Top 25 Characters from The Wire
Published April 14, 2008
First appearance: Season one
15. D'Angelo Barksdale (Larry Gilliard Jr) - It takes a special show to introduce a character as a drug dealing murderer, and then spend the rest of the season making him one of the most sympathetic characters on the show. This show wasn't as interested in what characters did as it was in why they did it, with D'Angelo providing a perfect example of how a decent person can go bad in the wrong environment. And when you see Dee's home life, it ain't hard to understand how he ended up how he did. Nor is it hard for your heart to go out to him, even if he's a drug dealing murderer.
First appearance: Season one
14. Marlo Stanfield (Jamie Hector) - Avon Barksdale was a monster. Marlo Stanfield is worse. Some people didn't give Jamie Hector enough credit for his work as Marlo, thinking him too quiet or stiff. Those people are dead wrong. Instead, Hector gave an amazingly controlled performance that was absolutely haunting. A complete sociopath who had no value for anything but the pursuit of power, Marlo Stanfield was the best villain the show ever had. Yes, better than Avon, and here's how I know: when it appeared that the MCU wasn't going to catch Marlo, weren't you hoping at least a little bit that maybe Avon could do the job for them?
First appearance: Season three
13. Ellis Carver (Seth Gilliam) - I don't think there's another character on this show that changed as much from episode 1 to episode 60 than Ellis Carver. When we first meet him, he's just a knucklehead, no better or worse than his partner Herc. He has some ups and downs over the next few seasons, but ends up as one of the few truly honourable characters by series' end. He earned it, by gradually becoming a better cop and a better man, to the degree that it took a few seasons for me to realise that I had begun to enjoy the character (and hate his erstwhile partner).
First appearance: Season one
12. Preston "Bodie" Broadus (J.D. Williams) - On the other side of the law, Bodie had a maturation process similar to that of Carver. When we first met him, I thought he was a brash punk. By the end of the first season, I HATED Bodie. But the kid had a survivor's mentality, despite the fact that he was never more than a pawn in other people's games (a smart-ass pawn, but a pawn nonetheless), and that mentality won me over as he matured, developing into a fondness for the guy. Looking back at season one, I realise even that which made me hate him really wasn't his fault, but rather the reality of the situation he was placed in by others (those in position to use their pawns). Although, I guess it's possible that he simply won me over because he's TV's best-ever spitter.
- 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
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Comments
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
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.
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.
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).
"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.
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.
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.
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.
The Cheese stands alone.
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
Prez is higher on the list than Avon?
You trippin












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.