USA’s ‘White Collar’: Solid Entertainment, Solid Values
by S.T. KarnickIn the classic manner of series television, the USA Network’s latest new dramedy, White Collar (Fridays at 10 EST), smartly combines elements common to numerous other contemporary TV crime dramas, especially other USA Network shows, in a way calculated to maximize both familiarity and originality. Thus we have at the center of the show a pair of characters of strongly contrasting personalities but similar values under the surface differences, working together to do good.

Convicted confidence artist, forger, and counterfeiter Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) is released from prison (and shackled with an electronic tracking device) in order to assist FBI agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) in catching other criminals. As in the 1960s TV series It Takes a Thief, Caffrey is young, handsome, single, insouciant, creative, and free-spirited, and his FBI handler is more mature, less handsome, and more conventional and stable.
Together, as in all such shows and in real life to a surprising degree, their differing capacities complement each other and make for a highly effective team. The pair work well together in solving the mysteries that face them each week in the board rooms, boudoirs, and mean streets of New York City, and as noted earlier, they do seem to share many of the same values, especially now that Caffrey finds himself confronted by unexpectedly dire consequences of his raffish prior existence, which I’ll discuss later in this article.
The use of confidence schemes as a central plot element is of course a common theme in contemporary television, including highly enjoyable series such as Hustle, Leverage, and The Mentalist, and is undoubtedly a topic of relevance in this time which the public perceives as unusually rife with political and economic corruption (though in fact it’s really all pretty much as usual with the human race).
As with Hustle and The Mentalist, White Collar is extravagantly forgiving of the unsavory elements of Neal’s past–he was a liar and a thief, after all–but without denying the moral import of his actions. It posits instead a redemptive point of view that acknowledges the superiority of repentance and reconciliation over simple punishment, while recognizing that many (if not most) people of a criminal bent are not interested in reform.
Those thoughts are all under the surface, however, not stated openly, though anyone with normal acuity and a moral sense will surely see them. That, too, is how series television works best.
Another appealing and rather unusual element of White Collar is a happy marriage at the center of the show. Burke is married to Elizabeth (Tiffani Thiessen), an attractive, smart, perceptive and understanding woman. This latter quality is important because Burke’s work often puts strains on the amount of time he can spend with her, and he has in the past been all too inclined to take her for granted.
Here too, Caffrey does some good work, educating Burke about the importance of treating his wife well. This is made particularly poignant by another central story element of the show: while working for the FBI, Caffrey is surreptitiously pursuing the solution to a mystery of his own, the disappearance and probable abduction of his girlfriend. While recycling and slightly varying the central plot elements of Monk, Leverage, and several other such series, the abduction scenario gives the viewer a strong sense that Caffrey has paid a high price for his prior crimes and is now acutely aware of their cost to others, and is thus a good candidate for forgiveness and redemption (as appears to be true also of The Mentalist, although it’s not clear that much of what Patrick Jane did was actually criminal).
The supporting cast is quite talented, including Diahann Carroll, Willie Garson, Natalie Morales, and James Rebhorn. It’s particularly good to see Carroll back on TV, and Rebhorn is always a strong screen presence.
Also enjoyable is the show’s measured but definite appreciation for the finer things in life–good food, good clothes, nice cars, attractive people, comfortable and elegant home furnishings, and other such creature comforts. Caffrey’s role in the cases, which typically consists of undercover work (as in NCIS: Los Angeles but among a much more moneyed group of people) involves him rubbing elbows with beautiful and wealthy people and going to expensive restaurants and trendy nightclubs.
While being intrinsically pleasing–nice things are pleasant to look at, after all–this aspect of the show also means something. In the perpetually Puritanism-suffused United States, it’s sometimes important to be reminded that the natural world is not intrinsically evil and that it’s all right to enjoy life as long as one does not harm others or ignore the plight of the less-fortunate in doing so.
The modern-day Luddites who would send us all back to the eighteenth century (or the fifth, or prehistoric times) in a quest for environmental purity are only the most recent manifestation of this Manichean attitude, and White Collar is appealingly free of that impulse–and quite enjoyable for it.
As noted earlier, however, the theme of personal redemption is at the forefront of the show. Central to that theme in plot terms is the issue of whether Burke can really trust Caffrey, whether the latter has truly turned his back on his old ways. Episode 3, “Book of Hours,” is especially attentive to this issue. As Burke and Elizabeth discuss the agent’s concerns about having to trust Caffrey, she says, “Sometimes you just have to take a leap of faith.”
The episode explores the concept of faith in a much deeper way as well. A pre-Renaissance Bible with alleged healing powers has been stolen from a Catholic church, and Caffrey and Burke are assigned to find and retrieve it. The two discuss the possibility of whether miracles really can happen, with Burke, a lapsed Catholic, arguing against the possibility, and the stylish, free-spirited Caffrey arguing for it.
That’s a refreshing reversal of the roles Hollywood usually assigns in discussions of religious faith, of course; typically the religious person has been shown as dour and unhappy and the doubter as much more likable.
In the end of “Book of Hours,” the Bible literally saves Caffrey’s life. Burke jokingly says, “I guess the Big Guy had your back.” Moments later, the book saves the life of a dying dog, and Caffrey tells the still-skeptical Burke, “I’ll take my miracles where I can get them,” and, “He [God] works in mysterious ways.” Here, too, White Collar reflects the much-greater openness to religion shown in recent series such as Monk, Psych, Leverage, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, The Mentalist, and numerous others, a much more liberal and fair-minded attitude than Hollywood showed for many years before the current decade.
With such classical liberal, generous, and morally sound attitudes, sharp writing, appealing performances, a surprisingly fresh visual presentation of New York City, a serious interest in the moral content of its characters’ choices, and a strong sense that people are happiest when they’re doing good things together, White Collar is the very model of a modern TV drama series.
Those who value surface originality above all other considerations will probably find it to be far beneath their dignity–but those who appreciate the good things formula fiction can do (as the brilliant critic, belle-lettrist, and fiction writer G. K. Chesterton repeatedly stressed) may find White Collar very much to their liking.






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My wife and I enjoy the show just as we enjoy Burn Notice.
I've found a number of the USA programs to be very good. I hadn't followed this show until recently, but had a chance to catch with it, during the Thanksgiving weekend, when they reran all the shows. Now they've gone and thrown a twist in in the last show. I can't wait to see if they pull it off.
My husband and I enjoy this show (as well as many others on the USA network) very much… the characters are likeable (and I'm so glad Tiffini Theissan finally has a decent role) and the storyline isn't preachy (at least as far as we have noticed and I have been trying to take care to notice lately)…. Though I do wonder what's going to happen next season, because I never expected what the teaser showed)… We are finding ourselves sticking to the NCIS franchise and tv shows on cable… I also like the NBC show Mercy (it's the only one on NBC I will watch… unless it's something like Merlin)…
Excellent review of an excellent new show. Those are the very things about this show that surprised me when I started watching, and the very things that are keeping my entire family glued to the set each week and looking forward to when it resumes. I hope they keep that high moral center as the various story lines develop.
…and the floundering dino-networks are still wondering where their viewership is fleeing to – hello.
At present my wife and I don't have a current show we enjoy together. She enjoys relationships, I love a good plot. Hope you're right on this one.
I agree. I also like Leverage (and love CSI) and Burn Notice. The USA/TNT shows seem to be showing up pretty good. I even have taped most of this season of Numbers because White Collar is on opposite.
Love the show. I have it on the DVR and just in case that dies, again, I also pull it down from the web while waiting eagerly for the DVD set to come out.
Burn Notice, Leverage, Psych, Royal Pains, not only are these shows good, but there also not on network tv.
Time for the execs to wake up.
Great review. i already like the show and I haven't seen it. Hopefully it's on HULU.
This show wasn't on my radar until I found out Natalie Morales is in it. She starred in a short-lived (and surprisingly conservative) ABC Family show a couple summers ago called The Middleman. Think Men In Black meets Get Smart. Highly recommended!
Somehow I can't believe this won't turn into another "rich white male villain of the week" show.
I dont like the show, the premise is ok, the execution is just terrible in my opinion, the acting is hokey, and the storys just don't keep me interested.
Burn notice is pretty good, depending on the episode, and I loved Monk, followed by Psych. This one just left me bored, wife didnt care for it either
Oh, the twist! I didn't see that coming at all! I'm with you. I can't wait to see it either. I love USA's series and TNT's also. Such great characters.
I'm just hoping the twist was well-thought out in advance and not a spur of the moment "well, what if ______ were the case?" thing, because right now to me it makes virtually no sense (I kind of have a theory, but I'm not wild about it).
The Middleman: a great show sadly gone too soon.
D'oh! I just realized that I forgot to ask for it for Christmas.
So far they've been pretty ethnically diverse in terms of the villains. And the track record of USA shows (at least the ones I've seen) is pretty good on that score when I think about it.
"called The Middleman. Think Men In Black meets Get Smart.
That analogy alone will now have me looking for it.
It's on DVD, a 4-disc set. It was actually based on a comic book by former Lost writer Javier Grillo-Marxauch. It's not for everyone but it is a lot of fun.
As for my comment about it being conservative, I'm probably not the best judge of such things. It was just a vibe I got, especially during one episode when our hero says how much he loves old westerns and their sense of rugged individualism.
USA/TNT are doing better series than the nets are buying. The nets are locked into buying crap series that actually attacks the culture of their own audience; odd, really. Your point about showing religion is even more true of the "Sons Of Anachy" series, which is basically Sopranos/Corleones/Goodfellas in leather as a motorcycle gang. While the show rationalizes bad things worse than the criminal conduct you discuss in the USA shows, Katy Sagal's Gema character and her family spent the past year of the series giving the best discussion of Christian priciples I have seen in years on TV.( OK, the son does kill the scumbag and Gema kills the bimbo in the finale, but I saw it is the writer doing a contradiction with their beliefs)
Off topic……….Happy Hanukkah to my Conservative Jewish brethren. To my liberal Jewish brethren I hope you get food poisoning from your matzoa ball soup.
For me Monk, Psych, Burn Notice, and White Collar are a 21st century style of the great NBC Mystery Movies/Shows of the 1970's. Like Columbo, Banacek, McCloud, McMillian and Wife before them they provide the same sharp dialogue, easy going TV. For me the shows are like a perfect comfort food and the marathons always provide a place to go when I need a fix. For network TV, the only shows I see in the same vein are Castle and The Mentalist (Psych, but less sunny).
LOL! I'm not Jewish but I appreciate the sentiments.
How can anyone Jewish even slightly think liberal thoughts, must less actually have voted for the boy wonder.
There's actually a book out now, "Why are jews liberals?"
It is on Hulu… I don't think the whole season is though… but I could be wrong on that last part…
, I would not go and wish food poisoning on any one, well maybe the nut jobs we are at war with, but I would just rather we shoot them on sight. Never the less You have a Great Hanukkah, And the Rest a very Merry Christmas..
It's the evil twin or really bad news.
Yep, Next to Burn Notice, White Collar is going to end up being one of my favorite shows on cable. I can't tell you the last time I even watched a show on one of the big three networks. Most of their shows are either reptative comedies, boring crime dramas or preachey cop shows. I think V was the exception but now 99% of my time watching TV are cable.
I haven't watched much of what's on USA but I have caught the last few episodes of this show, and it looks interesting. Like what I see so far.
Thanks k8blujay.
Thank you George. For what's it's worth I only wish a mild food poisoning on them.
sounds fair enough. After all, it is white collar crimes here and the villains will be rich, regardless.
Love this show. One of my favorites next to NCIS, The Mentalist, and Chuck. I was completely shocked at how the season has ended and can't wait until it starts up in January. After the final show ended, my husband and I kept going through scenarios about what happened. Thanks for the great review. Hopefully lots of people will start watching and a good show will stay on tv!
I've noticed my kids watching this one. I watch online and enjoy this show.
Thanks for the reminder that I've got a couple of episodes to catch up on.
Your welcome…
I thought too that the 2nd season was better written and plotted. I also thought, re the "Godfather" on a Harley thing, that the son's whole "taking SOAMCO to legitmate good place" meme sets up a whole Michael Corleone tragedy thing. Anyway, fascinating series idea, way way better than the nets buy.
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Its thoroughly enjoyable to watch. Bomer is especially easy on the eyes and so true to his character that its easy to forget he's gay in real life
The marriage in this show is shown to be happy and very functional. Not perfect (what marriage is?) but they have a true love and respect for each other and it shows. I think your wife would love that part of it.
Have you tried watching NCIS together? The heart of that show is the relationships between the characters. The friendships, mentorships, etc.
I think this is a nice show. I like that DeKay doesn't fade into the background next to pretty-boy Bomer. Maybe it's my age, but I like my men to look like men and not boys.
I have been meaning to give this show a try, but haven't managed to so. Thanks for the review. I will look for the episodes on the Web. Thanks again.
I recently finished watching both seasons of Sons Of Anarchy online and I absolutely loved it. I was surprised that the second season was better than the first.
Will definitely check it out. I'm one of those who enjoys things that are not for everyone.
I also appreciate when a film or show can use subtlety to display conservative thought (even if this wasn't a concious intention). It's not always necessary to bash an audience over the head with a theme, which seems to be the prefered method among the lefties.
Exactly! I loved watching the NBC Mystery Movies when I was a kid, and that's what these USA shows remind me of, too. I was trying to explain the NBC MM concept to my wife. I got the big "huh" stare.
Also. . .remember "The Name of the Game?"
This looks like a show that I'll get into eventually. I've come to the point that I don't invest myself emotionally in a first season show until it proves it has traction.
No one else having a problem getting into NCISLA? Something about the presentation of the characters doesn't work for me. They're interesting, but I think that what makes them interesting is what ruins it. In DC, Gibbs, Abby, and the rest are all great characters that support and point the attention to the script. It seems like the LA characters just use the story to let their slickness, ok – coolness, be the thing to watch. Maybe it will get better. [See comment in p1]
I saw the whole first season and can't say that I loved it. But it's the kind of show that gets your attention and makes you think. I wasn't going to watch the second season, and then I saw a commercial about half way through that made me jump right back in. Now there's a hole in the story for me that I gotta fill. I still don't love it, but I'm going to keep watching.
Good call.
Possibly really bad news about the "kidnapped" girlfriend? Maybe she isn't so kidnapped as he thought…?? Just an idea I keep having about her place in things….
From reading your comments and getting a feel for your sense of humor Darkwolf, I REALLY recommend that you watch MiddleMen! Awesome subtle and not so subtle humor!!
Total agreement. Got a big kick out of Castle's Halloween episode. His costume was a 'Space Cowboy', whereupon his daughter informed him that he wore that 5 years ago, and it might be time to put it away (re: Firefly/Serenity). The wife and I cracked up. Also loved the good natured poking at the Mentalist by the Psych guys this past season.
These shows are just… easy to watch.
Put me down for Castle. I liked what's his name in the Sci Fi series Firefly. The wife loves Castle, and was floored when I told her I used to watch him on Firefly.
I love the show. Of course Caffery being georgous doesn't hurt but it's a pretty good show when just about all other shows on the alphabet stations are total garbage I won't watch
"I agree. I also like Leverage (and love CSI) and Burn Notice. The USA/TNT shows seem to be showing up pretty good. I even have taped most of this season of Numbers because White Collar is on opposite."
complete agreement here. White Collar, Burn Notice, Leverage, The Closer and Grace are the only shows I watch regularly and I love them. The alphabet stations deserve the dismal ratings they get, their shows suck outloud
Nathan Fillion.
He played Captain Malcolm Reynolds in Firefly.
You know how many couples have "Their Movie"? My wife and I have "Killer Klowns from Outer Space", so yes I am guessing the humor in this one would be right up my alley.
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