Strictly for the Wire fans

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  • i just got stepped to for DLin' a 30 Rock episode

    Really? Who stepped? The Man?

    (I'm being serious here)

  • ariel_calmerariel_calmer 3,762 Posts
    i just got stepped to for DLin' a 30 Rock episode

    Really? Who stepped? The Man?


  • Phill_MostPhill_Most 4,594 Posts
    i just got stepped to for DLin' a 30 Rock episode

    Really? Who stepped? The Man?

    (I'm being serious here)



    i ain't sweatin' it though... just be aware, they do be lookin'

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    It's not currently on On Demand.

    I don't have a DVD burner, would someone be willing to rip me a DVD of season 4 for a small fee or record?



    I, too, need this in my life. I had been waiting for the DVD release to watch the whole thing in its entirety. But fuggit I'm ready if anyone can rip me a DVD for a small fee.

  • rkwparkrkwpark 915 Posts
    It's not currently on On Demand.

    I don't have a DVD burner, would someone be willing to rip me a DVD of season 4 for a small fee or record?



    I, too, need this in my life. I had been waiting for the DVD release to watch the whole thing in its entirety. But fuggit I'm ready if anyone can rip me a DVD for a small fee.

    im down to pay shipping and a small fee too

  • thropethrope 750 Posts
    at one point, the torrent floating around was a brokeass screener copy, extra dark and missing the final episode......


    i dont suppose there is now a torrent from someones high quality tivo rip?

  • edulusedulus 421 Posts
    MARLO?!?!?!???!??!?!??!

    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.drugs08jun08,0,7983091.story?coll=bal-local-baltimorecity

    The probe was nicknamed Operation Fowl Play by the task force because one of the principal leaders of the drug organization - who remains unidentified and at large - raises pigeons, officials said.

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts


    I need the last season in my life. I had been waiting for the DVD release to watch the whole thing in its entirety. But fuggit I'm ready if anyone can rip me a DVD for a small fee[/b] .

  • rkwparkrkwpark 915 Posts


    I need the last season in my life. I had been waiting for the DVD release to watch the whole thing in its entirety. But fuggit I'm ready if anyone can rip me a DVD for a small fee[/b] .

    if quality aint an issue, theres some sites that are hosting the videos. you can watch them online. i ended up marathoning thru season 4 for the first time last weekend. season 4 is truly facemelting.

  • DjArcadianDjArcadian 3,632 Posts
    Hey, some of you might be interested in this, I picked up The Wire Season 1 on sale for $25 yesterday at Best Buy. Sadly, they haven't discounted S2 or S3 much yet ($55 and $84 respectively).

    Pfffff.

    http://www.netflix.com + http://www.mrbass.org/dvdrip/

    Get familiar.

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts

    ^^^what is this/how does it work???


  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    Hey, some of you might be interested in this, I picked up The Wire Season 1 on sale for $25 yesterday at Best Buy. Sadly, they haven't discounted S2 or S3 much yet ($55 and $84 respectively).

    You're right, those dudes should totally not get any money for their brilliant work

  • rkwparkrkwpark 915 Posts
    if you have a costco nearby, they got season1 for like $22 and season 3 for $42. that is if you got a membership.

  • Dudes. I sat in on the set a few weeks ago, just for one short scene. So fucking cool. The sets are absolutely amazing. Wow. More soon.

  • mumbosaucemumbosauce 480 Posts
    I am at work now so I can't verify tha these videos are working but www.tv-links.co.uk has seasons 2, 3 and 4 listed as being able to view them online. I hope they work cause I am planning on having marathon viewing this weekend. Or (another thing I can't verify until I get home) try downloading season 4 screaner torrent at The Wire Season 4 screener torrent.

  • vajdaijvajdaij 447 Posts
    That Best Buy deal is so tempting. Anyone got a deal for Season 2?

  • 40ozking40ozking 308 Posts
    What's the word on season 5? I know they're shooting on location right now... Anybody have an idea of when this is suppose to hit the airwaves?


  • drewnicedrewnice 5,465 Posts
    What's the word on season 5? I know they're shooting on location right now... Anybody have an idea of when this is suppose to hit the airwaves?


    Around September, according to Detective Lester Freamon.

  • Phill_MostPhill_Most 4,594 Posts
    What's the word on season 5? I know they're shooting on location right now... Anybody have an idea of when this is suppose to hit the airwaves?


    Around September, according to Detective Lester Freamon.

    sheeeeeeit... that means i gots to get my hbo turned back on (free cable finally died out on me... can't be mad, had it for a good 'leven years )

  • rkwparkrkwpark 915 Posts
    What's the word on season 5? I know they're shooting on location right now... Anybody have an idea of when this is suppose to hit the airwaves?


    Around September, according to Detective Lester Freamon.

    that would mean, season 4 will be released on dvd just prior to that? I hope, im tired of watching it on a small ass youtube-like screen.

  • noznoz 3,625 Posts
    http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=7992

    After the first three seasons were released in each of the last three years (although at quite different times of the year!), each at a near-one hundred dollar list price, HBO Home Video is preparing to announce The Wire - The Complete 4th Season on DVD for "just" $59.99 SRP! These 13 episodes will arrive in your neighborhood on December 4th.


  • Shooting for Season 5 just wrapped up. It was covered in this week's Washington Post. This season is going to be hot but I'm sad to see it end.

    --

    Down to 'The Wire': It's a Wrap for Gritty TV Series[/b]
    Real Life and Fiction Jostle for a Final Time As Acclaimed HBO Show Shoots Last Episode

    By Teresa Wiltz
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, September 3, 2007; A01

    It was early still -- about 10 p.m. on Friday -- and somewhere in Columbia, David Simon was giving a tour of the sights: There, he said, pointing, was the Baltimore mayor's office. Over there? The city's Western District police headquarters, and there, that little closet of a room, "that can be the visiting room at Jessup." Pause. "Or the jail. Depends. We just redecorate."

    As he stood on a platform, taking in his world, it was hard to ignore the irony: For the past two years, a good chunk of "The Wire," the HBO show that critics have praised for the grittiness of its inner-city v??rit??, has been filmed in an anonymous soundstage in the burbs -- a soundstage that reportedly will be turned into a massive Wegmans Food Market.

    After five seasons, and this final episode, they would be done.

    "It's time," said Clarke Peters, who plays Detective Lester Freamon, "to pull the plug on 'The Wire.' "

    It is the actor's lot to say goodbye again and again, to bond with cast and crew, only to be sent scattering after the wrap. But this, everyone insisted, would be a particularly sorrowful parting: This morning, they buried one of their own, the daughter of a crew member who died of breast cancer. Tonight, they were putting "The Wire" to rest.

    "I was a wreck," said Deirdre Lovejoy, who plays Assistant State's Attorney Rhonda Pearlman on the show. "But there was a funeral and that put everything in perspective." She looked around the room at everyone guzzling champagne, slapping backs and engulfing each other in hearty bear hugs. " This is a happy death."

    Simon, who once covered cops for the Baltimore Sun, always knew that "The Wire" would end at exactly this point. From the beginning when the show debuted in 2002, he saw it as a visual novel, with each season a distinct chapter exploring an aspect of inner-city life: The first season examined the drug trade; the second focused on Baltimore's longshoremen; the third grappled with politics and the notion of reform; the fourth dug into education and the lives of the city's children. This season, which begins airing Jan. 6, explores the media, featuring a morally challenged reporter played by Tom McCarthy, who wrote and directed the indie film "The Station Agent."

    "The Wire" has always struggled in the ratings; last season it averaged 1.6 million viewers per episode. But it's always enjoyed the admiration of critics, who praised it as being the "most authentic epic ever on television." Notwithstanding the giant soundstage, a good 50 percent of the show was shot on location in Baltimore, with real-life characters frequently sprinkled in with the fictional ones. Like former drug kingpin Melvin Williams, whom co-producer and writer Ed Burns, an ex-Baltimore cop, once arrested in a big takedown. Felicia "Snoop" Pearson, who did time as a teenager for killing a 16-year-old girl, made her acting debut last season, playing an assassin. Even Robert Ehrlich, when he was Maryland governor, made a cameo -- as a state trooper in the governor's office last season.

    Over the years, Simon has carved out a cottage industry from covering Baltimore's drug and crime issues, from "Homicide," to the HBO miniseries "The Corner," based on his book by the same name, to "The Wire." But despite the show's depiction of Baltimore as decaying and dysfunctional, the city has benefited greatly from its presence, from its showcasing of B-more music to the tens of millions in revenue it has brought to the city. In many ways, "The Wire" is a long, convoluted love letter to Baltimore-- from a conflicted but resolutely committed lover.

    But even the greatest love affairs come to an end.

    Said Wendell Pierce, who plays Detective William "Bunk" Moreland: "He told us from day one, 'It's a novel.' He had the novel in his head, and he wouldn't share with us."

    It wasn't until last year that Simon told his cast that this season would be the last.

    "If you get five years out of a TV show," Pierce said with a shrug, "that's pretty successful. I'm proud of it. . . . We showed the possibility of television used as an art.

    "There are people who come up to me and say, 'I hate the show.' I accept that. They're still engaged. If at the end of an hour of watching 'The Wire,' if you don't feel bad, you should."

    This sensibility of art as mission statement pervades the conversations of everyone here -- writers, actors, producers, casting directors, crew. Here, they don't talk about TV, they talk about "television." There is a sense of them being the earnest outsiders, messengers shining a klieg light on society's ills. Whether you like it or not.

    It was sweltering on the set of the cop shop: No cooling fans allowed during filming. Too noisy. Which meant that between takes, the makeup artists rushed in to dab at the sweat on the faces of Pierce and Dominic West, the British actor who plays Detective James "Jimmy" McNulty.

    Behind a stack of file cabinets was the video village, where Simon and his crew hunkered down over TV monitors, listening intently to the action on headsets. Actor-filmmaker Clark Johnson sat in the director's chair. He directed the pilot; it seemed only fitting, Simon said, that Johnson direct the coda, too.

    Johnson, honey-colored, genial, goateed, stared into the monitor. "Tighter, tighter, mo' tighter," he called out, jumping up to confer with his cast, in this instance McCarthy and West, who were filming a confrontational scene. They would film this scene over and over, from every angle, wide, medium and "mo' tighter."

    At 9 p.m., it was time for "lunch," which was held in a giant tent outside the warehouse. Surrounding it were massive trailers: wardrobe trailers, caterers' trailers, even bathroom trailers marked "Desi" and "Lucy." A woman from wardrobe, bald and heavily tattooed, greeted everyone with a big smile, while weathered crew dudes hung back for a smoke. Folks were queuing up in the food line, grabbing trays and loading their plates with lobster tails, steak and baked eggplant before heading into the tent.

    Notwithstanding the cameras, the makeup artists and the high-rent grub, this was your standard office party. On the walls of the tent, a gag reel was projected, a litany of you-had-to-be-there jokes: close-ups of actors munching on chips, belching, cursing, a montage of "The Wire's" extravagant use of the F-word. Actors wandered in with their families, while Andre Royo, who played Bubbles, ran around, dressed like a newspaper peddler, handing out copies of a fake newspaper, "The Wire," with a giant headline: "HBO SERIES WRAPS PRODUCTION: Fifth season concludes in Baltimore; Emmy voters will be given one last shot to get it right."

    After lunch, it was back to work, and as the clock edged past midnight, folks started getting giddy. The final episode was an hour and a half, as opposed to the normal hour-long length, but the production schedule dictated that shooting be confined to 11 days. Simon, juggling another HBO miniseries, admitted that he's been consistently late with turning in scripts. ("Really, really, really late," said Royo, with a laugh.) The night before, they filmed until close to 3 a.m. They would be even later this night.

    So all kinds of silliness ensued. Actor Reg E. Cathay showed up to watch, his curly 'fro completely shaved bare. Johnson, not to be outdone, came back after break with all the peach fuzz on his head shaved, too. No way he, he said, was he going to be upstaged. A crew member worked the set sporting a three-foot Afro wig.

    "Did that [expletive] just mock my performance?" Pierce joked to one of his cast buddies. "I know I'm not as good as you, but damn, you don't have to rub it in."

    At 3:10 a.m., it was time for some goodbyes. Everyone applauded after Sonja Sohn, who plays Shakima Greggs, wrapped up her final scene. Her teenage daughter ran to her, shoving a bouquet into her crying mother's arms.

    "Ain't no need to hold the tears back," said Sohn, her voice shaking. ". . . It's not going to be like this again. It can't be."

    At 4:40 a.m., the assistant director called out, "It's a wrap, it's a wrap. We're done. Forever."

    Everyone stood around clapping and clapping, wiping away tears. It's hard to say goodbye to five years of friendship and steady employment. Pierce is going to act in a New Orleans production of "Waiting for Godot." Royo is heading with his wife and daughter to Los Angeles, to run their new restaurant and act in theater. Peters and West are going to ride horseback across country to raise money for AIDS awareness.

    Pierce, a native of New Orleans, thanked everyone for standing by him after Hurricane Katrina. A wardrobe worker, who first met Simon when he was an inner-city preteen haunting the set of "The Corner," sobbed, hands covering his face.

    Simon held his plastic champagne cup aloft. "It's 4:40," he said, "and I am at a complete loss. I'm out of words.

    "I am very spoiled by this cast and crew. . . . To all of us and for this last night . . . L'chaim."

  • Here's the video from the above story

  • dollar_bindollar_bin I heartily endorse this product and/or event 2,326 Posts

  • Birdman9Birdman9 5,417 Posts

    That was awesome!

  • CosmoCosmo 9,768 Posts

    That was awesome!

    !!!

  • mannybolonemannybolone Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts

    That was awesome!

    !!!



  • That was awesome!

    !!!


    sheeeeeeeit.... just the greatest tv show EVER. fuckity fuck fuck.


  • That was awesome!

    !!!




    BTW WHEN IS SEASON 5 STARTING?????//

  • dollar_bindollar_bin I heartily endorse this product and/or event 2,326 Posts

    BTW WHEN IS SEASON 5 STARTING?????//

    I have seen dates ranging from January to March, but according to the recent Washington Post article, the date is January 6th, 2008
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