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Test your knowledge of TV police trivia


Monday, August 25, 2008 6:36 AM PDT

Most law enforcement officers became interested in the profession based on what they saw on cop shows as they were growing up. I enjoyed "Adam-12" and "Police Story." Test your cop show trivia knowledge:

  • What long running crime drama began with the phrase, "Ladies and gentlemen, the story you are about to hear is true. Only the names have been changed to protect the innocent"?

  • This crime fighter had a pet cockatoo named Fred.

  • In "Hill Street Blues," at the end of dayshift briefing, Sergeant Phil Esterhaus always paused and said something to his officers before they hit the street. What was his heartfelt reminder?

  • These two young detectives drove a bright red Ford Torino and had a flashy informant named Huggy Bear

  • Captain James T. Kirk traded in his phaser for a job as a sergeant assigned to LCPD's Academy division in this early '80s series.

  • Before he took the helm of the Black Pearl in "Pirates of the Caribbean," Johnny Depp starred as a young undercover officer in this 1987 series.

  • One of the main characters in this mid-'80s series didn't wear socks, had a perpetual five o'clock shadow, drove a Ferrari and lived on a sailboat.

  • This mid-'90s series was based on the bicycle patrol unit at Santa Monica P.D.

  • This actor appeared on five cop shows and played Detective Andy Sipowicz on "NYPD Blue." Name him.

  • This was one of the first true reality shows in television history. Each episode ends with, "132 on Bush. I've got him at gunpoint." Name the long-running Fox series.

  • Former Lodi P.D. officer Diane Dutra and her K-9 partner, Sam, recreated an incident where Sam jumped off the Highway 99 overpass into the Mokelumne River and apprehended a suspect, for this PAX network series.

  • Retired LPD Lieutenant Bill Barry starred in a recreation of a high-profile Lodi murder case on this Discovery Network show.

  • LPD Sergeant Lance Hayden's father served as a technical advisor for this popular '80s cop show. At age 8, Lance appeared in one episode but did not have any dialogue. His sister had a speaking part in an episode and receives residual checks to this day. Name this series. (A clue: The two stars rode motorcycles on the Los Angeles freeways. In most of the highway scenes, they were actually riding on a trailer.)

    Answers:

    "Dragnet"

    "Baretta"

    "Let's be careful out there."

    Starsky and Hutch

    "T.J. Hooker"

    "21 Jump Street"

    Sonny Crockett, "Miami Vice"

    "Pacific Blue"

    "Dennis Franz

    "COPS"

    "Amazing Animals"

    "The New Detectives"

    "CHIPS"

    Any comments, questions or advice for Behind the Badge can be e-mailed to jbiskup@pd.lodi.gov or mailed to Jeanie Biskup, Lodi Police Department, 215 W. Elm Street, Lodi, CA 95240, phone (209)333-6864.

    Reader Feedback

    TandC wrote on Aug 31, 2008 9:42 PM:

    " cogito, you forgot Galt's sherrif Andy and deputy Barney! LOL "

    Bob Hussein Loblaw wrote on Aug 31, 2008 12:05 PM:

    " I got them all. What do I win? "

    Cogito wrote on Aug 26, 2008 10:28 PM:

    " Over the years I've had many friends who've become LPD, and met many men and women who are LPD. They are, without exception, some of the finest people I've had the honor to know. Lodi is very blessed by the professionalism and humanity they have in a Police Department. Thanks Garold, Jim, Terry, Chuck, Rick, Reba, and anyone else I may be forgetting. "

    t jefferson wrote on Aug 26, 2008 6:58 AM:

    " Dragonfaire,

    For the most part I will agree with you statement. The LPD is professional and does provide good service for the citizens of Lodi. I do question what Helicopter assults, armored cars, SWAT teams and other things policing has morphed into, have to do with policing in Lodi. It is a tired argument, but how close is the US to becoming a police state? "

    dragonfaire wrote on Aug 25, 2008 7:29 PM:

    " Response to T Jefferson:

    Fortunately the officers and staff at the Lodi Police Department exemplify members of the most well run metro police force I have ever had the privelege of being served by. Try living in a rural area, or large city and hope that someone shows up when you need them.

    Lodi has always been led by Commanders that actually care about the public. It's an awful job, heartwrenching, gut turning, and dangerous work. If you walked a mile in their shoes, you would know what I mean. I am not an officer, just a member of the public who appreciates LPD. "

    t jefferson wrote on Aug 25, 2008 7:44 AM:

    " Fortunately or unfortunatly, depending on where you come from, a lot of the police these days think they are living in an episode of one of these shows. What ever happened to reasonable policing, oh thats right it was replaces with SWAT, machine guns, communitiy oriented policing and everyone is guilty until proven innocent. Someday it will change, but I fear it will only get worse before it will get better. "

    Comments on this story are now closed.



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