Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[78] Miami Vice ' s season ratings slipped from #9 in Season 2 down to #27 by the end of Season 3. [79] Before leaving the series to work on his new television series, Crime Story, [80] Michael Mann handed the role of executive producer to future Law & Order creator Dick Wolf [81] prior to the third season (1986–1987). [80]
When the first season of Miami Vice became a "breakthrough hit", [19] the "smooth and swinging" [24] character of Tubbs became a style icon—Bloomingdale's reported "noticeable" rises in the sales of blazers and jackets; whilst Kenneth Cole brought out "Crockett" and "Tubbs" shoes, and Macy's opened a "Miami Vice" young men's section [19] The ...
The Miami Vice intertitle (color scheme as per season three) The following is an episode list for the 1980s American undercover cop television series Miami Vice. In the United States, the show was broadcast on NBC. The first episode of the series premiered on September 16, 1984, with the series concluding on June 28, 1989, after five seasons.
Philip Michael Thomas (born May 26, 1949) is a retired American actor and musician, best known for his role as detective Ricardo Tubbs on the hit 1980s TV series Miami Vice. His first notable roles were in Coonskin (1975) and opposite Irene Cara in the 1976 film Sparkle .
During its five-season run on NBC, the series had immortalized Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in the TV Cop Hall of Fame as super-stylish undercover officers James "Sonny" Crockett and ...
4th episode of the 2nd season of Miami Vice " Out Where the Buses Don't Run " Miami Vice episode Episode no. Season 2 Episode 4 Directed by Jim Johnston Story by Joel Surnow Douglas Lloyd McIntosh Teleplay by Douglas Lloyd McIntosh John Mankiewicz Original air date October 18, 1985 (1985-10-18) Guest appearances Bruce McGill as Hank Weldon David Strathairn as Marty Lang Little Richard as ...
Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said the abolition of the death penalty was "more than a legal reform; it is a statement of our commitment to justice and humanity".
He’s one of the first Miami-Dade defendants to fall under a new state law in which only an 8-4 jury vote is needed to be sentenced to death, as opposed to a unanimous verdict.