CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
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The Cast of CSI
Format Crime Drama
Run time 45 Minutes
Creator Anthony E. Zuiker
Starring William Petersen
Marg Helgenberger
Gary Dourdan
George Eads
Jorja Fox
Eric Szmanda
Robert David Hall
Paul Guilfoyle
Wallace Langham
Country USA
Network CBS
Original run October 6, 2000
– present
No. of episodes 116 (to date)

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (commonly referred to as CSI) is a popular CBS television series that trails the investigations of a team of forensic scientists as they unravel the circumstances behind mysterious and unusual deaths in Las Vegas, Nevada. Ranked second in the June 2005 Nielsen Ratings with a viewership of 15 million, the show serves as the backbone of CBS's leading Thursday lineup.

Contents

History

CSI was presented for review to ABC in 1999, only to be dismissed as too confusing for the average viewer. Creator Anthony Zuiker then took the show to CBS, which placed it in its Friday lineup, where it shot to the top of the ratings charts.

After its initial success, the show's time slot was moved to Thursdays in 2000 in an attempt to challenge NBC's Thursday lineup, which boasted poular shows such as Friends, Will & Grace, and ER. CSI maintained its ratings in its new timeslot, and when Friends came to an end in 2004, its ratings strengthened.

In 2003, Spike TV purchased the right to syndicate CSI for a record amount of $1.6 million per episode. The nightly reruns quickly became that network's top-rated show.

CSI is sometimes credited with the resurgence of American crime dramas, although earlier shows like Law & Order had been mainstays for years. In addition to expanding the CSI brand with spinoffs such as CSI: Miami (2002) and CSI: NY(2004), the success of the show has also prompted CBS officials to develop their own raft of new investigative shows: Cold Case and Without a Trace. Other major networks have followed suit with shows such as Crossing Jordan, Law and Order: Criminal Intent, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, and Medical Investigation.

Although the show is set in Las Vegas, the production is actually based in Santa Clarita, California, and most scenes are filmed in or around Santa Clarita. The cast and crew do occasionally travel to Las Vegas to film on location.

In July 2004, CBS briefly fired stars George Eads and Jorja Fox, allegedly over contract disputes. In addition, Eads had reportedly been hours late for work on the first day of filming for the fifth season, and Fox had allegedly failed to submit a letter CBS confirming that she would be on time for shooting. The disputes were resolved in just over a week, and the two were rehired by CBS.

As for the show's broader social impact, it has also been credited with an increase in college applications to forensic science programs.

Main characters

The series' recurring characters include Archie Johnson (Archie Kao), a computer and technical expert; Assistant Coroner David Phillips (David Berman); former dayshift supervisor turned Assistant Director of the Crime Lab Conrad Ecklie (Marc Vann) and lab tech David Hodges (Wallace Langham).

Criticisms

Although real-life criminal science investigators hardly leave the lab other than to conduct field tests and rarely (if ever) interview criminal subjects, CSI is acclaimed for portraying a little-known aspect of police procedures. Without dramatic embellishment in showing the responsibilities of the investigators, the show might not be as great a success. However, real forensic experts have complained about those embellishments. For instance, they have noted that the forensic examinations are unrealistically swift in coming to conclusions with equally fanciful tools. One example is the fictional computer databases the characters use to examine trace evidence like fingerprints against records in seconds, when the actual analysis is a long and meticulous process. That in turn has led to real police detectives making unrealistic demands on the experts.

There are also concerns that such TV shows cause juries to have unrealistic expectations about forensic evidence presented in court. This has come to be known as the "CSI effect" (see External links for further description). Another problem of CSI is not its falsities but its accuracy. Some FBI agents and police detectives have expressed distress at what CSI does to criminals. The more intelligent felons, says a FBI SAC are starting to get more clever with the dawn of forensics shows like CSI. In shootings, more and more often shell casings have been removed from the site of the crime. Stabbings sometimes have no prints, and criminals have just generally found a way to be smarter at what they do.

Style

The show's characteristic gadgetry and occasional use of yet-to-be-invented technology has moved the show nominally into the genre of science fiction and garnered it with a 2004 Saturn Award nomination for best science fiction, fantasy, or horror television series.

The series is known for its unusual camera angles, high-tech gadgets, detailed technical discussion, and graphic portrayal of bullet trajectories, blood spray patterns, organ damage, methods of evidence recovery (e.g. fingerprints from the inside of latex gloves), and crime reconstructions.

Awards

Trivia

External links

See also: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, 1999, 2000, 2004, A Hunger Artist, Academy Award, Alcoholism, American Broadcasting Company