OPINION

Top 25 Characters from The Wire

Written by Andy Sayers
Published April 14, 2008

I already had a lot to say about this series earlier, but didn't get into the terrific cast of characters both because my article was already long, and I had this one in mind. If you've never watched the show, you may think a list of 25 characters is a touch of overkill. However, if you have watched it, you're probably thinking to yourself: only 25?

There's never been an ensemble as deep as that of The Wire, which completely eschewed stars and delved into the lives of dozens of characters and how they affect, and are affected by, the city of Baltimore. The cast grew exponentially as the seasons went on, with the show introducing several new characters at once in an attempt to expand the scope of the show and the picture of Baltimore.

Managing all these characters was a Herculean task, one that the show managed on an incomparable level. All the characters mattered, and each fit into the puzzle perfectly. When you consider that other shows have difficulties managing casts of less than ten, you start to get an appreciation of what The Wire did with five times that amount. When putting together this list, I came up with a list of over 50 names of characters I enjoyed that were vital to the show, so that should give you an idea of why a list of 25 top characters is a perfectly acceptable number.

By "top 25", I'm taking a few things into consideration. "Best" is too abstract an idea to apply to any type of standard, but I did try and decide which characters were the most unique, which actors performed the best in their roles, which characters were most significant for the show, who was the most memorable, etc. Then my personal tastes and favourites were factored in, and viola, a "Top 25" is made.

A Note on Spoilers: Because I know not everyone is caught up on all five seasons of this show, but I still want as many people to read this as possible (I'm vain that way), this list will be as spoiler-free as possible. I will have to reference some events in order to talk about the characters, but no major events will be discussed (especially the ultimate fate of any character). Also, since characters move up and down their career fields throughout the series, I'll avoid referring to character by title as much as possible. When it is needed to refer to a character by their job title (i.e., Lieutenant, Judge, Mayor, etc), I'll only refer to the job title the character holds when we are first introduced to them. That said, if anyone wants to get into spoilers, I'll gladly do so via comments (with spoiler warnings).

25. Jay Landsman (Delaney Williams) - Ah, the Fat Man; how he makes me chuckle. Landsman is an excellent example of how the show shapes three dimensional characters. On a normal network show, he'd be a one-dimensional supporting figure who checked in every once and awhile, gave a wiseass one-liner, then left (kind of like the guy on Law & Order who always says something while eating sandwiches). But on The Wire, we get a funny guy who reads nudie mags at work, who is sympathetic to those who want to do real police work, but self-interested enough to play by the bureaucratic rules. Just when you think you have him figured as a cynical middle-manager, he'll make the right decision instead of playing for the stats. Fun fact: Jay Landsman is based on a detective by the same name who was the original inspiration for the character Detective Munch in David Simon's Homicide: Life on the Streets, and who also acted on The Wire as Dennis Mello.

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8

Andy Sayers is a technical writer from Canada, which automatically makes him funnier than people from other countries. When not writing about pop culture, he is consuming it alongside his loving wife.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Top 25 Characters from The Wire
Published: April 14, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Crime, Video: Drama, Video: Television, Video: Urban
Writer: Andy Sayers
Andy Sayers's BC Writer page
Andy Sayers's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Andy Sayers
Video: Crime
Video: Drama
Video: Television
Video: Urban
All Video Articles
All Opinion articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — April 14, 2008 @ 22:42PM — El Bicho [URL]

You could have everyone tied for first. Great job--wait a sec...no Rawls? Come on. Compared to everyone else, he may have been the smartest in dealing within the system, and that includes Clay Davis. Everyone else bucked the rules, but he masterfully worked within them.

Plus, one throwaway moment in a scene forever changed his character for the audience without any predictable heavy-handedness that would have plagued any other drama. Keep your johnny cakes, David Simon. I'll take Rawls flipping through Landsmann's girlie magazine.

Thanks for reminding me I have nothing to watch on Sunday nights.

#2 — April 14, 2008 @ 23:37PM — Ajay Srikanth

How in the world did you manage not to include Bunny Colvin on this list? He is a top 5 character for me. He created the brilliant idea of Hamsterdam, was able to send the corner kids out so the stoop kds could learn, and generally spoke his mind without fear. He represents the brutal honesty which is needed to make real change. Unfortunately he is forced to fall on his sword and shut up because he is believed to be too much of a radical. What a show

#3 — April 14, 2008 @ 23:45PM — Andy Sayers [URL]

Rawls and Colvin were two characters I expected to hear about leaving out, and believe me, it wasn't easy. Rawls probably missed out due to my desire to fit in personal favourites. Rawls is too much of an asshole to be a favourite, even though he's the best asshole on the show. I'm guessing if Colvin would have had more of a role in season five, he'd have made it for sure.

For the record, if the list were bigger Rawls would come in at #27, and Colvin at #28 (with Prop Joe at #26). Not that this list isn't plenty big as it is.

#4 — April 15, 2008 @ 03:07AM — El Bicho [URL]

Taken the series a whole, I don't see how Rawls is an asshole. Please give an example. He's the smartest guy in the series. He always moving on and moving up. Don't hate the playa, hate the game.

#5 — April 15, 2008 @ 03:14AM — Andy Sayers [URL]

The fact that he'll always step on others to help out himself makes him an asshole. A politically-wise one, no doubt, but he's still the guy who will pass the buck at Com Stat to dress down a Major.

That said, he had his moments; particularly when he refused to let McNulty beat himself up at the hospital in season one, or when he offered to transfer Freamon after tearing apart the MCU (that said, he still tore up the MCU... just as he was ready to tear up the Barksdale investigation just to get four murders to black a few weeks early).

#6 — April 15, 2008 @ 19:35PM — El Bicho [URL]

"The fact that he'll always step on others to help out himself makes him an asshole."

You have identified nearly every character on the show.

#7 — April 15, 2008 @ 19:48PM — Andy Sayers [URL]

I disagree. In fact, I'd say that only describes 6 out of my top 25 characters.

Who would Daniels step on to get ahead? Kima? Bubbs? McNulty? Carver? Freamon? That doesn't even identify Bodie, Omar, or Sobotka.

#8 — April 15, 2008 @ 20:07PM — El Bicho [URL]

Are we talking about the same show? That's all McNulty did. Forget the women in his life, he didn't care who got in his way and what rules he broke to get what he wanted. Just because the viewer usually rooted for him to succeed doesn't mean he didn't act like an asshole, according to your definition.

And you can't really be claiming Omar didn't step on anyone. Sure, it was only people in the game, but that don't change a thing. Just because characters we don't like or root for are the ones who get stepped on doesn't mean the result isn't the same.

I am out the door, so I can't deal with any others right now.

#9 — April 15, 2008 @ 20:43PM — Andy Sayers [URL]

I don't think McNulty stepped on others though, and not to get ahead. He certainly fucked people over, but that was more out of an obliviousness to the consequences of his actions (which makes him a different kind of asshole). He pursued what he thought was right, consequences be damned. When did Bill Rawls ever do what he thought was right?

McNulty never shoved anyone under the bus to move ahead; in fact, getting ahead wasn't anything he was ever concerned about. Being right is what drove Jimmy McNulty, and if it meant someone looking bad, then so be it.

As far as Omar goes, I admit, I messed up when I typed the original sentence about Rawls and forgot to recheck it. Going by "The fact that he'll always step on others to help out himself makes him an asshole", then of course, that's Omar's M.O. What I meant to say was ""The fact that he'll always step on ANYONE to help himself GET AHEAD makes him an asshole". That's what I was getting at with Omar, that he proved that there are some people he won't push down so that he can rise up. So I guess I was arguing a completely different point there, my bad.

In any case, I can't believe I'm trying to defend the position that William Rawls is an asshole. Here's a good reason why I think that: every character on the show that's ever dealt with him thinks he's an asshole. I'd say that the onus is on you to prove that he wasn't one.

#10 — April 17, 2008 @ 00:33AM — Sam

The Cheese stands alone.

#11 — May 13, 2008 @ 15:19PM — Christopher Wallace

A great list. I guess we all have our favorite characters, a couple of mine that were left off the list would include Brother Mouzone and Bunny Colvin. I still hope that one of these days they will announce plans for a season six

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/75776)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments