Treme Series Quiz – Which Character Are You?

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Take this Treme Series Quiz to find out which character you are. We update the quiz regularly and it’s the most accurate among the other quizzes.

I’ll be honest: I detested the first season of “Treme.” I had no idea what I was watching and had no desire to find out. The show was plotless and boring in my opinion. Davis McAlary, played by Steve Zahn, irritated me. “Treme,” a drama about how individuals and communities coped with Hurricane Katrina, seemed destined to fall short of David Simon’s masterwork, “The Wire.”

I was mistaken. But I wasn’t mistaken at the moment. The first season of “Treme” is one of the slowest I’ve ever watched. But, following the series conclusion in the closing days of 2013, I’m revoking everything I said. Furthermore, I’ll make a bold claim: “Treme” is superior to “The Wire.”

Editor’s Picks

I’ve been thinking about my favorite television and internet series from the previous year (see my write-ups of my favorite comedy and drama web series for Indiewire). In general, television drama, particularly that starring marginalized persons, had a successful year. Women-led programs had a particularly successful year, as Alison Willmore has remarked. My favorite shows featured women attempting to maintain a sense of self while reforming and surviving institutions ranging from hospitals to police and prisons, such as “The Bridge” and “Borgen” from Denmark (which you can watch for free on Link TV for a limited time), “The Good Wife,” “Enlightened,” “Getting On,” “Nurse Jackie,” “Top of the Lake,” “Orange Is the New Black,” and “Orphan Black.” That’s a lot of fantastic concerts.

Treme Series Quiz

The most surprising dramas of the year, such as “American Horror Story: Coven” and “Scandal,” have had a lot of fun with moral ambiguity. (On the other hand, while strong, Cable’s white/macho dramas aren’t evolving creatively as well as they should be: witness “Sons of Anarchy,” “Boardwalk Empire,” “The Walking Dead,” and arguably “Mad Men,” with the exception of “Breaking Bad”). And in the midst of all of this amazing, diversified drama was “Treme,” which was hosting a fabulous party that only the most disciplined TV fans would want to attend. Also, you must try to play this Treme Series Quiz.

Perhaps you attempted to watch “Treme.” You adored “The Wire” like any educated viewer, and you were enthusiastic about a magnificent work of historical fiction set in one of America’s most interesting but least represented cities, New Orleans.

This isn’t your fault. Eric Overmeyer and David Simon abandoned “The Wire’s” case-of-the-season plot technique in “Treme,” which made it a little easier for viewers to leap into a show that took its time unraveling a violent if vividly realized, dramatic yarn. Instead, “Treme” is all about the characters and has little to do with the plot. As a result, there’s no discernible reason for us to care about the characters in the story and their many difficulties. While the characters are linked, it is unclear how at first, and many of them never meet.

About the quiz

What in the world was going on? Overmeyer and Simon, on the other hand, did not want to make another “Wire.” For one thing, “The Wire” is fiction, which allows a writer to effortlessly develop a plot that leaves viewers eager for a resolution. There’s always the possibility of a climax, however fleeting, in fiction, which is why people tune in every week. It’s why “Scandal” continues to outperform other broadcast dramas in terms of ratings: it’s a series of expertly built climaxes. “Treme” denies the necessity for weekly, even season-long, climaxes and does not compensate by stuffing the script with gags.

The climax of “Treme” was really the third season finale, “Tipitina,” which was also the series finale at the time. LaDonna (aka #MamaPope Khandi Alexander) organizes the community to hold a fundraiser after her bar burns down. For a brief moment, all of these divergent personalities came together to assist a black lady in reviving her business.

It was the most moving television episode I saw in 2012, and it rates among my all-time favorites. “If there’s a heaven, it’s wired for HBO, and Robert Altman viewed this episode while smoking a gigantic joint and beaming ear-to-ear,” said New York’s Matt Zoller Seitz.

For more personality quizzes check this: Big Love Series Quiz

Written By:

Larry Flynn

Larry Flynn is a passionate writer and a devoted fan of television, known for his knack for crafting intriguing questions that test your knowledge, recall, and love for TV shows. Born and raised in the vibrant culture of Canada, Larry's fascination with storytelling and screenwriting has evolved into a dedicated pursuit of creating immersive quiz experiences for TV enthusiasts around the globe.
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