@@Centrinario No it wasn’t lmao, in season 3 when Dutch suspects him of the money train robbery and tells Aceveda he literally tells him he’s back on his shit list and starts being a dick to him again, it was clearly malicious.
1:48 is the best part. You can see Vic instantly realizes Dutch is onto something while the underlings are slow on the pickup. Vic always knew Dutch was a threat
@@edwardfetner2513Tsung Szu said respect your enemies ability. Whilst he actively hated Dutch (no one is questioning that) Vic at no point ever doubted his ability as a detective
The Strike Team bullied and made fun of Dutch throughout the entire series, but this was the one moment when they all realized they had to stand up for once and give him all the respect he deserved.
There were a couple other times like when he was investigating the money train they knew he was a good detective and wouldn’t just chalk it up to gangland violence that he’d keep pushing
@@willn8664what Vic did to Terry is by no means his default. Considering Lem & Ronnie were never even told about it, Vic might be corrupt, but he doesn't take killing a cop lightly.
This was one of the greatest episodes, everyone is cheering for Dutch, and he walks out, goes to his car and breaks down. What an amazing moment of vulnerability and great acting
Dutch is so amazing, I love seeing him legitimately gain respect from the Barn overtime, it was such a great moment in season 3 when Vic acknowledged him as a threat considering how he starts and this scene was probably the biggest stepping stone towards that.
A nice touch in this scene is how while everyone else is roasting Dutch, Vic begins watching with interest. Despite their differences, Vic always respected him professionally.
Yeah, it's the key part of the episode. Dutch has to give so much of himself, to expose himself to humiliation and ridicule just to get this guy to play along with the killer's conceit and hubris so he can buy time to do his detective work. .
@@frodobaggins9752 I think it was that all of the killer's critiques actually cut Dutch to his core, but he kept it together long enough to get the confession. When he got in his car, he was able to release everything he felt in the interrogation.
@@frodobaggins9752 No, what happened was the killer's efforts to hurt Dutch worked. The killer analyzed him and ripped him apart for fun (that's what Dutch meant by "showing off"). The thing is, all the stuff the killer said about Dutch was true. It hurt him in his soul. He just pretended it rolled off him the whole time. When he was finally alone, he cracked and showed how he really felt.
Guy playing the serial killer did a really good job here. As soon as Dutch mentions his aunt's house, his eyesight falters towards the floor, yet before he has no problem making unbroken eye contact with the detectives because he thinks they got nothing on him. Really good scene.
Michael Kelly. He's great in everything he does. House Of Cards especially. One of those guys that probably will never be a lead, but maybe, just maybe...
Dutch and Vic was mostly adversarial during the whole series. Truth is, they would've made the best partnership ever due to Vic's street knowledge, and Dutch's prolific skills. Both had natural instincts. And both had dark sides.
Dutch’s “dark side” isn’t anything at all compared to Vic’s. Yeah he strangled a cat (the one that was constantly keeping him up at night and would’ve been killed anyway by animal control) but he admitted he felt nothing when talking to a serial killer that he couldn’t relate to. That’s when the second serial killer would realize that he’d never know how to help him because he knew he never had it in him or a “dark side” to begin with. He walked the edge from planting evidence or killing, but he never took the plunge like the strike team did or aceveda.
This was such a good show. When this came out, we didn't have many dramas like this. HBO dramas were just starting out. This may seem normal now, but it wasn't then.
Were JUST starting out? As someone said already, Sopranos was going strong by then. And of course The Wire. And people even forgot Oz from HBO which premiered in 98, or 97.
@@adrianmarquez8345 you’re focusing on semantics The point is that serious dramas like this were a pretty new thing - and especially outside of premium cable
2:30 look at Lem specifically. Vic by this point has fully figured out what Dutch is doing. Shane doesn’t get it until the very end. Lem however, Lem arrives at the questioning phase pretty much right before this moment. He stops looking at the interrogation as mocking Dutch and truly sees that Dutch is on to something. He’s studying to see what happens to get better at his job. Lem was amazing
I love Vic in this scene. For as much as he gives Dutch shit, he knows Dutch isn't stupid. While everyone else was treating this like a joke, Vic was following along to see where this train of thought ended
The exchange of looks after 2:20 puts this almost better than the wire in terms of writing, cinematography, and acting. That’s the best thing about this show, the characters can say so much without talking at all.
He did this and a bad guy on CSI or Law and Order. Then, he became the guy for any political consultant or CIA role. He absolutely shined in Jack Ryan.
"Here, let me draw you a picture, Shaun." The way he says it so casually, so devoid of any ego. The moment hits so hard not because Dutch was trying for a one-liner, but simply doing his job. As was made excruciatingly clear in the early parts of the interrogation, Dutch does not have the "rizz" or "swagger" God gave a gopher. *But he is good at his job.* The fact this scene started with everyone grabbing popcorn to watch Dutch sh*t the bed, and ended with them on the edge of their seats while he stole the smile right off this creep's face; was beautiful. Followed by Dutch crying in his car after work. He solved the case, but it cut him to the core.
They finally stopped putting dog crap into his desk after this. How his colleagues openly cheered for the perp to eat Dutch for lunch even after so many tries is beyond all of us! 17-22 bodies later all of them finally took their best detective seriously.
It really is. The switch from them all laughing at Dutch to realising the gravity of the situation is just amazing and that little moment caps it off perfectly. One of the best episodes of any television show I have ever seen.
@@khalidhussein5346 I absolutely love how the writers of this show didn't give a shit about making people uncomfortable when watching this show. It's what makes it so special, I can rewatch this show twenty thousand times and never get tired of it.
@@daveschnee9249 basically to understand the thrill of the kill.. being he had dedicated his career to understanding the psychology of killers. And maybe in his own twisted way.. a form of being as ruthless as many of those he worked with
@@daveschnee9249 A serial killer had described to Dutch how “amazing” he felt when he killed. I think Dutch wanted to see if he could experience the same thing. Dutch probably feels like he often has more in common with these guys than most the police he associates with. He is socially awkward, doesn’t do well with females, lives alone, thinks he is smarter than most people. He probably wanted to know if he had the potential to be a serial killer. Also he probably thought it might help him understand their mind set which might help him catch them. However, if he would have enjoyed it, might this have set him down the same path?
A murder out of curiosity is even worse than a murder from spontaneous reasons. I understand what the writers were trying to do but it doesnt make sense.
The Shield was fantastic! It is still the only show that made my heart race during certain scenes (for anticipation, but also fear for the participants). Of course I knew everyone was acting, but the realism was intense and believable. I'm thinking (for example) of the scene when Capt. Acevedo has his gun taken from him and is assaulted. It always played like a documentary, but with excellent acting, camera work, and writing. And CCH Pounder and Glenn Close were phenomenal!
This is my favoritte moment on the show. You can tell this took a lot of out Dutch, so when he see him in his car crying you can completely understand his reaction
Imagine just confessing to multiple murders and ruining your life. And as soon as the detective walks out of the room you hear.... Thunderous applause and cheering.
This was by far my favorite episode of the Shield. The whole thing. Hearing Dani complain about the guy jacking off in the alley. Recognizing this guy was reliving the experience.
I heard the "Barn" set (the Farmington police station) was dismantled on Sony studios' lot after the series ended in order to build something for Grey's Anatomy. What a sick joke.
Oh shit! The guy from House of Cards and The Penguin got his start in The Shield?! There’s a LOT of underrated TV actors in this show. Anthony Anderson’s performance still gives me chills. And he’s a comedy guy.
He's always great at portraying arrogant yet intelligent characters who know how smarter they are than everyone else. His performance as Tyler Brennan in Burn Notice made him one of the best villains of the show, as well as one of the most unintentionally funny too.
"Oh you had the chance to leave earlier. Instead you chose to stick around and show off." For almost the entire episode, I was sure where this story was going--Shawn from Rockford will get overconfident and drop the One Detail that gives him away, just like a thousand other cop dramas--and I was totally wrong. Dutch knew that as long as he stayed there and let Shawn psychologically beat him up, Shawn would stay too and the other cops would get the evidence he needed. This story (and Dutch's final moment in the car) and everything else that happened in this episode, this is when The Shield went from being something pretty good to the greatest thing on television, and it stayed that way to the end.
@@AllRequired I think her slow decline could have been something that could have been built into a new spinoff show -- in fact, perhaps even a driving factor for Wyms to "finish off as many open cases as she can" before retirement.
I heard, how much everyone loves it! I just finished rewatching Justified for my 3rd time. I'm a huge Walton Goggins fan! The Shield is next on my list!
He didn’t lie, he was stalling so that they could search the aunts house. Not shown in this clip, but he spends a good portion of the hour long episode playing dumb and keeping the guy tee off on him to get the guy to stay put while they get the warrants and conduct the search. It’s further set up throughout season 1 by the show making him seem a bit pathetic. This is the end of the episode and the payoff.
@@Merknilash There's more than enough operatives that can get that shit done without the PR nightmare he's going to cause. No one needs him, no one wants him, and no one is going to miss him.
One minute they are making fun of him in being really disrespectful,then soon as he got a confession out of a serial killer they applaud him,phony mfs.
I loved the show but this scene always felt a little forced. He didn’t really break this guy, they just got a search warrant and found bodies on his property. Literally any cop could’ve done that
Respectfully, I feel like you're missing the point. They steered him to admitting the exact number of murders through steering their verbals directly to him
What??!? That's not the gift. The gift is that 1. Dutch is initially suspicious of the guy jerking off in the alley 2. Perceptive enough to sense that something is not right when he visits him 3. Willing to accept a humiliating level of abuse in order to keep him thinking he has power and control while he has the house searched. By the time Shawn understands he doesnt have as much control as he thought, he has none at all. Most police would not ever get to the point where they are looking at this guy let alone be an a position to pin 22 murders on him
He picked the guy out of almost nothing from pure instinct bro to even start the process off of the weirdo jerking it in public alone!, thats the definition of credit right there!.
The point is that the guy can't resist the air of vulnerability that Dutch gives off which is what makes him stay and why the judge signs the search warrant. Because the guy stays for questioning when he doesn't have to, it looks guilty.
"If you're so special how come a lowly civil servant like me just caught you." -greatest line
Yo gotta be shitting me
@@Mrgreen8886 Jesus Christ!
Better than "I'm a different kind of cop."
Dutch really was so underrated in the series when it came to his detective work.
Show Is the GOAT of TV shows!!!
Dutch was the best detective on this show hands down
This was the one time Vic really respected Dutch
Vic always respected Dutch that's why he tried to emasculated him because he knew how good he was
This and another time in season 4, where Dutch hit him in a face and called him out. Later Vic invited him for drinks to celebrate in the finale.
Dutch? He couldn't catch a thief who stole his squad car with him in it.
He always respected Dutch. The constant ribbing is a sign of respect.
@@Centrinario No it wasn’t lmao, in season 3 when Dutch suspects him of the money train robbery and tells Aceveda he literally tells him he’s back on his shit list and starts being a dick to him again, it was clearly malicious.
vic was smiling when dutch finally got him to confess. he was proud and admired him
1:48 is the best part. You can see Vic instantly realizes Dutch is onto something while the underlings are slow on the pickup. Vic always knew Dutch was a threat
Dutch was able to crack cases by being an actual detective while Vic relied on brute force.
@@edwardfetner2513Tsung Szu said respect your enemies ability. Whilst he actively hated Dutch (no one is questioning that) Vic at no point ever doubted his ability as a detective
@joemckim1183 Vic was the smartest in the room, stayed a step ahead of everyone else right till the end. Got his immunity, superbly.
@@edwardfetner2513 Vic may have been a macho thug on the take but he was very smart.
The Strike Team bullied and made fun of Dutch throughout the entire series, but this was the one moment when they all realized they had to stand up for once and give him all the respect he deserved.
There were a couple other times like when he was investigating the money train they knew he was a good detective and wouldn’t just chalk it up to gangland violence that he’d keep pushing
Indeed. This was likely the moment where Vic realized that Dutch (along with Claudette) were true threats to his illicit operations.
@@dannydinosaur73 They stopped the meaner stuff like dog crap in his desk after this one, I think. Yeah, they generally treated him as such anyway.
@@debestcanadian Vic still had enough respect for Dutch and Claudette not to eliminate them like they did with Terry.
@@willn8664what Vic did to Terry is by no means his default. Considering Lem & Ronnie were never even told about it, Vic might be corrupt, but he doesn't take killing a cop lightly.
This was one of the greatest episodes, everyone is cheering for Dutch, and he walks out, goes to his car and breaks down. What an amazing moment of vulnerability and great acting
That and in the Miracle Joe scene.
Dutch is so amazing, I love seeing him legitimately gain respect from the Barn overtime, it was such a great moment in season 3 when Vic acknowledged him as a threat considering how he starts and this scene was probably the biggest stepping stone towards that.
A nice touch in this scene is how while everyone else is roasting Dutch, Vic begins watching with interest. Despite their differences, Vic always respected him professionally.
Always remembered this scene. Dutch getting the bad guy and getting the respect he deserved. Everyone pats him on the back but Vick shakes his hand
Misses the part of Dutch breaking down and crying
Yeah, it's the key part of the episode. Dutch has to give so much of himself, to expose himself to humiliation and ridicule just to get this guy to play along with the killer's conceit and hubris so he can buy time to do his detective work. .
@@yamabushi170 I thought it was more out of sympathy for the victims given he just had a moment of glory but that's a good take.
@@frodobaggins9752 T sick là
@@frodobaggins9752 I think it was that all of the killer's critiques actually cut Dutch to his core, but he kept it together long enough to get the confession. When he got in his car, he was able to release everything he felt in the interrogation.
@@frodobaggins9752 No, what happened was the killer's efforts to hurt Dutch worked. The killer analyzed him and ripped him apart for fun (that's what Dutch meant by "showing off"). The thing is, all the stuff the killer said about Dutch was true. It hurt him in his soul.
He just pretended it rolled off him the whole time. When he was finally alone, he cracked and showed how he really felt.
Guy playing the serial killer did a really good job here. As soon as Dutch mentions his aunt's house, his eyesight falters towards the floor, yet before he has no problem making unbroken eye contact with the detectives because he thinks they got nothing on him. Really good scene.
He was good in Generation Kill ( an HBO show that nobody seen, about the invasion of iraq,its super realistic) and he's good as doug on House of cards
He was also in the Sopranos, albeit a secondary role.
@@tobe1207 such a dope series
@@jasonkeidel2553 He was Agent Harris' partner when he was investigating terrorists, I knew I saw him somewhere else before.
Michael Kelly. He's great in everything he does. House Of Cards especially. One of those guys that probably will never be a lead, but maybe, just maybe...
I just love how he immediately made Lem and Shane eat crow
Dutch and Vic was mostly adversarial during the whole series. Truth is, they would've made the best partnership ever due to Vic's street knowledge, and Dutch's prolific skills. Both had natural instincts. And both had dark sides.
Dutch’s “dark side” isn’t anything at all compared to Vic’s. Yeah he strangled a cat (the one that was constantly keeping him up at night and would’ve been killed anyway by animal control) but he admitted he felt nothing when talking to a serial killer that he couldn’t relate to. That’s when the second serial killer would realize that he’d never know how to help him because he knew he never had it in him or a “dark side” to begin with.
He walked the edge from planting evidence or killing, but he never took the plunge like the strike team did or aceveda.
It was here that Vic started to realize that not only was Claudette formidable and not worth tangling with, but also Dutch.
This was such a good show.
When this came out, we didn't have many dramas like this. HBO dramas were just starting out.
This may seem normal now, but it wasn't then.
The Sopranos had been on since 1999 The Wire was next and then a month later The Shield came on
Were JUST starting out? As someone said already, Sopranos was going strong by then. And of course The Wire. And people even forgot Oz from HBO which premiered in 98, or 97.
@@adrianmarquez8345 you’re focusing on semantics
The point is that serious dramas like this were a pretty new thing - and especially outside of premium cable
@@kdizzle901 It would have been on sooner if FX hadn't been fighting with LAPD over naming the show 'Rampart'.
Yes, I agree. This show was too good.
Dutch over time has become my favorite character in the show.
2:30 look at Lem specifically. Vic by this point has fully figured out what Dutch is doing. Shane doesn’t get it until the very end. Lem however, Lem arrives at the questioning phase pretty much right before this moment. He stops looking at the interrogation as mocking Dutch and truly sees that Dutch is on to something. He’s studying to see what happens to get better at his job. Lem was amazing
Vic Mackey's countenance and expressions in reaction to the rest of Strike Team is such an interesting, understated part of this scene.
End of the episode is the best part. The suspect did get to him, but he held it together as long as he needed to
Jay Karns deserved an Emmy for this
I love Vic in this scene. For as much as he gives Dutch shit, he knows Dutch isn't stupid. While everyone else was treating this like a joke, Vic was following along to see where this train of thought ended
The exchange of looks after 2:20 puts this almost better than the wire in terms of writing, cinematography, and acting. That’s the best thing about this show, the characters can say so much without talking at all.
1:48 Shane still thinks Dutch is getting worked but Vic sees that he’s not.
This show had so many layers.
I love when he goes “SEVENTEEN!” And they cut to Lem uncomfortably move in his chair lmao
Michael Kelly was such an underrated actor back then too.
He got old fast if you watch him in The Penguin now. Unless they made him look older via makeup
@@williamgiesen4910it's mostly makeup. He still looks like this save some wrinkles.
He did this and a bad guy on CSI or Law and Order. Then, he became the guy for any political consultant or CIA role. He absolutely shined in Jack Ryan.
@@williamgiesen4910 Losing one's hair ages a person up real quick and he was in his early to mid 30s here. This show is 20+ years old.
"Here, let me draw you a picture, Shaun."
The way he says it so casually, so devoid of any ego. The moment hits so hard not because Dutch was trying for a one-liner, but simply doing his job. As was made excruciatingly clear in the early parts of the interrogation, Dutch does not have the "rizz" or "swagger" God gave a gopher. *But he is good at his job.* The fact this scene started with everyone grabbing popcorn to watch Dutch sh*t the bed, and ended with them on the edge of their seats while he stole the smile right off this creep's face; was beautiful.
Followed by Dutch crying in his car after work. He solved the case, but it cut him to the core.
They finally stopped putting dog crap into his desk after this. How his colleagues openly cheered for the perp to eat Dutch for lunch even after so many tries is beyond all of us!
17-22 bodies later all of them finally took their best detective seriously.
@@rlouie05also love the fact that Dutch made the guy's body count (literally) just another symptom of "Whiny Loser Wants to Be Special" Syndrome.
That is on the list of my favorite scenes on the shield.
This episode was ONE OF THE BEST.
Shane's "Jesus Christ" at 3:17 is so great
It really is. The switch from them all laughing at Dutch to realising the gravity of the situation is just amazing and that little moment caps it off perfectly. One of the best episodes of any television show I have ever seen.
The Strike Team will never underestimate Dutch after this moment.
@@khalidhussein5346 I absolutely love how the writers of this show didn't give a shit about making people uncomfortable when watching this show. It's what makes it so special, I can rewatch this show twenty thousand times and never get tired of it.
BEST show in history @@WaLdo5940
Dutch was hungry, like the wolf...
😂😂😂😂😂😂
😅😅😂
Go get your fkn shinebox
😂😂
Dutch strangling the cat os the most brutal murder in the whole series
Definitely self defense
Why did he do that again? It's been years I watched this show
@@daveschnee9249 basically to understand the thrill of the kill.. being he had dedicated his career to understanding the psychology of killers. And maybe in his own twisted way.. a form of being as ruthless as many of those he worked with
@@daveschnee9249 A serial killer had described to Dutch how “amazing” he felt when he killed. I think Dutch wanted to see if he could experience the same thing.
Dutch probably feels like he often has more in common with these guys than most the police he associates with. He is socially awkward, doesn’t do well with females, lives alone, thinks he is smarter than most people. He probably wanted to know if he had the potential to be a serial killer. Also he probably thought it might help him understand their mind set which might help him catch them. However, if he would have enjoyed it, might this have set him down the same path?
A murder out of curiosity is even worse than a murder from spontaneous reasons. I understand what the writers were trying to do but it doesnt make sense.
Yo he writes his R’s like Billy Madison writes his Z’s😂
I’d love to see him try to write Rizzuto in perfect cursive 😂😂😂😂😂
How good was this show my lord
Just an absolute masterpiece. PERFECTION.
The Shield was fantastic! It is still the only show that made my heart race during certain scenes (for anticipation, but also fear for the participants). Of course I knew everyone was acting, but the realism was intense and believable. I'm thinking (for example) of the scene when Capt. Acevedo has his gun taken from him and is assaulted.
It always played like a documentary, but with excellent acting, camera work, and writing. And CCH Pounder and Glenn Close were phenomenal!
One of my favorite episodes of the series, sooo good.
Jay Karnes is one of the most underrated actors of all time. He should be talked about a lot more.
This is my favoritte moment on the show. You can tell this took a lot of out Dutch, so when he see him in his car crying you can completely understand his reaction
Imagine just confessing to multiple murders and ruining your life. And as soon as the detective walks out of the room you hear.... Thunderous applause and cheering.
Awesome series.....Definitely one of a kind.
This was by far my favorite episode of the Shield. The whole thing. Hearing Dani complain about the guy jacking off in the alley. Recognizing this guy was reliving the experience.
God dammit Dutch! What other errands do you have us running for the DA??!!
I heard the "Barn" set (the Farmington police station) was dismantled on Sony studios' lot after the series ended in order to build something for Grey's Anatomy. What a sick joke.
First time I saw Michael Kelly.
Really like his work - that short part in Law abiding citizen the longer i Lioness and soo much more 🙂
Dutch boy ❤
Such a great character
Oh shit! The guy from House of Cards and The Penguin got his start in The Shield?! There’s a LOT of underrated TV actors in this show. Anthony Anderson’s performance still gives me chills. And he’s a comedy guy.
He also on Lioness on Paramount plus.
This show was so good. You can't do this anymore
You don't need to. Same idea behind Blazing Saddles.
As much as Dutch hated him you can see he was happy to get the respect of a great cop like Vic,
@justicemiller7192Vic got results.
1:48. I feel like Vic is like…”Maybe Dutch is onto something”
I love Dutch
Brilliant acting by Jay Karnes
The Show is The GOAT to me
This was the scene where I'm like FUC# IS this the greatest TV show off all time!!!😊
Shane calling him Sherlock Holmes cracks me up
This guy was in the Sopranos and most people don’t even realize lmao
Noone ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public
@ very good
@@kindaepicngl1671
Harris: 😐🤢🤮
Its disappointing Jay Karnes hasn't had a better career
He's always great at portraying arrogant yet intelligent characters who know how smarter they are than everyone else. His performance as Tyler Brennan in Burn Notice made him one of the best villains of the show, as well as one of the most unintentionally funny too.
@@madgavin7568 it sucks Tyler got killed in such a cheap way by Dead Larry. I would've preferred him getting defeated in a battle of wits by Michael.
Almost as cool as when Dutch got to arrest Ronnie. Vic played the psycho but Michael Jace was the psycho
"Oh you had the chance to leave earlier. Instead you chose to stick around and show off."
For almost the entire episode, I was sure where this story was going--Shawn from Rockford will get overconfident and drop the One Detail that gives him away, just like a thousand other cop dramas--and I was totally wrong. Dutch knew that as long as he stayed there and let Shawn psychologically beat him up, Shawn would stay too and the other cops would get the evidence he needed. This story (and Dutch's final moment in the car) and everything else that happened in this episode, this is when The Shield went from being something pretty good to the greatest thing on television, and it stayed that way to the end.
Michael Kelly seems way too at home playing creepy killers, although this role wasn’t nearly as terrifying as Doug.
Second Best cop show ever, after Third Watch
I love this show,it’s in my favs with the sopranos the wire and breaking bad.
Great scene great acting
Criminally underrated
Dutch needed his own show
OMG Doug Stamper wow
"Rule number 3 of the tank: if the suspect sleeps, they are guilty"
The actor who plays Dutch was wasted on SOA
This was a great show
Dutch Dutch Dutch Dutch Dutch !
Compare Dutch's handling of this guy to Mackey's handling of Grady. Guess who's getting a new trial and guess who's staying behind bars?
Why? Vic got away with everything, on paper anyway.
@@billybatts8283 The Feds have three years to break him.
Great scene
Is that Michael Kelly with hair????
Yes!
Oh wow, I forgot the actor from House of Cards was in this show.
There really should have been a Dutch / Wyms spinoff series after "The Shield" was done.
Claudette wouldn't have been alive anymore.
@@AllRequired I think her slow decline could have been something that could have been built into a new spinoff show -- in fact, perhaps even a driving factor for Wyms to "finish off as many open cases as she can" before retirement.
God, Lem was so cool
Doug Stamper before joining Team Underwood.
Hahahaha! I thought the same
I have not watched this show, is the rest of it as good as this scene?
Yup
Absolutely
Its even better. This show is criminally underrated, with several gut-punching scenes and stories. Its as close to perfect as it gets.
is a show that today wouldn't be a reality for political correctness over entertainment
Some is even better. Way better.
Eu fiquei triste quando ele entrou no carro e chorou 😢
Does this Dutch have a PLAN?
Fuck! This scene blew me away! I'm going to watch the entire series!
It really is worth the time.
I heard, how much everyone loves it! I just finished rewatching Justified for my 3rd time. I'm a huge Walton Goggins fan! The Shield is next on my list!
You will not regret it. Fantastic series with great writing and acting. The Shield is my all time favorite show.
I did watch it, a few months ago. Best show ever. There will never be another show as good as The Shield.
4:02 mic drop
I never watched the show so i need to ask. Did Dutch trick the killer by lying saying the cops found bodies under his aunts house?
No, they had the bodies, but a confession goes a long way. Especially considering that while he cosigned, he doesn't live there.
He didn’t lie, he was stalling so that they could search the aunts house.
Not shown in this clip, but he spends a good portion of the hour long episode playing dumb and keeping the guy tee off on him to get the guy to stay put while they get the warrants and conduct the search.
It’s further set up throughout season 1 by the show making him seem a bit pathetic.
This is the end of the episode and the payoff.
If the Hanas sell them I bring in my team we will find them
we need just 1 updated season with dutch as captain. why should justified be the only fx show to get a reboot?
I agree.
New season where they have to reach out to Vic - make a deal with the devil - to get some shit done.
Because The Shield ended on a perfect note -- with the guy that thought he was The Man ending up a nobody and a nothing.
@@Merknilash There's more than enough operatives that can get that shit done without the PR nightmare he's going to cause. No one needs him, no one wants him, and no one is going to miss him.
dumb take. easy to write a reason why they go back to Vic@@AllRequired
We don't need it, everything ended in a perfect note, Dutch is almost guarantee as captain once Claudette retires.
Shitting all over him a minute ago. This show was phenomenal.
The real crime here is Dutch's penmanship.
Dutch boy
My cursive is terrible too
I love The Shield is my favorite TV show but that surely is the worst drawing of a house I have ever seen.
😂
One minute they are making fun of him in being really disrespectful,then soon as he got a confession out of a serial killer they applaud him,phony mfs.
I loved the show but this scene always felt a little forced. He didn’t really break this guy, they just got a search warrant and found bodies on his property. Literally any cop could’ve done that
Respectfully, I feel like you're missing the point. They steered him to admitting the exact number of murders through steering their verbals directly to him
What??!? That's not the gift. The gift is that 1. Dutch is initially suspicious of the guy jerking off in the alley 2. Perceptive enough to sense that something is not right when he visits him 3. Willing to accept a humiliating level of abuse in order to keep him thinking he has power and control while he has the house searched. By the time Shawn understands he doesnt have as much control as he thought, he has none at all.
Most police would not ever get to the point where they are looking at this guy let alone be an a position to pin 22 murders on him
@@jacobscott9732exactly and Vic's respect when he breaks this guy sets the tone between the two throughout the series
He picked the guy out of almost nothing from pure instinct bro to even start the process off of the weirdo jerking it in public alone!, thats the definition of credit right there!.
The point is that the guy can't resist the air of vulnerability that Dutch gives off which is what makes him stay and why the judge signs the search warrant. Because the guy stays for questioning when he doesn't have to, it looks guilty.
Fucking acting