LAPD: Life On the Beat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LAPD: Life on the Beat
Format Reality
Starring Los Angeles Police Department
Country of origin USA, Portugal
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 5
Production
Running time 30 mins
Broadcast
Original channel Syndicated
Original run September 11, 1995September 10, 1999
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

LAPD: Life on the Beat (sometimes referred to as LAPD or Life on the Beat), was an American reality television series which aired on FOX, about the Los Angeles Police Department that aired from 1995-1999, (premiered in 1997 in Portugal). Like its still-running contemporary, COPS, LAPD followed police officers on patrol and during investigations, however unlike COPS, Life on the Beat only featured police officers from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD). Originally the series aired as just LAPD in 1995, it wasn't till 1996 when the show really took off and had better graphics and so forth that the name was changed to LAPD: Life on the Beat.

A typical episode featured four segments, a cold case story and usually a quiz relating to police statistics. Unlike COPS, Life on the Beat featured incidental music and a narrator. At the time of the series, the LAPD still had only 18 stations, so camera crews would cover as many stations as possible and had episodes featuring multiple areas of Los Angeles. Episodes featured routine patrol, vice units, gang units, and even SWAT calls. Many segments also featured the Air Support Division. For a large amount of Patrol based segments, cameras would flip back and forth between ground and aerial angles.

Contents

[edit] Officers in the series

Throughout the series a large number of officers are seen repeatedly. Officers appearing on LAPD could also be found on TLC's Hollywood COPS and Discovery's On the Inside that featured mostly Pacific division. Four officers made a huge impact on the show and were seen over and over again; they were officers Jeff Alley, Derek O'Donnell and brothers Tim and Sean Colomey who all worked in South LA patrol divisions. These officers can also be seen on an MSNBC special report that focused on problems in South Central Los Angeles.

Officer Jeff Alley played a huge role by making sure that the TV crews always had a deeper understanding of what was really going on. He didn't play up the camera but instead took the great opportunity to educate those in TV land about police work with pros and cons of situations and allowed those with an interest in law enforcement to have a better understanding about the job. Officer Alley along with the Colomeys and O'Donnell were some of LAPD's greatest recruiters[citation needed].

In a couple episodes, Life on the Beat filmed with Hollywood Division Officer's J.C. Flores and Jeri Snell, the two were assigned to the Domestic Violence Unit, Both Flores and Snell could also be seen on TLC's Hollywood COPS working the same detail.

On TLC's Women In Blue, Officer Monica Labato is working CRASH in Newton area, She can also be seen on an early episode of Life on the Beat working patrol also in Newton.

Throughout the series, SWAT Special Weapons And Tactics is seen responding emergency calls and while raiding narcotics locations. From barricaded suspects to the North Hollywood shootout SWAT segemnts were seen throughout the show, one particular SWAT officer was Randal Simmons. He can be seen in episodes filmed from 1996-1998 on different call-ups. He was killed in February 2008 during a standoff in Winnetka,CA and was LAPD's first SWAT fatality in 40 years of being in business. Four days after the death of Officer Randal Simmons, FOX Reality re-aired an episode feauturing Randy and SWAT. The network at the time was playing as many as three Life on the Beat re-runs per day. At the beginning and end of this particular episode Fox decided to pay tribute and create an End Of Watch memorial graphic with Randy's photograph on it.

Surprisingly, for having many camera operators through the city and having access to SWAT,Air Support and other special details, Life on the Beat was not on scene with officers for both the North Hollywood Shootout and the North Valley Jewish Community Center shooting. In both cases, in the weeks and months leading up to these events Life on the Beat was filming with the same officers assigned to the same areas,and shifts as those who would later respond to these events. For the North Hollywood incident, Special segemnts were filmed with exclusive interviews with those involved at the scene including all SWAT members,SWAT Officer Pete Wiereter who led efforts in rescuing downed officers and civilians, SWAT officer Don Anderson who led a team of three SWAT officers,including himself,Steve Gomez and Rich Massa,together they stopped the remaining gunman bydeploying in a cruiser and interceepting the gunman in the middle of a residential street by performing a vehicle assault takedown, killing the final gunman and ending the icident. Traffic Officer Conrad Torrez is featured regarding his actions in engaging the first gunman with gunfire, He is the officer believed to have killed the first suspect while that suspect was believed to have also been trying to kill himself after his gun jammed. Other Interviews were conducted with Sergeant Dean Haynes and others such as Tracy Angeles and James Zboravan. Officer Zboravan was filmed in the months leading up to the shootout working North Hollywood patrol as a probationary with only a couple months on the job from the academy.

It's very remarkable given the amount of time filming with LAPD,Valley units,SWAT,and also Air Support that on February 28, 1997, Life on the Beat was not filming with any of those officers. They did get very exclusive information and Interviews as outlined above. Most of those segemnts were hosted by Captain Rich Wahler of North Hollywood Division. In 2006 History tried to set the record straight regarding the North Hollywood shootout as it remains to this day as one of the most influential events of modern American history ranking third overall of documented U.S. events of recent years behind 9/11 and the War on Terror according to History channel. The amount of information given and explained in the History channel documentary was done very well, however still, Life on the Beat the whole time had more information,more access and more facts about the incident and since 1997 many media outlets have made their share of versions including MSNBC,Discovery,BBC,TLC,National Geographic and others. Life on the Beat's account remains the most informative and most accurate.

[edit] Withdrawal of LAPD

Ultimately, the Los Angeles Police Department stopped participating with the show because they believed that Life on the Beat exposed too many police policies, procedures and tactics.

A lot of the world-wide respect that is given to the LAPD stems from television[citation needed]. LAPD: Life on the Beat was a show that was good for the department and not the criminal population. In an interview in 2005 the LAPD said it still feels that gangs were using the show to their advantage and that having a show like Life on the Beat or appearing again on COPS, as they did in 1994, would pose a threat to current officers, and possibly inspire more criminals. According to ABC's special report in 2002 (that had Peter Jennings ride along with cops in southeast) and a 2004 CNN story (with Anderson Cooper about cops in Hollenbeck), there were only short-term projects that only involved one episode.

Reruns of the show currently air on Fox Reality

[edit] Similar programmes

A couple years after Life on the Beat went off air, TLC aired a special about females in law enforcement titled Women In Blue. The show featured a female detective from Narcotics Division and two female officers in the Newton Division assigned to the anti-gang unit known as CRASH. Filmings were done in the summer of 2001.

[edit] See also

[edit] References