New York and Miami

Barrett 2022-01-06 08:01:58

(Please see: Science Man Magazine: http://www.sciam.com.tw/circus/circusshow.asp?FDocNo=694&CL=25
Criminals may also feel the CSI boom, and maybe even take notes. Fort Worth, Texas Ernest, a forensic gun expert in China, said: “What I have heard is that CSI has received a lot of attention in prisons. For some people, prisons are almost crime schools. They see a certain episode and say:” Ah, they caught me because of this. Well, I won't make the same mistake again."")

Miami and New York.
Although I like Miami’s sunny beaches, I still think the gray and black New York CSI looks better.

In the NY version of the case, two cases are cross-checked in each episode. There are many scientific tools for analysis. DNA and other evidence can be obtained all day long. The criminals will hardly be injured and bleed at the scene, and only the dead are injured.

So every time we have to find clues from the subtle stubs. Evidence verdict.
Although unreasonable, and some dead states are too beautiful, they are still (slightly) closer to reality.
The people who committed the crimes have all kinds of backgrounds, and they perform well in the cultural combination of the melting pot.
In addition, many people have good descriptions and expressions of getting along with each other, and the expressions of actors are good.

In comparison, the Miami series had intermittent scores for a long time to finish watching.
The music is not as good as New York (the later episodes are better) is one, the actors are not as good as the New York series is the second, and the LAPD seems to be busier than NYPD. The case was so strange that it was too far away. Half true and half false, and don't just exaggerate. (The next few episodes seem to be better. I guess the director and screenwriter have reviewed and improved.)

Of course, the incident is probably too small in Miami, regardless of the crime scene evidence team, so the plot is either that the retired FBI was killed or the shark. Eating people, throwing private jets, and looking for evidence by the river where crocodiles live are all national news, but the plot is not fascinating, and it is not like Japanese TV dramas, although they are plain and unremarkable.

Every episode of CSI series will sprinkle a lot of blood, but instead of sprinkling dog blood, it means that it is made into human blood.
When I was eating, my younger brother would not be able to eat, but I looked carefully.

It is an occupational disease.
So when watching this kind of album, I even sometimes watch those bloody special effects scenes in reverse and freeze frame several times. You know, some makeup artists know that most people have always seen this kind of picture, so their skills are sloppy.

Besides, the forensic doctors on both sides are black, but the black forensic doctor in New York is my favorite in the play.
I feel that it is more rare for people of color to be respected in places where racial and class discrimination is serious. There are many Chinese friends who grew up in those places. I know that kind of difficulty.

The New York and Miami versions will have different shooting features.
I like the lifestyle of the West Bund, but I like the performance of the CSI East Bund.

Whether it is the United States or Canada, the East Coast and the West Coast are completely different, and the climate is the most fundamental and greatest influence.
With the basic difference in climate, the difference in urban development began.
The climate affects the character of the city, the character of the city affects the form of residence, and the form of residence affects all the lives of residents.

We should look more at the sky, feel the temperature, feel the dry humidity in the air, and feel the symbiosis between our body and nature.
(Uh? Is this the summary of the crime scene investigation? It's really messy.)

http://sweetobject.com/2006/04/12/272

View more about CSI: NY reviews

Extended Reading

CSI: NY quotes

  • Det. Mac Taylor: You will answer to this crime.

  • Det. Stella Bonasera: That's it? No butler?

    Det. Don Flack: No.

    Det. Stella Bonasera: Too bad. I thought we could wrap this one up quick.

    Det. Don Flack: What?

    Det. Stella Bonasera: Mansion like this, it's always the butler. Didn't you ever play Clue?

    Det. Don Flack: I was a Monopoly guy.

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