Take this which The Shield character are you quiz to test which character are you? Answer these quick questions to find out. Play it now!
That was the question on the final image in the finale of “The Shield.” After all, Vic—who became a cubicle slave, had his family removed for all from his life and saw every other cop he had knew had come to disdain him (or more to disdain him)—still lived. And for his list of misdeeds, he has successfully dodged justice.
I expected Vic to die, to pay for the whole life he’d taken in the years a partial recompense. He deserves to die, part of me thought.
Again, if I guess Vic should have paid with his life for all of the sins that began with the death of Terry Crowley? Doesn’t it want me to be hypocritical of Vic’s death? I’ve certainly been horrified by some of the things he has done, but that’s the ability to act and to write about this program so at least sometimes I couldn’t help that I want Vic to make it through several jams.
What the last few episodes of “The Shield” have shown pretty effectively is how we have disturbingly inured them even if you think we didn’t agree with Vic’s behavior. At the end of his crime recitations in the second episode, Vic laughed somewhat, like a man who remembers his colleges. I was also smiling a little bit, although I also felt new horror in the sheer number of Vic’s evil actions as I saw his sins with the eyes of a scared federal agent.
Which The Shield character are you?
I remember the first word… S#@! Like in, Sacred. The second… finish. As in, when the corrupt members of the Strike team finally got their support, I had a feeling of fulfillment. And I never really got from the magnificent yet enigmatic soprano the last atypical of the close. Also, you will find out which The Shield character are you in this quiz.
Shawn Ryan, the author of the series, has packed certain key Moments into the last edition. I have to tell that I squirmed in the pleasure of witnessing Ronnie being rewarded for her blind faithfulness to Vic with huge, fat treachery. “Are you sorry?!?!?” Ronnie said back. Ronnie, we are somewhat surprised that you have done that all the way to the conclusion. Which would outweigh Lem by two seasons). (Your wrath is justifiable. This season, of course, focused on a new interaction between Vic and Shane’s Strike Team.
For Shane, Vic’s old companion in crime, you knew it would not go well, but wow.
The occurrences preceding up to his death, the curiosity he had paid to his work in the youth comfort shop, fixing himself to the toy police car, and phoning for the pregnant wife Mara and kid Jackson (“Family meeting!”).
About the quiz
Here’s something refreshing you could find: On the Mad Men conclusion I don’t have an opinion. It is not that Mad Men didn’t make me think, but it wasn’t my duty to turn these ideas into major theories. I would want to enjoy Mad Men because of a sunset off the Big Sur coast.
I thought it would be wrong to talk about the Twitter reactions as I didn’t want aliens to destroy my Zen-like peace among post-mad men. Most of the time I also avoided the recaps. However, my friend Scott Tobias, film reviewer for The Dissolve, waved my defenses and my brain somehow. There was a tweet Although the Mad Men ending was not ruined for me, the tweet showed how far away it was from the best series finale ever.
Remember folks still The Shield? When it debuted on FX in 2002, it was something of a new notion when focusing a TV drama around an amoral antihero. The Golden Globes early honored The Shield and won the Best TV series Drama after the first season. The Golden Globes are the best ones. The show’s star, Michael Chiklis, was also won by Vic Mackey, the cops of the Strike Team known as the corrupt L.A. corps, a Golden Globe (and Emmy). Tony Soprano was maybe the most renowned SOB on TV, but Mackey upped the ante.
For more personality quizzes check this: Banshee Quiz.