Law & Order
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Law & Order is an American television police procedural and legal drama set in New York City. Created by Dick Wolf, with award-winning theme music composed by Mike Post, the award-winning Law & Order is broadcast on the NBC network and syndicated on other US networks, as well as worldwide. The show is produced by NBC Universal Television Studio, formerly known as Universal Television and Studios USA.
Law & Order first appeared on the NBC network in the fall of 1990, and its success has resulted in the creation of additional shows under the Law & Order franchise. It is the longest-running primetime drama currently on American television.
The pilot episode was produced for CBS in 1988, but it never aired on that network. Instead, it aired as Episode 6 on NBC in 1990.[1]
Law & Order's seventeenth season on NBC began on Friday, September 22, 2006 at 10PM EST and will continue as an anchor of the network's Friday lineup; the show had aired on Wednesdays since 1992, and on Tuesdays before this. The series is broadcast in Canada on CTV. Reruns can be seen regularly each weeknight on TNT (U.S.) and weekdays (1PM) & weeknights (11PM) on Bravo! (Canada). It can be seen in the UK with new episodes first showing on the cable and satellite channel Sky One and later on Sky Two with a terrestrial airing on channel Five. The early seasons are being shown on the Hallmark Channel.
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[edit] Description
The following statement, narrated by Steven Zirnkilton, is spoken at the beginning of nearly every episode:
- In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the police who investigate crime and the district attorneys who prosecute the offenders. These are their stories.
The show follows a small team of New York City homicide detectives from the fictional 27th Precinct who occasionally investigate other serious crimes. Generally, about halfway through the hour-long program the focus shifts from the investigation of the crime to the prosecution of the offender, which is always handed over to the same small team of lawyers from the Manhattan District Attorney's office.
[edit] Two-tiered format
The two-tiered format of the program, with investigation of the crime and prosecution of the crime, is almost identical to a 1960's series titled Arrest and Trial, although the similarities are considered to be coincidental. Law & Order creator Dick Wolf was reportedly unaware of them when he created his series.
The prosecution portion of Law and Order is unusual in that it shows more legal proceedings than just a trial. The second half almost always opens with an arraignment and then proceeds to trial preparation. However the show does on occasion deviate from this format and centers on either indictment proceedings before a Grand Jury or an allocution upon entering a plea of guilty, usually in consideration for a plea bargain. It is very uncommon for legal dramas to show Grand Jury proceedings. This format is usually seen once or twice per season, with a trial being the norm. Grand Jury episodes focus on the difficulty of obtaining an indictment for a particular accused and often end with a guilty plea and allocution to wrap up the show quickly.
[edit] Show format
Most Law & Order episodes are self-contained, with only a few exceptions over the many years of production.
The cold open or lead-in segment of the show usually shows a slice of New York life (walking a dog in Manhattan, jogging in Central Park, etc.) apparently unrelated to the main story until the (usually non-recurring) characters in the scene suddenly discover, witness, or become victims of a crime (most often, murder). Careful attention to these opening segments often reveals subtle connections or hints foreshadowing key aspects of the case. The scene immediately cuts to the police making a preliminary examination of the crime scene in which the featured detectives make their first observations and theories followed by a witty comment or two before the title sequence begins.
The plots often have a resemblance to actual cases, such as in the 1998 episode "Tabloid", in which a woman is killed in an auto accident after being pursued by a gossip reporter. This followed the similar death of Princess Diana the previous summer. This "ripped from the headlines" nature can also be seen in the opening credit sequence which flows from newspaper headlines, print copy, and photographs into photographs of the actors that evolve from newspaper halftones into high resolution photos. Promotional advertisements of episodes with especially close parallels to real-life cases often use the actual phrase "ripped from the headlines," although a text disclaimer within the actual episode emphasizes that the story and its characters are fictional. The format lends itself to exploring different outcomes or motives that similar events could have had under other circumstances.
Because of the nature of the format, the detectives rarely encounter a simple murder where the perpetrator does little to hide his guilt (which is actually very common). Instead, the detectives often have few or no good clues to start with — they may not even know the identity of the victim — and must chase down several dead ends before finding a strong suspect. Towards the middle of a show, the police begin working with the prosecutors to make the arrest, and an arraignment scene is usually shown. The police may appear again to testify in court or arrest a subsequent suspect, but most investigation in the second segment is done by the assistant DAs, who always consult with the District Attorney for advice on the case.
The format includes not delving too much into the private lives of the recurring characters. Some personal information is given, but it is usually incidental, such as conversation that goes on during the course of an episode. In contrast to many other detective shows (Perry Mason and Matlock, for example), the protagonists of Law & Order do not always win their cases; episodes frequently finish without full resolution. Sometimes the true facts of the crime are left ambiguous to the audience. Sometimes the case against the offender is won, but justice still seems lacking. Often the viewer identifies with the defendant and wonders whether punishment under the law is even appropriate. Examples of the above is in an episode from the first season "Subterranean Homeboy Blues" a woman shoots 2 black teenagers, who she claims were going to attack her and another episode "The Reaper's Helper" where a HIV positive man is found dead and it is revealed that he asked a friend to kill him, to avoid developing full-blown AIDS (the episode was made in 1990 when there was hardly any medicine for the disease).
[edit] Stylistic touches
[edit] Local color
The series has a number of distinctive stylistic touches. The show is shot on location in New York and is known for its extensive use of local color. In recent seasons, NYC Mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg have both appeared on the show, adding a realistic dimension to the program.
While most of the locations are real, there are two notable exceptions. The fictional Hudson University is often used for college settings and The New York Ledger is typically the tabloid newspaper mentioned and is heavily based on the real-life New York Post. In one episode The Sentinel was used as a competing paper similar to the The New York Times. All are amalgams of actual New York institutions.
The real-life New York Daily News has also appeared in the series.
On September 14, 2004 in New York City, a road leading to Pier 62 at Chelsea Piers (where the series is mostly shot) was renamed "Law & Order Way", in tribute to the long-running series.[2]
[edit] Legitimate theater talent
Because both the interior and exterior filming all occur in New York City, the series has access to a wide variety of regular and guest actors who perform in the legitimate theater. Many times these actors are available for shooting during the day while performing on Broadway in the evening or between engagements.
[edit] The card
Most scene changes are preceded with a card indicating the location and date of the events to be portrayed. In episodes where the passage of time is an element (such as the episode "Mayhem", in which Briscoe and Logan had to finish part of an investigation in time to get to a New York Knicks game), the time to the second is also shown, sometimes accompanied by ticking. Perhaps best known is "the sound", a dramatic form of musical sting that accompanies each card. It has been described as a "DUN dun" sound. It was originally developed to sound like a barred door in a jail cell slamming shut (Law). Other fans think it sounds more like a gavel (Order).
In promos for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit reruns on the USA Network, actor Dann Florek refers to the sting as the "doink doink", while Richard Belzer refers to it as the sound of a judge's gavel.
[edit] Portrayal of characters
The show's cast of police and lawyers are portrayed as basically honest professionals who rarely stray from the boundaries of accepted procedure and usually solving crimes by the book, although occasional cases hit home and the detectives and/or ADAs become somewhat personally invested in the case. With the exception of several episodes at the end of Season 8, the show does not employ subplots, and the private lives of the characters are only mentioned in passing. Perhaps the scenes involving lawyers stray from reality a little more, with a far higher proportion of cases going to trial than in real life (although plea bargaining plays a far greater role than in other television series), and with trial lawyers sometimes acting as pseudo-detectives.
[edit] Technical accuracy
The same detectives always working with the same prosecutors is not a realistic depiction of the legal system, nor is the number of high-profile, highly complicated cases taken on, nor their success in solving nearly all of them. In the actual legal system, most real cases do not go to trial and are settled with a plea bargain, whereas the trial is a signature part of nearly every Law & Order episode (though a large number of cases are indeed resolved in plea bargains). Nonetheless, the characters and process depicted can be seen as amalgams of the entire legal system, and the technically unrealistic legal process as a simplifying plot device necessary for the show to be possible, thus maintaining suspension of disbelief.
Alternatively, viewers can take this point of view: the cases depicted on the show are not all the ones the detectives handle, but only those in which they are working with the specific prosecutors. Likewise, the cases depicted may not represent all those on which the prosecutors work, but only major, complicated cases which proceed to trial. A significant amount of time compression (compressing events that may occur over a period of months into a one-hour show format) may also be assumed.
Like the lawyers and police on the show, the victims and witnesses of crimes speak in pithy, perfunctory sentences that help to expedite the plot with a minimum of dialogue, even when the same characters are visibly upset or under cross examination. Frequently, questioning of key witnesses lasts a minute or less, even in real time. Expert witnesses typically perform infallibly under cross examination without equivocation. Nevertheless, the defense's expert witnesses, particularly psychiatrists, are regularly shown to be advocates of controversial or fringe ideologies such as Repressed memory or Black rage. Forensic experts are portrayed as almost omniscient and forensic evidence is rarely portrayed as botched or questionable; acquittals are generally gained in the face of forensic evidence only when a defense lawyer successfully argues for its inadmissibility on a sophistic or cynical "technicality". Like many legal dramas the show has thus been accused of providing an unrealistic portrayal of the criminal justice system.
[edit] Revolving cast
Law & Order is noted for its revolving cast; in fact, none of the original six regulars are with the show any longer, and many stay for only a few seasons. This continual replacement of actors has not appeared to harm the program's popularity. In fact, it has been speculated that the transforming cast has contributed to the series's longevity. Also, the regular appearance of new faces in the cast has constantly changed the show's dynamic, allowing it to effectively reinvent itself repeatedly.
Four long-serving exceptions are Steven Hill (1990–2000) as Adam Schiff, Sam Waterston (1994–present) as Jack McCoy, Jerry Orbach (1992–2004) as Detective Lennie Briscoe, and S. Epatha Merkerson (1993–present) as Lieutenant Anita Van Buren, who is the show's longest-serving actor. Steven Hill was the last member of the original cast to leave the show, though even he did not appear in the series' original pilot episode.
It is widely believed that the Adam Schiff character was based on real life New York County District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau who still serves in the post, aged 87.
Cast changes were announced in 2004 when longtime performer Orbach left the series at the end of Season 14 to star in the spinoff, Law & Order: Trial by Jury. Orbach died shortly after producing the first two episodes after a long battle with prostate cancer. Dennis Farina replaced Orbach, joining the cast as Detective Joe Fontana. In addition, Elisabeth Röhm, who played Serena Southerlyn for three and a half years, left the series midway through the 2004–2005 season; her successor was Annie Parisse, who played Alexandra Borgia.
In December 2004, Michael Imperioli was announced as a temporary replacement for Jesse L. Martin for the last four episodes of the 15th season. This was in order to allow Martin to fulfill a movie contract (the film version of Rent, in which Martin starred on Broadway); Martin returned for the 16th season. In the show, Detective Ed Green is wounded in a shootout and takes medical leave in order to recuperate. Michael Imperioli appeared as the same character in a guest-starring role in a later episode in Season 16.
On April 26, 2006 Fox News reported that Parisse had quit her role as Alexandra Borgia on Law & Order amid rumors of the show's imminent cancellation. The show, however, has been renewed for a 17th season. This departure was followed, on May 30, 2006 by the announcement that Dennis Farina would be leaving the cast as well,[3] in a story reported by the Associated Press. Farina was replaced by Milena Govich, who played one of the assistant district attorneys on series creator Dick Wolf's drama series Conviction. This will be the first time that a woman has played one of the main investigating police officers. As of the beginning of the seventeenth season, Annie Parisse has been replaced by Alana de la Garza.
[edit] Past and present cast
For all Past and Present characters see Law & Order Characters (All Series)
[edit] Trivia
- Jesse L. Martin's character has been on the show since 1999, but his character was not promoted to "senior partner" status until 2006 at the beginning of the show's 17th season. This is the first time in the series that the "junior partner" has become the "senior partner".
- In the pilot episode, which was filmed in 1988 but aired as Season 1 episode 6 (1990), the role of District Attorney Alfred Wentworth was played by Roy Thinnes. Adam Schiff was not in this episode. This is the only time Alfred Wentworth appeared, although Thinnes has returned to the series several times since then (in other roles).
- Joe Fontana transferred to the NYPD from Chicago. Dennis Farina, in addition to playing a Chicago cop on Crime Story, was a Chicago cop before becoming an actor.
- In the first three seasons, the precinct where the detectives work was often identified as the 33rd.
[edit] Recurring supporting cast
- Further information: Law & Order characters
[edit] Trivia
- Carolyn McCormick had star billing for most of Season 3 into Season 4.
- Many of the members of the recurring cast have appeared in other episodes playing different characters, a phenomenon known as "same actor, different character", which has been much discussed on Internet forums such as Jumping the Shark. Fans sometimes refer to these actors as "repeat offenders."
- S. Epatha Merkerson made a guest appearance as the grief stricken mother whose children were shot in the 1st season episode "Mushrooms."
- Jerry Orbach made a guest appearance as a defense attorney in the 2nd season episode "The Wages of Love."
- Annie Parisse made a guest appearance as a stripper in the 12th season episode "Attorney Client."
- Milena Govich made a guest appearence in the 16th season episode "Flaw."
[edit] Episodes
Season | Start | End | # of episodes |
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Season 1 | September 13, 1990 | June 9, 1991 | 22 |
Season 2 | September 17, 1991 | May 14, 1992 | 22 |
Season 3 | September 23, 1992 | May 19, 1993 | 22 |
Season 4 | September 15, 1993 | May 25, 1994 | 22 |
Season 5 | September 21, 1994 | May 24, 1995 | 23 |
Season 6 | September 20, 1995 | May 22, 1996 | 23 |
Season 7 | September 18, 1996 | May 21, 1997 | 23 |
Season 8 | September 24, 1997 | May 20, 1998 | 24 |
Season 9 | September 23, 1998 | May 26, 1999 | 24 |
Season 10 | September 22, 1999 | May 24, 2000 | 24 |
Season 11 | October 18, 2000 | May 23, 2001 | 24 |
Season 12 | September 26, 2001 | May 22, 2002 | 24 |
Season 13 | October 2, 2002 | May 21, 2003 | 24 |
Season 14 | September 24, 2003 | May 19, 2004 | 24 |
Season 15 | September 22, 2004 | May 18, 2005 | 24 |
Season 16 | September 21, 2005 | May 17, 2006 | 22 |
Season 17 | September 22, 2006 | — |
[edit] Awards and nominations
[edit] Awards won
- Outstanding Drama Series (1997)
- Outstanding Male Actor in a Drama Series Jerry Orbach (2005)
- Outstanding Male Actor in a Drama Series Sam Waterston (1999)
- Best Episode in a Television Series Teleplay René Balcer and Michael S. Chernuchin, for "Conspiracy" (1993)
- Best Episode in a Television Series Teleplay I. C. Rapoport and Ed Zuckerman, for "Deadbeat" (1997)
- Best Episode in a Television Series Teleplay Richard Sweren, Simon Wincelberg, and Ed Zuckerman, for "Double Down" (1998)
- Best Episode in a Television Series Teleplay René Balcer and Ed Zuckerman, for "Bad Girl" (1999)
- Best Episode in a Television Series Teleplay René Balcer, for "Refuge, Part 2" (2000)
[edit] Awards nominated
- Outstanding Drama Series (1992–1996, 1998–2002)
- Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Sam Waterston (1997, 1999–2000)
- Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Jerry Orbach (2000)
- Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Michael Moriarty (1991–1994)
- Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Steven Hill (1998–1999)
- Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Benjamin Bratt (1998)
- Best TV Series-Drama (1992, 1994–1995, 1998–1999)
- Best Performance by an Actor in a Drama Series-Drama Sam Waterston (1995)
- Best Performance by an Actor in a Drama Series-Drama Michael Moriarty (1994)
- Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series (1995–2002, 2004)
- Outstanding Male Actor in a Drama Series Sam Waterston (1998)
[edit] DVD Releases
DVD Name
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Cover Art
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Release dates
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Region 1
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Region 2
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Region 4
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The Complete 1st Season | ![]() |
October 15, 2002 | June 16, 2003 | April 14, 2003 |
The Complete 2nd Season | ![]() |
May 4, 2004 | February 28, 2005 | January 19, 2005 |
The Complete 3rd Season | ![]() |
May 24, 2005 | November 21, 2005 | March 8, 2006 |
The Complete 4th Season | ![]() |
December 6, 2005 | July 17, 2006 | N/A |
The Complete 5th Season | April 3, 2007 | N/A | N/A | |
The Complete 14th Season | ![]() |
September 14, 2004 | N/A | N/A |
[edit] Future of Law & Order
In late March 2006, the show witnessed a drop in ratings after NBC moved new episode showings to a different time slot;[4] however, speculation still exists that it may reach the record for longest-running American prime time drama, currently held by Gunsmoke (1955–1975).[citation needed] According to news reports in 2005, the Law & Order franchise (including all the different series) generates around $1 billion in annual revenues for NBC Universal and its cable partners (a February 2005 NBC financial presentation states that NBC's share of this revenue (including syndication and advertising) is more than $550 million).
On April 5, 2006, the show returned to its old timeslot.[5] This produced an improvement of ratings. [6]
NBC announced on April 27 that all three shows under the Law & Order banner have been renewed through early 2007.[7]
The show lost 1.8 million viewers in the sixteenth season.[citation needed] Both Law & Order and Criminal Intent were placed in new time slots for the 2006-2007 season. Law & Order currently averages 9.3 million viewers on Fridays at 10pm, down from 11.6 million a year ago, while Criminal Intent averages 9.7 million viewers on Tuesdays at 9pm and SVU averages 12.9 million viewers during its timeslot.
[edit] Related series
[edit] Spin-offs
The show's popularity has resulted in a Law & Order franchise with the creation of three other television dramas under the same brand: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999), and Law & Order: Criminal Intent (2001). These two shows focus more on the police side of a case. A short-lived spinoff, Law & Order: Trial by Jury (2005), which lasted only 12 episodes, focused almost entirely on courtroom drama, but was pulled off due to low ratings, becoming the first series of the franchise to be cancelled. Every spinoff uses the same theme music as the original series, albeit with differing arrangements (harder guitars for the Criminal Intent theme, for instance).
The latest and now canceled spinoff, Conviction, was only loosely related to the original. While Alexandra Cabot (Stephanie March) from SVU was one of the lead characters, and a cameo by Fred Dalton Thompson tied it into the same continuity, it did not bear the "Law & Order" title, nor did it use the Law & Order theme music and scene transitions. In addition, Conviction had no coverage of the police investigations and followed the prosecutors' entire lives, rather than just the cases they argue in court.
[edit] Crossovers
Law & Order crossed over six times with other NBC shows:
- "Charm City" (L&O ep 6–13), continued in "For God and Country" (Homicide: Life on the Street ep 4–12)
- "Baby, It's You – Part I" (L&O ep 8–6), continued in "Baby, It's You – Part II" (Homicide: Life on the Street ep 6–5)
- "Sideshow – Part I" (L&O ep 9–14), continued in "Sideshow – Part II" (Homicide: Life on the Street ep 7–15)
- "Entitled – Part I" (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ep 1–15), continued in "Entitled – Part II" (L&O ep 10–14)
- "Tombstone" (L&O ep 15–20), continued in "Skeleton" (Law & Order: Trial by Jury ep 1–8)
- "Design" (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ep 7–2), continued in "Flaw" (L&O ep 16–2)
While not considered a cross over episode, Chris Noth appears in the before-the-credits sequence of the Homicide episode "Law and Disorder" (H:LotS ep 3–15). Taking place entirely in a Baltimore train station, Logan hands off a prisoner (John Waters) to Frank Pembleton (Andre Braugher). The two detectives engage in some friendly banter about which city is better: New York City or Baltimore. They argue over topics such as Babe Ruth and Dorothy Parker.
[edit] TV movie
There was also a TV movie called Exiled: A Law & Order Movie (1998), which featured the fate of Mike Logan (played by Chris Noth), one of the popular characters who departed the series. Noth has since returned to the role of Detective Mike Logan starting in the 2005–2006 season of Criminal Intent.
[edit] Reality series
The producers crafted a reality television series, Crime & Punishment (also sometimes called Law & Order: Crime & Punishment) (2002), which focused on actual trials.
[edit] Computer games
In addition, there are three computer games of Law & Order in which the player investigates crimes and then prosecutes the resulting cases: There is also a computer game based on the "Law and Order: Criminal Intent" Franchise.
- Law & Order: Dead on the Money
- Law & Order: Double or Nothing
- Law & Order: Justice is Served
- Law & Order: Criminal Intent
[edit] Books
True Stories of Law & Order (published 11/06 by Berkley/Penguin) chronicles 25 real cases that inspired some of the most popular "ripped from the headlines" episodes of the show. Authors Kevin Dwyer and Juré Fiorillo discuss famous cases including the Bernie Goetz subway shootings, the murder of Jennifer Levin in Central Park, and the San Francisco dog mauling of Diane Whipple, as well as lesser-know crimes such as the death by excorcism of Torrance Cottrell and the tragic murder of Anthony Riggs, a soldier who returned from the Gulf War only to be ambushed by a hitman hired by his wife. The book also includes interesting facts about police and legal procedure.
[edit] International Broadcasters
Country | Alternate title/Translation | TV Network(s) | Series Premiere | Weekly Schedule |
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NBC (first run) and TNT (syndication) | September 13, 1990 | Friday 10:00pm ET | |
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La Loi et l'Ordre (French title) | CTV & NBC (first run) and Bravo (syndication) |
September 13, 1990 | Friday 10:00pm ET |
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La Ley y el orden | Universal Channel | Monday 9:00pm ART | |
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Network Ten (first run) and W.(syndication) | |||
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Law & Order/ Aus den Akten der Straße ("From the Files of the Street") |
ORF1 (first run) and (re-runs) | Mondays late nights | |
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Lei & Ordem | Bandeirantes and Universal Channel (first run) |
Monday 11:00pm (Universal Channel) |
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I lovens navn ("In the Name of the Law") |
TV3 (first run), TV3+, Hallmark Channel (syndication) |
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Kova laki ("The Hard Law") | YLE TV2 (first run) and Hallmark Channel (syndication) |
Friday 10:05 pm | |
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New York - Police judiciaire ("New York - Criminal Investigation Department") |
TF1 | September 11, 1994 | |
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Law & Order/ Die Aufrechten- Aus den Akten der Straße ("The Upright- From the Files of the Street") |
RTL Television (first run) and Das Vierte (re-runs) |
October 6, 1992 | Tuesday 11:10pm |
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RTÉ Two and Channel 6 | |||
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Hok VaSeder | Channel 1 and The Hallmark channel | ||
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Law & Order- I Due Volti Della Giustizia ("Law & Order- The Two Faces Of Justice") |
RaiDue, La7, Fox and Fox Crime | ||
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La ley y el orden: Unidad de Víctimas Especiales |
Canal 5 (Televisa) | October 2, 2006 | Monday, 10:00 pm |
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VARA, Net 5, RTL 7 and Hallmark Channel (Note: VARA still has the broadcasting rights, however, they recently stopped airing Law & Order) |
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Lov og orden | TV3 (first run), ZTV and Hallmark Channel (syndication) |
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Crime/Suspense, Hallmark Channel | |||
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Prawo i bezprawie ("Law & Lawlessness") |
TVP 1 | ||
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Lei & Ordem | Fox Life | ||
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Закон и порядок (translit: Zakon i Poryadok) ("Law & Order") |
Rossiya | shuffle, now Benjamin Bratt (1995-96) |
Tuesday-Friday ~0:00-1:00 GMT |
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Закон и порядок | Rossiya-Belarusian | shuffle | Monday-Thursday ~21:55-22:50 EET |
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Ред и Закон ("Order and Law") | Fox Crime | ||
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Ley y orden ("Law and Order") | LaSexta | ||
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I lagens namn ("In the Name of the Law") | TV3 (first run), ZTV, TV6 and Hallmark Channel (syndication) |
Sunday 11:10 pm | |
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Hallmark Channel | |||
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Sky One (original airing), Sky Two (re-runs), Channel Five and The Hallmark Channel (syndication) |
April 8, 1991 |
[edit] Technical Information
Law & Order has been shot on film in widescreen format since at least 1996. As broadcasters convert the archived film to 1080i high definition, the show holds the distinction of being the oldest weekly series currently available in High-Definition Television (HD). This also presents the unique oddity of reruns in HD, providing more (previously cropped) material than when the episodes were first run broadcast in 4:3. Since 2002, first run episodes have also aired in HD.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official Law & Order website
- Official Website for reruns on TNT
- Law & Order DVD official Universal Studios website
- Law & Order FAQ (compiled 1995-1996 by a fan)
- Law & Order filming locations, Mayor's Office of Film, Theatre, and Broadcasting
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