The Wire - Stringer and Colvin's Graveyard Meeting

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  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2024
  • Stringer Bell has a secret meeting with Major Colvin to discuss the location of Avon
    Barksdale's safehouse. (Season 3, Episode 11 "Middle Ground")

Komentáře • 499

  • @nolapropertybuyer9732
    @nolapropertybuyer9732 Před 4 lety +566

    Colvin is the most underrated character in the whole series. A good human trying to make sense of the madness he was thrusted in.

    • @rjofusetsudzin8011
      @rjofusetsudzin8011 Před 3 lety +2

      @Akshay Natu Its true unfortunately Colvin being ghood was the only reason why they get away with it. If Colvin did not have heart he had, he would put this whole thing public and trial and fuck everybody up.

    • @LloydWaldo
      @LloydWaldo Před 3 lety +1

      He’s like Stringer. That’s why they understand each other so well.

    • @salt27dogg
      @salt27dogg Před 3 lety +1

      @@LloydWaldo only time Stringer was called Russell.

    • @isaiahwatson9824
      @isaiahwatson9824 Před 3 lety +3

      Bubs was the most underrated.

    • @PantomimeHorse
      @PantomimeHorse Před 2 lety +4

      If anything, I think Stringer might be the more underrated, at least amongst fans of the show. Lot of comments under The Wire videos claiming Stringer was a fool for trying to change the game; Colvin was trying to do the same thing from another angle, and also failed.

  • @sharosekhan3281
    @sharosekhan3281 Před 5 lety +1100

    They say on the show repeatedly "your only as good as your CI/informant" so what does it say about Colvin's policing skills that Stringer's his informant

    • @FreePlayMode
      @FreePlayMode Před 4 lety +136

      It says that even among those who are the top of the game, he has their respect. It's never personal with him. It's like that episode of Looney Toons with Sam the Sheep Dog and Ralph the Wolf. Off the clock, they're just normal as can be, but on the clock, they have a job to do. All the shit Ralph tries to do to Sam, and all the shit Sam does to Ralph to prevent Ralph from stealing sheep. Then at the end of the day, they're back to normal as can be. Showing that it was never personal, just business.

    • @liquid6901
      @liquid6901 Před 4 lety +42

      It says that String is living on borrowed time.

    • @vka337
      @vka337 Před 3 lety +32

      He was The Hero of the Wire.

    • @Nerdiness1985
      @Nerdiness1985 Před 3 lety +49

      Means he is natural police.

    • @sethritchie4032
      @sethritchie4032 Před 3 lety +6

      @@FreePlayMode I've heard that in reference to this show, quite a few times, that's an amazing way to look at this show.. There's so many nuances that go by casual viewers eyes

  • @juvenilemafia10
    @juvenilemafia10 Před 9 lety +738

    the fact that Stringer said Hamsterdam was the reason why he contacted Colvin, the way Colvin's face lit up, it validated his whole philosophy of policing, that there is merit to his cooperative methods, that even a guy like Stringer can eventually open up and try to help an honest policeman

    • @laphonz
      @laphonz Před 6 lety +61

      ^ Stringer could have went to any person in law enforcement to snitch on Avon, but he went to Colvin because he trusted him enough to carry out the deed. And why would Bunny turn Stringer's request down? He's police at the end of the day

    • @jarmonjohnson
      @jarmonjohnson Před 5 lety +4

      @TheRealist 811 Goddamn, that's a great observation.

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 Před 5 lety +8

      @TheRealist 811 Probably had runins with the Barksdale when Colvin was just a Sergeant or Lieutenant.

    • @MarcillaSmith
      @MarcillaSmith Před 5 lety +17

      Mr Bell went to Mr Colvin because who else in power would be so desperate to make something happen for the sake of his name? The part about "Hamsterdam" is an appeal to his ego. It's a manipulation. This is Brer Rabbit going to Brer Fox, "oh PUH-LEEZE, don't throw Brer Avon in the slammer and leave me out here in the Brier patch all by myself!"

    • @SuperRobertoClemente
      @SuperRobertoClemente Před 3 lety

      Now we got legal pot, legal mushrooms in some states... they saw the future.

  • @Antrizzle2009
    @Antrizzle2009 Před 13 lety +291

    "It's just business". Same thing Avon says to him the last time they see each other on top of the building at Avon's place. Damn the writing on this show was amazing.

    • @dylanmorgan2752
      @dylanmorgan2752 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Yet Avon was also the one trying his best to destroy String's Co-op scheme by relentlessly pursuing war with Marlo and 'Mo corners' bs over safer business with less police scrutiny. The sad truth was that only after String was dead did Avon realise how right he was all along. If he'd listened to String to begin with he would've dodged jail and probably retired with tons of property and legit business prospects. In fact if there was more Stringers and Colvins on both sides you'd ultimately have safer streets and community revival in Baltimore.

    • @user-nh6oq8ut2t
      @user-nh6oq8ut2t Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@dylanmorgan2752nah stringer messed it all up by going behind avons back. Had he not betrayed Muzone he wouldn’t have had placed a target behind his back. He shouldn’t have had told Avon he had D killed. Had he allowed Avon to eliminate Marlo they would’ve had their corners back and war would be over, with Marlo gone they’d still get their coop package since Joe wouldn’t be able to sit down with him. Ultimately it’s on Stringer for not respecting the game, he snaked out Avon, had d killed, snitched, setup Omar and mouzone. Had he not gone off the reservation they’d all be good.

    • @dylanmorgan2752
      @dylanmorgan2752 Před 7 měsíci

      @@user-nh6oq8ut2t They both represented both sides to the game. The business and the street. Ultimately as Prop Joe said their main problem was a conflict of leadership. Stringer definitely made mistakes leading to his demise, and one of those was going behind Avon’s back. But equally Avon made the mistake of going straight on the warpath before the ink had dried on his release papers and immediately jeopardising everything Stringer built. This was despite the fact that Stringer literally handed him waterfront property in his name and security in knowing he’d never have to touch the streets again. But Avon couldn’t leave that life behind and still needed to act the soldier. It’s a tit for tat argument. You can say Stringer should’ve taken care of Marlo before he became a problem or that Avon would’ve done differently. But equally if Avon had just left Stringer in the driver seat their problems could’ve been resolved with minimal violence and police scrutiny. Say what you want about Stringer he might’ve been overly idealistic but he was miles ahead and truly the brains of the Barksdale crew. Avon basically admits as much after he dies and he realises how right String was all along.

    • @oN3xShOtxkilL
      @oN3xShOtxkilL Před 7 měsíci

      “It’s just business” - The Greeks

    • @madgavin7568
      @madgavin7568 Před 5 měsíci

      @@dylanmorgan2752 The thing is Avon knew Marlo couldn't be reasoned with because he saw him for what he was. Guys like Marlo aren't interested in honour, or respect, hell even money, they're only interested in power, and will do anything to get it. Once they get that power, they maintain it by being as ruthless as possible, ruling through fear and reputation (you respected him, but he didn't respect you). Marlo is two-faced and devious by nature, alliances and relationships are purely out of convenience, once he no longer has a use for them he gets rid of them by killing them.
      Avon and Slim both knew Marlo was dangerous and couldn't be trusted, which was why Avon was adamant about having his corners and getting rid of Marlo. The corner is at the end of the day where the drugs are sold and the bulk of the money from the dealers is made. You abandon the corners, you'll get someone else who will claim them, then you have territory disputes and eventually gang war. Stringer was out of touch with the realities on the street, he was making his move to become legitimate too soon without realizing it.

  • @nykia31
    @nykia31 Před 7 lety +482

    All of these guys likely knew each other when they were kids.
    Different roads, different breaks. Haunting scene.

    • @totalba69
      @totalba69 Před 5 lety +71

      ny_kia31 like how Omar remembered Bunk from high school

    • @stephenblacks2876
      @stephenblacks2876 Před 4 lety +5

      it would of been good if showed that in the series but its all good. great observation tho.

    • @buickboy92
      @buickboy92 Před 4 lety +16

      @Derrell S Not necessarily, The Wire did produce a number of mini episodes showcasing the origins of several characters. Prop Joe, and Omar are two to check out, CZcams has them somewhere.

    • @buickboy92
      @buickboy92 Před 4 lety +4

      @Derrell S Yeah definitely get what you mean, as each season of The Wire features a different issue within the city of Baltimore. In this way the city is the main character, and each season is an in-depth look into the consciousness or mindset of that city. There is a lot of sociology behind the show, and as you said a deeper understanding of the characters individual mindsets is second to that of the city's.
      Breaking Bad is a great example of individual character development, but I would also recommend The Sopranos. Despite my own personal disgust with the behavior of Tony Soprano, he is just so fascinating to watch as you want to just pick apart his brain to see why he does the things he does. Also, the show is literally built around exploring the deeper meaning behind each of the characters actions and worldviews (Tony has therapy sessions after all). Thus, even 20 plus years after having been introduced, these characters can seem richer than similar characters in The Wire; this is despite Sopranos feeling less realistic compared to The Wire.

    • @buickboy92
      @buickboy92 Před 4 lety +2

      @Derrell S I struggled with The Sopranos as well, as I had just finished The Wire (this was a few years ago) and the tone and structure of that show hit me differently. It's for sure an excellent show once you get into the meat of it, and I enjoyed my time with it.
      Another TV show I would recommend for great character development would be Bojack Horseman. This is a show that, despite the zany and outlandish misadventures the characters get up to(it is a cartoon), and the hilarious comedic situations they find themselves in, it is ultimately a show about the mind. Bojack Horseman explores the deeper causes/meaning behind childhood trauma, societal expectations, and how we deal with living on with our own issues. I know it sounds heavy, but Bojack manages to balance these themes with an air of comedy and self-awareness that few others accomplish.
      The show just had it's series finale, and I can definitely say that it will go down as my personal top four perfect TV shows. I absolutely loved it.

  • @torontoBluejays87
    @torontoBluejays87 Před 4 lety +421

    I love the way Colvin says, "speak your mind Russel", as if to let us know in the audience that those two characters probably had a lot of history and run-ins back in the day. Probably even went to school together like Bunk and Omar did. In the end, after all the paranoia about snitches, Stringer turned out to be the biggest one.

    • @brandonethereal1084
      @brandonethereal1084 Před 3 lety +94

      Nah Colvin was much older than Avon and String so I doubt they attended school togehter. They're about 31/32 and Colvin was nearing retirement( maybe late 50's or close to 60) However I agree that the two definitely had some run ins from back then,💯💯💪🏿

    • @jacobb5625
      @jacobb5625 Před 3 lety +2

      @@brandonethereal1084 i think its possible they would be classmates. Colvin did hamsterdam not bc he was already retiring, but bc he had the security of a major's pension. I reckon Avon/Stringer were a little older than that. Hell, D'Angelo seemed to be around that age and he was Avon's nephew. I guess the casting is a little misleading

    • @kstanton87
      @kstanton87 Před 3 lety +33

      @vladkonstantinov16 @BrandonRedPill @@jacobb5625 Just finished a rewatch. Avon was mentioned as being 31 when the show started, so Stringer could only be a year older or younger realistically as they grew up together. Colvin mentions to Namond that he and his wife have kids that are grown and have moved out of home so surely that put him at the very least 40 years of age, but you would have to guess he is probably older given his rank and pending retirement. There is also a mention of him joining the BPD in 1973 on Wikipedia, but I don't recall seeing that in the show.
      I'm only confident of this because I JUST finished a rewatch last week. Not trying to blow anybody up!

    • @brandonethereal1084
      @brandonethereal1084 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jacobb5625 I know why he did Hamsterdam.. D'Angelo was in his early 20s smh

    • @brandonethereal1084
      @brandonethereal1084 Před 3 lety +3

      @@kstanton87 Exactly. We both are right bro. It's common sense at the end of the day.

  • @khobarkastenglish5029
    @khobarkastenglish5029 Před 5 lety +191

    "Speak your mind, Russel." That explains their whole extremely unique relationship in one sentence. Two people respecting each others role in the current system, accepting the reality and trying to work out a solution that works in the interest of both sides.

  • @dudeseriously57
    @dudeseriously57 Před 4 lety +165

    Coldest line ever delivered on The Wire, "Nah it's just business."

    • @afrocentricalbion
      @afrocentricalbion Před 3 lety +9

      Reminds me of a scene in The Godfather.

    • @ludovico6890
      @ludovico6890 Před 3 lety +18

      And yet I think you can hear the sadness. He's trying to convince himself that it's just business.

    • @MillzSzn
      @MillzSzn Před 3 lety +2

      NOPE "the price of the brick going up!!!"

    • @40streetblack79
      @40streetblack79 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@MillzSznNope! " He must the Done something To You?"

    • @mastod0n1
      @mastod0n1 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@afrocentricalbionyep, when Michael tells Sonny that killing Sollozzo and the cop isn't personal, it's strictly business.

  • @ParticleJesus
    @ParticleJesus Před 13 lety +139

    avon got judicial justice at the hands of stringer, the legitimate business man.
    stringer on the other hand got street justice from avon, omar and mouzone.
    just shows the difference between how avon and string operated, they were coming at problems from two different worlds.

    • @A_10_PaAng_111
      @A_10_PaAng_111 Před 3 lety +6

      And like in every criminal empire in the end everyone double crosses each other.

    • @MarcillaSmith
      @MarcillaSmith Před 3 lety +2

      @@A_10_PaAng_111 for example: Congress

    • @mikedaflexta
      @mikedaflexta Před 3 lety

      Yep.

  • @mmcneil777
    @mmcneil777 Před 8 lety +246

    2:20 - Classic Colvin: "He must have done something to you..." He didn't have to say it, but he did and it worked. Colvin was a good read of people - especially the guys on the street and those in his unit. You sensed he cared, which was surprisingly why the guys on the street trusted him, even if he was going to lock them up. Colvin was one of those type of guys, if you got in his presence, he would pick up stuff about you, yet you sense he cared enough to notice. He was sort of like a 'Dad'..

    • @yungjj84
      @yungjj84 Před 7 lety +18

      mikem987 Wee-bey was the first person I thought of when reading this comment.

    • @doublestrokeroll
      @doublestrokeroll Před 6 lety +8

      real police

  • @UtwoOneMaster
    @UtwoOneMaster Před 11 lety +646

    The problem about both of them is that they tried to change the game. You can't change the game.

    • @vimalb88
      @vimalb88 Před 5 lety +41

      You couldn't have said it better man

    • @MVegas
      @MVegas Před 4 lety +62

      UtwoOneMaster the game is the game

    • @Gabriel-br4qe
      @Gabriel-br4qe Před 4 lety +30

      @@MVegas Always.

    • @ali56
      @ali56 Před 4 lety +35

      Well you can, it's just much, much bigger than these two men.

    • @franz-dominikimhof4940
      @franz-dominikimhof4940 Před 4 lety +26

      But the game is changing. And while no single man can change it, it is changed by all the men playing it.

  • @kgizzle92
    @kgizzle92 Před 3 lety +48

    Bunny callin Stringer “Russell” shows that he knows these dudes (later confirmed by Wee-Bey)…from the same streets and came up through the same mud!

    • @KarlPostMalone
      @KarlPostMalone Před 2 lety +6

      Coleman was a beat cop on the blocks that Avon, Stringer and Weebay use to run, when the three were junior high and high school age.

  • @desktopshorts7411
    @desktopshorts7411 Před 7 lety +303

    Ah man now I have to watch the whole box set again.

    • @ohd00bley
      @ohd00bley Před 6 lety +5

      I've have the original box (entire series) set since about it's release. I don't watch it now cause I find 'most any scene on CZcams.

    • @snapshotsreviews4967
      @snapshotsreviews4967 Před 4 lety +2

      Do it

    • @london_james
      @london_james Před 4 lety +1

      Restarted a few weeks back :)

    • @wacodraco1558
      @wacodraco1558 Před 3 lety

      @@snapshotsreviews4967 okay Emperor Palpatine relax lol

    • @depressedglub32
      @depressedglub32 Před 3 lety

      Its on hbo max too

  • @SchumannProductions
    @SchumannProductions Před 10 lety +432

    Both of these men are so similar, an awesome thing The Wire did was at the two scenes where both men fell, they had them say "Get on with it motha-!" Also, awesome foreshadowing in this scene, they meet at a graveyard...I don't think thats a coincidence.

    • @anthonyanderson9303
      @anthonyanderson9303 Před 9 lety +77

      Great point, I almost forgot they both said the same thing at their end, Stringer getting killed and Colvin's career being ended.

    • @DuaneJasper
      @DuaneJasper Před 5 lety +15

      @Jesse Brennan at this time they were both trying to change the culture of their respective hierarchical systems. And both got spat out/destroyed for doing so. It's a parallel, rather than a personality comparison

    • @elbowgang9715
      @elbowgang9715 Před 4 lety +6

      @Jesse Brennan get your head outta your ass

    • @yung007jr
      @yung007jr Před 4 lety

      Stephen May he’s right tho..a rat is a rat

    • @TrackpadProductions
      @TrackpadProductions Před 4 lety +14

      The Wire is too smart of a show for it to be a coincidence. If you think Stringer is no more complex than "just a disgusting rat" than the show is wasted on you, frankly.

  • @MrRiddleAW
    @MrRiddleAW Před 8 lety +332

    Kind've funny how Stringer and Avon spent a lot of time in Season 1 & 2 trying to silence people who might talk to the police and snitch on the Barksdales, yet in the end it was Stringer who would actually be the one to talk to the police and inform on Avon which ultimately got him arrested. After all that talk about D'Angelo talking to the police and Stringer believing it was necessary to kill D in order to make sure that he didn't talk and that he was a liability, it just makes Stringer having D'angleo killed harder to take in.

    • @wjk2109
      @wjk2109 Před 8 lety +53

      Avon didn't betray Stringer. Stringer had to pay.

    • @user-yr8zm7cc3s
      @user-yr8zm7cc3s Před 7 lety +30

      MrRiddleAW stringer was a hypocrite lol

    • @PzychoMantis90
      @PzychoMantis90 Před 7 lety +19

      Especially when you consider D talking was a way for him to escape while Stringer was doing it to take control.

    • @help4343
      @help4343 Před 7 lety +38

      Everything Stringer did was for himself.

    • @RN-ez1ii
      @RN-ez1ii Před 7 lety +14

      He sent him to jail so he didn't have to kill him.
      Funny how Avon had no problem setting up String to have HIM killed.

  • @signoresantinoburnett1169
    @signoresantinoburnett1169 Před 6 lety +98

    He wore the same jacket when he got popped by Omar and Brother.

    • @thedarkwarriorperspective7475
      @thedarkwarriorperspective7475 Před 4 lety +14

      They probably shot both scenes that same day. Directors do that sometimes.

    • @elbowgang9715
      @elbowgang9715 Před 4 lety +27

      He got popped the very next morning at the meeting with the developer

    • @ikazukison2
      @ikazukison2 Před 2 měsíci +1

      that happened the next fucking day

  • @MocHolliday
    @MocHolliday Před 7 lety +102

    This scene definitely shows a slightly more human side to Stringer. He shows it in certain other scenes, but when Colvin stops to just take a look at him, he could tell how truly hurt Stringer was at doing all of this. Despite being a business man first and foremost, this was anything but 'just business'. Stringer more or less had been digging his own grave since S2, but I'd be lying if I didn't say that he and Avon, and their relationship was one of my favorite things about the show. And also why season 1 is still my favorite to this day.
    I can't begin to put into words how life changing and how brilliant this show is. There will never be anything else like this. Ever. Probably not for a long time at least.

    • @johnodee100
      @johnodee100 Před 6 lety +6

      True, that. Skakespearean in breadth and depth.

    • @22shots27
      @22shots27 Před 5 lety

      J M lv

    • @philjoyce1548
      @philjoyce1548 Před 5 lety +3

      @Realjayrome then why did he make sure he only got the paroke violation and not the serious years that the guns would of gotten him....stringer was clearly (although snitching like a bitch) doing it for a strategic reason so he could set shit up his way and nukriple years and by then he believes Avon would be down with it....he was visibly upset about Colvin not knowing if he could keep the charge to a parole violation

    • @DaBirdman1995
      @DaBirdman1995 Před 5 lety +5

      I find it interesting that even though Stringer wanted Avon outta the picture, he tried to get Colvin to book Avon only on the Parole Violation (the five years he mentioned), instead of getting caught up in the weapons charges what would entail considerably mor ejail time. Shows that even though Stringer's setting up his man Avon for time behind bars, he still trying to do minimize the damage.

    • @mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm3153
  • @ardie77
    @ardie77 Před 4 lety +60

    "The game didn't change, just got more firece"- Slim Charles

    • @draganjovanovski6134
      @draganjovanovski6134 Před 4 lety +12

      Fierce* 🤷‍♂️

    • @ardie77
      @ardie77 Před 4 lety +2

      @@draganjovanovski6134 Yes fierce! I forget to edit it

    • @chrisjimenez9902
      @chrisjimenez9902 Před 3 lety

      Fizzz

    • @ardie77
      @ardie77 Před 3 lety

      @Ricky Homan Great TV show and you don't got to be from Baltimore to repeat lines about it. Btw I'm from India originally and grew up in the hood in Jamaica, NY.

    • @salt27dogg
      @salt27dogg Před 3 lety +1

      Fierce !!

  • @ryancrowell9867
    @ryancrowell9867 Před 3 lety +24

    man this show has some of the best characters ever written I swear

  • @geraldmoton1182
    @geraldmoton1182 Před 3 lety +21

    What would have been crazy, as Stringer was walking away from Colvin, Stringer seen D’Angelo grave mark and just pause for a second and look back at Colvin, knowing his time was almost up.

    • @kharizmatikone1481
      @kharizmatikone1481 Před 2 lety +8

      Yo, that would've been dope no lie! Would've made this scene that much darker

    • @evangelionl0vr857
      @evangelionl0vr857 Před rokem +3

      The wire was more subtle than that in its foreshadowing/metaphors. That is something a lesser show would do.

  • @Harctor
    @Harctor Před 8 lety +190

    The graveyard is foreshadowing.

    • @tim3198
      @tim3198 Před 8 lety +17

      Genius

    • @ArchangelSteve
      @ArchangelSteve Před 8 lety +36

      It's also a callback to when Greggs and McNulty met Omar in season 1.

  • @rtgunzboi
    @rtgunzboi Před rokem +7

    They met up where Colvin's career and Stringer's life ended, a cemetery. Fuck this show was definitely in a league of it's own

  • @danteshorewaves2587
    @danteshorewaves2587 Před 5 lety +26

    The foreshadowing of this scene is crazy

  • @seanward8974
    @seanward8974 Před 4 lety +17

    You know what’s so ironic about Stringer? He eventually came around to D’Angelo’s ideology of playing the game. D said to Bodie, Poot and Wallace way back in the beginning of the show that police weren’t concerned about the poor communities getting high on drugs, just the violence and murders associated with it. D was a hustler and could play the game and could be violent when he needed to be but his heart wasn’t with all of the violence. He always said the game don’t gotta be played like that. He was wrong in his thinking because the game has to be played like that.
    There has to be violence, there has to be bloodshed and there has to be death. This is an illegal enterprise and the only type of “regulation” and system of checks and balances is violence. There’s no governing council or entity that you can go to when you get robbed or jumped or whatever. Even the co-op would have eventually failed because there’s always going to be a Marlo type of person who will upset that balance and re introduce the violent nature that this game is built on.
    Stringer was all for the violence and beef in season one but slowly he came around to D’s thinking of playing the game with no violence and just profiting. I understand why he chose to have D killed but if he actually ever sat down and really got D’s thoughts on the game, he would have realized his own philosophy was very similar to D’s. I wonder what D would have thought about the game if he were alive to see Marlo’s reign.

    • @onbored9627
      @onbored9627 Před 3 lety +2

      And D got that whole spiel from McNulty.

  • @chanceboi3147
    @chanceboi3147 Před 7 lety +47

    Damn, Stringer was a cold ass serpent

    • @aa-.-477
      @aa-.-477 Před 3 lety +2

      & people say marlo was worse jokes

    • @Sbbodhi
      @Sbbodhi Před 3 lety +2

      Like avon didn’t get string killed

    • @resonatingtruths
      @resonatingtruths Před 3 lety +4

      @@Sbbodhi String got himself killed. Avon just couldn’t fix it.

  • @thomasdr08
    @thomasdr08 Před 8 lety +12

    I don't know which scene is more heartbreaking: this one, the scene with Brother and Avon, the scene with Avon and Stringer, or when Avon found out String snitched

  • @SamritpalSingh
    @SamritpalSingh Před 9 lety +52

    "Nah it's just business."
    Got to love Stringer Bell.

    • @jiggleykrowzer8768
      @jiggleykrowzer8768 Před 9 lety +8

      Stringer actually did the right thing trying to get Avon sent back to Jessup, since he knew the war would cost them everything, maybe even their lives. It wasn't worth it, they already had enough legit money plus their drug income, it was Avon's pride obviously. They both had flaws, they both turned on each other, but the game is the game, so obviously Avon comes out on top even though you can see he was very upset about having to give up his 'brother'.

    • @jiggleykrowzer8768
      @jiggleykrowzer8768 Před 9 lety +6

      Adam Apex #TVN #DVN
      That's the point though, Stringer did NOT beg or plead. He made a half assed offer about giving them money and being a better friend to them alive, but he saw in their eyes they wanted him dead. Brother Mouzone doesn't even say anything because they all 3 already know. Stringer was too smart for his own good. He went out like a man, not a sniveling little bitch who shits his pants like Andy Krawchek I HATED that fucker, him and Clay Davis make everyone else look like altar boys.

    • @jiggleykrowzer8768
      @jiggleykrowzer8768 Před 9 lety +8

      Adam Apex #TVN #DVN
      He wasn't acting. He briefly tried to buy them off but quickly seen they didn't care about money so he swallowed and took a deep breath and took it like a man.

    • @jiggleykrowzer8768
      @jiggleykrowzer8768 Před 9 lety +7

      Adam Apex #TVN #DVN
      LOL yea I'm sure you used to be a drug kingpin. Then you came on youtube to tell us all about it. LOL

    • @BoboTF2
      @BoboTF2 Před 5 lety +1

      @@buttsucker2741 gotta love your profile name man

  • @ashkeygii9449
    @ashkeygii9449 Před rokem +3

    I love how Colvin correctly asserted that Avon hurt Stringer. Stringer had time to back up on snitching, because the first time it was just informing that Avon had gotten shot. Stringer tried to say it was business like Avon not compromising with Marlo was the reason, but bro was hurt that Clay played him and Avon called him out on it and wouldn't hit Clay.

  • @UMANGPLAYS
    @UMANGPLAYS Před 3 lety +10

    both Stringer and Avon gave each other up in their own way.

    • @teshillimite922
      @teshillimite922 Před 2 lety +5

      Avon tried to help Stringer by paying Mouzonne for his mistake. In the end he was right he bleeds red and stringer bleeds green (money)

  • @ali56
    @ali56 Před 10 lety +39

    Meeting in a graveyard, how sadly fitting...

  • @erics362
    @erics362 Před 4 měsíci +3

    People like comparing them because of how they tried the change drug distribution dynamics. But they couldn't be farther apart. Stringer was motivated by greed, power, and money. Bunny was motivated by his caring nature and desire to make a positive impact on the community.

  • @aidacailar1126
    @aidacailar1126 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Stringer and Colvin mirrored each other, both two men trying to fight against tradition trying to improve the system they belong to.

  • @johns1187
    @johns1187 Před 2 lety +6

    Stringer probably left and started asking people in the crew who is snitching lately. Dude was an absolute perfectly written slimy businessman thug character.

  • @Mcnutty924
    @Mcnutty924 Před 14 dny

    Colvin really is the centerpiece of season 3. He's tied into almost everyones storyline.

  • @MichaelJordan-xp3yb
    @MichaelJordan-xp3yb Před 2 lety +3

    one of my favourite scenes in the series.

  • @Antrizzle2009
    @Antrizzle2009 Před 12 lety +22

    @seekisforme5 Did you not watch the show? Stringer the "good dude" was the guy who had D'Angelo killed even tho D was cool with doing his years, then hid behind Avon's back. He then went behind Avon's back and took the package from Prop Joe, despite Avon telling him not to. He then set up Mouzone to have him killed, further damaging Avon's rep. He messed up on so many different levels. Avon had to give him up or else he was gonna lose his NYC connection. Like Stringer himself said, it's business

    • @sirhoudini6430
      @sirhoudini6430 Před 4 lety

      Antrizzle2009 just reminding of your 8 yr old comment lol,

  • @AbdurRahman-mb1vr
    @AbdurRahman-mb1vr Před 2 lety +4

    When I first watched The Wire, the connection between Bunny and Stringer Bell for some reason led me to think that Bunny was some drug leader hidden in the police.

    • @Se0420_
      @Se0420_ Před 11 měsíci +3

      naw. bunny use to work the beat, on the same corners avon crew grew up on. It was pretty much said in the scene with colvin and weebey talking about namond

  • @spaftw123
    @spaftw123 Před 8 lety +6

    By far my favorite scene in the wire. In one scene it captures the political maneuvering of a criminal (for the greater good of his people), and the actions of natural police (for the greater good of his). I love how Colvin calls Stringer by his actual name, showing how in depth he knows his district. I definitely could see a resemblance between Bodie and Carver developing into something like this too. BEST SHOW EVER MADE

    • @capnskiddies
      @capnskiddies Před 6 lety

      Except bodie went to meet his brother.

  • @Smash255
    @Smash255 Před 10 lety +33

    @DreadfulControversy They likely knew each other for years prior, similar to how Carrver and McNulty had a relationship with Bodie. In season 4 when Colvin talked with Weebay "I use to bang up on ya'll all the time" basically showed they knew each other from way back. Considering Weebay Avon and Stringer all came up together it fits

    • @finarrykahn13
      @finarrykahn13 Před 10 lety +7

      Yeh exactly right, beauty of the subtlety of the show. It is clear that they know each other from previous interactions, and once more a testament to cops like Colvin and Carver who know and understand the people they are chasing.

    • @TroiJupiter
      @TroiJupiter Před 10 lety +2

      finarrykahn13 THEY DID NOT KNOW EACH OTHER STOP PUTTING YOUR OWN THOUGHTS ON THIS SCENE AND TAKE IT FOR WHAT IT IS

    • @crews-lj3ph
      @crews-lj3ph Před 9 lety +1

      +Troi “live4diy” Davis stfu

    • @TroiJupiter
      @TroiJupiter Před 9 lety

      Vonte Smith well actully my dad was on my account and he commented this

    • @crews-lj3ph
      @crews-lj3ph Před 9 lety +1

      Troi Davis lies

  • @nickmonts
    @nickmonts Před 4 lety +5

    Bunny Colvin is my favorite fictional character. Ever

  • @HayastAnFedayi
    @HayastAnFedayi Před měsícem

    Love the nuance of Colvin being cautious about taking the address piece of paper from Stringer, almost like he feels bad for Stringer like giving him one last out of giving his lifelong friend up, even though both were on opposite sides, Colvin knew the ramifications of what stringer was doing.

  • @DWSimmy
    @DWSimmy Před 12 lety +4

    If anyone was truly evil it was Marlo. Stringer wanted to treat drug dealing like a business. This approach could have led to a drop in the murder rate. So he was working towards a more noble end than Marlo, even if he was doing it for purely selfish reasons.

  • @HighLordBlazeReborn
    @HighLordBlazeReborn Před rokem +2

    Everyone assuming the retired Colvin went to school with the mid 30s Stringer and Avon? Did yall miss the Carver/Randy/FayetteMafiaCrew parallel here? Colvin straight up admits he used to chase Wee Bey when he was really young to his face lol.

  • @MrKnicks599
    @MrKnicks599 Před 5 lety +2

    We need a full length The Wire Movie!

  • @datnotoriousmadman
    @datnotoriousmadman Před 12 lety +5

    They meet in a graveyard, when Stringer's found out he dies. but when Colvin gets found out, he just gets fired.

  • @DirkCjelli42
    @DirkCjelli42 Před 5 lety +8

    Is Colvin the only person who calls Stringer by his true name?

  • @michaelmartin7010
    @michaelmartin7010 Před 7 lety +11

    that's some betrayal shit stringer bell did towards Avon

  • @PantomimeHorse
    @PantomimeHorse Před 2 lety +1

    Meeting in a graveyard, foreshadowing their eventual fates; Happily, Colvin's death was merely metaphorical

  • @malkeytone3285
    @malkeytone3285 Před 3 lety +6

    It's so crazy that they don't spell it out Colvin policed them when they were young. But you can see it in the hate and contempt on Colvins face when he first meets him

    • @malkeytone3285
      @malkeytone3285 Před 2 lety

      I loved that context. That look of Colvin thinking man this another bitch is still the same piece of shit from when he was a teenager

  • @johnb5057
    @johnb5057 Před 2 lety +3

    anybody notice that the tombstones kind of look like chess pieces? remember the chess scene in season 1?

  • @kristawelch3821
    @kristawelch3821 Před měsícem

    One of the best scenes in the series. Both men walking the line and knowing too damn much.

  • @JoeyKlender
    @JoeyKlender Před 2 lety +2

    The way Colvin and String’s meeting alternated with Avon and Brother in the barbershop only showed me how String was veering away from his path as Avon’s #2. He was attempting to be “normal,” or as normal as he could. In my opinion, normal, everyday people would do what String did.
    Meanwhile, Avon was “just a gangster, he supposed,” and set up Avon how gangsters would. Out of line? You’re out.

  • @FlamingSpaceman
    @FlamingSpaceman Před 7 lety +5

    As The Greek once said "Business. Always business"

    • @andrew7taylor
      @andrew7taylor Před 7 lety +3

      Definitely the most horrifying dialogue in the Wire is the one they have just before that.
      - He knows what he knows, but he only knows my name... and my name is not my name. And you? To them, you're only "the Greek".
      - And of course, I'm not even Greek...
      Compared to them, even Clay Davis and Andy Krawczyk were playing with a laughable amount of money. Plus, they were uncatchable, untouchable and had the FBI in their pockets.

  • @jhbmc1
    @jhbmc1 Před 5 lety +2

    Amazing how he in a graveyard and says its just business and Avon had him killed for the sake of business love when a show makes go in different emotional directions

  • @CallMePaine
    @CallMePaine Před 4 lety +2

    Dead man meeting at a graveyard!! Gotta love The Wire!!

  • @5280PolotheKid
    @5280PolotheKid Před 4 lety +6

    How are u gonna hear that your best friend/brother is gonna atleast... atLEAST do 5 years.. n u still continue with it smh

  • @SergioMendoza760
    @SergioMendoza760 Před měsícem

    I like how both Avon and Stringer knew they were going to betray each other for leadership over barksdale. And it ended up fucking everything up anyways proving they would’ve easily been stronger working together.

  • @bigjoker690
    @bigjoker690 Před 4 lety +8

    Stringer was never one of them.

    • @SocialAssasin
      @SocialAssasin Před 3 lety

      And that's a bad thing? Funny how so many people with room temperature IQs glorify that shit.

  • @erikseidler133
    @erikseidler133 Před 6 lety +2

    Dunder Mifflin and the funniest angel in the garrison.

  • @domingow.17
    @domingow.17 Před 9 lety +15

    Stringer was all about organized crime, like the mobs that still thrive today, hiding in plain sight. Avon was almost too much of a gangbanger and not enough of a mobster.

    • @palebluedot89
      @palebluedot89 Před 9 lety +14

      If you think about it though, there is validity to both sides in some sense. Avon was too eager for war. But fundamentally, he understood someone like Marlo. As long as there is an illegal element to selling drugs, the game will never be what Stringer wants it to be. He sees what the game could be, if it could be a business, but Avon sees the game for what it is and in the end he plays it right and ends up in prison, but alive.

    • @BigBadassR
      @BigBadassR Před 9 lety +7

      Domingo W. Avon already owned four project buildings and the low rises and the cops had no idea what he even looked like. Then they went to get his picture from the projects growing up as a kid and he had taken care of that too. Stringer telling McNulty to fuck off is what brought all the heat on the Barksdale crew to begin with...that's what made McNulty want to go after them so bad. So I have to disagree.

  • @TrueTrife
    @TrueTrife Před 6 lety +18

    This was the beginning of Stringers downfall - he was desperate and out of touch with the street vs his idealogical "businessman" approach to the issues and I also feel like he secretly wanted Avon's spot.
    Avon starts to see through Stringers shit but keeps shrugging it off in the earlier episodes/seasons until Brother Mouzone shows up and confirms that he knows String tried to get him killed/have Omar killed and that he never told Avon about the double crossing he was doing behind his back.

    • @Putaspellonyou
      @Putaspellonyou Před 5 lety +5

      I think its the other way around. People in the game so caught up in the gangster shit couldn't see the bigger picture. It almost worked, but Avon destroyed the co-op. Literally.

    • @mrskinszszs
      @mrskinszszs Před 5 lety +5

      @@Putaspellonyou Avon himself regretted not listening to Stringer about it. You're right.

    • @ZPSBestProfileName
      @ZPSBestProfileName Před 3 lety +2

      How can this be the beginning?! The beginning was what happened to Brandon. He went beyond necessary. Later examples include telling Avon about D'Angelo when Stringer's pride was hurt after Avon said he wasn't "hard enough for this shit right here", and setting Omar on Mouzone.
      Avon even tried to save Stringer even at the last

  • @durtyreddz
    @durtyreddz Před 11 lety +3

    that's the jacket string got killed in he was wearing

  • @jpa5038
    @jpa5038 Před 3 lety +4

    That last shot of Stringer walking through the graveyard into the shadows. If that's not good foreshadowing then I don't know what it is.

  • @Hossak
    @Hossak Před 4 měsíci

    This is where all the dead chess pieces go when they leave the board.

  • @marquesjohnson6359
    @marquesjohnson6359 Před 3 lety +2

    I always liked colvin. He was a good guy who really tried to make things better I always thought he mirrored stringer they were similar just on opposite sides they both tried to reform their respective institutions and were punished for it

  • @NewYork975
    @NewYork975 Před 4 lety +5

    Stringer still cared enough to at least try to get him just a 5 year extra bid. Avon straight up green lighted String, that's some stone cold shit.

    • @seanward8974
      @seanward8974 Před 4 lety +5

      Can’t really say that’s true because Stringer actually did that to himself. He let Prop Joe get into his head and turned against his own brother Avon. I wonder how Stringer would have felt doing business with Joe if he found out Joe set Omar on Avon to have him killed. Stringer did a lot of foul things, many of those things were exactly exactly the opposite of what Avon ordered. Meanwhile Avon, who built his reputation off of honor and respect, he had no choice but to give Stringer up or lose all he built up. Stringer brought that Omar and Brother Mouzone heat on himself by going against Avon’s wishes and allying himself with their worst enemy. Stringer was breaking every rule and it caught up to him. Then he snitched on Avon to get him out the way so he could establish the co-op which was no guarantee it would work and with Marlo in the picture we see exactly why the co-op wasn’t going to last. He snitched on Avon, the same thing he got D’Angelo and Wallace killed over.

  • @SankofaNYC
    @SankofaNYC Před 3 lety +1

    Damn String... smh damn damn damn

  • @Grantj9137
    @Grantj9137 Před 11 lety +1

    He meant that Barksdale was going to end up serving atleast 5 years. I think String only intended for the cops to hit Avon with the parole violation and he was just going to serve his remaining four years from his previous sentence. I don't think Stringer wanted Avon gone forever, maybe just long enough to keep them from going to war and long enough for him to legitamize his business ventures....(real estate and whatnot).

  • @imfine6904
    @imfine6904 Před 5 lety +2

    that's cause you was behind that, that made me come to you with this
    look like you and me both tryna make sense of this game

  • @shameekgrimes1921
    @shameekgrimes1921 Před 3 lety +1

    I loved Colvin talking with String’ in here and Bey at prison.

  • @kivanihabhouse3467
    @kivanihabhouse3467 Před 7 lety +14

    you bleed green

  • @jimmyguapo5245
    @jimmyguapo5245 Před 3 lety +5

    Mannnnnn id pay big money to see how these 2 know each other.
    Was Bunny knocking String and Avon around back in the day like Herc and Carv did Bodie?
    Did they grow up together?
    Did String owe Bunny for something?

  • @BigBadassR
    @BigBadassR Před 9 lety +13

    Stringers dumb. When Avon got busted he would have had disclosure rights, and he would have found out stringer set him up. Stringer would have been through.

    • @BlackPride1000
      @BlackPride1000 Před 8 lety +1

      +Big R Didnt Omar Say ''Your Own Boy Gave You Up''

    • @BigBadassR
      @BigBadassR Před 8 lety +5

      ***** Yeah...but that's after Stringer already set up Avon. And Avon didn't really have much choice.

    • @bgstv10001
      @bgstv10001 Před 8 lety +3

      +Big R and plus stringer got his cousin D.Angelo killed

    • @811chelseafc
      @811chelseafc Před 5 lety

      Big R Avon didn’t know that. And stringer didn’t have much of a choice either. They both betrayed each other and that’s that.

    • @khoabuivan4458
      @khoabuivan4458 Před 5 lety +4

      It's like you people never watch the show lol

  • @ManuelGarcia-up5ps
    @ManuelGarcia-up5ps Před 5 lety +3

    Is it me or is the “GAME” all about how you word things.

  • @dandrewilson1995
    @dandrewilson1995 Před měsícem

    Speak your mind Russell !

  • @travisitio
    @travisitio Před 2 lety +1

    Damn. Stringer was giving Avon up to the cops, and Avon was giving Stringer up to Omar and Brother Mouzone

    • @MichaelJordan-xp3yb
      @MichaelJordan-xp3yb Před 2 lety

      yeah but it says a lot that Stringer only wanted Avon to do 5 years, where as Avon literally green lit a hit on his mans life...

    • @travisitio
      @travisitio Před 2 lety +1

      @@MichaelJordan-xp3yb And Stringer bought that on himself. That's what you get for being devious and not having a code. Avon had a code which is why he gave up him up.

    • @MichaelJordan-xp3yb
      @MichaelJordan-xp3yb Před 2 lety

      @@travisitio thats exactly the thing, his code is family and loyalty but he got his day one homie hit...that shows that all that code shit was fake

    • @travisitio
      @travisitio Před 2 lety

      @@MichaelJordan-xp3yb What Stringer Bell was wrong. You act like he set up go get money or something. Stringer had to go

  • @jontray87
    @jontray87 Před 13 lety

    @Itsasony thats why i put "in their grave." He doesnt literally die like String but him not getting his major rank when he retired and Hamsterdam falling apart, that symbolized his "death."

  • @queensmickey
    @queensmickey Před 6 lety +3

    Looking back on this series a lot of people say Stringer was out for self but I truly believe Avon is who fucked it up. When Avon got out of jail, Stringer has a good thing going for the whole crew. He had Prop Joe package and he had a seat on the New Day Co-op. Avon came back home with his street nigga mentality bullshit and wanted to go to war with Marlo right away. I liked Avon but in the end Stringer was right when he said if Avon don’t give this shit up, everything they built was gonna turn to shit and that is exactly what happened. Not to shit on Avon or nothing but he was a short term thinker and Stringer thought past just the streets, which is why in the end they wound up stepping on each other’s toes. Avon and Stringer tried to step over each other and in the end they didn’t lose to Marlo or Omar and Brother Mouzone but themselves. Avon lost to himself because of what he was and Stringer lost to himself because he was too much a business man to understand the street but too much of a gangster to understand business. Kind of fucked up when you think about the fact that had these two put their heads together they could’ve easily beat Marlo.

  • @jasandros
    @jasandros Před 3 lety +1

    Real Machiavellian drama. String sets up Avon for the Cops/Avon sets up String for Omar n Brother.

  • @soldatheero
    @soldatheero Před 11 lety +3

    You are right in fact it is the exact opposite. He is brainless when it comes to business affairs, he thinks thinks he can put on a suit and that makes him a business a legit man. He applies his street mentality to the real common business world. Hes a street genius but he thinks it can transfer over and he fails misrably

    • @willia3r
      @willia3r Před 3 lety +1

      It’s not brainless, he just didn’t have enough time to learn the business hustle.
      Plenty of folks used their underworld money to go straight.
      Donald Trump’s father was a major bootlegger before transitioning over to legal businesses, which is why Donald was born into wealth.

  • @stk32018
    @stk32018 Před 11 lety +1

    Meant metaphorically since he lost his job, like McNulty at the end, them losing their job is like them "dying" in a way

  • @marcuswashington5159
    @marcuswashington5159 Před 4 lety +1

    Stringer was the example of a cat that wasn’t built for the game

  • @bryanbelcher8582
    @bryanbelcher8582 Před 8 lety +3

    why didn't he tell on clay Davis?

    • @yochill1
      @yochill1 Před 7 lety +2

      why is this comment ignored? It wasnt business it was personal

  • @jaywali249
    @jaywali249 Před 2 lety

    Stringer and Barksdale scheming against each other almost at the same time....Grimy minds think alike.

  • @jiheem2006
    @jiheem2006 Před 2 měsíci

    I don't remember this, but I remember the conclusion.I think the episode was you can't flush guns😮

  • @bobbystars1984
    @bobbystars1984 Před 2 měsíci

    Dam! He said his snitching on his own family was just business 😂 Glad Omar got his azz

  • @jeffrey3425
    @jeffrey3425 Před 5 lety +1

    "It's just business."
    And at the same time, Avon was selling Stringer out to Mouzone for exactly the same reason.

    • @kaytomp27
      @kaytomp27 Před 5 lety +4

      Avon didnt sell stringer out...stringer sold himself out...he played away games like avon said..he played the street game wrong..bad moves, and avon tried to save stringer but he couldnt

    • @seanward8974
      @seanward8974 Před 4 lety

      Can’t say that Avon sold him out. If you look at it, they both actually tried to save each other from their fates, Stringer was much closer to his goal of trying to get Avon just the five years in prison, but Avon couldn’t save Stringer even though he really tried. Everything Stringer did from season 2 forward caught up to him, all the things Avon warned him not to do that he did anyway caught up to him and that’s why Avon had to let that happen. And it actually hurt him to do that as you see after with his interactions with Slim Charles.

  • @nillaguerilla
    @nillaguerilla Před 13 lety

    @Shack83 thats my thoughts too. The Wire always showed the revolving cycling of "the game", so this scene could've predicted how carver and bodie might have played out, just a thought.

  • @AceNucci
    @AceNucci Před 12 lety

    You're right about the first 2... But Bodie and McNulty weren't in a graveyard... It was a park outside of the city.

  • @garybusey9941
    @garybusey9941 Před 2 lety +1

    I'd love to see a show of young Colvin walking his beat, but I know that (in today's media/entertainment standard) it would suck. At least we got The Wire.

  • @daauthor6004
    @daauthor6004 Před 3 lety

    Stringer didn't want to do it. But something had to be done. Avon had grenades! Damn...

  • @ibramblebush
    @ibramblebush Před 3 lety +1

    The fact that Stringer actually thought he could get away with snitching on Avon and live afterwards shows how stupid he really was. He actually thought he could give up Avon and it wouldn't get back to him or he wouldn't figure it out who betrayed him. Stringer problem is he thought he was way smarter then what he was and in the end that what got him dead, even if Mozzone and Omar missed him Avon or someone in the crew would have figured it out and killed him, Stringer was dead either way.

    • @johnshooter4763
      @johnshooter4763 Před 8 měsíci

      Snitching didn't get him killed, it was the fact he had D Angelo killed inside and McNulty fucked String by telling D's mum who told Avon!

  • @pattywagon313
    @pattywagon313 Před 5 lety

    Their familiar interaction here suggests that they knew each other in the past, maybe before they took separate paths..

  • @julianjdogg
    @julianjdogg Před 5 lety +3

    Stringer the Nihilist.
    Avon the Moralist.

  • @ikazukison2
    @ikazukison2 Před 2 měsíci

    I lost my shit when these two fellas met

  • @houseofmatrix6174
    @houseofmatrix6174 Před 11 měsíci

    Maybe this why Bunny wanted save Namond . He didn’t want him to end up like Stringer Bell

  • @GHOST91141
    @GHOST91141 Před 6 lety +2

    Speak your mind Russell.. Classic Wire shit there

  • @stk32018
    @stk32018 Před 11 lety +2

    Stringer and Colvin both die tryin to reform the game, which was the central point of Season 3 and applies to the whole series really

  • @Nuffsaid876
    @Nuffsaid876 Před 2 lety

    Man I forgot about this. Sting got avon. Avon got string. A dirty game

  • @TLMTVTHELOVEMOVEMENT
    @TLMTVTHELOVEMOVEMENT Před 3 měsíci

    That man is NOT your brother if you set up his own nephew to be killed, making it look like he hung himself…
    That man is NOT your brother if you go to the police and give them direct information on how and where they can arrest him…..
    Avon even after learning what happened to his nephew, he STILL tried to negotiate for “Stringer’s” life….
    What happened to “Stringer Bell” was everything coming full circle, and he was the cause of it.