(Quietly banging head into desk) Okay, okay, okay…so recall
how made a blog on March 10th about how Jim Gordon was bad at his job
because his ethical choices have really, really, really sucked. I almost wish I did v-logs just so you could
actually see how agitated I am at what I saw on last week’s Gotham.
Seriously, we’re talking hands shaking I am so mad at this
show right now.
So, I love the Penguin subplot, that was very well done and
I frankly wish Reubens had been with the show longer, but take what you can
get.
Bullock’s big plan to help Gordon clear his name is to have
him escape Blackgate under the ruse that he was killed by a fellow inmate, and
is aided by Carmine Falcone.
That’s your plan.
That is the absolute best you can come up with? “Carmine still has the resources to…” do a
prison break? Yes, actually that I
believe, but you’d think that it would make more sense for Carmine to come out
of the shadows, use a judge he had in a back pocket to overturn the conviction
and have Gordon freed that way. Sure he
wouldn’t be a GCPD detective anymore, but he could work to clear his name
without having to hide from literally the entire city.
But he faked his death, they won’t be looking for him! I
hear you saying it, and here’s the problem with that. The warden is still alive. He saw, physically saw Jim Gordon alive and
escaping and was knocked out. Unless
that guard proceeded to pummel the warden to death after Gordon fled, there’s a
very credible witness to tell the police that Jim Gordon is a fugitive in the
wind and decidedly not dead, which makes the whole “free to clear your name”
thing a lot more complicated.
So let’s look at the absolute best case scenario. Jim Gordon clears his name. He can’t legally be reinstated into the GCPD,
or join any other law enforcement agency.
While he may have been sent to prison under false pretenses, he still
knowingly and willingly escaped of his own accord and that’s still a
crime. Will they throw him behind bars
for it? Eh maybe not, but he’s still
guilty of it. With that on his record,
the closest thing he can do to law enforcement might be as a life guard at the
public pool.
The major issue I’m having is that a police procedural show,
even one based on a comic book, should have some foundation in actual law
enforcement practices.
No comments:
Post a Comment