NBC’s Reality TV: To Catch a Terrorist
by Mark TapsonWhen I learned of a new NBC-TV series called “The Wanted,” about an elite investigative team tracking down terrorists-at-large, I naturally assumed the terrorists in question would be Homeland Security priorities: white Christian conservatives building abortion clinic bombs in church basements, anti-government Tea Partiers, and disgruntled military veterans, whose volatile mix of post-traumatic stress disorder and paranoia of big government could cause them to snap at any moment and take out the nearest Obama-appointed czar (after all, there are more czars than there are Secret Service agents to protect them).

Imagine my astonishment when I discovered that “the wanted” of the show’s first two recent episodes (you can see them here; four more have been produced but are not presently scheduled) were Islamic terrorists. This is an encouraging new development, considering that Western governments and media have increasingly made taboo any reference to a connection between Islam and acts of terror (of course, the Islamists themselves never got that memo, because they insist on quoting Islamic theology to justify their murder and mayhem). And the left-leaning entertainment industry has virtually ceased pitting heroes against the real-world threat of jihadis, falling back instead on more fashionable stock bogeymen like corporate executives, Marvel Comics supervillains, and, well, corporate executives.
But now along comes a major network TV show that makes no apology for identifying and targeting Islamic terrorists, and its investigative team even makes unqualified reference to jihad, another taboo word and a concept that Islamist apologists have nearly indoctrinated us into believing has nothing to do with waging holy war against infidels.What’s next, the apocalypse?
The aforementioned elite team consists of producer/journalist Adam Ciralsky, former Green Beret Roger Carstens, former Navy SEAL Scott Tyler, and war crimes prosecutor David Crane. In episode one, they zero in on an extremist imam in Oslo called Mullah Krekar, the founder of Ansar al-Islam, a group closely allied with al Qaeda and at the forefront of anti-coalition attacks in Iraq. Krekar is wanted for prosecution in Iraq but is being sheltered by the Norwegian government, which refuses to extradite him to a country that might mistreat or execute him. (Personally, I don’t see the problem with shipping these murdering, openly bigoted supremacists off to any country that might mete out the serious justice they deserve, but that’s why I’m not a politician).
In episode two, the team heads to Hamburg in pursuit of terrorist financier Mamoun Darkazanli, who is credited with funneling money to the 9/11 hijackers – but Germany is waiting for an official indictment from Spain before they hand him over (it’s complicated).
Liberal critics of the show ridicule the team for “hunting down” suspects who are practically listed in the phone book, but they’re missing the point: it’s outrageous not because these evil men are hidden among us, but precisely because they’re living openly in, and being protected by, countries whose very downfall these Islamists are plotting. Sadly, “The Wanted” doesn’t provide the satisfying closure of a “Law and Order”; in both episodes, the best the team can manage is to pressure the European governments to quit stalling and finally cooperate on legal action against the suspects.
The show is “really about the rule of law,” Carstens says.“It’s about justice; it’s about human rights; it’s about facing those that are accused – and that’s the key word – facing those that are accused of the most egregious crimes against humanity and effect some sort of effort to get them to at least take responsibility for their actions or clear their name.”
Sounds reasonable, if unexciting. And yet “The Wanted” seems to drive liberal entertainment bloggers into a frothy outrage.Slate’s critic derided its “frenetic pandering to base instincts” – base instincts such as the uncivilized urge to bring war criminals to justice, I presume. Lucy Dalglish of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press frets, “Is this supposed to be journalism?” She and others worry that this show promotes vigilante journalism, the kind that led one cornered suspect to kill himself in the pedophile-hunting “To Catch a Predator” (frankly, if this show does lead to any terrorists killing themselves, then that’s a big plus in my book). Lydia Khalil, who labels it “dangerous,” and Baltimore Sun critic David Zurawik, who stretched for a hyperbolic denunciation of the show as “McCarthyism,” are apparently concerned that Ciralsky et al are targeting and smearing random innocents: “Who’s deciding who is a terrorist or war criminal?” he frets (for a show that liberals find so easy to sneeringly dismiss, it certainly inspires a lot of fretting). Well Mr. Zurawik, it’s the State Department and other international agencies who have decided who the terrorists and war criminals are, not a rogue vigilante journalist at NBC, as you imply.
The New York Times too disapproves of “The Wanted” blurring the line between journalism and activism. Of course, these same critics wouldn’t hesitate to give their imprimatur to the show if the suspects were Bush administration officials/torturers, whom the terrorist hunters could hold accountable for reading all our private e-mails and for callously disregarding the legal rights and cultural sensitivities of foreign Muslim fundamentalists who yearn to hack off infidel heads. The Obama-era journalists who gleefully declared “Objectivity is passé!” suddenly feign blustery moral indignation, though, when a journalist assists a former SEAL and a Green Beret in the pursuit of the Western world’s real enemies.
If this show brings attention to “an overlooked story,” as NBC producer David Corvo calls it, then I’m all for it. If more journalists committed themselves to shining a spotlight on, and actively taking down, such vile monsters as Mullah Krekar instead of targeting Joe the Plumber, dutifully transcribing every lie out of the mouth of Bristol Palin’s slimy ex-boyfriend, or giving us breathless updates on who gets Michael Jackson’s children, then maybe they’d earn a little more respect and trust from the public.
But liberal entertainment critics, who serve no useful function in society, are one thing; what about the people “The Wanted” represents? One unnamed person in the Department of Defense’s special ops community said, “Everyone I’ve talked to said that it was well done, didn’t reveal a lot of our trade secrets – if you will – and left me feeling that somebody’s doing something about a problem we all know exists and, frankly, we can’t do anything about.”
The show’s critics do have legitimate complaints about some of its stylistic glitz, its forced tension (such as a lengthy car chase that fizzles out rather pointlessly), its exposition-heavy dialogue and staged conversations, and its lack of dramatic takedowns. Could “The Wanted” use a little retooling? Certainly. But it already gets its most unique, core elements right: it exposes the bureaucratic apathy of Western governments who coddle some of our most dangerous enemies, and – like “To Catch a Predator” – “The Wanted” raises viewer awareness of the monsters walking free among us.






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If your worldview is defined around righteous opposition to the ills (real, exaggerated or imagined) of your own society then seeing defending it as virtuous rather gets in the way.
Sounds like a good light entertainment.
[...] like this post, buy me a coffee. Tags: personalized baby blanket Related posts No related posts. NBC’s Reality TV: To Catch a Terrorist – bighollywood.breitbart.com 08/07/2009 When I learned of a new NBC-TV series called “ The Wanted [...]
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Catching bad guys is a problem? Then every true crime show, sting operation news special, investigative journalist program, forensics, COPS, bounty hunter etc., is a problem. This real reality type show is the bread and butter of countles networks. If you get rid of these what is left? fake reality shows
How is it possible to have trouble with this?
After Obama finds out about this, expect every utterance of "jihad" and "terrorist" on the show to be bleeped out.
Yeah but Tom Shales likes it. What to do?
NBC obviously didn't get the memo that "The War on Terror" is over (so did we win, lose, or draw?) and certain distasteful words like "terrorist" are now verbotin. I'd love to sneak a peek at that "enemies list" that's being compiled at the White House. I'll bet there's not a single terrorist on it.
The show sounds fishy to me…better send an email to the snitchline.
It does appear to be a positive development, but must admit I have solemnly pledged to not watch NBC. So far, I have done a pretty good job, with my only lapses coming with a few live major sports events. I admit, I get a "tingle" in the leg thinking about a documentary about watching Chris and keith, newly jobless, cleaning out their desks and wondering if maybe they could catch on as Al Franken staffers.
I predicted that once the left was in power, that much of the self censorship being practiced in the media would vanish. I mean when you've got Bushitler in office, you can't
support his administrationhave racism on the screen, but with Obama in power it's okay to show the government is on the job rooting out the enemies who mean us harm.I heard the interview on Dennis Miller with the producers, two young guys who sounded like they get it. Hopefully the rest of the kids will put down their kool aid and get a clue themselves.
I love this show. I see first hand how i$lamtology infects our prison system. To see Americans cheering Gitmo detainees and communicating with imams and others who support the destruction of Western civilization is disturbing to say the least. What the ACLU and others have done over the last 40 years of SoSo-tomayor empathy vote collecting has exposed the greater population to violence.
Obama surrendered.
Well, you convinced me to start watching The Wanted. Bravo!
the show is good…and ladies the guys are hotties…expecially that Tyler fella…growr…..just saying.
Watch this show and don't watch the liberal stuff. If enough people do that, maybe NBC'll get the point.
Saw the first episode hope to see another 100. "Get em and then kill em" would be the title I would like to see on this show!
If the NY Times pans it, I'll take a look. I am anxious to watch the episode where they lie to Nancy Pelosi about the waterboarding.
hmmm maybe a tie in between Wanted and Dog the Bounty Hunter. Wanted can find em and confront em, then turn it over to Dog and his crew to extradite em to where they will be dealt with.
I can't believe this was made. Wow, how shocking. More socking than watching 2 gay men kiss on TV for the 35th time. True shock entertainment.
I guess it is the liberals that are "the establishment" these days, the same establishment they have protested for the last 40 years.
THAT . . . is a brilliant idea.
the sinner,
Patrick
bet the ratings would skyrocket!
Have to admire those guys who, within the laws of the countries that they are in, go head to head with real terrorists.
Right on, Mark. I checked out Episode 1 on the web last week and found myself shocked that this show was even made. I wasn't too fond of the staged conversations, either, but hoped the show might wake some folks up.
Nice article! I love the show's premise, but I'm so glad you included the section about the show's technical workings. I wanted to like THE WANTED, but was so turned off by fake conversations, and the forced tension. I'll DVR it to lend support for the idea, but I probably won't watch it unless they do some re-working.
So, according to Hollywood…
Faux-documentary style movies that make American troops in Iraq look like evil rapists = good.
Hunting down WANTED terrorists = bad.
So, according to liberals…
Faux-documentary style movies that make American troops in Iraq look like evil rapists = good.
Hunting down WANTED terrorists = bad.
How dare portray Americans winning against Islamic terrorists. Doesn't NBC realize that we're LOSING? Ask Harry Reid…
"General Petraeus is going to come to the Hill and make it clear to you that there is progress going on in Iraq, that the so-called surge is working. Will you believe him when he says that?"
REID: "No, I don't believe him, because it's not happening. All you have to do is look at the facts."
This *man* is a U.S. Senator ….a cheap pimp in a nice suit exploiting his office for gain and fame
who gets to *play* Nan?….will they show her on her own personal Jumbo jet? Can she be *briefed* by Bill Clinton? Can the "team" be shown *lying* to her during a botox session? Can there be documents showing the tax$$$ being funneled to her wealthy realestate cheat hubby? Will she have a *boytoy*?
[...] NBC’s Terrorist Reality Show Irks Liberals By creeping An update on NBC’s The Wanted – read it all at Big Hollywood. [...]
I agree with ivybelle, great idea that needs to be polished. The car chase in the last episode did not make any sense to me, the show needs to be at least an hour and 1/2. I will support the show 100% I can't believe that NBC ran the series, I was actually waiting for Steve Austin to pop out on the screen.
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