• SusagaEnglish
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    It’s kind of been a running thing that the only way to make a group of cops the good guys is to have them point out how bad most cops actually are. There’s an episode where Terry gets racially profiled and has to sacrifice a promotion so he can get even a little bit of justice. There’s an episode where NYPD posters keep getting defaced, and Gina has to point out how most people hate cops for good reasons. The series starts with Holt pointing out the NYPD kept him from getting promoted due to being a gay black man, then promoted him when they thought it would make them look good.

    Heck, all of season 8 is spent opposing a police union and trying to stop police corruption.

    It’s copaganda that desperately didn’t want to be copaganda.

    • NeatNitEnglish
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      Exactly. Literally every other part of law enforcement is vilified, including all precincts other than the 99, federal law enforcement (mail police(?)), lawyers (defence lawyers definitely, I don’t remember if prosecutors were really present).

      Honestly I don’t know if the show had a pro-cop agenda. If it did, it failed to deliver it, but I don’t think it even did. I think they just wanted to make a high-energy sitcom about cops, and they didn’t want to make the main cast unlikable.

      • SusagaEnglish
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        Defence lawyers are only really vilified for opposing the police. After all, they’re helping someone the police arrested, and everyone the police arrest are evil, right?

        • OneOrTheOtherDontAskMeEnglish
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          In the show, defense attorneys were called out for being knee deep in the system and their careers holding more value than ‘justice’, or that’s how I read into the Jake-dating-a-lawyer episodes. Her boss was dirty, she was mad he exposed that and jeopardized her career.

        • NeatNitEnglish
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          Right, that’s one legitimate way to read it, but this take doesn’t work for any of the others I’ve mentioned. “Everyone is awful except the main cast” is consistent.

          Also the one car thief that they always partner up with? What’s the deal with that?

          • BarrelAgedBoredomEnglish
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            Pretty sure Doug Judy is only a thing because Andy Samberg and Craig Robinson have amazing chemistry

    • abracaDavidEnglish
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      I’m about as ACAB as it gets and I still love that show.

      They’re barely cops. It’s just a good comedy.

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    If you just watch it as if this is the one precinct in all of New York with good cops thanks to the command of a fundamentally progressive but strong leader like Holt, you can maintain both your indictment of the greater NYPD and police in general while also seeing how progressive reforms and leadership can actually make a change for the positive in your community. There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with the law, with enforcing said law or with those who chose to enforce it, so long as law enforcement is held to account and not allowed to be overwhelmed with violent conservatives with authoritarian boners.

    • PheganEnglish
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      They had a whole episode with another cop harassing Terry, and only apologized after he found out he was a cop.

      • kryptonianCodeMonkeyEnglish
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        Right and a few other captains came in that ruined the culture of the whole precinct

        • ZootEnglish
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          An then eventually Rosa leaves the NYPD, and Peralta has a very hard time reconciling with his own life inside the NYPD. Currently rewatching it, personally I love how happy they are to shit on Police in general at the end. They could have kept up the facade that their precinct was the best all around, like SVU. But they chose not to do that.

          • kryptonianCodeMonkeyEnglish
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            Yeah, it came back from hiatus after George Floyd was killed and the police were attacking protestors, particularly the NYPD. They (rightfully) thought it would be in bad taste to make more copoganda at that time.

            • DragonTypeWyvernEnglish
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              Mad respect for ending the show with a anti-copaganda message tbh. It takes courage to walk away from a gig like that you otherwise liked.

    • SusagaEnglish
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      In the broad strokes, I absolutely agree, but I think you need a few asterisks in that statement to avoid becoming copaganda yourself.

      There’s nothing fundamentally wrong with the law*, with enforcing said law** or those who chose to enforce it***

      * The law isn’t always just, and can be just as rotten as the lawmakers can. It used to be against the law to be gay, and that law IS fundamentally wrong. “Don’t murder people” is a just law, though.
      ** The law isn’t always enforced evenly. Some officers only enforce the law when it suits them, letting wealthy people get away with murder while cracking down on minorities for minor offences. If you make sure to treat everyone evenly, you’re fine.
      In addition, enforcing unjust laws is unjust, and I don’t care if you were just following orders.
      *** Not everyone chooses to enforce the law for the sake of the law. Many cops became cops because of the status that comes with the badge. They don’t care about protecting the innocent. Luckily, even the most ruthless in the 99 is in it to protect people.

      • kryptonianCodeMonkeyEnglish
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        Right. My implication was that those things are sometimes or even often wrong, but they don’t have to be.

      • EchEnglish
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        They covered all of that with the part you left out.

      • trololololEnglish
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        Well anarchists disagree with the fundamental premise that the state (generic name for government) should have either the right to create laws that are applied to everyone living in a geographic are or the act of people appointed by the state to enforce it.

        The short version of that belief is based on the concept of consensus of consequences, decided and enforced among equals. As opposed to 2 special classes of citizens having special roles, ruling over others, such as senators and police.

  • Drusas
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    “Woobified” is a new one for me.

      • Drusas
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        I think they probably aren’t because I never would have guessed that. Thanks for sharing!

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    Easiest way to see it wasn’t based on reality is that they solved crimes, and usually even cared about people. That isn’t our reality so it had to be fictitious.

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      There was a black guy that was allowed to do multiple crimes and even live! Clearly fiction.

      Long live Doug Judy.

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    Wasn’t this why they stopped doing the show?

    • KogasaEnglish
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      I dunno, but the last season takes a hard left turn with one major character leaving the pd for ethical reasons and the others struggling with their part in the institution. It was definitely informed by current events.

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    Everything said in this image is incorrect. Go read about what Michael Schur has to say about the show and it’s relationship to policing.

    • zero_spelled_with_an_ecksEnglish
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      Got a link to share? Michael Schur police just brings up a bunch of AI listicles that include Brooklyn 99.

      • KairosEnglish
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        No sorry, it’s something about taking on the issues directly. I think they did it a lot more in the last season. It’s almost satirical?

    • TrickDacyEnglish
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      I didn’t really watch it but I got the impression it was a satirical comedy. No?

        • TrickDacyEnglish
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          but you just claimed to understand the show and what the creator of it intended

          • KairosEnglish
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            I didnt actually, just that the other thing was incorrect.

            • TrickDacyEnglish
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              You have to admit, it’s confusing that you’re not sure what the show’s deal is, but you know it’s not [x].

  • zero_spelled_with_an_ecksEnglish
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    From what I remember, the vast majority of the arrests and cases were drug related. It’s still not a great look.

    • Venat0rEnglish
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      Also the incompetence/laziness of Scully and Hitchcock, and the corruption/politicking of a lot of the cops they encountered outside of Captian Holts command