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The Cops is a British television police procedural drama series created by Jimmy Gardner, Robert Jones, and Anita J. Pandolfo, first broadcast on BBC Two on 19 October 1998. [1] Produced by World Productions , the series follows the lives of one shift of uniform officers based at Christie Road Police Station in the fictional town of Stanton ...
The show initially aired on Fox from March 11, 1989 to May 4, 2013 for 15 seasons and 752 total episodes. It is one of the longest-running television programs in the United States and, as of May 2011, the longest-running show on the network, following the cancellation of America's Most Wanted after 23 years.
May 3, 1976 () Joe Forrester is an American crime/drama television series, starring Lloyd Bridges as a uniformed foot patrol officer in a run-down neighborhood of Los Angeles . Patricia Crowley co-starred as Georgia Cameron, Joe's romantic interest.
a massive armored car, the TU-89 355 Ladybird used in episode 1 and 2 of Part I by a hired right-wing mercenary and his henchmen aiming for a national coup d'etat and revenge against Daimon an illegally-modified Mercury Cougar used by bank robbers in episode 45 of Part I
During the series' third season, a two-part episode (titled "S.W.A.T.") aired on February 17, 1975 and served as the pilot for the spin-off series S.W.A.T. The SWAT two-part episode only aired on ABC in 1975 and was subsequently never part of the syndicated TV rerun package as Spelling-Goldberg decided it might confuse viewers as to which TV ...
Producers from the reality-TV show “Cops” film at the scene of an incident July 16, 2024 in Pierce County after Sheriff’s Department deputies pursued and detained a suspect.
The series spun off from The Streets of San Francisco, although the episode which introduced the character ("Superstar") had its first airing on March 4, 1976, [2] after the spinoff premiered. It was screened in Britain on BBC1 in the summer of 1976 (curiously, The Streets of San Francisco was an ITV import).
In the 1990s and early 2000s, two of the most popular American television programs portraying the NYPD were NYPD Blue and Law & Order. [1] Both programs were notable for deliberately blurring fiction and reality: NYPD Blue was filmed using a shaky camera "docu-drama" style, while Law & Order promoted the fact that it engaged with issues "ripped ...