“He Was Some Kind Of A Man”

Written by Bill Sherman
Published January 08, 2003

Perhaps it's the proximity of the two season premieres that did it, but watching the first ep of The Shield's second season, I found myself thinking, "Vic Mackey is Greg Stillson w./ a badge."

Both characters affect a high moral ground when it serves their purposes, yet their base modus operandi rest on physical intimidation & violence. For both characters, public well-being is secondary to their drive for personal profit, though their capacity for self-deception is boundless. Stillson is a psychopath, while Mackey at the very least is a sociopath: one look at those blank blue eyes as he blew a fellow cop away in the show's debut ep was enough to establish that.

The difference, of course, lies in the characters' respective places in their teevee universes. The Dead Zone's Stillson is an antagonist, a political candidate who we see will reduce the nation's capital to radioactive ash if he ever attains the presidency. Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) is The Shield's protagonist - Tony Soprano's only real rival in the TV Anti-Hero Sweeps - a ruthless & opportunistic cop in the meaner-than-mean streets of Farmington, CA. Shielded by his politically ambitious Captain (Benito Martinez), Mackey and his special unit underlings cut deals w./ local drug dealers and stomp down hard on those dealers' competitors. Oh, yeah, and occasionally they arrest some real bad guys, too.

This season opens w./ our main man frantically trying to find his family (they left at the end of last season), leaving the unit's well-being in the hands of spikey-haired second-in-command Shane Vendrell (Walton Goggins). The problem is that Shane has even less of a sense of boundaries than Vic. Wanting to "take things up a notch" (okay, no more Emeril references ever again, people!), he spends the unit's cached money on a big drug buy and winds up purchasing poisoned coke - no longer just abetting local dealers but actually becoming a middle-man supplier. This angers Mackey, primarily because the big doof has lost all this cash just when Vic needs $50,000 to pay a p.i. looking for his missing wife. So he and the boys hie it down to Mexico to get their money back. When confronted by Captain Alcevedo about the reason for this sudden trip, Mackey gets all huffy and talks about wanting to stow the flow of poisoned coke onto the streets.

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Bill Sherman is a mostly harmless pop culture nerd who can either be found at the Pop Culture Gadabout blog, or sorting out boxes of CDs, DVDs, comics & manga paperbacks that are still unopened from a big move across country.
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“He Was Some Kind Of A Man”
Published: January 08, 2003
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Filed Under: Video: Television
Writer: Bill Sherman
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#1 — January 9, 2003 @ 16:30PM — Al Barger [URL]

Good one. I hadn't thought about invoking the Welles movie.

I will, however, give the Mackey character more credit than you seem to. He makes money from protecting a drug dealer, but there is some legitimate logic in what he's doing. He hasn't gone on with any lengthy explanation, but he seems to consider that you can't stop people from doing dope. He's regulating the market, putting in his preferred dealer who works under his command in order to minimize the mayhem. His own money is [very convenient] gravy.

I don't necessarily agree with this position, but there is some reasoning to it. You COULD say he's just making excuses, but if it works then it works.

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