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3!!It's all in the tropes, man. It's all in the tropes.
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5[[foldercontrol]]
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7[[folder:S]]
8* SarcasticConfession: Major Colvin ''did'' tell the other majors that he was planning on legalizing drugs in his district. They just thought he was kidding.
9* SassyBlackWoman: Squeak. The show can sort of get away with this because it has plenty of more nuanced female black characters.
10* SaveOurStudents: Played fairly straight. Prez struggles to adopt to his new life as a teacher, and the class barrier between him and his students makes his transition very difficult, but he grows pretty quickly and gets his class in line within the first school year. Even still, he cannot win every battle.
11* SeriesContinuityError: So minor that it's understandable the writers missed it, but in the Western District there's a photograph of Bill Rawls in a Major's uniform next to Major Colvin's, indicating that he's Colvin's predecessor as commander of that district. However, in ''The Wire Prequels'', Rawls is shown already leading the Homicide CID unit downtown... as a Lieutenant.
12* ScaryBlackMan: Most of the gangs' enforcers. The cops even have a shorthand for less-than-useful witness descriptions, "B. N. B. G." ("Big Negro, Big Gun").
13* SceneryGorn: The beautiful locales of West Baltimore are captured in all their glory.
14-->'''Santangelo:''' No disrespect to your appendix, but if them terrorists do fuck up the Western, could anybody even tell?
15* SchmuckBait:
16** Herc and Carver roust a corner of the drug dealers, when one of the youngest ones grabs the drug stash and takes off through the alleys. The cops all tear off in pursuit, and then another kid comes walking by, casually picks up the ''real'' drug stash, and disappears.
17** Season 5, during one of the corners "time out" moments. Kenard blatantly stashed a brown bag "package" in plain view for the western "narcos" to see. Without question, militant cop Colicchio snatches the whole corner. When he reaches inside the package, he pulls out a hand full of dog shit.
18* TheScream: Omar's reaction after viewing the mutilated body of his lover Brandon at a Baltimore morgue. The camera cuts to [=McNulty=]'s sons (who are waiting in the main lobby for their father) freezing in shock when he screams.
19* ScrewTheRulesImBeautiful : [[HelloAttorney Rhonda Pearlman]] uses Judge Phelan's attraction to her to get favorable rulings out of him a few times. In Season 3, Rhonda uses [[ShowSomeLeg a short skirt]] and a seductive smile to convince Judge Phelan to authorize a wiretap that the cops technically don't have a valid probable cause for.
20* ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight[=/=]HonorBeforeReason: Many examples where personal or professional ethics clashes with the wishes of the higher-ups and the chain of command. It's almost a foregone conclusion how that usually turns out for the mavericks.
21* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: [[spoiler:Poot]] is the only hopper shown to actually leave the game successfully. After he flees from [[spoiler:Bodie]]'s assassination, he's not seen again until Season 5, when Dookie bumps into him working at a shoe store. [[spoiler:Poot]] admits, "Shit just got old."
22** Bunk invokes this—"I'm out! I'm outta here!"—after his attempt to have Lester talk [=McNulty=] out of concocting a serial killer on the loose in order to get the city to commit enough resources to the police for him to investigate Marlo again results, instead, in Lester ''joining forces'' with [=McNulty=] to make [[BatmanGambit the stratagem]] work better.
23* SecretTestOfCharacter: Stringer sends Bodie and some other Mooks to Philadelphia to pick up some drugs stashed in a parked car. He has Bodie memorize the route and plans to check his odometer ''down to the tenth of a mile.'' What Bodie doesn't know is that Stringer has a car following Bodie the whole time, and the route he picked goes right through a construction zone (necessitating a detour) just to see how Bodie would handle it.
24* SecondComing: Judge's Phelan amusingly [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_zJDJGJ82M cites it]] as his criteria to grant parole to a convicted murderer.
25-->'''Phelan:''' Mr. Hilton, are you the second coming of our savior? [...] Are you Jesus Christ come back to Earth?\
26'''Bird:''' Uhmm...
27* SelfPunishmentOverFailure: When one of [[KarmicThief Omar's]] robberies from [[TheSyndicate the Barksdale Organization]] goes wrong and gets a member of his gang killed, he is deeply remorseful for having insisted on doing the robbery despite signs that the Barksdales were beefing up security due to his prior attacks, and does a bit of atonement by putting out a lit cigar in his palm.
28* SeriesFauxnale: The ending of season three, since David Simon wasn't 100% sure whether ''The Wire'' would return for the fourth and fifth seasons.
29* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Sgt. Jay Landsman often provides sarcastic commentary in a theatrical style using overly fancy language.
30* SeriousBusiness:
31** The annual basketball game between the Barksdale crew and Proposition Joe's men. The entire neighborhood shuts down to watch it and Avon thinks nothing of paying $20,000 to hire a ringer for his team.
32** Business doesn't get more serious than a stained glass window at Father Lewandowski's church. Because of a beef over that window, lives are destroyed, careers are made, a union is brought low, and the MCU is formed.
33* SexSlave: The plot of Season 2 kicks off when a shipping container full of dead Eastern European sex slaves are found on the Baltimore docks.
34* ShaggyDogStory: One of the main themes of the show is the idea that no matter what, the game is always on. [[spoiler:Which is pretty much reinforced with the last montage showing how every character is replaced by someone in one way or another.]]
35* SherlockScan:
36** Lester: "This is a tomb. Lex is in there." Cue baffled looks from his colleagues.
37** A subtle variant shows up in the third episode. When Sydnor is preparing to go undercover as an addict in the Pit, Kima asks Bubbles to give him feedback on the disguise, which Sydnor thinks is completely flawless. Bubbles points out that any drug dealer would immediately know that he's a cop because he's wearing a wedding ring (when a real addict would have long since pawned off such a valuable item to pay for drugs) and because the soles of his shoes are clean (when a real addict would have broken glass on their shoes from walking over "dead soldiers", Bubs street slang for discarded heroin vials).
38* ShirtlessScene: [=McNulty=], Avon, Daniels, D'Angelo, Omar, Stringer.
39* ShootTheShaggyDog:
40** Although each season ends with successful convictions of drug dealers, it becomes progressively more and more clear with each season that the best the police can do is sweep up low and mid level operators. Everyone sufficiently high up is (almost) untouchable, and American social and political systems make effecting actual change impossible. In the final episode, [[spoiler:[=McNulty=] has to resign from the force, InternalReformist Cedric Daniels is forced to resign when he refuses to cooperate with the new Mayor's insistence to "fix the statistics", (to make it look as though crime is going down when it's actually going up) Mayor Tommy Carcetti and Commander William Rawls are both promoted when they don't deserve it, and the crooked newspaper reporter who falsified his stories (along with the bosses who enabled him) gets lauded. Most of the supporting characters also come to realize that they can't change the system, and will be shuffled into the background while a new generation of thugs and cops dominate Baltimore]].
41** In spite of his RoaringRampageOfRevenge, [[spoiler:Omar]] never gets the chance to kill Marlo Stanfield, nor does he make any significant impact on stopping the flow of Stanfield goods onto the Baltimore streets. He [[spoiler:gets shot in the head by Kenard, a kid, while he stopping at a convenience store to buy a pack of smokes]]. This was arguably deliberate on creator David Simon's part, as he wanted to show that being the most feared vigilante in the city doesn't mean much, and the character ultimately realizes how futile his struggle is in the scene prior to his death. When the show creator piles on the uselessness of the show's plot, he piles it ''on''.
42** Conversely, [[spoiler:Omar's]] plotline also affects Marlo Stanfield's. After a season of learning how to be a better criminal and getting away from common-thug tactics, Marlo's operation is efficiently dismantled by the efforts of [=McNulty=] and Lester, who figure out his coded signals with [[spoiler:The Greek's operation]] and arrest the majority of his organization. The charges don't stick on him, but Marlo is forced to become a legitimate businessman. However, he soon learns that he's trapped in his own personal hell, that he can never go back to the life he once wanted, and his name means absolutely nothing on the streets. (Evidenced by the two men [[spoiler:discussing the growing legend of Omar's death]] and not knowing who Marlo is.)
43** [[spoiler: Frank Sobotka]]'s subplot in Season 2 is a particularly cruel example. Throughout the season, all of his actions are driven by a desire to help the struggling workers at the ailing Baltimore docks, where paychecks are light and work is scarce. His involvement with the Greek's smuggling organization comes to a head when [[spoiler: his son Ziggy]] winds up in jail after killing the Greek's lieutenant George Glekas over a personal quarrel. The Greek agrees to help him beat the murder charge by convincing the sole surviving witness to change his story (allowing him to plead self-defense), but only in exchange for ''absolute loyalty''. The problem? [[spoiler: Frank]] already went to the FBI and agreed to testify against the Greek, and the Greek has a mole at the FBI who helpfully informs him of that fact. As soon as he shows up to parley with the Greek's men, they promptly kill him for his betrayal. And afterwards, it comes out that [[spoiler: Ziggy already confessed to killing Glekas without provocation]], and the police have a signed statement to that effect. There was never any chance of saving [[spoiler: Ziggy]], and [[spoiler: Frank]] died for nothing. And ''after'' he dies, the stevedore's union immediately caves, and hundreds more dockworkers wind up on the streets as a set of luxury condominiums are built over the docks. ''Damn''.
44** At the end of Season 3, [=McNulty=] finally has Stringer tied to the Barksdale drug operation, when a wiretap catches Stringer ordering a hit. However, before he can make the arrest, [[spoiler:Brother Mouzone and Omar, working together, catch up to Stringer and kill him in revenge for him having set the two of them against each other the previous season. [=McNulty=] has to settle for arresting all the other Barksdale players, and letting Avon himself see on the warrant just who provided the tip.[[note]]His own late brother[[/note]]]]
45** D'Angelo's arc in the first two seasons. In the first scene of the series he beats the rap for an impulse killing thanks to one of the two witnesses against him[[note]]later found to have been paid off[[/note]] recanting her identification of him. Despite his tough exterior, he shows HiddenDepths and seems to want to leave the life of crime, almost flipping to the police twice. At the end of the season he gets a 20-year prison sentence after taking one for the family and pleading guilty to a murder he didn't commit. In prison during season 2, he has an epiphany after reading ''Literature/TheGreatGatsby'' and realizes that he needs to leave his own past behind. [[spoiler:But due to this perceived weakness, he's killed in prison to prevent him from snitching and [[NeverSuicide it's made to look like a suicide]]]]
46* ShortTeensTallAdults: D'Angelo is a head shorter than Avon and Stringer. He's supposed to be a generation younger than Avon and Stringer, but Lawrence Gilliard Jr. is only two years younger than Wood Harris and one year ''older'' than Idris Elba.
47* ShoutOut:
48** Cutty's roommate in the hospital is watching ''{{Series/Deadwood}}.'' The man chuckles to himself, "[[HehHehYouSaidX Ha ha ha]], he called him '[[CatchPhrase cocksucker]]'!" It's probably a bit of a TakeThat.
49** In season four, Little Kevin mentions WesternAnimation/{{SpongeBob|SquarePants}} in a conversation with Bodie and some other runners. Bodie chides them for watching too many cartoons.
50** In season five, Dukie and Bug watch ''Series/{{Dexter}}'' and are obvious fans. This is probably another TakeThat, calling the show childish.
51** When Bunk and Lester are interviewing the crew members from the ship in Season 2, at one point Lester yells [[Film/PulpFiction "English, motherfucker!"]] Bunk opts for [[WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones "yabba-dabba-doo"]].
52** Omar and Dante are shown watching a season six episode of ''Series/{{Oz}}'' together.
53** Some of the cops choose music on their car stereos to compliment their mood. When rallying to shut down Hamsterdam, Rawls plays [[Film/ApocalypseNow "The Ride of the Valkyries"]]. When prepping to chase drug runners down alleys, Herc chooses the ''Film/{{Shaft}}'' theme.
54--->'''Herc:''' He's a complicated man, and no one understands him but his woman.\
55'''Carver:''' Seek therapy.
56** In the second season, Bodie discovers that radio stations are different outside of Baltimore by accidentally tuning into ''Radio/APrairieHomeCompanion''. When we cut back to him later, he's still listening to it.
57** The graphic novel ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' features a company called "Pyramid Delivery", as does the second season of ''The Wire''. In both works, the company turns out to be a front set up by the BigBad ([[spoiler: Ozymandias]] and The Greek, respectively).
58** [=McNulty=] is nicknamed ''Film/ThePrinceOfTides'' by Landsman when the case of a dead women is revealed to be within homicide jurisdiction thanks to [=McNulty's=] thorough seafaring calculations in the episode ''Ebb Tide''. He's later called [[Film/TheSilenceOfTheLambs Clarice]] during his season 5 SerialKiller case.
59** When Prez likens the school district's announcement that all teachers will focus on preparing for the state tests, and that means that he, as a math teacher, must do language arts for part of his classes since the school needs to improve those scores, to the stats-juking he saw in the police department, a fellow teacher responds "[[Film/TheAdventuresOfBuckarooBanzaiAcrossThe8thDimension Wherever you go, there you are]]"
60** Marlo's analysis on Omar's escape: "That's some ComicBook/SpiderMan shit"
61** A TakeThat to ''Series/{{CSI}}''; when Greggs lands in Homicide she suffers a number of [[NaiveNewcomer novice practical jokes]], she eventually asks if they are coming again with "some other "CSI" bullshit that don't exist?" . A second TakeThat via the [[SmugSnake petulant and not really competent]] FBI boss who says he is a consultant for that show.
62** Senator Davis brings up ''Series/{{Survivor}}'', ''Series/FearFactor'' and ''Theatre/PrometheusBound'' in his ChewbaccaDefense
63** The ''5-0'' moniker for incoming police originates from ''Series/HawaiiFiveO''
64** In the pilot, [=McNulty=] discusses with Bunk ''Film/TheBridgeOnTheRiverKwai'' as the origin of his CatchPhrase, in the MyGodWhatHaveIDone sense.
65** Colvin uses AnOfferYouCantRefuse during [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4j_oSeWZyU his debrief on Hamsterdam]]
66** When Avon calls out Stringer for wanting to kill [[spoiler: Clay Davis]], he says, "You need a ''[[Literature/TheDayOfTheJackal Day of the Jackal]]'' type motherfucker to do some shit like that."
67** Bunk is seen reading ''In a Strange City'', a novel by Laura Lippman, David Simon's wife.
68** In the Season 3 episode "Reformation", Jen Carcetti can be seen reading a novel by Creator/DennisLehane, who worked as a writer on this show.
69** When the police are about to [[StormingTheCastle assault the Barksdale's HQ "Delta Force-style"]], Jimmy remarks they are mistaking Avon for [[Film/{{Scarface 1983}} Tony Montana]], so Daniels and [=McNulty=] simply walk up calmly into the compound and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaysD0qByUo arrest him peacefully]].
70** Several drug dealers wear T-Shirts with the face of Tony Montana.
71** JustForFun/JohnMunch: makes a cameo in the fifth season as a bar patron. Munch was Jay Landsman's expy in ''Homicide'' and in ''The Wire'' he shares the counter with Mello, who is played by the real Jay Landsman!
72** One of the bosses of ''The Baltimore Sun'' wants to portray the "[[Creator/CharlesDickens Dickensian aspect]] of the homeless situation. This is part of showing his preference for crowd-pleasing narratives over accurate and relevant journalism.
73** In the episode "Refugees", Prez's line "One side just loses more slowly" is paraphrased from a similar line in ''Film/NightMoves''.
74** In the penultimate episode "Late Editions", Snoop says, "[[Film/{{Unforgiven}} Deserve's got nothin' to do with it.]]"
75** When Old Face Andre claims he was robbed by a masked attacker, Bunk asks in disbelief if he was like ''Franchise/{{Zorro}}''.
76** [=McNulty=] derisively refers to a rural police officer as "Buford Pusser," a reference to ''Film/WalkingTall1973'' (and the real Tennessee lawman it was about).
77** Clay Davis tries to pass himself off as a modern-day Prometheus by bringing ''Theatre/PrometheusBound'' to his court date, though he mispronounces both the title and the author.
78** [=McNulty=]'s sons name-drop the neo-psychedelic band Music/DeadMeadow as the music they're listened to. Out of touch, [=McNulty=] asks what's wrong with Music/TheRamones. The band's vocalist is series co-creator David Simon's nephew.
79** After [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yMh0goQ0Z8 Bodie kicks out a police car window]], some onlooker starts shouting "[[Film/DogDayAfternoon Attica, Attica!]]"
80* ShownTheirWork:
81** When it was on the air, ''The Wire'' was considered to be quite possibly the most realistic, accurate, and brutally honest television show on the air. One sociologist called the show the greatest sociological text ever created.
82** In the episode "The Detail", ''The Wire'' turns out to be one of the few cop shows ever to point out that police interrogations are supposed to end as soon as the suspect asks to see legal counsel--a fact that pop culture depictions usually ignore for RuleOfDrama. Bunk cleverly gets around that rule by instead trying to trick D'Angelo into confessing to William Gant's murder by asking him to write a letter of condolence to Gant's (nonexistent) children. When Levy barges in and yells at Bunk and [=McNulty=] for not ending the interrogation, Bunk points out that [[LoopholeAbuse he didn't actually ask D'Angelo any questions, and didn't record any statement he made]].
83-->'''Levy:''' He calls his lawyer, that's supposed to be the end of the interview!\
84'''Bunk:''' Your client gave no statement, we took no statement. He just decided, voluntarily, to write a letter to the victim's family.
85** After [=McNulty=] and Perlman finish their productive interview with D'Angelo following his arrest in New Jersey, they're shown walking outside a New Jersey State Police building that indicates it is a barracks for Troop D—the troop that, in real life, exclusively patrols the New Jersey Turnpike, where D'Angelo was arrested.
86* ShroudedInMyth: Omar. After [[spoiler:he is shot by Kenard]] the story makes the rounds through the streets getting bigger each time it's told. When another character who knows the truth tries to correct someone, no one believes him. 'The bigger the lie, the more they believe.'
87* SiblingYinYang: The Sobotka brothers; Frank is crooked while Louis is straight, their children (brotherly cousins) too. Ziggy is TheDitz, TheLoad, a ''malaka'' (wanker) who talks way too much while Nick is smart, reliable and concise.
88* SirSwearsALot: Played straight with almost every character from the police, the politicians, corner boys, workers, and fiends. Notably averted by Omar Little, who ([[CharacterizationMarchesOn after one incident early in season one]]) never swears at all. When he finally breaks his habit in an expletive-laden public tirade against Marlo, it's a sign of his degenerating composure and state of mind.
89* SlaveToPR: An omnipresent driving force behind many situations. After all, politics it's part of the game.
90* SleepingSingle: As part of the Daniels' marital breakdown, by the end of season 2 they're in separate bedrooms.
91* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: Definitely on the cynical side.
92* SmallNameBigEgo: Cheese is the game's version of this. There is not a single season that he appears in where he doesn't get completely punked out at least once, and if he weren't Prop Joe's nephew he probably wouldn't have gotten anywhere near where he got. [[spoiler:And then when he finally ''gets'' on top of the drug game, it lasts all of one scene before Slim Charles puts a bullet in his brain.]]
93* SmallTownTyrant: [=McNulty=] is clearly under the assumption that rural police departments are run by crooked officers. In season 3, before heading inside one office, he announces he going to meet "[[Film/WalkingTall1973 Buford Pusser]]". When he meets the cop in charge, [=McNulty=] starts making casually racist comments under the belief that this will ingratiate him to the man. When the rural cop turns out to be married to a black fellow police officer, [=McNulty=] is left hurriedly backpedaling on his previous statements and offers to introduce him to [[SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX his partner, Kima]].
94* SmartPeopleWearGlasses: Lester, Stringer and Prop. Joe's cleverness is often underscored by their need to use reading glasses. Landsman puts on glasses when he pretends to be a professor operating a lie detector.
95* SmokingIsCool: Omar and Bunk.
96* SmugSnake: Ervin Burrell, Maurice Levy and Clay Davis.
97* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Kima Greggs is the only female ''poh-leece'' who gets any focus during the show.
98* SnobbyHobbies: When Avon and Stringer reminisce about their youth, Avon mentions a time Stringer tried to shoplift a badminton set from a downtown mall, and they both laugh about what he would have even done with one without a yard.
99* SoftSpokenSadist: Marlo, who no matter the situation, no matter what he's asking people to do, never raises his voice. The fact that he's eloquently laconic makes this trope even more terrifying in his hands.
100* SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX: After [=McNulty=] makes some racist statements in hopes of ingratiating himself to a local cop, he realizes his error and immediately starts talking about his black partner, Kima, to show that he's not actually racist.
101* SophisticatedAsHell:
102** Used in both a verbal and non-verbal sense when Stringer is shown attending an Introduction to Macroeconomics class (and uses the lesson in the next scene).
103** This trope is to David Simon as BuffySpeak is to Creator/JossWhedon.
104--->'''Bubbles:''' You're equivocating like a motherfucker, man.\
105'''Carver:''' Did you just use the word 'habitat' in a sentence?\
106'''Brother Mouzone:''' Let me be emphatic, you need to take your black ass across Charles Street where it belongs.\
107'''Bodie:''' Man, better go on before I lose my composure out this bitch!\
108'''Stringer:''' Nigga, you ain't got the floor. Chair don't recognise yo ass. [...] Adjourn your asses.\
109'''Fat Face Rick:''' Uh, point of order and shit\
110'''Cheese:''' 'Incursions?' Ain't you the articulate motherfucker?\
111'''Poot:''' Do the chair know we gonna look like a bunch of punk-ass bitches?
112--->'''Judge Phelan:''' Ms. Pearlman, your professional demeanor and your overall competence stands in stark contrast, against the municipal backdrop of mediocrity and indifference. [...] I'd love to throw a fucking to her.\
113
114* SortingAlgorithmOfEvil: Played With overall.
115** Season 1 has the Barksdale Organization, which has the impenetrable Franklin Terrace towers where they do most of their business. They are widely known and feared in the West Baltimore streets, and their leader Avon cannot be tied to any police accessible databases besides being born in Baltimore. Avon's criminal contacts in other cities allow him to easily call for more help or hide his soldiers when needed.
116** Season 2 plays it straight with The Greeks, an [[TheSyndicate international smuggling ring]] that brings drugs and prostitutes into Baltimore. The Greeks are greater on the hierarchy than the Barksdales, who sell the drugs. Their leaders are even more of TheSpook than Avon, being foreign-born and no one knowing their names and they have contacts in law enforcement and international criminal organizations. Because their organization is too powerful for the Baltimore Police, the FBI have to get involved. [[spoiler:The Greeks's leadership end up being untouchable because they have an FBI handler that tips him off about police moves in exchange for information about their suppliers sometimes. No villain in the series reaches the status and power the Greeks have.]]
117** Season 3 subverts it as it sees the decay of the Barksdale Organization to [[AHouseDivided infighting in it's leadership]] (who want to take it in two radically different directions), the loss of the Franklin Terrace towers where they could safely deal, and losing a lot of it's muscle in the previous two seasons. This leads to a losing gang war with the more ruthless Stanfield Gang that the Barksdales, who had been moving away from violence, are not able to deal with.
118** Season 4 and 5 focuses on the Stanfield Gang. They are comparable in strength to the Barksdales, though lacking much in the way of legitimate businesses. However, in terms of morality, the Stanfield Gang is the [[VillainousEthicsDecay most heinous]] of all of the villainous organizations and make up for the lack of a complex organization with their extreme violence, responsible for over 30 murders in a short period of time. They have no qualms about crossing lines the Barksdales never would, like killing civilians uninvolved in the game or their cases, and using ChildSoldiers for murder. Despite being the final antagonists of the series, it is repeatedly shown that their threat is drawn out at least partially [[BornLucky due to luck]], such as coming up at the time the Barksdales were moving away from violence, [[spoiler:Avon being arrested shortly before he was going to kill Marlo with military grade weaponry, the investigation into Marlo being sabotaged by Rawls in Season 4, and the Major Crimes Unit being defunded due to a huge budget hole in Season 5]]. Wee-Bey even mentions that back in the day Marlo would have been quickly killed. [[spoiler:Even at his most powerful, Marlo is still reliant on the Greek's organization. In the very end, Marlo is forced out of the game and his name is forgotten, in contrast to his street rivals. Avon holds onto influence in jail and Omar becomes a legendary figure in the streets posthumously.]]
119* SpellMyNameWithAThe: The Bunk.
120* SpitefulSpit: Michael asks Chris Partlow to kill his stepfather, Devar. Normally Chris carries out hits in a dispassionate manner, killing with a headshot. However, it's implied that Devar has sexually abused Michael, and upon hearing Devar admit to raping other inmates in prison (or at least, that's what Chris takes from it), Chris beats him to a bloody pulp, spitting on the corpse afterwards.
121* SpoilerOpening: Every opening contains clips from episodes later on in the season, but they don't make much sense until you see them in context. Season 5 takes it the furthest by showing headlines about a SerialKiller that preys on the homeless. It doubles as BaitAndSwitchCredits given the [[IfItBleedsItLeads true nature]] of the killer.
122* SpottingTheThread:
123** Bubbles easily tears apart Sydnor's cover during the rehearsal and points out anyone on the street would do the same; a dope fiend would have pawned his ring a long time ago and his shoes are too clean with no trace of broken drug vials.
124** In the last episodes, [[spoiler: Levy realizes something is fishy in the Stanfield case, as [=McNulty=] and Lester tainted the due process, but he can't really PullTheThread as he has his own skeletons in the closet]]
125* TheStarscream:
126** Rawls and Burrell are thick as thieves once Rawls is promoted to Deputy Ops, but when Burrell becomes threatened, Rawls immediately moves in to get him fired and take his place.
127** Cheese to Prop Joe. He's just too stupid to see the wisdom in Joe's moves and decides to [[spoiler:ally with Marlo against Joe]].
128* StatusQuoIsGod: Life in Baltimore is cyclic with new characters taking the roles of old characters. Nothing really changes.
129* StealingFromTheTill: Happens a few times on the street with the dealers, and also the dockworkers often divert product to their own benefit.
130* StormingTheCastle: In "The Detail", Carver, Herc and Prez are hanging out drinking together late one night when they basically decide to do this, driving their department cars right up to the towers Barksdale's organization controls and making a big scene, ostensibly to do field interviews. It doesn't go very well.
131* StunnedSilence: Daniels is speaking with [=McNulty=] and is about to have him be EasilyForgiven after [=McNulty=] swears loyalty. [=McNulty=] stuns Daniels by promptly quitting Major Crimes and choosing to be a beat cop.
132* StraightGay:
133** Omar and most of his boyfriends are stick-up men without the standard gay mannerisms.
134** [[spoiler:Bill Rawls]] is just as chauvinistic and crass as the rest of the cops in Baltimore, but he's shown drinking at a gay bar in a single scene. Without that scene, you'd have no idea.
135* StringTheory: The Major Crimes Unit's pegboards are a fairly low-key example.
136* StealthPun: The tale of Frank Sobotka, particularly how he ends up. It's a Greek tragedy.
137* StickEmUp: In a fifth-season episode ("The Dickensian Aspect"), Omar uses a glass bottle to "[[BrandishmentBluff hold up]]" Rick.
138* StraightEdgeEvil:
139** Baltimore kingpins do not get high and prohibit their employees from using drugs as well. When a few flunkies show up high at Avon's welcome home party, Avon has them thrown out. Bird gets caught because he violates this rule and he uses the same gun from kill to kill.
140** Baltimore kingpins rarely, if ever, show any ConspicuousConsumption. It's standard for them to own almost nothing in their own name. Prop Joe for example, is still living in a humble old house he inherited from his family. In season three, Stringer Bell's legitimate enterprises allow him and Barksdale to actually own property.
141** Marlo does not drink and does not dance. While he does pick up women in clubs, he proves immune to a HoneyPot. His one true vice is gambling. When he and Chris discuss blowing off some steam, Marlo wants to go to Atlantic City to hit the casinos.
142* StupidCrooks: Many of the low-level street criminals are ignorant kids with little education and little knowledge outside of their bubble. Their crimes are often poorly conceived and sloppily conducted. And the police love to take advantage of them any way they can, such as passing off a copier as a lie detector.
143* StylisticSuck:
144** To go undercover in a brothel, [=McNulty=] [[HowsYourBritishAccent puts on an intentionally horrible British accent]].
145** Bubbles puts a sign on his merchant cart reading "Bubble's Depo".
146** The New Day Co-Op's sign at the Executive Inn has zeroes standing in place of several O's.
147* SuicideWatch: After Officer Prezbylewski [[FriendOrFoe accidentally shoots another police officer]] while chasing a suspect in the projects, his superior Lt. Daniels comes to visit a despondent Prez as the rest of the department heads are discussing what to do next. After Daniels leaves the room, he tells Deputy Rawls to send somebody home with Prez to make sure he doesn't kill himself out of guilt.
148* SuperWindowJump: Unfortunately, it [[{{Deconstruction}} doesn't work too well]] for [[spoiler:Omar]]; he ends up with a broken leg that never fully heals. [[note]] RealityIsUnrealistic; the event actually had to be downplayed compared with the real life incident, which happened from a higher altitude and resulting in lesser injuries for Donnie Andrews[[/note]]
149* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome:
150** [=McNulty=]'s use of his young sons to do surveillance on Bell at the Northeast Market ''does'' get him an important piece of information, even if he loses track of them in the process, but is reckless enough that it leads his wife to make an emergency motion to suspend his weekend custody.
151** Happens often, most notably with Omar's arc in the final season. An injured man going on a one man revenge spree against the most powerful drug gang in Baltimore is unlikely to end well for him, regardless of how badass or determined he is. [[spoiler:After using every shred of street guile he had and sometimes just [[TheDreaded his fearsome reputation]] to continue attacking and harassing Marlo Stanfield's drug empire despite his injury, Omar winds up getting shot in the back by a young kid with a gun who wanted to become famous for killing the legendary Omar and claim the bounty Marlo had put on Omar's head.]]
152** Major Colvin, in an attempt to drive down the murder rate in his district, creates a safe zone, called "Hamsterdam", where dealers can sell their dope without fear of arrest. With the help of Carver and his other officers, he's able to keep this under the radar from his superiors downtown, and even accomplish his goal of significantly reducing homicides within his district. Unfortunately, it doesn't take long for Burrell & Rawls to find out, and by the end of the season, he's demoted & forced to resign, while dozens of cops descend on Hamsterdam to arrest everyone.
153** Among the drug dealers arrested when the police raid Hamsterdam is Bodie, [[spoiler:who manages to beat the charges simply by claiming that the police entrapped him.]]
154** Stringer wants to have Clay Davis, a state senator, murdered for scamming him out of thousands of dollars. Avon then has to explain to him why that is a very bad idea.
155** Stringer also finds out the hard way that a lifetime of screwing people over will come back to bite you in the ass, especially if they're gun-toting criminals.
156** One episode deconstructs ATeamFiring, by having a little kid in the second floor of a house be the only casualty during a gang-on-gang shootout on the street below.
157* SurroundedByIdiots: There is a chronic deficit of competence across the spectrum.
158** Valchek, who is at first portrayed in a [[ObstructiveBureaucrat villainous]] [[ObnoxiousInLaws light]], vocally complains that the first Sobotka detail under Lieutenant Grayson is full of "humps", [[JerkassHasAPoint and he's right]].
159** Proposition Joe suffers from it thanks to an enforced {{nepotism}}.
160--->'''Joe:''' I got motherfuckin' nephews and in-laws fucking all my shit up all the time and it ain't like I can pop a cap in their ass and not hear about it Thanksgivin' time. For real, I'm livin' life with some burdensome niggers.
161** Sometimes PlayedForLaughs with Stringer Bell and his subordinates, the more he interacts with his minions, the more it becomes evident. By season 3 you can tell this is going through his head all the time as he tries to use his business smarts to reform the Barksdale gang. Comically aggravated by his use of advanced economics terms with barely literate underlings whose intelligence is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ttbQTz8tAE like a 40 degree day]].
162** Slim also feels this way thanks to less than competent members of the gang like Sapper and Gerard.
163--->"As usual man, y'all fools are missing my point."
164** In Season 3, Avon is unable to recruit any quality muscle for a while--with Slim Charles being an honorable exception- and is burdened with a bunch of morons at first, until he hires some soldiers from the Eastside. On rare occasions, Avon has to call Stringer out on [[IdiotBall his mistakes]].
165* SuspectIsHatless: The (real life) Baltimore Homicide Unit equivalent for a generic useless description given by witness to a murder is "Big Negro, Big Gun" or "BNBG." The term is used by Bunk [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toZsLQZDDME in the Season 3 finale]] when Andy Krawczyck fails to describe Omar--who on top of being FamedInStory [[IconicOutfit doesn't go anywhere without]] his BadassLongcoat and has a distinctive scar in the center of his face and stands in front of him long enough for the witness to take a good look at his face.
166* SuspiciouslyAproposMusic: Subverted with the music that plays as Ziggy gets his ass handed to him in season two: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHybA8n2b8A Love child]]. The prank prompts an ActuallyPrettyFunny smirk from Nick.
167* SwissBankAccount: The unsophisticated Marlo has to be schooled about this (Antillean off-shore version) and even then he decides to visit the bank in person to verify that his money is actually there.
168* SympatheticPOV: The point of the show, as the story itself is seen through the perspectives of cops, drug dealers, foreigners, students, politicians and the media, showing in great detail the context behind every problem.
169* TheSyndicate: The New Day Co-Op, gathering up all (well, almost all) the major drug dealers in Baltimore around three organizing principles: (1) pooling together to get a better deal on bulk dope (2) respecting each others' territory, and (3) talking out their problems rather than applying violence. It's basically Lucky Luciano's [[UsefulNotes/TheMafia Mafia]] "Commission" but with black gangsters in Baltimore, not Italian ones in New York.
170[[/folder]]
171[[folder:T]]
172* TechnologyMarchesOn: Invoked in-universe. In S1, the cops find it odd that the Barksdale crew are all still using pagers and pay phones, but this turns out to be by design, helping to obfuscate and compartmentalize communications. Stringer even mentions later that as cell phones become cheaper and more accessible, telecom companies not in that market become less of a good investment.
173* TellMeAgain: Often used in preference over AsYouKnow. For example, Jimmy asks Lester to explain again how he's secretly routing a wire tap to their own investigation.
174* TerribleIntervieweesMontage:
175** In the second season, with sailors who all claim to not speak English.
176** In season 3 The Bunk, when trying to recover a police gun, interviews several convicts who can't help him, including some who try to sell him other guns.
177* ThatWasntARequest: The following exchange when Omar's crew is robbing a drug kingpin at a high-stakes card game.
178-->'''Omar:''' Money ain't got no owners, only spenders. Tell you what, I sure like that fancy ring you're wearing.\
179'''Marlo:''' ''[non-response]''\
180'''Omar:''' ''[puts his pistol up against Marlo's throat]'' Boy, you confuse me for a man who repeats himself.
181* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Happens quite often.
182** [=McNulty=] gets several over the course of five seasons, even Rawls slips one in while trying to console Jimmy in the wake of Kima getting shot. Landsman crafts the ultimate in the last episode and Bunk delivers comprehensive ones regularly:
183--->'''Bunk:''' You've lost your fucking mind, Jimmy. Look at you. Half-lit every third night, dead drunk every second. Nut deep in random pussy. What little time you are sober and limp-dicked, you're working murders that don't even exist!\
184'''Bunk:''' The thing of it is, Lieutenant... Jimmy [=McNulty=], when he ain't policing he's a picture postcard of a drunken, self-destructive fuck-up. And when he is policing... he's pretty much the same motherfucker. But on a good case, he runnin' in front of the pack. That's as close as the man comes to bein' right.
185** Sobotka gives one to Valchek that roots their feud deep into [[ItsPersonal personal territory]].
186** Omar gets a nasty armor-piercing one from Bunk in Season 3:
187--->'''Omar''': Shit, the way y'all look at it [a double murder] there ain't no victim at all.\
188'''Bunk''': Bullshit, boy. No victim?! I just came from Tosha's people, remember? All this death, you don't think it ripples out? You don't even know what the fuck I'm talking about. I was a few years ahead of you at Edmondson, but I know you remember the neighborhood, how it was. We had some bad boys, for real. Wasn't about guns so much as knowing what to do with your hands. Those boys could really rack. My father had me on the straight, but like any young man, I wanted to be hard too, so I'd turn up at all the house parties where the tough boys hung. Shit, they knew I wasn't one of them. Them hard cases would come up to me and say, "Go home, schoolboy, you don't belong here." Didn't realize at the time what they were doing for me. As rough as that neighborhood could be, we had us a community. Nobody, no victim, who didn't matter. And now all we got is bodies, and predatory motherfuckers like you. And out where that girl fell, I saw kids acting like Omar, calling you by name, glorifying your ass. Makes me sick, motherfucker, how far we done fell.
189** Carver gets a lenient one from Major Colvin on how he isn't much of a police officer. It inspires him to clean up his act and become more community-minded.
190** Avon calls Stringer out when he grows tired of him trying to avoid war even after Avon is almost killed.
191** One of the best has Nicky Sobotka slapping Frog hard with his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82Jg-Omwmo4 "You Know You're White?" speech]].
192** Odell Watkins delivers one to Mayor Royce when Royce's corruption becomes too much.
193--->'''Odell Watkins:''' Look at you, Clarence. Just look at you. You've forgotten your agenda. You've forgotten your base! You think a shave and some Marcus Garvey posters are gonna get you over? You think that's going to make up for jumping in bed with every damn developer? Shit, you're even on Clay Davis' tit.\
194'''Clarence Royce:''' Now don't you go getting all self-righteous with me, Odell. Campaigns run on dollars, you know it.\
195'''Odell Watkins:''' Whose dollars? Those sons of bitches you got around your card table ever month, feeding your kitty? Oh yeah, I know about that too. You... the trouble with you. (Gives up and turns to leave) FUCK YOU, Clarence!
196** [=McNulty=] gives one to Scott Templeton, which amounts to [=McNulty=] admitting that he's full of shit but having no clue what Templeton's excuse is.
197* ThemeMusicPowerUp: Omar whistling "[[IronicNurseryTune The Farmer in the Dell]]".
198* TheyDiedBecauseOfYou:
199** Exploited paired with LyingToThePerp when Bunk and [=McNulty=] try to elicit a confession out of D'Angelo over the William Gant murder.
200** Played straight when Poot spits back [=McNulty's=] condolences over the death of Bodie, telling him Bodie was shot for talking to the police, and Poot wants Jimmy to leave him alone before he meets the same fate.
201* ThickerThanWater: Factored in, anticipated and defied by Stringer in his decision to off D'Angelo, Avon's nephew, as explained in his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lBG7FR-pe8 motive speech]]
202-->'''Stringer:''' But there go a life that had to be snatched, Avon (...) Twenty years above his fucking head. He'd flip, man! They got you, me, and Brianna! No fucking way, man! Hell, no! Now, I know you family, you loved that nigga, but you wanna talk that ''Blood is thicker than water'' bullshit, you take that shit somewhere else, nigga! That motherfucker would've taken down the whole fucking show, starting with you, killer!"
203* ThievesGuild:
204** Stringer trying to run Barksdale Organization meetings according to Roberts' Rules of Order. Often played for laughs, as the members of the board aren't the sharpest knives in the drawer.
205--->"Nigga, you ain't got the floor. Chair don't recognize yo ass, man."
206--->"[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGo5bxWy21g Nigga, is you takin' NOTES on a criminal fucking conspiracy?]]"
207** Stringer and Prop. Joe take it to citywide levels with the Co-Op, while Marlo is opposed to it.
208--->'''Joe:''' For a cold-ass crew of gangstaz, y'all carried it like Republicans and shit.
209* ThirdPersonPerson: Bunk, Omar, Bubbles and Cheese all do this from time to time.
210* ThoseTwoGuys: Bodie and Poot in the first two seasons; Herc and Carver throughout the series
211* TheThreeFacesOfAdam:
212** Within the Baltimore drug trade, Marlo Stanfield is the Hunter (young, building his empire, making lots of mistakes, making big moves), Avon Barksdale is the Lord (well-established, fighting for what he's got, trying to keep things stable), and Proposition Joe is the Prophet (older than Avon by a good ten years at least, concerned about the future of the drug trade, tries to impart wisdom on Marlo).
213** Among the BPD detectives, Jimmy [=McNulty=] is the Hunter (comparatively young, trying to make a name for himself, making big--occasionally ''huge--mistakes, but also aggressively going after big cases), Bunk Moreland is the Lord (although willing to go out of his way to make a good case, he is at the end of the day content to be a Homicide detective and trying to keep things that way), and Lester Freamon is the Prophet (although he's still working cases, he is mostly trying to guide younger detectives into the methods of good police work and impart the wisdom of his years and mistakes upon a new generation of cops).
214* ThreeWaySex: [=McNulty=] has a threesome with two prostitutes while he is undercover during a bust; he ends up justifying it as, "I was outnumbered" and has to write a report on why he did it, as obviously he wasn't meant to "close the deal" before he gave the signal. Bunk warns him that his perverted report will make him a Baltimore PD legend. Several seasons later, [[OnceDoneNeverForgotten Dozerman brings it up]] and [=McNulty=] only halfway denies it.
215* TooCleverByHalf:
216** Jimmy "I'm the smartest asshole in three districts" [=McNulty=] is mostly propulsed by his intellectual vanity and this [[MarriedToTheJob consumes his life]] (when he is not philandering). He's even professionally trounced once by Freamon and Bunk when they have already figured out one case before he is able to smugly expose it. Finally his acts lead to no good.
217** Stringer Bell, a businessman at heart, knows or thinks he is way above the "gangsta bullshit", but he quickly fails in the respectable suit and tie part of the game and his manipulations end up backfiring on him.
218--->'''Avon:''' I look at you these days, String, you know what I see? I see a man without a country. Not hard enough for this right here and maybe, just maybe, not smart enough for them out there.
219* TookALevelInBadass:
220** In the series finale, we find out that [[spoiler:like many rookie teachers after a few years, Prez has become a pillar of authority, with a [[ManlyFacialHair beard]] to boot]].
221** Between the third and fourth seasons, Carver also TookALevelInBadass after [[spoiler:taking to mind Major Colvin's lecture about needing to know something about the street, and not just bust heads.]]
222** Lampshaded by Bunk and [=McNulty=] regarding Beadie, "She wasn't much when we started. Now she's got game"
223* TownWithADarkSecret: Major Colvin's Hamsterdam project in season 3.
224* TrademarkFavoriteFood:
225** Omar loves his breakfast cereal, particularly Honey Nut Cheerios, which he finds hard to get.
226** D'Angelo often requests and is often seen drinking ginger ale.
227* TragicHero: Frank Sobotka is an intricate character and in consonancy with the complexity of the show he is portrayed with AntiVillain, WellIntentionedExtremist etc traits, but in any case he gets dragged into the nefarious game while his only goal is to save the comatose waterfront and the jobs of his workers.
228-->"We used to build shit in this country. Now we just put our hand in the next guy's pocket"
229* TragicVillain
230** Wallace tries to go straight but is unable to and chooses The Game for good. String has Bodie kill him because he thought he couldn't be trusted.
231** D'Angelo is trapped by his family's legacy as crime lords. He offers to testify for a chance at being normal but his mother guilts him into staying quiet. He distances himself while in prison, causing String to have him killed because he thought he couldn't be trusted.
232** Avon is a good man who just happens to be a crime lord and The Game is just a means to an end to him for the sake of helping his community. He gets caught between avenging Dee or protecting his friend String and he chooses the latter. String later betrays him to the police because the New Day Co-Op threatens to cut off their drug supply because Avon won't back down from his war with Marlo, despite String promising to back him up like always. Avon is now serving 25 years in prison and while he is still formidable inside, he has lost both his family and his only friend.
233** Bodie like any other ambitious young man believes working hard and keeping your nose clean will get him far. He's sacrificed everything for The Game including his friend Wallace but has nothing to show for it. Bodie finally realises "The Game is rigged" and agrees to testify against Marlo but is killed before he does.
234* TraumaCongaLine: Season 4 subjects Randy and Bubbles to this, ''especially'' in the WhamEpisode.
235* TreacheryIsASpecialKindOfEvil: In season 4, Randy Wagstaff, an eight-grade student in the Baltimore public school system, talks to the police after witnessing a murder perpetrated by the Stanfield drug gang. After word gets out, he is immediately targeted by his peers as a snitch, culminating in his house being firebombed and his foster mother permanently disfigured. Randy eventually has to go back to the badly-funded group home he already stayed in for years.
236* TrojanHorse: A few.
237** When Rawls is frustrated by the Major Crimes Unit serving subpoenas to high-ranking city officials, he sends in Lieutenant Charles Marimow to [[TyrantTakesTheHelm take over command]] and disrupt the unit from within. Marimow forces the unit to focus on "street rips," which is the exact thing the unit was created to get away from, rendering the MCU useless. Rawls even calls him "Marimow, my Trojan Horse."
238** When Omar wants to rob a Barksdale stash house and disguises himself as an old man in a wheelchair to gain entry, claiming to be related to the home's owner. He even has the [[TheGuardsMustBeCrazy guards]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1VgmEtuhwA carry him up the stairs]] before Kimmy pulls out a gun and Omar gets one from a guard.
239-->'''Omar:''' Do tell.
240** Bernard is the Barksdale Organization's burner phone runner, dispatched weekly to pick up burner phones. His girlfriend Squeak gets annoyed at how he drives long distances to only get two phones at each store. The MCU use this to their advantage. Bubbles, who knows Squeak, approaches them and claims he knows a guy who can bulk-sell them burner phones at a good price. What he doesn't tell them is that said black market cell phone salesman is actually an undercover Lester Freamon, and these phones have been pre-tapped.
241* TrueCompanions: A lot of the cops might hate each other. In fact, a lot of them do. But when [[spoiler:a cop gets shot,]] the ''all'' forget their differences and ''all'' work together.
242* TwoferTokenMinority: Korean-African-American Lesbian Detective Kima Greggs is at ''least'' a twofer, though her tokenhood is questionable given the show's diverse cast.
243* TwoDecadesBehind: Lampshaded after Snoop returns to Marlo's gang with the $668 nail gun she bought with $800 cash and then told the salesman to keep the change: "He said it was the Cadillac of guns. He meant Lexus."
244* TwoOutOfThreeAintBad: When Carcetti becomes mayor, he's told that if he wants to run for governor in a few years, his administration's policy goals should be to 1) authorize a major construction project he can put his name on, 2) lower Baltimore's crime rate, 3) not interfere in the city's schools, and 4) do his best to keep his boyish good looks. He fails to lower the crime rate, shortly after being told all this it's discovered that the city schools are millions of dollars in debt, and in the end Carcetti has to break or compromise all his campaign promises. He does manage to be at the center of a big revitalization project opening. When he gripes about all this to his aide Norman, Norman snarks that one out of four isn't bad.
245* TyrantTakesTheHelm:
246** Lt. Charles Marimow, with a well known unit-killer reputation in the fourth season. Invoked by Rawls, who sends him to the unit to specifically [[TrojanHorse disrupt the unit from inside]]. The previous laid-back [[BenevolentBoss mild boss]] returns once the political tide changes.
247** Marlo Stanfield dismantling the Co-Op and assuming an autocratic rule over the drug trade mirrors the classic takeover executed by many tyrants in the history of mankind.
248[[/folder]]
249[[folder:U]]
250* {{Ubermensch}}: Omar Little, personal-code warrior
251* UnionsSuck: The stevedore's union is corrupt, helping smugglers move their products in exchange for money that their boss Frank Sobotka is using to try and bribe officials to expand the docks, allowing them to bring in more [[CriminalCravesLegitimacy legitimate]] work.
252* UnintentionalPeriodPiece:
253** Kima is observed in S1 struggling with a manual typewriter and needing to use actual whiteout to correct mistakes. Reference is made to computers existing, but not being available to everyone yet due to funding. By the start of S2, she has a computer, but "still can't fucking type."
254** In S2, Nick is awed by Ziggy’s mastery of a search engine and they are both blown away by a rudimentary website.
255** When [=McNulty=] visits the federal office in "[[Recap/TheWireS02E05Undertow Undertow]]", you can literally see agents taking down the seal representing the INS for the Homeland Security one. The INS was dissolved in 2003, and replaced by Homeland Security and USCIS.
256* UnwinnableByDesign: As remarked by Bodie ("This game is rigged man") and Marla Daniels ("You cannot lose if you do not play.") amongst others. The game is the game; the system in Baltimore [[InherentInTheSystem shapes itself and is merely perpetuated]] by those at the top, who are just an instrument to screw over those below them.
257* UpdatedRerelease: The Wire was remastered into [[http://davidsimon.com/the-wire-hd-with-videos/ widescreen high definition]] in late 2014, 6 years after ending its original run. Since the opus was conceived in a 4:3 ratio, a lot of thought and care went into the process from all sides to respect the artistic integrity of the work.
258* UrbanSegregation: Many districts are a perpetual warzone and there is a big concern about Baltimore becoming a DyingTown. One episode has Bubbles traveling from a nice residential zone to his usual [[ScavengerWorld decayed habitat]] and remarking "thin line 'tween heaven and here".
259* UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: Major Colvin's Hamsterdam project can be considered a mild example. It greatly improved public safety and quality of life for Baltimore citizens, but it involves allowing criminals to peddle drugs unhindered in designated areas, and ''brutally'' [[DisproportionateRetribution punishing the dealers who refuse to move to the free zone]].
260[[/folder]]
261[[folder:V]]
262* VictorStealsInsignia: During season 4, Snoop is shown to want to take {{Creepy Souvenir}}s from people she and Chris kill, including a Yankee hat from a New York dealer, and the badge of a security guard, which she had already taken out of the house, when Chris takes it and throws it away.
263* ViewerFriendlyInterface:
264** Apparently, on The Wire, ''VideoGame/{{Halo 2}}'' features [[TitleDrop its title at the bottom of the screen at all times]] during gameplay.
265** Perhaps the worst is Nick's search for the uses of the chemicals Vondas wants him to steal. The first hit is an absurdly simplistic page that literally just says they're used to process cocaine.
266** The dock's tracking software includes little animations of shipping containers moving from the docks to trucks.
267* VandalismBackfire: Rawls trashes a desk thinking it belongs to [=McNulty=], his soon-to-be former (in)subordinate. He is informed that the stuff actually belongs to Crutchfield, and [=McNulty=] sits at the opposite cubicle. In line with his usual bluntness, Rawls doesn't seem to care much for the mistake.
268* ViewersAreGeniuses: You're expected to keep up with multiple plot lines, a dozen-plus characters and their sub-stories, and all their field terminology with no {{Expospeak}} provided. David Simon's quote "Fuck the average viewer" famously summarizes his writing style.
269* VillainByProxyFallacy: A major theme of the series. Best shown in their depiction of the drug war, or from Major Valchek. Check out the trope itself to see the details.
270* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Senator Clay Davis.
271* VillainousBreakdown:
272** Omar shows signs toward the end of season 5 as his physical condition deteriorates and his RoaringRampageOfRevenge becomes more and more disastrous.
273** Stringer has one in "Middle Ground", unfortunately for him it gets cut short by [[spoiler: Brother Mouzone and Omar showing up.]]
274** Marlo has one [[spoiler: when he hears about Omar calling him out all his time and flies into a complete rage for the [[NotSoStoic first time]] in the series.]]
275* VillainDecay: The Barksdale organization begins the series at the height of its power, ruling the drug trade of West Baltimore with an iron fist and flying under everyone's radar until [=McNulty=] takes issue against them. The police, the law, internal dissent and other street rivals gradually bring the organization down and Avon's kingdom ceases to exist in the last seasons.
276* VillainousGentrification: This trope constantly hangs over the series. Gentrification is presented as, at best, attempting to paper over the problems of the city, and at worst as almost an equal force with the city's prodigious crime rate in making the city unlivable and unable to pull itself out of its downward spiral. Also, every real estate developer encountered for more than a few seconds is greedy, corrupt, and willing to screw over anyone to make a few dollars. Specific examples include:
277** Real estate developer [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Andy Krawczyk]] is a major behind the scenes power in Baltimore. He's also the very model of a corrupt developer, pushing to do things like building luxury condos after doing a land grab, [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney skirting the law to bribe officials]], bending city hall to do his bidding in everything from zoning laws to who gets promoted within the police force.
278** Drug kingpins often buy up cheap real estate in bad neighborhoods, then profit massively from corrupt deals made with developers or the city when the land has to be bought for urban renewal.
279** The second season features a protracted fight between the union dockworkers and the aforementioned Andy Krawczyk over a pier that has fallen into disuse. The dockworkers want to repair and reopen the space for commercial use, which could mean adding hundreds of badly needed jobs and giving that area of the city a chance at genuine renewal. Krawczyk wants to simply take the land and build luxury apartments near the water.
280*** The second season also has a short incident where Nick Sobotka, the nephew of the head of the dockworkers union, attempts to by a house that used to belong to an aunt of his, only to find that due to gentrification the prices of real estate have soared so much that he could never hope to buy property in that neighborhood, showing how blue collar locals get squeezed out by gentrification.
281** There's a darkly humorous case in the third season. Stringer Bell, the DragonInChief of what was the biggest drug empire in the city when the story began, is trying to move into legitimate business and become a real estate mogul/developer. [[spoiler:The business partners who are supposed to be helping him do this, Andy Krawczyk and [[SleazyPolitician State Senator Clay Davis]], are actually conning him out of money while his projects go nowhere. They are literally bigger crooks than one of the biggest drug dealers in town and can cheat him with impunity.]] Stringer's attempt to get into the real estate business is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKk1eoYALlM discussed by a group of detectives]] who investigated him in Season 1 and are now doing so again.
282--->'''Detective Freamon:''' You know, a couple of years ago when they were buying all that downtown real estate, I thought they were buying it to flip it. Get the cash when the federal payout lands and the properties are condemned.
283--->'''Detective Pryzbylewski:''' Bell and Barksdale haven't sold ''any'' of it. They're buying ''more'', in fact, and applying for building permits.
284--->'''Detective Freamon:''' Seems that Stringer Bell is worse than a drug dealer.
285--->'''Detective Pryzbylewski:''' [with distate] He's a developer.
286* VillainsOutShopping: Several times.
287** In the Third Season, Herc and Carver run into Poot and Bodie while all four of them are on dates.
288** The fourth season opens with a hilarious scene of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gE-uY7P3pe4 Snoop buying a nailgun]] at Home Depot. Subverted as it turns out it's a work-related purchase.
289** In Season 1 [=McNulty=] catches Stringer Bell out grocery shopping and has his children tail him, a fact that doesn't impress his estranged wife.
290** A reversed Season 3 partial example has Stringer ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0oVG9bLHP0 trying to sell]]'' a condo to [=McNulty=]. In this way, Stringer points out real estate and not villainy is now his full-time job.
291** Season 4 plays this literally and for laughs. Omar gets up one morning and, finding he and Renaldo are out of breakfast cereal, goes out in his silky pajamas, unarmed, to get more from the corner store. Upon seeing him, all the local bangers scatter, and when he sits on a step to light up, a stash bag is dropped from the upper story to land next to him. In other words, he robbed the dealers without even intending to.
292* VillainousFriendship:
293** Avon and Stringer go way back and are like brothers. Avon and Wee-Bay have a genial relationship.
294** The Greek and Vondas are genuinely close.
295** Marlo is unvariably cold but has a rare affectionate relationship with Chris Partlow.
296* VisualPun: A great example that overlaps with BlackComedy when Omar walks into Proposition Joe's repair shop (a front for his criminal enterprise, but otherwise a real business) out for revenge for Joe previously having betrayed him, but just presents an old, broken clock and asks Joe to fix it up. When Joe asks what's wrong with it, Omar immediately whips out a [[HandCannon Desert Eagle]] and quips "Ran out of time!".
297* VomitingCop:
298** [=McNulty=] in season one, when he listens to [[spoiler:the tape of Kima getting shot]]. Slightly different from most examples in that he's not even at the scene, and when it actually happened he kept his cool. It's only in reliving the experience when he loses it.
299** In season two, it looks like Beadie's about to throw up after the discovers the 13 dead girls in a shipping container, but she keeps it together. Not bad for a port cop, whose main work experience up to that point was taking tolls, and a hint that she's a lot tougher than she looks.
300** In season three, we hear one of the other police brass doing this in the bathroom as Colvin prepares himself for another Comstat session with Rawls. The officer's queasiness [[spoiler:turns out to be entirely justified as he's relieved of command at the meeting after failing to impress Rawls yet again with his awareness of what's happening in his district]].
301** Later that season, as [=McNulty=] and Bunk are out on the sidewalk at Kavanagh's at Cole's wake, another detective comes out, hands them both shots and then proceeds to barf in the gutter.
302[[/folder]]
303[[folder:W]]
304* WasItReallyWorthIt: Discussed between Lester and [=McNulty=] in the aftermath of the Stanfield case, without a clear answer.
305* WateringDown: Due to its heavy focus on drug gangs, ''The Wire'' features the drug version of this trope in spades. Numbers are thrown around between the gangs to talk about the strength of their product; 'Take it to ten' or 'This stuff is ninety', referring to what percentage of the product is actually the drug, and in hard times, they weaken their product by cutting it with whatever similar-looking substance comes to hand to make more profit. In season two, there are five deaths and eight hospitalizations at the prison due to Avon and Stringer conspiring to have the drugs Tilghman smuggles into the prison be tainted with rat poison, as part of a plot to get early parole for Avon.]]
306* WeUsedToBeFriends: The four boys introduced in season 4 go their separate ways and are unrecognizable by the end. Namond gets adopted by Colvin and gets free of the game, Michael becomes a stickup man, Randy becomes a thug and Dukie becomes a drug addict.
307* WhamEpisode: Usually the second-to-last episode of each season; most memorably, the eleventh episode of the third season.
308* WhamLine: Carcetti learns that all his high-flying plans to rebuild Baltimore, and particularly its police department, are about to go to shit.
309-->'''Finance Advisor:''' The system is running a 54-million-dollar deficit.
310* WhatHaveIDone: One of the intonations of [=McNulty=]'s catchphrase, "The fuck did I do?".
311* WhatTheHellHero:
312** Bunk on the night after Jimmy's JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope.
313** Subverted when Bunk brings Lester into the loop to talk some sense into [=McNulty=]. "Shit like this actually goes through your fucking brain?". But what Lester means is [[DoWrongRight the lie needs more wings to fly]] and ends up encouraging [=McNulty=] to sensationalize the story.
314* WhatYouAreInTheDark: Namond and Michael need to beat up Namond's insubordinate hopper. Namond can't bring himself to hurt an innocent child. Michael can.
315* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: seen at the end of each season, with an extra-length one at the end of season five.
316* WhereDaWhiteWomenAt: Pearlman and Daniels must initially keep their relationship a secret because it becoming known that Daniels was divorcing his wife Marla and dating a white woman instead would harm Marla's political career.
317* WhereWereYouLastNight: In season 5, [=McNulty=] has such a scene with his lady, who knows he's cheating.
318* WhiteBreadAndBlackBrotha: Inverted with Herc and Carver. While many of the Baltimore cops are dirty and brutalize suspects from time to time, Herc is worse than most; he also goes undercover with WhiteGangbangers in a working-class Polish neighborhood. Meanwhile, the black Carver increasingly becomes a ByTheBookCop over the course of the series.
319* WhiteGangBangers:
320** The hoppers in white neighborhoods are generally portrayed as posturing wannabes. Herc visits Kima just to joke about how incompetent they are and suggests there should be Affirmative Action for white gangbangers. Herc and Nick Sobotka both deliver a "You know you're white, right?" line to Frog.
321** "White Mike" [=McArdle=] is a mid-level dealer in Prop Joe's East Side organization.
322* WhyAreYouLookingAtMeLikeThat:
323** In "Duck and Cover", the eighth episode of the second season, the major crimes unit is debating over who to send undercover at a brothel. Herc isn't subtle enough, Carver doesn't look like he'd have to pay, and Kima and Bunk both have domestic issues. In walks [=McNulty=].
324--->'''[=McNulty=]:''' What?\
325'''Kima:''' Takes a whore to catch a whore. (''everyone starts laughing'')\
326'''[=McNulty=]:''' [[CatchPhrase What the fuck did I do?]]
327** Also done in Season 1; while in the office, [[=McNulty=]] finds out he's being called into an emergency custody hearing, and he doesn't have a lawyer. Then he and Landesman look at Perlman.
328--->'''Perlman:''' What?
329* WickedCultured: Stringer Bell attends college and gives his economical lessons a great practical use. The police are genuinely surprised when they discover his refined and elegant penthouse, full of classical books and styled very differently from the archetypal mansion of a drug-lord.
330* WindowLove: A staple of the second-season prison conversations.
331* WitlessProtectionProgram: Witness Protection rarely works out for anyone. Because the city is so broke that it can't afford a proper witness protection program, on numerous occasions over the course of the series witnesses are killed or people who try to come forward with evidence of crime unintentionally give themselves away to their fellow criminals and pay a heavy price as a result.
332* WorkingTheSameCase: Rawls succesfully manages to unload the "clearance-killer" case of the thirteen dead women to Daniel's detail, also working the waterfronts for the Sobotka case. The tentative connection is [[spoiler: eventually proven right by "Boris".]]
333* WorthyOpponent:
334** [=McNulty=] is [[{{Pride}} proud]] to be chasing Barksdale, since "[[StupidCrooks stupid criminals]] make [[PoliceAreUseless stupid cops]]". Lester makes a similar remark, later expanded to Marlo after underestimating him at first.
335** At the end of season 1, Stringer Bell tells [=McNulty=] "nicely done" at the trial. Which echoes [=McNulty=] saying the same to Stringer in the pilot.
336* WouldHarmAChild: "Hoppers" are young kids who act as couriers for drug lords. They're considered expendable. Many of the older drug dealers are also still technically juveniles, though they are considered fair game for assassinations.
337* WouldHitAGirl: Cutty, who despite seeming to be considering going straight has no problem striking Squeak in the face[[note]]In public, on the street and in broad daylight, no less[[/note]] to get her to admit that Bernard gave her the money for all the jewelry, money he took from the crew's take.
338* WretchedHive: Bodymore, Murdaland. 300 murders a year. Note that the show goes out of its way to show "Hamsterdam" getting ''worse''.
339-->'''Bill Rawls:''' Here's a fun fact for you, people: If Baltimore had New York's population, we'd be clocking 4,000 murders at this rate.
340** In other words, Baltimore's murder rate is '''''EIGHT''''' times higher per capita - New York City peaked at 2245 murders in 1990 and by the early 2000s in which the show is set, was down to 500-600 a year.
341[[/folder]]
342[[folder:X]]
343* XMustNotWin:
344** Freamon and [=McNulty=] take professional offense and put their careers on the line after Marlo stops being investigated.
345--->'''Bunk: '''Marlo ain't worth it. Nobody is.\
346'''Jimmy:''' Marlo's an asshole. He does not get to win, we get to win!
347** In the first episode of season 3, Herc and Carv spend most of a drug bust chasing down a runner who has a corner stash. It's later revealed that they called most of patrol, helicopter and K-9 units in order to track down one kid, who as it turned out, just faked having a drug stash to distract them. When Major Colvin asks why they used so many resources for one kid to whom they can't even put a drug charge on, Carv just replied that the bad guys don't get to win.
348* XanatosGambit: Valcheck congratulates Carcetti on having put Burrell in a tight spot because either outcome works in his favor: if the mayor pushes back and keeps Carcetti from using his council position to help Burrell, it's the mayor's fault that crime is up, but if he doesn't, then Carcetti has a snitch in the mayor's inner circle.
349** Burrell returns the favor the next season when he refuses to resign. Carcetti doesn't have the political capital to overcome the resistance he'd face from Campbell and the black ministers if he fired Burrell, and they could keep the pay raise Carcetti wants from passing the council. And by staying, he guarantees that he can reassert control over the department.
350[[/folder]]
351[[folder:Y-Z]]
352* YouDoNotWantToKnow: After Bird is convicted of murdering Gant because Omar lied on the stand about having witnessed the killing, [=McNulty=] asks Omar if he really did see Bird kill the man. "You really askin'?", Omar replies.
353* YouAreTooLate: A common occurrence. Most notable in the second season where, due to an FBI mole, the Greek's organization twice gets tipped off just in time to destroy the evidence or murder the key witness. One scene literally cuts back and forth between the cops frantically typing up warrants and the dealers washing the heroin down the drain.
354* YouBastard: David Simon is very clear that everyone is responsible to some degree for the problems depicted in the show. [[http://www.hbo.com/the-wire#/the-wire/inside/interviews/article/finale-letter-from-david-simon.html His finale letter basically tells his fans to get up and do something about it.]]
355* YouHaveFailedMe: This is done with disturbing frequency by the Barksdale drug empire, and taken even further later by the Stanfield empire, who supplant the Barksdales as the most powerful criminal organization in West Baltimore. If someone screws up in a job or seems insufficiently reliable at a time when the cops are cracking down on these groups, then those people tend to disappear or be found dead later.
356** A rare, non-lethal example from the heroes' side: In Season 3 the police brass start having to attend weekly Comstat meetings where the district commanders are grilled by Burrell and, especially, Rawls. One commander, Major Taylor, is seen at one to seem incompetent, having to look through his paperwork for information about recent crimes in his district that Rawls already knows off the top of his head, and not having spotted obvious patterns in the crimes. Before a second meeting Taylor is so nervous he [[VomitingCop throws up in the bathroom]], and after a similarly unimpressive performance, Rawls announces that Taylor's deputy is now in charge of the district, in front of all the assembled brass.
357** In Season 4, when Little Kevin goes to Marlo himself to explain how he said nothing about Lex's murder during his recent jail stint and interrogation, he lets slip that involving Randy as a cutout was his decision. Marlo is so disgusted by this freelancing, which needlessly created another potential witness, that he has Kevin killed immediately afterwards.
358* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: [[spoiler:Marlo does this to Proposition Joe, [[MentorOccupationalHazard who taught him]] the more complicated aspects of the game. It comes back to bite Marlo, as it leads to the discovery of the Grand Jury mole, which ultimately brings down his organization.]]
359* YouLookLikeYouveSeenAGhost: Rawls does a double-take that's the silent version of this trope when [=McNulty=] pays a visit to Homicide in season 2 and salutes him.
360* YouWontFeelAThing: A variant appears in the fourth-season premiere, where enforcer Chris Partlow prepares to execute a dealer in a vacant house.
361-->'''Chris:''' Don't fret, boss. I've got you covered. Quick and clean, I promise.
362* ZippingUpTheBodybag: We see [[spoiler:Omar's body bag]] being zipped up in the morgue at the end of an episode. Furthermore, in this scene, it's shown that there was a mistake with the ID tags, which the ME has to correct, which further emphasize the point: he's no longer a character, just a statistic.

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