|
THROUGH THE WIRE
HBO's The Wire
Paco Martin Del Campo
t all matters,” Sergeant
Ellis Carver says in the fifth season of The Wire. “I know
we thought it didn’t, but it
does.”
Sergeant Ellis Carver’s observation about institutional
neglect speaks to the success
that the series has enjoyed.
The Wire isn’t getting the attention at the awards shows or
in the Nielson ratings, but critics are hailing it as one of the
best shows in television history. And importantly, it is very
popular among the inner-city
demographic it depicts. The
resonance of The Wire among
urban dwellers reveals that
the gritty realism of the show
truthfully captures the violent,
corrupt, and conflict-ridden
life of American cities.
The Wire’s low ratings indicate a disturbing truth in
America. “Reality” television
remains popular, but a program that portrays the harsh
realities of our country is not
what people seem to want
to see. As The Wire demonstrates, we are all individually
woven into a complex social
fabric. The visceral nature of
the show throws mainstream
America’s complacent cognitive dissonance back in its
face, and apparently most
Americans would rather
ignore systems of oppression that implicate
themselves as participants.
Sergeant Carver’s quote could
be applied to privileged America’s overall attitude of willful
neglect of “the other America.”
It does indeed matter, but the
media, political leaders and
infrastructure, and “middleclass” Americans all act as if
they think it doesn’t.
 |
|
The Wire began its first season as a deceivingly simple cops-and-robbers narrative. It
traced the efforts of Baltimore city detectives to infiltrate the West Baltimore drug trade monopoly using telephone surveillance, a wiretap , (hence
the series’ name). However,
this was never a typical onedimensional cops and robbers
story. Avon Barksdale, the
drug kingpin, was portrayed
as a modern-day black “Godfather,” a family man simultaneously ruthless and
supportive of his entourage.
Two detectives, Bunk and McNulty, are alcoholic womanizers,
especially McNulty, who is a belligerent and irresponsible father and husband. Some cops commit blatant police brutality. One of the
most popular characters of the
show, Omar, makes a living
by robbing drug-pushers and
generally creating chaos for
narco-traffickers. He is also
homosexual. These are only a
few examples of the ways that
The Wire complicates and humanizes all of its characters.
Each subsequent season
expanded in focus, incorporating other elements of the
American city beyond the
drugs-and-detectives storyline.
Season two incorporated the
longshoremen’s unions and
the dock-workers, portraying
the cruelties of modern capitalistic enterprise and its detriments to the working-class.
Season three drew in city politics, depicting how the mayor
and city council’s personal
political ambitions trump actual reduction of crime in the
city. Season four dealt with
the failing school system, with
specific emphasis on schools’
blatant refusal to acknowledge
the traumatic socialization facing black males. Season five,
the current and last, depicts
the inner workings and pitfalls
of the media, as represented by
the Baltimore Sun. The “wire,”
no longer a simple reference to
wiretapping, became a metaphor for the interconnectedness of all these institutions
and how they affect and relate
to each other.
There are too many complex themes in The Wire to fully discuss, but describing a few
can help explain the show’s
popularity among both critics
and certain dedicated viewers.
Painful relationships, like that
of a teenage boy who has to
keep the DSS (welfare) card
from his crack-addicted mother, strike a chord with anyone
who has known a “crack baby.”
The line “I’m not paying you
to be my mother” is at once
powerful and heartbreaking.
The effects of repressive conditions on the human psyche
are another common theme. A
silent foster child, traumatized
in ways left only to our imagination, stares blankly with no
recognition of his social surroundings. His silence speaks
to the silence imposed on
the oppressed every day. The
homeless veteran of the Iraq
War, recounting the story of
watching his commander lose
his hands and laugh insanely
during an attack in Fallujah
(“It’s the laughing that I can’t
stand. No hands: whatever”)
speaks to the insanity of war,
both in foreign countries and
the more intimate conflict on
the streets of Baltimore. These
concerns resonate deeply with
those who have seen and lived
the tragic circumstances of
contemporary city life.
Of course, the critics’ adoration of The Wire has more
to do with the observations
that the series makes about the
structural failures of city infrastructure. When the schools are
failing, the mayor takes money
from crime-fighting units to
compensate, but he, along with
the rest of us, will ignore them
again as soon as the media loses interest in putting schools
on the front page. Budget distribution is a teeter-totter of
lies, pandering momentarily to
the political winds, only to be
taken the moment people stop
caring. Perception and power
are two other themes that are
very prominent in The Wire.
Political ambitions, whether
they are to become a city prosecutor or the governor, dictate
every action. Politicians and
careerists are only concerned
with public perception.
The themes in The Wire
touch on problems that face every American city plagued by
racist political and economic
systems, the stark inequality
of the post-industrial economy, and institutional failures
to meet these crises.
Even the drug trafficker is
conscious of perception. If he
(the traffickers are mostly men)
shows any weakness or doubt,
he opens the door for insubordination and competition,
usually coming in the form
of gunshots. So drug dealers
must be cruel and heartless in
their actions. Seasons four and
five deal with the expediency
theme explicitly. The show follows a well-intentioned city
councilman running for mayor
with the earnest intention of
changing Baltimore; one year
later, he “jukes the crime stats,”
alters the statistics so that they
are misleading, emphasizing
quantity of arrests over quality in hopes of a gubernatorial
bid. Officials wielding political power do so for personal
gain, not for the greater good
of Baltimore. Even when a corrupt official is prosecuted, he
becomes a pariah who falls to
preserve the system, not end it.
But The Wire, in observing
the structural problems facing
American cities, does more
than describe. It also raises
interesting questions, such as
who actually has power. The
police commissioner has direct
control over investigations and
resource distribution, and the
mayor is mostly just briefed
about crime-fighting. Careerist
bureaucrats, more interested in
numerous low-level arrests than
the few leaders of the crime organizations, decide how crime
is fought. It’s not just about who
has the power in the political
systems. The local drug lords
have much more influence over
youth than any local leaders or
law enforcement, and young,
intelligent black males (and
some females) are more likely
to end up on the corner, working for the drug kingpins, than
in college (or even high school
for that matter). Drug dealers
hold sway over urban youth far
more than any political organization or detective unit. The
drug trade is depicted as more
efficient and rational than the
bureaucratic mess downtown.
They make more money - and
provide more money for youth
in Baltimore - than the police
can even conceptualize. The
drug-pushers are, of course,
ruthless, oppressive, and dehumanizing on their own, and
are not to be emulated, but The
Wire suggests that the political, economic, and educational
institutions in power hold less
influence over the hearts and
minds of urban denizens than
the drug dealers they label as
criminals. Those social institutions simultaneously enforce
the dehumanizing conditions
and are almost powerless to
stop it.
The creators of The Wire,
David Simon and Ed Burns,
know the city of Baltimore
quite intimately. Simon was
a police reporter for the Baltimore Sun, and Burns is a
former police detective and
teacher in Baltimore. Most of
the events and themes in The
Wire are based on their own
experiences working in Baltimore, and the city is indeed
the heart of the show. The language and culture in The Wire
are uniquely “B-More,” but the
themes of The Wire are shared
by urban communities all over
the United States, and the series provides a powerful argu-ment for why American cities remain poor, corrupt, and
dehumanizing places for their
residents.
This article is run in collaboration with El Participante, a publication organized
by Lucha, an activist group
at Columbia dedicated to the
struggle for immigrant rights,
worker’s power, and ending
imperialist wars and occupations. Visit elparticipante.blogspot.com for more
information.
The themes in The Wire
touch on problems that face every American city plagued by
racist political and economic
systems, the stark inequality
of the post-industrial economy, and institutional failures
to meet these crises. Creator
Simon has himself said that
The Wire is about how we are
subject to institutions - political, educational, governmental,
media, narcotic - that consistently fail us. There probably
has never been a fictional show
with more sociological and
political significance than The
Wire. Despite American’s preference for the farce of “reality”
television, The Wire’s unprecedented broadcast on a popular
network like HBO enables a
large audience to see the inequities of American life and
what is happening in our cities. Perhaps more importantly,
it gives a voice to people who
have been silenced in America,
like the foster child, the corner
boys, the single mothers, crack
babies, and everyone else on
the block.
|