'Miami
Vice': Watch out for the Feds
by
William L. Anderson
Last
Memorial Day, instead of watching military parades and listening
to speeches by war mongering politicians, I watched some of the
"Miami Vice" Marathon put on by The National Network (TNN).
Having been a "Vice" aficionado when the show was in its
heyday during the 1980s, I have been pleased to see TNN put on reruns.
The "marathon" replayed some of the best shows, including
the one that featured Lee Iaccoca in a cameo role.
("Vice"
often had guest stars outside of the small screen, including Phil
Collins and Bill Russell, who played starring roles – and did so
quite well. Vice-President George Bush wanted to appear as well,
but he wanted to play himself, not a drug dealer, as producer Michael
Mann had envisioned.)
There
were many reasons why I liked this show so much. First, it was a
groundbreaking show, both in its style and its camera work. It was
also shot on location in Miami, as opposed to a studio on Hollywood
(as is the case with NYPD Blue, another favorite show of mine),
with the whole backdrop being quite spectacular.
I
must also admit to being a big fan of Don Johnson, whose present
show "Nash Bridges" is another one that I regularly watch
– it is even shown in the same Friday night time slot as "Vice"
was nearly two decades ago. Johnson, who played the role of Vice
Detective Sonny Crockett, and his partner, Phillip Michael Thomas,
who was Tubbs, was a wonderful performer who, to be quite honest,
looked perfectly natural tooling about in his expensive Italian
suits and driving a Ferrari.
As
I think back on the show, however, I realize now that one of the
most important things that "Miami Vice" did was something
I did not really understand until much later. Unlike previous cop
shows, "Vice" did not portray federal law enforcement
agents as heroes. Instead, they often were portrayed as crooks at
worst and bumblers at best.
Because
Crockett and Tubbs were vice cops, they often had to deal with drug
dealers, which put them in constant conflict with officers from
the FBI and the newly formed Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). In one
memorable show, Joe Don Baker starred as a corrupt DEA officer who
goes over to the other side and is only stopped when Crockett kills
him.
As
for the FBI agents, they are constantly portrayed as willing enablers
of the worst kinds of crooks, especially since they were constantly
interfering into legitimate local law enforcement and placing many
drug dealers in the Witness Protection Program, which provided a
cover for even more crime. Of course, "Vice" did not portray
all local cops as Dudley Do-Right angels. Many were as corrupt as
the criminals they chased or in cahoots with them (along with being
tied into the most corrupt agents of the FBI and DEA).
Modern
cop shows have followed in the same footsteps, whether the show
be "NYPD Blue," "Law and Order," or "Nash
Bridges." Today, it is not unusual for television to show federal
law enforcement agents as being corrupt or bumbling (or both).
(Unfortunately,
producers of the Big Screen have not followed suit. The popular
movie "The Fugitive" depicts local police as trigger-happy
idiots who are all too anxious to send innocent people to prison,
while one of the heroes is Phillip Gerard, played by Tommy Lee Jones,
who is a U.S. Marshall that finally helps crack the case. Harrison
Ford, who plays the wrongly convicted Dr. Richard Kimble in "Fugitive,"
also stars in "Air Force One," where he plays the President
of the United States as an action hero. A more appropriate name
for that movie is "Air Farce One.")
This
is a far cry from the earlier television series like "FBI:
The Untold Stories" or "The Untouchables" in which
federal agents were seen as brilliant and incorruptible. To generations
like myself who were brought up on the belief that the FBI was nearly
infallible, the conduct of this agency for the last decade is still
hard to fathom. "Vice" helped make the transition to our
modern understanding of federal agencies a little easier.
This
is not to say I liked everything about "Vice." I wish
that its producers had better demonstrated the futility of the War
on Drugs as effectively as it portrayed the corrupt incompetence
of federal law enforcement agents. Perhaps, that will be the next
courageous step that a producer may take. If "Miami Vice"
could take the shine off an FBI badge, perhaps someone in the near
future can unmask this entire corrupt and futile drug war.
June
2, 2001
William L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send
him mail], is assistant professor of economics at North Greenville
College in Tigerville, South Carolina. He is an adjunct scholar
of the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
©
2001 LewRockwell.com
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