Handmade Awesomeness: Cops & Robbers Edition
June 10, 2009 by Alexis
Filed under Handmade Awesomeness
To celebrate the release of the seventh and final season of “The Shield” on DVD, we rounded up the coolest crime and punishment themed handmade goodies we could find!

With wickedminky’s mini mustache necklace, you can bust out your cop ‘stache at your own convenience!

The Riot mobile by SaltyandSweet is sure to bring you sweet dreams.

This cop car tee is screened by hand by ArturoClothingCo.

Delicious looking soap in the shape of a cop’s favorite snack! (Donut soap by LoveLeeSoaps.)

Mouse and Squirrel play a dangerous game on this messenger bag by skirt.

This silver handcuffs bracelet by BrooklynThread might be a little small to use on an actual perp.

There probably would have been a lot less bloodshed on “The Shield” if Mackey and Co.’s greed could have been satisfied by cupcakes. (Burglars and Cupcakes illustration by tamaragarvey.)

Money Train! (Night Train money clip by dmented.)

These handgun woodcuts are silent but violent. (By porkchopshow.)

papermoongallery‘s CAT bandit is making off with the Strike Team’s Money Train cash!!

The Culprit screenprint by kdkd.
And the Emmy should go to…
June 9, 2009 by Tim & Lex
Filed under TV, TV Previews
The big list of potential Emmy nominees is out for the acting categories, and though the ceremony is still a few months away here are our nominees and winners. Thanks to Alan Sepinwall for the idea.
Outstanding Lead Actor In A Comedy Series

Ken Marino* – Party Down
Alec Baldwin – 30 Rock
Adrian Grenier – Entourage
Lee Pace – Pushing Daisies
Danny McBride – Eastbound & Down
Outstanding Lead Actor In A Drama Series

Bryan Cranston* – Breaking Bad
Gabriel Byrne – In Treatment
Michael C. Hall – Dexter
Jon Hamm – Mad Men
Edward James Olmos – Battlestar Galactica
Outstanding Lead Actress In A Comedy Series

Tina Fey* – 30 Rock
Toni Collette – United States of Tara
Sarah Silverman – The Sarah Silverman Program
Cheryl Hines – In Motherhood
Julia Louis-Dreyfus – The New Adventures of Old Christine
Outstanding Lead Actress In A Drama Series

January Jones* – Mad Men
Emily Deschanel – Bones
Molly Parker – Swingtown
Elisabeth Moss – Mad Men
Mary McDonnell – Battlestar Galactica
Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Comedy Series

Kevin Dillon* – Entourage
Ryan Hansen – Party Down
NPH – How I Met Your Mother
Ed Helms – The Office
Rainn Wilson – The Office
Outstanding Supporting Actor In A Drama Series

John Noble* – Fringe
Walton Goggins – The Shield
Michael Hogan – Battlestar Galactica
James Callis – Battlestar Galactica
Aaron Paul – Breaking Bad
Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Comedy Series

Jane Lynch* – Party Down
Rosemarie Dewitt – United States of Tara
Alyson Hannigan – How I Met Your Mother
Jane Krakowski – 30 Rock
Mindy Kaling – The Office
Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Drama Series

Anna Gunn* – Breaking Bad
Elizabeth Mitchell – Lost
Tricia Helfer – Battlestar Galactica
Christina Hendricks – Mad Men
Dichen Lachman – Dollhouse
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Comedy Series

Dean Winters* – 30 Rock
Ed Begley, Jr. – Party Down
Peter Dinklage – 30 Rock
Chris Parnell – 30 Rock
Nate Corddry – United States of Tara
Outstanding Guest Actor In A Drama Series

Jimmy Smits* – Dexter
Dean Stockwell – Battlestar Galactica
Alan Dale – Lost
Charles Durning – Rescue Me
Stephen Root – True Blood
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Comedy Series

Kristen Bell* – Party Down
Amy Ryan – The Office
Jessica St. Clair – United States of Tara
Salma Hayek – 30 Rock
Phoebe Strole – 30 Rock
Outstanding Guest Actress In A Drama Series

Kate Vernon* – Battlestar Galactica
Frances Fisher – The Shield
Rekha Sharma – Battlestar Galactica
Kristen Bell – Heroes
Lizzy Caplan – True Blood
The Shield, Season 7: All Things Must Pass
May 26, 2009 by Timothy Kozar
Filed under TV, TV Reviews
In 2002, a gritty cop drama called “The Shield” stormed out of nowhere, landing an Emmy and a pair of Golden Globes and putting FX on the map as the HBO of basic cable. The future looked impossibly bright. This would be “The Sopranos
” of cop shows, with Michael Chiklis’ Vic Mackey playing the morally gray (bordering on pitch black) main character ala James Gandolfini’s Tony Soprano. (Chiklis even sported the Emmy and Golden Globe hardware to prove it with a clean sweep of the 2002-3 best actor awards.) By the time the finale of its seventh and final season aired on November, 25, 2008, to an initial audience of just 1.9 million, however, it was plain to look back and see that the rookie season was the peak of the series, at least in terms of hype, awards and gushing critical praise. (For the uninitiated, the first season
is well worth picking up – it’s an adrenalin rush in television form.)

We don't need no stinkin' badges!
Even if the awards abruptly stopped flowing in and the show never gained footing with a huge audience (though it was always big by FX standards,) many devoted fans greatly appreciated the ride well after the first season. The plot rocketed along, burning bright and hot, following Mackey and the strike team along their path of murder, betrayal and greed. From ripping off the Armenian money train, to Julien’s (Michael Jace) aversion therapy, to Detective Dutch Waggenbach (Jay Karnes) strangling a cat, to Police Captain and future Mayoral Candidate David Acevada (Benito Martinez) suffering a prison style mouth rape, to Shane Vendrell (Walton Goggins) dropping a grenade in fellow strike team member Curtis Lemanski’s (Kenny Johnson) lap, “The Shield” was loaded with the kinds of grit and dirt cop stories you couldn’t find in the squeaky clean worlds of “Law & Order” and “CSI
.” Season Seven faced the tall task of tying up a bunch of loose ends and bringing all of those stories to a close.
|
TV Casualties Rating: |
| Created by: Shawn Ryan |
| Starring: Michael Chiklis, Walton Goggins, CCH Pounder |
| Season Premiere: 09/02/08 |
| DVD Release: 06/09/09 |
| Nielsen Rating: 1.9 million viewers |
| Metacritic Score: 85/100 |
Picking up immediately after the sixth season, the final act continues to revolve around the conflict between Mackey and Vendrell in the wake of Lem’s murder by grenade. They start out in a reluctant alliance that quickly explodes into a full out blood feud, leaving both men jobless and scrambling to avoid prison in different ways. After walking the line for so many years and, with a lot of good luck, avoiding any real trouble, Mackey, Vendrell and their long time strike team partner Ronnie Gardocki (David Rees Snell) finally tumble over it into the land of no return. Death or imprisonment looks extremely likely for all three from pretty early on.
Other characters, like Acevada, Julien, Danni (Catherine Dent), and to a lesser extent Dutch and Claudette (CCH Pounder,) see their stories take a backseat to the strike team. This has been the case for the series since the first season or two, and looking back, I think it may have been a mistake. The show did work best when the audience was truly invested in all of the characters as both police officers and people with personal lives. The show veered from showing us many of those non-strike team characters outside of the office and lost a lot of variety, and maybe even humanity, for it.

the strike team during happier times
In most other respects, in fact, the last season is more of the same – in a good way. The show always centered around the intrigue of the web of strategy between opposing gangs, the cops and the semi-crooked strike team kind of playing all sides. The twists and turns of those plot elements remain strong and as always are told at the breakneck pace of the pilot’s opening chase scene. Pretty much the entire cast kicks ass here as usual, nailing both the funny scenes and the intense ones. Goggins has to cover the most territory this year, and he rises to the challenge. Chiklis, Karnes and Pounder are always awesome.
So does story of the strike team ultimately pay off? Justice was never easy or simple in “The Shield.” Nothing was ever quite black and white. The story of Vic Mackey and the strike team climaxes with a lot of justice, though – some literal, some poetic and some rough.

