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Homicide: Life on the Street is a police procedural television series that began airing on the NBC network immediately after Super Bowl XXVII on January 31, 1993, before moving to Wednesday evenings for the remainder of the first season. The show temporarily replaced L.A. Law on Thursday evenings at 10:00 p.m. ET for its
Anyone with information about this homicide is asked to contact Detective Matthew Salmon at 517-483-6855, the Lansing Police Department at 517-483-4600, ext. 5, Crime Stoppers at 517-483-7867, or ...
The fourth season of Homicide: Life on the Street aired in the United States on the NBC television network from October 20, 1995 to May 17, 1996 and contained 22 episodes. The fourth season marked the debut of two characters: Detective Mike Kellerman (portrayed by Reed Diamond ), who transfers from Arson to Homicide; and J. H. Brodie (portrayed ...
During the sixth season, NBC considered canceling the show in the face of consistently low ratings, but a number of shocks at NBC increased Homicide's value. Among those factors were the loss of the popular series Seinfeld and the $850 million deal needed to keep ER from leaving the network. As a result, the network approved a 22-episode ...
3rd episode of the 2nd season of Homicide: Life on the Street "Black and Blue" Homicide: Life on the Street episode Episode no. Season 2 Episode 3 Directed by Chris Menaul Story by Tom Fontana Teleplay by James Yoshimura Cinematography by Jean de Segonzac Production code 202 Original air date January 20, 1994 (1994-01-20) Guest appearances Kyf Brewer as Ryan Joseph S. Eubanks as Harris Michael ...
Zerick's autopsy report said that in addition to his stab wounds, he suffered scrapes to his head and neck and a bruise to his left shin. Contact Tim Hrenchir at threnchir@gannett.com or 785-213-5934.
Homicide: Life on the Street — the most sought-after, non-streaming show in a July 2023 TVLine poll, and the recipient of 17 Emmy nominations and four wins during its 1993-1999 run on NBC — is ...
The episode outperformed Homicide's time-slot competitor, CBS's Nash Bridges, by about 588,000 households, although ABC's 20/20 beat both shows with 11.37 million households. [18] The second and third episodes of "Blood Ties", however, finished behind both shows each week.