
It’s not a flashy show; there are no Boyd Crowders or other memorable villains; and it doesn’t inspire next-morning GIFs, but TNT’s “Southland” has quietly become the best show on TV you’re not watching. Granted, the show reaches 3 million viewers a week — which is more than “Mad Men” and, in fact, even with its more publicized time slot competitors, “Justified” and “White Collar” — but the show’s audience is quiet, like another phenomenal (and now cancelled) TNT show, “Men of a Certain Age.” The show is not widely discussed on the Internet, and there are no running storyline to absorb the attention of critics, but anyone who watches “Southland” swears by it. I don’t think there’s anyone who has given the show an honest shot who doesn’t love.
“Southland” is nothing short of phenomenal. I don’t know what it’s actually like to work as a Los Angeles police officer, but I suspect that “Southland” captures that reality better than any other cop show on television. It’s a slice-of-life, a semi-documentary style glimpse into the day-to-day activities that focuses on the daily grind of several members of the force and the frustrating problems with fighting crime in L.A. It’s not a matter of wiping out crime; it’s a matter of whacking moles, keeping it in check, building relationships, and then suffering the heartbreak.
What it does best — mostly through Regina King’s plotlines — is to humanize not the victims of crimes, but the perpetrators. Murderers are given sympathetic motivations, and the detectives are often asked to uphold the law against their better wishes. Regina King is also the most under-appreciated actress on television. Lucy Liu is also absolutely brilliant this season, in what has to be the meatiest role of her career (Kill Bill, notwithstanding). That, for me, is the biggest downside of CBS’s Sherlock Holmes pilot — it likely means Liu will not be back. The show has also followed Ben McKenzie’s Officer Sherman from naive and earnest rookie cop to a more experienced officer contending with ethical shades of gray. The show’s stand-out, however, may be Michael Cudlitz, an actor who has been around for 20 years that no one really knows. His character, however, is like nothing else on television: A gay cop who’s sexuality is not an issue. The way they’ve handled it over the course of four seasons is nothing short of spectacular.
In short: “Southland” will almost certainly be renewed, according to Variety. If you’re not watching it, find it. It’s not on Netflix (which may be one of the reasons it’s not as talked about as it should be), but you can download entire seasons for less than $10 on Amazon.



What is truly amazing about Southland is that it survived cancellation by NBC (facepalm) and was picked up by TNT with a significantly reduced budget.
And yet it got even better. It’s got heart, Rock!
Is there any difference between NBC Southland and TNT Southland? I enjoyed the first season but don’t get TNT so I haven’t seen anymore of it.
Yes. It’s better now.
It seems pretty generic to me and my time is too valuable to waste on an OK television program. *opens new window googles ‘cats’ settles in*
But it’s not generic, that’s the whole point of this post. In a TV landscape so overcrowded with generic cop shows, finding one that isn’t makes it worth watching in my opinion.
I am highly confident NBC would have screwed up the show by now had they kept it on. Also thanks NBC for dropping it for Leno.
I can only imagine how good this show would be on HBO or Showtime. I don’t want to say it would be a new The Wire, but it would still probably be the best drama that doesn’t involve Dwarves and tavern wench boobs.
Well, D’Angelo Barksdale was in the last episode.
I still can’t believe NBC tried to make this work. I am SO glad TNT decided to snatch it up and keep the show on the air. One of my favorite shows going right now. The entire cast is amazing.
My one small gripe is I feel like a lot of this season, the first person they interview about the murder in Regina King’s plotlines ends up being the murderer.
Its odd that I think Regina King is the best actor on the show but I end up fast-forwarding through her scenes- the detective storylines are just like any other procedural for the most part. The beat / patrol cops is the best part of the show I think.
This show is amazing, when i first saw promos for it I thought it would mainly focus on Ben Mackenzie’s character (who at the time I thought was a total douche since he was on the O.C.). But since I’ve become invested in this program its grown to become my favorite show and I think that Michael Cudlitz’s character is probably the most unique and one of the best acted on T.V. Oh and some of the humor on “Southland” is seriously underrated.
I watch it devotedly on my DVR, since it is my second favorite drama on tv. Maybe if TNT didn’t schedule it against my favorite drama, Justified. What are they thinking? Monday night tv is a wasteland, and Tuesday-Thursday are crazy packed.
….whoa…. hes gay? seriously? what?
Yeah I think it’s come up literally 3 times in the show’s entire run, and even then it was nothing more than an afterthought. But yeah, let’s celebrate Glee for trotting out gay stereotypes!! Because obviously all gay dudes have girly voices and want nothing more than to perform on Broadway. It’s the Gaymerican dream!
That’s what I thought at first, but after thinking about it, yeah, I guess he is gay.
OK, y’all convinced me. Amazon just got my 10 bucks. With my recent purchasing habots (BB S4, Archer, SoA) plus Hulu plus and netflix, it’s start to look like cable plus a DVR might be economic again.
Hear, Hear! I record Justified to watch this.
Shows like Southland and Men of a Certain Age will probably do well in syndication. http://www.facebook.com/fighttosavemenofacertainagefromcancellation.
Love it. Wish TNT could air it uncensored at like 2 a.m. instead of replaying it at midnight.