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COPS (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

COPS
Genre Reality television
Creator(s) John Langley
Starring Harry Newman
(announcer)
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
No. of episodes 1908(as of April 14, 2007)
Production
Running time approx. 22 min.
(excluding commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel FOX
Picture format 720p HDTV
Audio format Stereo with SAP Spanish translation
Original run March 11, 1989 – present
Links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

COPS is an American reality television series that follows police officers, constables, and sheriff's deputies during patrols and other police work. It is one of the longest-running television programs in the United States and is often considered the original reality television program. Created by John Langley and Malcolm Barbour, it premiered on March 11, 1989, and has aired over 600 episodes. It won the American Television Award in 1993, and has earned four Emmy nominations. It celebrated its 650th episode on May 20, 2006.

COPS is broadcast by the Fox Network,and other networks and follows the activities of police officers by embedding camera crews with police units. The show's formula calls for no narration or scripted dialog, depending entirely on the commentary of the officers and on the actions of the people with whom they come into contact.

The show has followed officers in 140 different cities in the United States, and also has filmed in Hong Kong, London, and the former Soviet Union. Each episode is approximately 22 minutes in length, and typically consists of three segments, with each segment being one or two self-contained police incidents.

The show is well known for its theme song, "Bad Boys," sung by reggae group Inner Circle.

Contents

[edit] History and background

COPS was created by John Langley and his producing partner Malcolm Barbour. In 1983, Langley was filming a show called Cocaine Blues, which focused on the South Florida drug scene. Langley went on a drug raid with drug enforcement officers as part of their research into the film, and was taken aback by the adrenaline rush of the raid and the unpredictable nature of the events that unfolded before them. “Just the adrenaline rush of not knowing what would happen at any time,” Langley says, inspired him to document the experience. “It seemed natural to do a TV show in the shoes of police officers.”

Langley and Barbour were unsuccessful at first in selling the concept of a new show that would put the viewer in the car with real police officers. The unpredictable nature of an unscripted show, the perceived legal hurdles , and the relative newcomer status of Langley and Barbour proved to be fundamental roadblocks to the concept being picked up.

In the late 1980s, after producing a series of live syndicated specials called American Vice: The Doping of a Nation with Geraldo Rivera, Langley and Barbour pitched the COPS show concept to Stephen Chao, a then unknown FOX programming executive. Stephen Chao would one day become president of the FOX Television Stations Group and later USA Network. Chao liked the concept and pitched it to Barry Diller, then CEO of the FOX Network. As fate would have it, a Writers Guild of America strike was occurring at the time, and the network was desperate for new material. An unscripted show that did not require writers seemed perfect. After the pitch, Langley recalled that an "accountant-looking guy", who turned out to be Rupert Murdoch, wanted to see four episodes and Barry Diller gave the order a green light.

The first episode aired in 1989, and featured the Broward County, Florida, Sheriff's Department. The original concept of the show was to follow officers home and tape their home lives along with their work. After a while this concept was deemed too "artificial" by Langley and was abandoned. Eventually, the format of three self-contained segments with no narrator, no music and no scripts would become the show's hit formula. The first segment is usually an action segment to hook the viewer. The second segment is typically humorous or more emotional, and the third is more thought-provoking in terms of legal and social issues.

This recipe has consistently proven successful, as COPS routinely wins its 8pm and 8:30pm repeat time slot on Saturday nights every year, and paired with the companion show America's Most Wanted following at 9pm, has created a strong and consistent night for Fox with steady ratings, allowing their Saturday night schedule to remain unchanged since November 1996. Its consistent performance has allowed COPS to maintain a relatively stable stream of advertising revenue. Each first-run episode of COPS costs advertisers about $60,000 (US) for a 30-second spot.

[edit] Production Information

COPS uses anywhere from five to ten two-person camera crews riding in different cities across the United States for each weekly 30-minute episode. The crews spend up to 400 total recording hours with officers, of which 22 minutes are used for each episode. The crews typically work as many as 36 weeks a year. Prior to taping, COPS field producers meet with the departments and interview individual officers for potential placement with camera crews. Since COPS relies primarily on the personality of the officer and the commentary provided by the officers, selection of the officers is crucial in creating an episode. By contract, each police department reserves the right to view and approve its footage prior to airing.

Editing is critical in creating a story arc for each segment, since COPS uses no narration and each segment is limited in length. Taped incidents must be shortened to fit into the allotted segment time, while at the same time allowing the viewer the sense of seeing a coherent story and providing enough background of the officer to allow the viewer to relate to him or her.

Each two-person crew consists of a camera operator and a sound mixer. The camera operator typically sits in the front passenger seat of the police car while the sound mixer sits in the back. In the case of a car with two officers, both crew members will sit in the back. Crew members are encouraged to wear ballistic-resistant vests (bullet proof vests) for protection. They typically do not interfere with any incident (see also fourth wall), however, there have been rare incidents in which the crew assisted an officer in restraining an extremely combative subject. In one episode, the sound mixer, a former EMT, assisted a police officer in performing CPR. In another episode, 1998 Atlanta a COPS camera operator, who was coincidentally a Las Vegas Reserve Police Officer, had to drop the camera and assist an Atlanta Police officer in wrestling a suspect into custody. The Police Officer, it turned out, had been severely injured during a foot pursuit; meanwhile, the soundman picked up the camera and continued filming the action which eventually made air. Because the camera crew was dressed in tactical gear, no one noticed the camera man in front of the camera.

One production staff member recalls a 1994 Los Angeles incident where they had rolled up to a vehicle on what appeared to be a routine traffic stop. “We were just getting out, and bullets started whizzing by my head,” says Hank Barr, a 17-year veteran of the show. “John and I were wrestling to pull each other into that little back seat.”

In the early 1990s, a camera crew was riding in one Denver patrol car, when it was broadsided by another patrol car. Both police cars were demolished, however, all officers and the crew sustained only minor injuries. This event was shot by another COPS crew that arrived at the scene and shown in one segment of COPS from the points of view of both camera crews.

In another episode being taped in Lynn, Massachusetts, a suspect with a knife was shot on camera after trying to stab an officer. The footage was used to determine that the officer did not use excessive force. This particular incident appeared on the COPS: Shots Fired DVD, released in 2004.

The show is completely unrelated to C.O.P.S., an animated series that ran from 1988 to 1989.

[edit] DVDs, books and syndication

Recently, several themed DVDs have been released, some of which include profanity and sexually explicit footage cut from the network version. They are entitled COPS: Shots Fired, COPS: Bad Girls, and COPS: Caught in the Act.

In 1999, Hank Barr published The Jump-Out Boys, a book giving a behind the scenes look at the production and taping of COPS.

In 1994, COPS went into syndication. This resulted in a slight dropoff in ratings consistent with other shows that have gone into syndication while still in production. Nonetheless, COPS has grossed over an estimated US$200 million since it has gone into syndication. COPS can be seen in syndication in the United States on the CourtTV, FX, G4 and Fox Reality cable networks. The show has also been licensed internationally through FOX and is seen in 40 other countries, although the format has been copied often.

[edit] Criticism

Police arrest someone in the show Cops.
Police arrest someone in the show Cops.

The show has been criticized for its predominant focus on the criminal activities among the poor. Critics of this aspect of the show say it unfairly presents the poor as responsible for most crime in society while ignoring the white-collar crimes that are typical of the more wealthy. Documentary film maker Michael Moore raises this very issue in an interview with a former associate producer of COPS, who was with the program for one season. Richard Herlan was included in Moore's film Bowling for Columbine, and was erroneously presented as a spokesman who represented the program. His response to Moore was that television is primarily a visual medium, requiring regular footage on a weekly basis to sustain a show, and police officers "busting in" on some office where identity theft papers are being created or other high-level crime rings are operating do not happen very often, thus it is not likely to be recorded and thus not shown. The low-level crime featured on the show happens every day, providing large quantities of material suitable for taping. COPS creator John Langley readily acknowledges that the program is about street crime, not white-collar crime, and urges that it should be judged accordingly. He also points out that the underlying message of the show is about the nature of our laws and the disenfranchised areas where those laws are broken, suggesting there are social and legal issues that are illuminated in the program.

Some police departments have refused requests to tape in their cities. Chicago Police Department Deputy Director of News Affairs Patrick Camden has stated in response to requests for COPS taping that "Police work is not entertainment. What they do trivializes policing. We've never seriously even considered taping." In response, the producers of the show suggest that a transparent police policy is desirable and that COPS humanizes police officers while avoiding the curse of a secret police. Other cities include Honolulu. The Honolulu refusal eventually led COPS to film on Maui.)

Accused pervert and former anchorman for CBS affiliate KPSP-LP & NBC affiliate KMIR (2002-2006) Jim Philbrick (Born James Kenneth Philbrick) threatened to file suit after being featured on an episode that aired March 3rd 2007 for attempting to pick up an underaged boy who turned out to be police decoy. His attorney, John Patrick Dolan, contends the production company didn't ask his client sign a release form. Later, he reversed himself by claiming that the program helped prove his client's innocence after he received a copy of the signed release. ABC affiliate KESQ reported that reversal on March 30th 2007. According to Palm Springs police, on March 22nd 2006, a Perverted-Justice.com volunteer posing as a 13-year-old boy was contacted by a man later identified as Philbrick. Using the alias Jimster7 he allegedly sent the volunteer lewd pictures and discussed interest in having sex. Philbrick attorney contends "He thought he was role-playing with an adult gay man."

On March 29th 2006 Philbrick was formally charged under California Penal Code 664 & 288(A), he was later released April 4th 2006 on $50,000 bail. On March 8th 2007 he was rescheduled to appear in court for a Preliminary hearing on March 29th 2007.

[edit] Parodies

[edit] Themes

COPS is a popular subject for parody, a testament to how deeply the show has become embedded in American pop culture.

A common theme among parodies is incompetence displayed by law enforcement at hand. For example, in a parody from the television series The Simpsons, the police use a helicopter to watch a drive-in movie and have multiple tanks and copters chasing an ice cream truck. Theme song Bad Boys was replaced by Bad Cops, featuring new lyrics. Another such parody involves the activities of Chief Wiggum. Other shows that have parodied COPS include the Comedy Central series Reno 911!, The Tick animated series, the Ronnie Dobbs sketches on Mr. Show with Bob and David, Mad TV and Saturday Night Live. The series was also the centerpiece of an episode of The X-Files, called X-Cops.

Australian sketch comedy show The Ronnie Johns Half Hour's Dan Ilic and Jordan Raskopoulos starred in a parody of COPS; Popes, in which Catholic popes go after sinners. This sketch was made when the costume department hired some papal outfits for another sketch, and was shot in between locations.

COPS soundbites are frequently used on the Howard Stern Show. A show (and fan) favorite is the comical scream of a man being tasered, and is played virtually any time something painful is being discussed.

[edit] Sketch Comedy

  • Mad TV has done several parodies of COPS. CLOPS used claymation, and used fictional characters to act as the weird people often seen in the program. Notable was Paddington Bear acting as a flasher and the Pillsbury Doughboy going nuts with a rifle in a bakery. Recently, they spoofed again by having CONSTABLES, where London Bobbies (aka London Metropolitan Police) responded to a Domestic Disturbance at Buckingham Palace.
  • In Living Color did a parody called THUGS, wherein a camera crew follows a group of house thieves as they try to steal electronics and jewelry. However, they are caught by the cops, and the would-be thieves lament that they weren't just caught by cops, but by the show COPS.
  • The Seattle based sketch comedy show "Almost Live!" had a recurring segment called "COPS IN (a major Seattle neighborhood)" where the actors would portray the criminals and victims as stereotypes of each area's culture.
  • A recurring The Ben Stiller Show sketch featured COPS in different historical periods. Each sketch followed two contemporary New England police officers on a beat in ancient Egypt, medieval Europe, and Salem, Massachusetts in the era of the witchhunts. The sketches' humor was derived from the anachronistic no nonsense cops' interactions with superstitious Christians, ancient pagans, and Arthurian figures, usually resulting in handcuffing or brutality.

[edit] Television

  • One episode of Comedy Central's hit show "South Park" features Cartman acting as a cop on his tricycle, making stereotypical comments very reminiscent of COPS.
  • In an episode of Beavis and Butthead, one episode featured a similar program, COPPERS, which included the "Bad Boys" theme song.
  • An episode of The X-Files features the COPS filming crew following Mulder and Scully as they investigate an alleged werewolf attack.
  • Reno 911! is in some respects a parody of the long-running television show COPS. The show features members of the fictional Reno Sheriff's Department (a non-existent law enforcement body created so as not to offend the Reno Police Department or Washoe County Sheriffs Department), who are videotaped during the course of their duties, sometimes addressing the camera directly as though being interviewed. The force has problems with racism, unrequited attractions, promiscuity, passive-aggressive feuds, drug use, and other dysfunctional troubles that supply much of the show's humor.
  • The TBS series Blotter! began airing in the early 2000s and continues to air it up to the present (2007), using it as an interstitial between shows late at night or early in the morning. The show deals with the wacky doings of the Gordieville Police Department.
  • An episode of Freakazoid featured a show known as Real Life Police, which included a parody of the "Bad Boys" theme song using comical and ridiculous lyrics.
  • In an episode of the show "Married...With Children", Al Bundy tags along with his police officer friend to catch a man who burglarized his home on the same night that his friend is having a "Cops" camera crew tag along.
  • In RoboCop: The Series, the episode entitled "Inside Crime" featured a TV show of the same name, which reversed the concept of COPS. Camera crews followed masked criminals as they perpetrated break-ins, robberies, assaults, etc.

[edit] Film

  • Shrek 2, which puts a spin on the parody with the medieval-themed KNIGHTS.
  • In the movie Super Troopers the first scene is shown with the first person camera view of the camera man running after the cops, with fair to poor visibility as he is running.
  • A 1997 short film, TROOPS, is a parody that stars Imperial Storm Troopers from the Star Wars franchise in place of police officers.
  • In the movie Series 7: The Contenders, a satire on reality television, the opening "warning" is a parody of that used in COPS. Also the cinematography used in the movie is similar to that captured by the camera crews in COPS.

[edit] Shows influenced by COPS

  • The late Paul Stojanovich, a former COPS producer, created the syndicated documentary series World's Wildest Police Videos, showing footage of police work from dashboard-mounted in-car cameras and from news footage. The show's narrator, John Bunnell, was a former Multnomah County, Oregon sheriff's deputy (and later Multnomah County Sheriff) who appeared on several early episodes of COPS conducting undercover drug busts.
  • The Montgomery, Alabama FOX affiliate, WCOV, also airs two long-running locally-produced shows based on the COPS formula: M.P.D. documents the Montgomery Police Department and County Law covers the Montgomery County Sherriff's Department. In addition to footage of actual law enforcement work, both shows also include community involvement programs and demonstrations of police equipment and tactics. The shows air following COPS and AMW on Saturday nights.
  • LAPD: Life On The Beat, a syndicated series focusing on the Los Angeles Police Department. Unlike COPS, LAPD would run a small text blurb at the end of each segment explaining what became of the featured "suspect" ("He was charged with Disturbing The Peace and released").
  • Real Stories Of The Highway Patrol, usually dealing with County Sheriffs and State Police. This show was hosted by California Highway Patrol Commissioner Maury Hannigan. (Note: Commissioner Hannigan was the active Commissioner of the CHP during the show's tenure).
  • In the mid-1990s, a pornographic series was recorded called Cuntz in which several women in police uniforms would arrest a man and then penetrate him with strap-on dildoes. Actors involved included Dick Nasty and Tony Tame.
  • New Zealand also has its own version of COPS, entitled Police 10/7 (10/7 being the code for having arrived at the event), and a further spinoff entitled Motorway Patrol (Motorway Patrol predates Police 10/7 by at least 2 years-Derek Judge- Narrator). Both shows consistently rate highly in New Zealand and Australia.
  • Mexico has its own version of COPS, called Policías. The show is often thought to have spread the "double-slang" associated with Mexican cops, often saying "dark black car" or "we will put this man under arrest so we can put it under custody".
  • The Cops Show premiered in Kirkuk, Iraq after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. This show is roughly based on the United States COPS, but with innovations including a segment where viewers can call the station to speak with police forces on air.
  • In Australia a cops-themed television show is currently airing on network 7 entitled The Force: Behind the Line. It is produced by Southern Star Productions. Episodes were filmed in Western Australia with Police officers. Currently Australian television is also screening Missing Persons Unit, a show that follow's Police who investigate missing person's cases.
  • The First 48, on the A&E Network in the United States, follows homicide detectives on the premise that the first two days of an investigation are the most critical. While the footage is all real, it is narrated. It has depicted cases in a number of cities, and in one notable instance followed the investigation of a serial killer in Kansas City.

[edit] Memorable episodes

  • Naked Perps - All perpetrators were nude at the time of arrest. (Aired censored on television.)
  • Jersey Cop - The gruff bluster alternating with tenderness of Cpl. Anthony Damiano of the Passaic County, New Jersey Sheriff's Department proved so popular that he became the only police officer to receive an entire 30 minute episode devoted to him.
  • Tased and Confused - All perpetrators were apprehended with the use of a TASER (electronic stunning device) at the time of arrest.
  • Ho Ho Ho! - An entire episode featuring the arrests of prostitutes and sex clients. Usually appearing around Christmas.
  • America's Most Wanted Crossover - In 2000, John Walsh rode along with the COPS crew and the Duval County, Florida and Pierce County, Washington Sheriff's Departments. Coincidentally, a fugitive profiled on AMW was arrested, following a viewer's tip, in Jacksonville the night of the episode's original broadcast, and the arrest was taped by the COPS crew. Amazingly, the fugitive had been working at a restaurant that Walsh had earlier eaten at with members of the Jacksonville Police and COPS crew.
  • Two fictional TV series have featured COPS crossover episodes: a 2000 episode of The X-Files featured Mulder and Scully being followed by the COPS crew while they investigate an alleged monster sighting, and a 2007 installment of My Name Is Earl showed a COPS episode filmed in Camden County.

[edit] References

  • Tran, Tini. (2005) "Iraq TV's 'Cops' breaks new ground". The Associated Press August 21.

[edit] External links

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