Today, we look at when (or if) you folks believe that Homicide: Life on the Street “jumped the shark.”
This is “Just Can’t Jump It,” a feature where we examine shows and whether they “jumped the shark.” Jumped the shark (coined by Jon Hein) means that the show had a specific point in time where, in retrospect, you realize that show was going downhill from there (even if, in some rare occasions, the show later course-corrected). Not every show DOES jump the shark. Some shows just remain good all the way through. And some shows are terrible all the way through. What we’re looking for are moments where a show that you otherwise enjoyed hit a point where it took a noticeable nose dive after that time and if so, what moment was that?
Something that is a bit hard to really conceptualize once time has passed is how much a TV show’s history can be impacted by, well, the other shows on that network. For instance, let’s say that NBC was doing really well in 1982, perhaps they never would have renewed Cheers for a second season. Since the network WASN’T doing that well, Cheers had more freedom and, of course, it all worked out quite nicely. A similar situation took place at NBC in 1994, when L.A. Law was struggling to get back to normal in its eighth season, and a critically acclaimed drama, Homicide: Life on the Steet, seemed poised to get the 10pm slot on Thursday (it literally DID get the slow for a brief period). Well, then NBC had this pilot called ER, and L.A. Law got the boot officially and Homicide lost its plum time slot, and ER went on to become a blockbuster. If ER wasn’t around, would Homicide have kept the Thursday at 10pm slot, with all of that Friends and Seinfeld attention? Would L.A. Law have been given a ninth season? Interesting What If…?s.
Anyhow, Homicide: Life on the Street was a brilliant police drama based on David Simon’s book, Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, where Simon followed the Baltimore Police Department’s Homicide detectives around for a year. The show was created by Tom Fontana, and it was a brilliant look at detectives, specializing in the verisimilitude of the series.
So first…DID IT JUMP THE SHARK? I’m going with no.
WHEN DID IT JUMP THE SHARK Here’s the thing. The network hated how unconventional Homicide was, and pushed the show to add “pretty” actors constantly, and the show really struggled with those silly demands, and by the final season, the cast was practically unrecognizable, especially when Andre Braugher left the show (he won an Emmy for Best Actor as Detective Frank Pembleton). However, the show was still good! It wasn’t as good as its earlier years, but it was still a good show! Simon had actually joined the writing staff of the series by this point, and the show was still well-written, just not AS good as it had been before. For longtime fans, the final season was annoying, but it was still a good show! So I say never jumped.
Let me know what you think in the comments or on social media!
Feel free to e-mail me at brian@popculturereferences.com for suggestions for shows for us to do in future installments!
I’m going with when Falsone was introduced. Specifically, the moment when he introduced himself to Kay Howard by opening a bottle of aspirin with his mouth. (At least he was correct when he said it was “my one talent.”)
He took over the show SO much, as it was obvious that Fontana was pushing him as a potential new lead once Braugher left at the end of S6, and it just didn’t work at ALL. Falsone was an unsympathetic, obnoxious character who spent much of his time clashing with Kellerman, a more popular character, plus Seda was just too inexperienced to carry a show at that point.
As you say, it was still a good show, but going by the classic “Jump the Shark” definition, where you just knew the show had changed for the worse and was never quite the same show again, Falsone’s introduction was the moment.
I think the dropoff has to be sharper for it to really count as jumping the shark, since ALL shows gradually get worse over time, even the brilliant ones that are still amazing in their final seasons.
Well, if you want a sharp dropoff, the seventh season is RIGHT THERE. 😉
(I kid, 7th season of HLOTS, I kid!)
I was sorry to see Braugher go, but he was replaced by Giancarlo Esposito, so it’s wasn’t a total loss.
I say “never jumped” because the writers handled the pressure to add more “pretty” actors by doing it THEIR way. Like bringing aboard Michael Michele, who is drop-dead gorgeous, so they leaned into that. Your average show would have had her in there from Day One, but in the early seasons Homicide was not about filling the cast with glamorous women and pretty boys; instead, they were proud of getting the most ordinary-looking bunch of schmoes they could find who also were stellar actors — including a future two-time Emmy winner (the late Andre Braugher) and a future Oscar winner (Melissa Leo).
Michael Michele’s character, Rene Shephard, was a beauty-pageant winner, and so drop-dead gorgeous that nobody took her seriously. Worse, when she made a mistake — when she got her gun snatched away — even the other women cops were looking at her sideways.
One of the best moments was when Shepard was in Lt. Giardello’s office (the late Yaphet Kotto) moping about it and told him, “I’m a woman, so you think I’m a screwup.”
Gee — who had put up with more discrimination and harassment in his career than Shepard could imagine — glowered at her (as only Yaphet Kotto could) and said, “You’re a Black woman, so I think you damn well better NOT screw up!” Then he told her to get out of his office and they would both pretend the conversation never happened.
Man, I really admired how willing they were to go THERE with Rene’s character by having the obvious problem with her (that she was such a slight looking person that didn’t look like they’d ever do well in a physical fight) being, well, you know, an obvious problem.