On Nov 23, 11:23 am, Marten Kemp <martendespamk...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Mike Piacente wrote:
> > "Mike Minor" <mminor...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> >news:13kdo952h2o64b7@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >> At the end of Wednesday's show Mack went to Chicago. Anyone else see
this
> >> as the opening for a new show, CSI: Chicago?
>
> > Admittedly, I don't watch 'Miami' and 'NY,' I only watch the original,
but
> > it would seem to me that Zuicker will approach 'CSI saturation' and
people
> > may not watch a 4th, 5th, 10th CSI series. Look what happened to the
"Law
> > and Order" franchises -- "Criminal Intent" plummetted for NBC and is
now on
> > USA Network and not sure how it's doing there.
>
> IMHO, L&O:CI is hampered by episodes starring Vincent D'Onofrio,
> whose style I find really irritating. The ones starring Chris Noth
> are better.
I don't mind Logan (Chris Noth), but I really like D'Onofrio and
Erbe. That redhead that's been with Logan lately is a PITA, but
otherwise. I've always liked D'Onofrio, ever since Full Metal Jacket
(and can't forget him as Edgar in Men in Black either).
>
> I really dislike Sam Waterston's Jack McCoy when he's shown going
> to great lengths to convict someone, no matter what gets destroyed
> in the process. The invalidation of NY's "gay marriage" law is a
> case in point.
Occasionally I like McCoy, generally in fact, but he does tend to go
over the top. Him and Perry Mason, lose so rarely that you can't
really remember what the crime was. If the ADA was that good, there
would be almost no crime, since everyone would know they were going to
jail if that "Jack McCoy" got ahold of their case.


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