. It was after seeing Caruso in Kiss of Death and a previous film, The King of New York" that I realized we were missing one of the last REAL tough guys.
CSI: Miami has brought him back. Caruso spearheads this show with a vengeance. Sure his line readings have their own stilted rhythm, but he did the same thing on NYPD Blue and people loved him then. Caruso with a gun in his hand looks more natural than anything else I have seen on TV (and my favorite show is The Shield).
CSI: Miami is action packed. The stories are seedier. The cinematography is unmatched by any other show. Go watch the DVDs. Tune in Monday nights. I swear, you'll be a convert.
Then go watch Gary Sinise give the performance of his life in CSI:NY. You'll be glad you did.
40 out of 64 people found the following comment useful :-

Entertaining show that presents itself more in Style than in Content, 27 February 2005
Author: Elson321 from United Kingdom
CSI Miami is an entertaining show that really has picked up David Caruso's career up from the Ocean floor. He is very blessed, indeed, to be experiencing success as a lead actor on a famous show since his NYPD Blue days.
CSI Miami is more about style than content. Compared to CSI: Las Vegas, CSI Miami is inferior. However, after watching it from the very first episode, and until 2004, i was hooked. It did grow on me. It's darker story lines than CSI: LV, =sunny settings, a cast that gels together made it different in a good way to CSI:LV. Plus i loved the way Caruso's Caine knows everything.as wlel as his emotional attachment and sympathy to the victims of crime.
A major downer since 2004 has been Rory Cochrane's absence in the show. He was a great character who was cool looking and had smart one-liners. Without him the show is a tad bit more empty.
The show is currently waring off me, and I am starting to find CSI:NY much more appealing. I will continue to watch CSI: Miami but not expect as much from it as I did before.
My score (2007 onwards) = 3/5
65 out of 115 people found the following comment useful :-
Not as good as the original, 10 August 2004
Author: oddtoddnm from Albuquerque, NM
CSI: Miami is a fun show to watch, like the original CSI:. But the chemistry in the original isn't quite there.
Grissom, in CSI:, is interesting, deep, and can easily be believed to be as smart as he is. But Horatio in CSI: Miami seems a bit more flat, and his bright moments seem cheesy and scripted.
Other characters don't seem to grow in CSI: Miami, while there's clear changes in their CSI: counterparts. Also, the side stories are more interesting in CSI: than in CSI: Miami.
So, while I'll watch CSI: Miami, it's not growing on me like how the original did.
16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-
Horatio Caine and his crime-fighting sunglasses, 30 August 2007
Author: Diogenes81
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The original CSI, at the beginning, was fun (before we got love stories shoved down the throats of the viewers or victims dressed in raccoon costumes). Preposterous, maybe, but entertaining, and based on an original idea; a "different" cop show.
CSI Miami, on the other hand, has all the flaws of the original CSI - like a penchant for overly implausible situations - without the strengths - like interesting and likable characters and gripping story lines.
Emily Procter, Adam Rodriguez and the other secondary character are uninteresting; the best was by far Rory Cochrane as the moody Speedle, who of course was the first one to go (after Kim Delaney, whose character, thankfully, was quickly written off).
However, the core of the show is David Caruso, who gives an unspeakably terrible turn as the smug Horatio Caine; Horatio chews the scenery shamelessly, acts like a demigod, and is in general so obnoxious, overblown and outrageously excessive that the viewer doesn't know whether to incredulously shake his head or to laugh at the sheer absurdity of this performance.
If you want to give a try to the "CSI" series, go for the first seasons of the original, Las Vegas.
4/10
29 out of 47 people found the following comment useful :-
A show you shouldn't miss!, 8 September 2004
Author: Patricia Barratt (olive_oil56) from Manchester England
I have watched this show from the very beginning, and wouldn't miss a single episode for anything in the world. The cast are the best.
The writer has certainly got an unbelievable talent, and how he comes to his conclusions is just beyond me. I never miss an episode, and I tape each show, along with Law & Order, which is another great show. It shows on Saturdays and Tuesdays here in England. David Caruso, well, he's my idol, he is so sweet and shy looking, He is a brilliant actor. Each case is detailed and examined, and the results are just outstanding. C.S.I.Miami is one if my favorites I have even looked up each character on the Internet and got a better insight to them all. I hope they keep turning out more shows.
Keep it up Guys!
35 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :-
Caruso Shines, 29 March 2004
Author: RC Copeland from Canada
The redhead that looks at the floor as he talks to his suspects. A brilliant trademark for a very well written show. From the opening crime catching scene and into a great 'screaming', remix of The Who's 'Won't Get Fooled again' open credit sequence, to David Caruso's great acting, this show is worth at least an hour of your time each week. Caruso makes the show. He's great to watch as he throws simple single line hooks into his suspects & catches them off guard with the forensic evidence his team gathers. We got a glimpse of this guy in 'NYPD Blue' as he played Detective John Kelly, but Caruso has been a good actor for a very long time. From 'Proof Of Life' to William Friedkin's 'Jade' to Barbet Schroeder's 'Kiss Of Death', Caruso has been an actor that has come into his own. If you have an opportunity to see 'First Blood' you will get to see Caruso as he plays a young Deputy showing compassion to Sylvester Stallone's character. The same compassion that he now shows in CSI:M to victims that are not able to help themselves. A welcome relief to today's hardened Hollywood leading dramatic actors roles that show no empathy.
This is not to take away from the rest of the cast. They are good and hold their own, however it's good that the lead actor shines as Caruso does. Perhaps an Emmy is not out of the question.
12 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-

What I dislike most of it is ..., 1 February 2008
Author: Simeon Vlahov from Sofia, Bulgaria
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
That this show is simply a show, something that is meant to entertain and not to make you think. This is done American way - as simple as possible, as impossible as possible, as predictable as possible, as easy to swallow as possible. Do not and I repeat DO NOT confuse it with the original series. This is crap to anyone with more than 2 brain cells of use. The scriptwriters must've been recruited from a primary school - we cannot otherwise explain the lack of originality and the whole world of errors that emerge in every single episode. Clues that appears as soon as they're needed, always stupid suspects that A) are awaiting for the cops to come and arrest them; or/and B) leaving crucial evidence of a crime in the crime scene so mighty Horatio (which is loathsome mockery with the Shakespeare's immortal Hamlet) can interfere. He is always right, he is carrying head always climbed right so he can look more intelligent, he is carrying gun with intention to use it in every possible moment, the feelings of fear are unknown to him. There are no such things as corrupt cops and always and I mean really always the suspect is found and captured at the end with absolutely the right decision. The suspect always confess at the end, showing every possible remorse a suspect can give, leaving nothing to the judges to prove just because of the wonderful Horatio's job done. The evil is punished and the children may now go to bed. An ideal world, isn't it? The reality - there are plenty of wrong convicted persons serving time s in prison for crimes they do not commit. Showing ideal world does not help the society as whole for wrong hopes can do more harm than just showing crimes.
I wouldn't be so critical if this hadn't been taken itself so seriously.
Something to avoid. Stick to the original series, at least they do have more accomplished writers.
11 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Looks good in HD - that's about it., 12 February 2007
Author: bull-frog from United States
Everything looks really glamorous in CSI Miami. While almost every show looks better on HDTV, CSI-Miami stands above the others. This show was made for HD. The landscape is ultra-modern, lush, and sexy. The interior decors are 22nd century. And the graphics and color coordinations are top notch. However beneath all that CGI and funky high tech devices that investigators use, there is little of redeeming value in this show. When it comes to what really counts, the characters, CSI Miami falls way short. The acting is wooden and one-dimensional. The dialog is bland and sometimes cheesy. When I watch this show, cast members don't even seem human. They just don't seem real.
CSI Miami is very gritty and serious. The only comic relief comes out of David Caruso with his big suits, cheesy delivery of lines, and that oh-so cool handling of deadly situations. He should be handling fine wines, not investigating crimes.
However, if you like CSI-Miami and have an HDTV, I recommend skipping cable and receiving broadcasts directing over the antenna. The picture will blow you away.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

3 for the price of one, 19 November 2007
Author: soulassassinx from Sweden
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I guess this is, as much about exploitation of audience as it is about pleasing all corners of U.S. territory - So the next CSI would be shot on Hawaii or in Alaska. An more interesting take on the whole forensic/pathology/ballistics's, etc. idea would for instance to place it in the Victorian era in London or revolutionary France, where some of the greatest luxuries would be a ruler or a microscope; that to me would seem like a greater challenge.
There are three versions. I have chosen to review the Miami one since this land in the middle of the two others, although all three of them are equally naive and borderline stupid. If the reason is too present escapist, fastfood-like plots all three shows actually work quite well when you're home from work with a cold or suffer a hangover.
This is where all three shows fail on equal basis: 1. Forensic investigators do not run around with guns, turning the city they work in, into a Sam Peckinpah shoot out.
2. If any city would spend so much man power on every case, the city's economy would be ruined pretty quickly.
3. It would ad grit and realism if the CSI-teams failed every once in a while. When 15 minutes remain of every episode you pretty much loose interest if you haven't changed the channel already after the mandatory montage scene with electronica music pounding over the soundtrack while the investigators use q-tips and coloured liquids in different vials. Take Note: Laboratories don't look like post-modern night clubs as they do here.
4. If police employees would treat suspects/witnesses the way they do in all shows they would get no collaboration. If some muppet-officer would treat me the same way these teams treat people I would obstruct justice for the fun of it. They are so unlikeable (all the characters) you actually root for the bad guys to get away with the crime. They're all pretentious, rude, cold, unempathetic and unpleasant; had they been really persons they would never get into any academy unless they tried out for CCCP's KGB or Gestapo.
5. Why must every team leader pull this strained, cheesy one liner before every opening credit. If some prostitute is found sliced and diced in a hotel room the team leader always looks into the camera and says something like: "That was the last time she charged you an arm and a leg." No professional treats dead people with such disrespect, especially not after the victim suffered a violent death.
It's a kids show with over the top, tasteless violence and some really far-fetched stories.
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