The Wire (The Wire episode)

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The Wire episode
"The Wire"
"...and all the pieces matter."
- Freamon
Episode no. 6
Teleplay by David Simon
Story by David Simon and Ed Burns
Directed by Ed Bianchi
Guest stars see below
Prod. code 106
Original airdate July 7, 2002

The Wire Season 1
2 June 20028 September 2002

  1. "The Target"
  2. "The Detail"
  3. "The Buys"
  4. "Old Cases"
  5. "The Pager"
  6. "The Wire"
  7. "One Arrest"
  8. "Lessons"
  9. "Game Day"
  10. "The Cost"
  11. "The Hunt"
  12. "Cleaning Up"
  13. "Sentencing"
Episode chronology


"The Wire" is the sixth episode of the first season of the HBO original series, The Wire, the titular episode of the series. The episode was written by David Simon from a story by David Simon & Ed Burns and was directed by Ed Bianchi. It originally aired on July 7, 2002.

Contents

[edit] Production

[edit] Title reference

The title repeats the shows own title and refers to the wiretap devices used to monitor phone calls made by the Barksdale organization.

[edit] Epigraph

...and all the pieces matter. - Freamon

Freamon uses this phrase to describe the importance of the individual calls recorded by their wiretap device to Prez. Simon has also described it as referring to the need for the viewer to concentrate on all aspects of the show to follow the plot.[1]

[edit] Credits

[edit] Starring cast

Although credited, Deirdre Lovejoy does not appear in this episode.

[edit] Guest stars

  1. Seth Gilliam as Detective Ellis Carver
  2. Domenick Lombardozzi as Detective Thomas "Herc" Hauk
  3. Clarke Peters as Detective Lester Freamon
  4. Jim True-Frost as Detective Roland "Prez" Pryzbylewski
  5. Leo Fitzpatrick as Johnny
  6. J.D. Williams as Bodie Broadus
  7. Michael B. Jordan as Wallace
  8. Corey Parker-Robinson as Detective Leander Sydnor
  9. Michael K. Williams as Omar Little
  10. Nat Benchley as Detective Augustus Polk
  11. Richard DeAngelis as Major Raymond Foerster
  12. Michael Salconi as Detective Michael Santangelo
  13. Delaney Williams as Sergeant Jay Landsman
  14. Michael Kevin Darnall as Brandon
  15. Wendy Grantham as Shardene Innes
  16. Michael Kostroff as Maurice Levy
  17. Caroline G Pleasant as Bodie's Grandmother
  18. Antonio Cordova as Michael McNulty
  19. Ed Norris as Detective Ed Norris
  20. Eric Ryan as Sean McNulty
  21. Brian Anthony Wilson as Detective Vernon Holley
  22. Tray Chaney as Poot Carr
  23. Gil Deeble as Hucklebuck
  24. Erik Todd Dellums as Dr. Randall Frazier
  25. Brandon Price as Anton "Stinkum" Artis

[edit] Uncredited appearances

[edit] Music

This episode is one of the few in which The Wire breaks the series' own rule of using only diegetic music. In a slow motion sequence (also a one-off) featuring Avon, Stringer and Stinkum in the low-rises, a piece called "Wax Music Box" by Lorem Ipsum from the Cytoplastik collective is played[2]. Usually only season finales feature music not emanating from an on-screen source.

[edit] Plot

[edit] The Street

The episode opens on the bloody corpse of Brandon (Omar Little's boyfriend and partner in crime) atop a car. Wallace wakes up nearby and goes through his routine of readying several children in his charge for school. The police arrive in the neighborhood and as Poot Carr and Wallace leave the house they recognize Brandon's body. Across town, D'Angelo Barksdale dresses at home while Shardene makes him breakfast. They discuss their blossoming relationship and D'Angelo reveals that he believes that all women come with a cost, particularly his other girl Donette.

Wallace expresses his anguish at seeing Brandon's corpse to D'Angelo. D'Angelo unsympathetically reminds Wallace that he knew what would happen to Brandon, and reminds him that killing is part of "the game" of drug dealing in Baltimore. Stringer tells D'Angelo they are bringing Bodie home following his recent arrests. At a court hearing, Maurice Levy lies to defend Bodie's actions and the judge allows Bodie to go free with the condition of twice-weekly phone calls to a parole officer. Herc and Carver later pick up Bodie, believing him to have absconded from custody a second time and are surprised that he managed to get released with a home supervision order.

D'Angelo realizes that his lookout, a girl named Cassandra, is conspiring with Sterling to steal small amounts of drugs and sell them on the side, so he re-assigns them; in order to protect them, he tells nobody, save Wallace. Avon, Stringer, and Stinkum visit the low rises and deliver reward money to D'Angelo and Wallace for their part in finding Brandon; Avon also tells D'Angelo that Wee-Bey and Bird killed Brandon. D'Angelo assures Stringer that there are no snitches in his crew, reassuring him. Avon tells D'Angelo that if he keeps working well he will receive "points on the package" soon.

With Johnny released from medical care, Bubbles returns to the streets. The pair runs a short con to steal copper piping, which they sell to make their next drug purchase. When Johnny goes out to buy more, he is arrested and Bubbles marvels at his bad luck.

[edit] The Police

Detective Jimmy McNulty meets with Major William Rawls and Sergeant Jay Landsman. Rawls tells McNulty he expects him to finish up the detail and be back in the homicide division in a week's time, which McNulty has no intention of doing. Rawls goes through the ballistics link to the old cases McNulty and Bunk had been investigating. Pressured by Rawls, Landsman orders Bunk to charge the cases. McNulty, Greggs and Freamon meet with Bunk to discuss the impact on the Barksdale investigation. They expect it will prompt Avon Barksdale to change his operations structure and negate all their work. Rawls refuses to shift his position even when Daniels asks him to do it as a favor, but Daniels convinces Deputy Commissioner Burrell to overrule Rawls. Rawls responds by asking Detective Santangelo to keep him informed of any misdeeds amongst Daniels's detail, particularly from McNulty.

In the detail office, Lester Freamon notes the high level of pager activity the previous night. The new wire taps on the project pay phones legally require officers to monitor them; Thomas "Herc" Hauk is dismayed that this will mean long hours of surveillance work. Freamon is angry at his co-worker's laziness and asks what they expected when they joined the detail. After Stinkum chastises Bodie for using his name on the phone, Freamon explains to Prez that the call should be marked "pertinent" because it is evidence of conspiracy, even without providing hard evidence of drugs. Polk stumbles in, drunk at 9AM, and Daniels berates him for his poor performance, ordering him to either get to work or check into medical for alcohol abuse. To Daniels' dismay, Polk chooses the latter option.

Detectives Vernon Holley and Ed Norris are working Brandon's murder. McNulty discusses the potential link to the Barksdale organization. The detectives complain about waiting for the crime lab because both available units are investigating the theft of patio furniture from a politically influential city council president. McNulty gets a call from Omar and brings his sons to the police station, where Omar identifies Brandon's body. He comes with Greggs and McNulty to the detail. Freamon fits the pattern of pager activity to Omar's description of Brandon's movements. McNulty is angry that they are, as usual, one step behind. Freamon and McNulty interview the arcade owner and Freamon matches the nearby pay phone to the one used the night before. Greggs continues to interview Omar and he offers to act as a witness in the Gant murder case. The episode ends with the police photographs of Brandon's mutilated corpse - the same image that it opened with.[3][4][5]

[edit] Deceased

  • Brandon: Omar's boyfriend whose corpse was displayed in the low rise projects.

[edit] First appearances

This episode marks the first appearance of homicide Detectives Ed Norris and Vernon Holley, seen investigating the death of Brandon. Ed Norris is played by former Baltimore Police Commissioner Ed Norris; the character's personality is based on the real Norris, but his history is entirely different from his portrayor's. According to Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, there was actually an African-American detective in the Baltimore Police Department homicide division named Vernon Holley.

Also seen for the first time is Sean McNulty, the oldest son of Jimmy and Elena McNulty.

[edit] References

  1. ^ David Simon. (2005). 'The Wire "The Target" commentary track [DVD]. HBO.
  2. ^ "Lorem Ipsum: Wax Music Box" (2005). Retrieved on 2008-04-14.
  3. ^ Episode guide - episode 06 The Wire. HBO (2004). Retrieved on 2006-07-26.
  4. ^ "The Wire". David Simon, Ed Burns. The Wire. HBO. 2002-07-07. No. 6, season 1.
  5. ^ Alvarez, Rafael (2004). The Wire: Truth Be Told. New York: Pocket Books.