
The issues with realism on this show have never bothered me, personally. I've just always tended to assume going into a crime drama/medical show/law show that most of what happened on there was going to be unrealistic to some degree :p. I appreciate it when the show does keep things believable, of course,, but that's not my main focus when watching the show.
But I can totally see how people who actually work in the fields depicted on these kinds of shows, or have a general interest in those specific aspects of the show, or whatever, would get all nitpicky and critical, though, and where these problems would bother them.
normasm hit exactly on what did attract me to this show, though, when it comes to the case side of things-the issues that they bring up. That's the part of the cases I've always been the most interested by, moreso than the whodunit/"solving the case alongside the team" aspect. I like a case that gives us something to think about in regards to society and what makes people turn out as they do and whatnot, and I like how the cases can create debate among the team, or between the team and the local officers/the higher ups/the people they're trying to help and protect/whomever, in regards to the right course of action. And of course, the moments when a case hits a personal nerve for a team member can also be quite interesting, too.
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