Today's FBI
Today's FBI | |
---|---|
Logo of Today's FBI | |
Also known as | Today's F.B.I. |
Genre | Crime drama |
Written by | Rogers Turrentine |
Directed by |
Harvey S. Laidman Stan Jolley Virgil W. Vogel |
Starring |
Mike Connors Carol Potter Johnny Seven Rick Hill Harold Sylvester Joseph Cali |
Opening theme | Elmer Bernstein |
Composer(s) |
Elmer Bernstein John Cacavas Charles R. Casey |
Country of origin | USA |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 18, plus 1 TV-movie |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | David Gerber |
Editor(s) | Herbert H. Dow |
Running time | 60 min. |
Production company(s) |
David Gerber Productions Columbia Pictures Television |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | October 25, 1981 – April 26, 1982 |
Chronology | |
Related shows | The F.B.I. |
Today's FBI is an American crime drama television series, an updated and revamped version of the earlier series The F.B.I.
Like the original program, this series is based on actual cases from the files of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the F.B.I. was involved in the making of the show. Unlike the original series, which ran for nine seasons, this show ran for only 18 episodes (following a TV-movie pilot) on ABC, during the 1981–82 season.
Cast
- Mike Connors as Ben Slater, a veteran "G-Man" who is the chief and mentor of an elite unit of agents.
- Joseph Cali as Nick Frazier, the one "ethnic" member of the team, a young and determined agent.
- Carol Potter as Maggie Clinton, the one female member.
- Rick Hill as Al Gordean, a "country boy" and strongman of the group, is often partnered with Nick.
- Harold Sylvester as Dwayne Thompson, the one African American on the show, often acts as the member who keeps the others focused.
Episode list
Nº | Title | Original air date |
---|---|---|
0 | "The Bureau" | October 25, 1981 |
TV-movie pilot; 2 hours. Mike Connors plays Ben Slater, a veteran G-man who heads an elite unit of agents.Slater and his team move to New York to investigate corruption on the waterfront. The target is Joey D'Amico, national vice president of the Stevedores Association of America, a man with a bad habit of exterminating dissenters. The key informant is Pete Kositchek, the owner of a company on the docks. Nick gets a job as the union leader's chauffeur. Joey becomes fond of the undercover agent, looking upon him as a younger version of himself. | ||
1 | "Hostage" | November 1, 1981 |
A religious leader (David Carradine) takes hostages in a Federal building, demanding that five inmates convicted of murdering members of his family and church be turned over to him — for execution. | ||
2 | "The Charleston Case" | November 8, 1981 |
Ben sets up a "sting" to break a distribution network for child pornography. | ||
3 | "Terror" | November 22, 1981 |
A paramilitary faction of the KKK terrorizes the black leaders of a Southern town. | ||
4 | "The Fugitive" | November 29, 1981 |
When three convicts escape from prison, Al learns that one of them is an old friend. Al decides to join the hunt; he starts by talking to his family to find out what went wrong. | ||
5 | "Career Move" | December 6, 1981 |
Small-time hoods luck into an $8 million heist, attracting the interest of both the FBI and the mob. | ||
6 | "The El Paso Murders" | December 13, 1981 |
Nick tries to nail a border guard suspected of the rape-murder of an illegal alien. | ||
7 | "Skyjack" | December 27, 1981 |
A mentally unstable skyjacker demands $3 million and safe passage to Libya. | ||
8 | "Spy" | January 10, 1982 |
A spy ring is selling American laser technology to the highest bidder. | ||
9 | "A Woman's Story" | January 17, 1982 |
An agent's marital woes may jeopardize an operation aimed at stopping a truck-hijacking ring. | ||
10 | "Hit List" | January 31, 1982 |
Mideast expatriates are being assassinated by a mercenary hired by their homeland. | ||
11 | "Deep Cover" | February 8, 1982 |
Ben fears an undercover agent is so involved that he may have forgotten which side he's on. | ||
12 | "Serpent in the Garden" | February 14, 1982 |
A medical lab is suspected of falsifying Medicare claims. | ||
13 | "Blue Collar" | February 21, 1982 |
The collapse of a building at a federally funded housing project prompts an investigation. | ||
14 | "Surfacing" | February 28, 1982 |
After 10 years underground, anarchists surface to kill a judge. | ||
15 | "Bank Job" | March 7, 1982 |
With the FBI hot on the trail, a team of bank robbers decides to pull one last job. | ||
16 | "Gulf Coast Murders" | March 14, 1982 |
An ex-cop attempts to steal cocaine from the police evidence storeroom. | ||
17 | "Kidnap" | April 19, 1982 |
Ben and his crew investigate the kidnapping of a Houston banker's son. | ||
18 | "Tapper" | April 26, 1982 |
A refinery whose output of gasoline is four times its intake of feedstock is targeted for investigation. |
Reception
According to Michele Malach of Fort Lewis College, the series attempted a more positive portrayal of the FBI by using diverse characters and a "fallacious assumption that its audience still viewed special agents as 'us' rather than 'them'," in contrast to federal agents with "a rigid, dogmatic, inhumane bureaucracy" depicted in later media, like Point Break, Betrayed, and The X-Files. Viewers "did not buy either the image or [the series]," prompting a cancellation.[1] Richard Gib Powers called it "pointless and a cover-up [of] the FBI villany[.]"[2]
References
- ↑ Malach, Michele (1996). "I Want to Believe... in the FBI". In Lavery, David; Hague, Angela; Cartwright, Marla. Deny All Knowledge: Reading "The X-Files". p. 68. ISBN 978-0815604075.
- ↑ Powers, Richard Gib (1999). "The FBI in American Pop Culture". In Theoharis, Athan G. The FBI: A Comprehensive Reference Guide. Oryx Press. p. 293. ISBN 0-89774-991-X.