Cops And Live PD Canceled

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lakelandman
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Cops And Live PD Canceled

Post by lakelandman »

Such a shame.

https://www.inquisitr.com/6104189/live- ... 5pb006X0yI

Live P.D. has officially been canceled amid the ongoing protests against police brutality triggered by George Floyd’s death, Deadline exclusively reported on Wednesday.

Previously, new episodes of Live P.D. were pulled from the schedule alongside the Season 33 premiere of Cops on Paramount Network. Paramount has since canceled Cops.

A&E’s decision is surprising given that Live P.D. was the network’s flagship series and one of its highest-rated programs. It even spawned a spin-off series titled Live Rescue.

While the series has ceased production, a statement released by A&E indicated that the show could eventually return, albeit in a different format.

“Going forward, we will determine if there is a clear pathway to tell the stories of both the community and the police officers whose role it is to serve them. And with that, we will be meeting with community and civil rights leaders as well as police departments.”

Dan Abrams, the host of Live P.D., told fans the show would return on his official Twitter account last night. Not long after, however, A&E and the show’s production company, MGM’s Big Fish Entertainment, made the joint decision to discontinue the series in light of the current political atmosphere and calls for police reform from protestors, celebrities, and politicians.

Abrams returned to Twitter on Wednesday to express his disappointment over the network’s decision. The former host said that it was “bittersweet” to see the show in the top trending spot.


Dan Abrams

@danabrams
I am going to finally go to sleep but I just want to say one more thing to the #LivePDNation. Thank you for making this so much more than a tv show. You created a huge community of kind, caring people with whom I hope to stay in touch with in this next chapter. More tomorrow. . .


Part of the decision to cancel the series likely stemmed from the recent revelation that Live P.D. crew filmed the 2019 death of Javier Ambler “during a police stop.”

Footage of the incident has reportedly been destroyed since the event occurred. Since the news was reported, dozens of social media users called for the show’s cancellation, claiming that it glamorized police brutality, the very thing the protests are trying to stop.

A&E’s decision comes just one month after the network had renewed the long-running show for an additional 160 episodes. According to Deadline, the series was “ad-supported cable’s #1 show on Fridays and Saturdays in 2019 and has helped A&E become a leading cable network.” Amid the pandemic, with live sports suspended, the show rose even higher in the ratings, reportedly “drawing a total of about 3 million viewers per weekend.”

When Live P.D. first debuted, it “marked a logistical breakthrough by being able to pull off a complex live broadcast from multiple locations at a reasonable cost.” Several copycat shows followed, such as First Responders Live on Fox and M.D. Live on TNT.

Hundreds of users have taken to social media to voice their disappointment over Live P.D.‘s cancellation. Many have questioned whether this decision will impact the spin-off, Live Rescue.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... ty-cancel/


In 1989, media outlets nationwide clamored to cover the debut of “Cops.”

The documentary-style crime program promising an intimate look at the daily lives of law enforcement officers marked one of the earliest forays into reality TV — and many at the time couldn’t get enough.

“ ‘Vice’ was nice, but ‘Cops’ is tops,” read the headline on one Boston Globe article, comparing the reality show, which aired on Fox, to “Miami Vice,” the wildly popular NBC series that was approaching the end of its five-season run.

“Having no script to follow and no ponderous narration … diluting its drama, ‘Cops’ delivers ‘real life’ TV that is as straightforward as a nightstick to the kidneys,” the Globe review said.

Those reviewers were right that audiences would love the formula. “Cops” would go on to run for more than 30 years, enticing loyal viewers with tense scenes of foot chases, prostitution busts and drug-house raids.

But as its popularity rose, social and criminal justice advocates charged that the very elements fans loved — namely raw footage of action-packed arrests — glorified officers, normalized questionable police tactics and reinforced racial stereotypes.

On Tuesday, “Cops,” which was scheduled to premiere its 33rd season this month, came to an unceremonious end after it was canceled amid widespread protests against racism and police brutality sparked by George Floyd’s death. Floyd, a black man, died last month in Minneapolis after a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while he was handcuffed on the ground.

“Cops is not on the Paramount Network and we don’t have any current or future plans for it to return,” a spokesperson for the show’s current network said in a statement. The Paramount Network, formerly Spike TV and owned by ViacomCBS, picked up “Cops” in 2013 following its cancellation at Fox.

Tuesday’s announcement was widely praised by critics of the show and comes after episodes stopped airing on Paramount earlier this month. Similar shows such as A&E’s “Live PD,” which follows police in real time, and “Body Cam” on Discovery’s ID channel also had episodes pulled by their respective networks in recent days, according to the Hollywood Reporter.


Keith Boykin

@keithboykin
Glad they’re canceling the “Cops” TV show. It’s time we stop making personal trauma a spectator sport. https://deadline.com/2020/06/cops-cance ... 54910/amp/

Cops
‘Cops’ Canceled By Paramount Network, ‘Live PD’ Return Evaluated By A&E
Cops’ six-year run on Paramount Network has come to an end. Pulled earlier this month in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, the series will not be coming back. “Cops is not on the P…


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“Cops” was the brainchild of John Langley and Malcolm Barbour, who both wanted to create a documentary-style show shot from the perspective of police, the Wall Street Journal’s John Jurgensen reported in 2012. Though the idea initially failed to garner much interest, it led Langley and Barbour to work with Geraldo Rivera, now a Fox News correspondent, to produce television exposés on sensational subjects ranging from Satanism to drug use, according to the Journal. One broadcast, titled “American Vice: The Doping of a Nation,” featured live footage of busts, The Washington Post reported at the time.

The pair held onto the concept for their show and in 1988, they pitched it to a young Fox executive named Stephen Chao. As Jurgensen wrote, Chao had helped launch “America’s Most Wanted” and “was hunting for other fresh concepts that could be made on the cheap.”

In a 2018 interview with the Marshall Project, Chao recalled doubting Langley’s pitch that he could produce a weekly program based on the simple premise of following police officers around on the job.

“My mind was whirling. I was like, ‘How can you possibly deliver such quality every week, with so much action?’ ” Chao said. “He shrugged his shoulders. He said, ‘I’m the pizza man. I can deliver every week.’ It was such a stupid thing to say. I laughed, of course. None of us knew it was possible.”

By 1989, millions of people around the country were listening to the telltale opening strains of “Bad Boys,” a song by the reggae band Inner Circle, as dramatic montages of police officers chasing and tackling suspects flashed across the screen.

While early media coverage of the show’s first few episodes, which documented a week in the lives of police officers in Broward County, Fla., were mostly positive, some were quick to raise concerns.

“The dominant image is hammered home again and again: the overwhelmingly white troops of police are the good guys; the bad guys are overwhelmingly black,” the New York Times wrote in 1989. “Little is said about the ultimate sources of the drugs, and nothing is mentioned about Florida’s periodic scandals in which the police themselves are found to be trafficking in drugs.”

One Los Angeles Times review noted that “the camera assumes the disgusting role of hanging judge by prematurely filling the screen with the faces of numerous suspects swept up in drug busts, some of whom may turn out to be innocent or may even go uncharged, for all we know.”

Soon, lawsuits targeting the show and the police departments it worked with started piling up, prompting producers to change tactics and allow police to have a say in what footage made the final cut, the Journal reported.

Still, “Cops” remained a huge draw for Fox in the ’90s. With more than 8 million viewers an episode, the show often topped the list of most-watched reality TV programs during those years, according to the Marshall Project.

As the popularity of the series increased, so did the criticism.

In 2004, a paper examining episodes was published in the peer-reviewed Western Journal of Communication, and researchers observed that “Cops” disproportionately showed people of color as perpetrators of serious crimes.

Programs like “Cops,” serve to “justify controversial police practices” and “implicitly justifies the practice of racial profiling,” the researchers wrote.

“In that many viewers experience and understand law enforcement and crime through these reality TV programs, these shows teach audiences to view certain police practices as legitimate and certain social groups as deviant,” the paper said.

The show hit another snag in 2013 when Color of Change, a civil rights group, launched a campaign urging Fox to drop the show, which the network ultimately did later that year. At the time, “Cops” had been on Fox for 25 seasons.

But the victory was short-lived. The program was soon picked up by Spike TV, now the Paramount Network, where it continued to draw viewers even as additional reports emerged in recent years raising concerns about the show’s potential to further inflame racial tensions and cause harm to marginalized communities.

A podcast released in 2019 called “Headlong: Running from COPS” delved into the controversies surrounding the show’s content and highlighted questionable interactions between officers and suspects. In one 2004 episode of “Cops” mentioned on the podcast, an officer in Wichita was seen using his flashlight to pry open the mouth of a black man and leaving it inside while another cop searched the man for drugs.

“What we found is that ‘Cops’ is edited far more problematically than it lets on, that it consistently presents excessive force as good policing and that its structural reinforcement of racial stereotypes about criminality raises questions about the ethics of continuing to let the show remain on the air,” the podcast’s host, Dan Taberski, wrote in an op-ed for the New York Times. “Above all, the questionable legality of several actions taken by ‘Cops’ producers and their Police Department partners should lead every American state and city to assess whether they should allow reality shows about the police to film in their jurisdictions.”

Many cheered Paramount’s decision to cancel the show Tuesday.

“Crime TV plays a significant role in advancing distorted representations of crime, justice, race & gender within culture & #Cops led the way, pushing troubling implications for generations of viewers,” Arisha Michelle Hatch, vice president and chief of campaigns at Color of Change, said on Twitter.


ColorOfChange

@ColorOfChange
JUST IN: #COPS has officially been CANCELLED off @paramountnet after our conversation with them this week and after millions of our members raised their voices to say stop #NormalizingInjustice! https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live- ... rk-1297778


'Cops' Canceled at Paramount Network
The move follows the ViacomCBS cable network's decision to pull episodes of the show in the wake of protests against police brutality.




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Everybody's got a plan until they get hit.
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Firemedic2000
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Post by Firemedic2000 »

These LIBERAL controlled (censored) such as cable and public channels. Big tech such as IBM, Microsoft and Google that are pulling their facial recognition software from all LAW enforcement agencies. Why you ask, because it was used to ID the rioters that looted, set fires, attacked people and even murder innocient Americans.

These attacks against the protection of Americans and our great society will come back to bite these LEFT WING SOCIALIST RADICALS in the pocket. I will never go to the movies again or pay for a movie. I'll become a pirate. Hey if they encourage murders and thieves. I'll steal their movies since they encourage the thief of products from small businesses. Why not them. They are no better than us.
RANGER AIRBORNE, BLACK TEAM, FIREMEDIC, NRA BENEFACTOR
In the Government's/Elitist eye's I'm a Terrorist for believing in the Constitution and taking an oath to defend it instead of POLITICAL LEADERS
N4KVE
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Post by N4KVE »

Total BULL$HIT!!!!! I will never watch an A&E program again. GARY.
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lakelandman
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Post by lakelandman »

I grew up watching cops and loved watching live PD sad times we live in when you can't see what cop go threw anymore.
Everybody's got a plan until they get hit.
neverenoughguns
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Post by neverenoughguns »

lakelandman wrote: Thu Jun 11, 2020 7:00 pm I grew up watching cops and loved watching live PD sad times we live in when you can't see what cop go threw anymore.
Does Not fit the liberal agenda when cops are shown professionally dealing w belligerent and just nasty people.
weaselfire
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Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2018 2:21 pm

Post by weaselfire »

Yep. I dropped A&E in response.

Jeff

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