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November 13, 2009

"Wire" conference in Leeds

"The Wire" was a cult hit in the UK - it aired every night at 11 p.m., meaning the series whizzed by in just a few months - but events like this show how much traction it gained: A "Wire" conference in Leeds, featuring two days of presentations by European and American professors on lessons centered around themes from the show.

There's an entire session on Omar:
Session 201- Omar: Ethics, Power and Perfomativity
201-a:"No shame in my game": Examining Omar's Challenge to Systems of Power, Aidan Condron (University of Sussex)
201-b: “A man gotta live what he knows, right?”: Omar and ‘Performativity, Kerstin Mueller
201-c: A Man Must Have a Code: The Masculine Ethics of Snitching and Not-snitching, Thomas Ugelvik (University of Oslo)
201-d: Omar Little: An Obituary, Juliet Brown & Nilam McGrath (University of Leeds)

Posted by Justin Fenton at 11:35 AM | | Comments (3)
Categories: Justin Fenton
        

Comments

I really think that Baltimore could generate some much needed revenue by sending the police and penitent corner boys on speaking tours. There could be whole tourist packages - attend real Baltimore police meetings, drive through authenticaly dangerous neighborhoods, get a tour of Central Booking... Throw in a baseball game and a trip to the Science Center, and you've got a real nice five day package. If the world is fascinated by the tragedy of our city, why not take their money and put it to good. With luck, one day Baltimore could have as much to do with street crime as Vegas does the mob, and be just as valid a tourist attraction.

I feel compelled to add that I wasn't just being flip in my previous comment. If people really would come here to see "The Wire" first hand, or would attend a talk given by the people who live in that world everyday they would see what most of in Baltimore know - there are real people living in a world of suffering. They may not always do the right thing, but it's important to remember that they have hopes and fears and baggage and dreams just as anyone does. I'm not suggesting we make the city into a side show, but that we put real faces the story. And if it drums up some money for schools and treatment centers, so much the better.

I don't know what to make of this. It sounds either like an interesting idea or a joke from an early Woody Allen movie.

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About 'Crime: A Tale of Two Cities'
When "The Wire" gained popularity in Great Britain, we were contacted by a London-based journalist who proposed a job swap. Mark Hughes, a crime reporter with The Independent, a national newspaper in the United Kingdom, wanted to come to Baltimore to see if the city’s police officers, drug dealers, prosecutors and politicians bore any resemblance to those on show. We agreed to complete the exchange by sending our police reporter, Justin Fenton, to London to compare crime trends. We’ll publish some of their work in the print edition of The Sun, and more observations will be available here.

Local media coverage
• 105.7-FM The Fan: The Ed Norris Show
• WBFF Fox45: London Reporter Greeted with Crime - John Rydell
• WAMU 88.5-FM: "The Wire" Inspires Trans-Atlantic Reporter Exchange



An American in London
Justin Fenton has covered crime for the Baltimore Sun for five years, in suburban counties and Baltimore City. His award-winning work has included coverage of the Amish schoolhouse slayings in Lancaster, Penn.; a 16-year-old boy who executed his parents and two brothers in their sleep; a three-part series about the odyssey of a female serial con artist; and a small town’s crippling baseball stadium deal with a hometown athlete.

Justin's articles from The Baltimore Sun
• Crime and race: A different world (November 27)
• Britons reject likening crime levels to Baltimore's (December 7)

A Brit in Baltimore
Mark Hughes is the crime correspondent for The Independent newspaper in Britain, a national daily based in London. He has covered the goings on at Scotland Yard, and further afield, since 2008. Previous to that he was the paper’s north of England reporter, working from Manchester. He joined The Independent in 2007 after three years working on a regional newspaper in Carlisle.

Mark's articles from The Independent
• Just minutes after I arrived, I was at the scene of a shooting ... (November 7)
• 189 homicides this year – this is The Wire, only real (November 9)
• The trials of 'Baltimore's Boris' (November 10)
• 'Wire' star joins real fight against crime (November 11)
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