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[[File:barney-miller-cast_3441.jpg|frame|From left to right: Wojo, Captain Miller, Harris, Fish, and Yemana.]]
 
A police squadroom sitcom airing on [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] from 1975-1982, '''''Barney Miller''''' was considered quite realistic by actual cops, especially in comparison to police dramas at the time. The episodes tended to take place entirely within the bleak, ancient squadroom as the detectives booked and processed various suspects. Action sequences usually took place off-camera and were described by the detectives as they returned from the scene. What made the show worth watching was the razor-sharp writing and the eccentric personalities of the detectives, including:
 
* The eponymous Captain Miller ([[Hal Linden]]), whose underlings exasperate him and whose superiors ignore him; an [[Only Sane Man]] who often feels ineffectual and underappreciatedunder-appreciated. Best known for leaving suspects and victims together for a while in hopes that they will work things out without pressing charges (and therefore without the associated paperwork).
* Sergeant Nick Yemana ([[Jack Soo]]), Captain Miller's second in command who is in charge of "the files" and is generally the [[Hypercompetent Sidekick]] of the squadroom. He takes a laissez-faire attitude to most things and often makes inappropriate jokes. His bad coffee is legendary.
* Sergeant Philip K. Fish ([[Abe Vigoda]]), an elderly and dyspeptic complainer who alternately wisecracks about today's batch of criminals or his wife. Despite his endless moaning, he can't stand the thought of his impending retirement. The character began appearing in a spin-off series, ''[[Fish]]'', midway through the third season but didn't leave until the end of it (getting a proper send-off in the fourth season premiere). The spin-off didn't last two years, and Fish continued to return for occasional appearances on the parent show.
* Detective Stanley Taddeus "Wojo" Wojciehowicz ("You say it like it's spelled!" or "Spelled just like it sounds!") ([[Max Gail]]), who tended to act entirely on his impulses, causing Barney endless headaches. His original uncouth and dense character gradually became more enlightened as the series went on.
* Sergeant Ron Harris ([[Ron Glass]]), whose police work frequently took second place to his novel-writing. He had a diva-esque attitude, best exemplified by his reluctance to wear anything he considered unstylish, even during undercover work. He also considered himself the squadroom intellectual, at least until the arrival of...
* Detective Arthur Dietrich ([[Steve Landesberg]]), a [[Deadpan Snarker]] and card-carrying intellectual, whose long-winded speculations about criminal psychology, science, and just about anything else that happened to come up in conversation drove the other detectives crazy. He particularly annoyed Harris, who didn't appreciate having a rival for being "the Smart One".
* During the first two seasons, Sergeant Chano Amenguale ([[Gregory Sierra]]); an amiable, talkative guy, but basically deficient in outstanding personality quirks. He [[Brother Chuck|disappeared]] when Sierra got a lead role on another sitcom, which promptly crashed and burned, beating ''[[Fish]]'' to the punch by a season.
 
Also around are abrasive, uniformed Officer Carl Levitt ([[Ron Carey]]), who longs to be a detective but can never seem to snag a promotion (he finally got one in the very last episode); and Barney's immediate superior Inspector Franklin D. Luger ([[James Gregory]]), who does nothing but chew Barney's ear all day and long for the halcyon days of acceptable police brutality. In the first season or two, which had episodes alternating between the squadroom and Barney's home life, Barbara Barrie was a regular as Barney's wife Elizabeth. She disappeared when the Millers had an off-screen separation, but returned later on a recurring basis.
 
Throughout the run, the show tried adding new characters to the cast; most of them would be given a "test run" of about three episodes to make an impression. More than half a dozen cops were "auditioned" this way. Save for Dietrich, none of them really worked, resulting in many a case of [[Brother Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]]. ([[Linda Lavin]] probably would have stayed on too, if she hadn't been offered the lead role in ''[[Alice]]''; she appeared prominently in flashbacks despite being in only five episodes). Midway through the fifth season, actor Jack Soo (Yemana) died. The cast did a memorial episode out-of-character for Soo, but Yemana was never [[The Character Died with Him|killed off]] in so many words. Once in a while, he would be mentioned in the past tense, sometimes with an air of wistfulness. When Levitt worked in the detective squad room, he took over Yemana's desk.
 
This show is also remembered for its super-catchy [[Instrumental Theme Tune]], which has quite possibly the most famous bass line in TV history. If you've seen the show, you're probably [[Ear Worm|humming it to yourself now]].
 
Characters and references to the show still turn up. In a novel spinoff of ''[[The Blair Witch Project]]'', ''Confessions of Rustin Parr'', the investigations were headed by Detective Nicholas Yamana. In William P. Young's supernatural murder mystery ''The Shack'', a Polish police detective says his name is "spelled just like it sounds". In ''[[Frasier]]'', one of Martin's police friends was Stan Wojciedubakowski, and when he died, Martin briefly dated his widow.
 
----
 
{{tropelist}}
* [[Ambulance Chaser]]: Arnold Ripner, a recurring character. At one point he sues Harris for putting a thinly-veiled version of him in his novel.
* [[Aren't You Going to Ravish Me?]]: Detective Wentworth is highly offended when a would-be rapist elbows her aside in order to get at Wojo, who is wearing drag for an anti-mugger sting.
* [[Beleaguered Bureaucrat]]: Barney in some episodes. Some government officials that get called in are also this. (Usuallyusually because of [[Wide-Eyed Idealist|Wojo]] giving someone political asylum or similar.).
* [[The Bet]]: Between Yemana (to stop gambling) and Harris (to stop smoking) on who could last the longest.
* [[Beware the Nice Ones]]: Non-violent, but it's still unwise to push Barney past the breaking point.
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{{quote|Harris: You're smoked a 3 year old cigarette?
Barney: Just wanted to make sure I didn't get hooked again.
Harris: That'll do it. }}
* [[Clip Show]]: The out-of-character tribute to actor Jack Soo.
* [[Commuting on a Bus]]: Abe Vigoda's Fish did this in season 3 (due to his concurrent role on his own show) before leaving entirely at the beginning of seasonSeason 4.
* [[The Couch]]: In Barney's office.
* [[Crime and Punishment Series]]
* [[The Dandy]]: Harris.
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: The two episodes when the NYPD is reorganized into specialty squads and the 12th is assigned homicide.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Numerous among both the squad and the people they dealt with, but Yemana and Dietrich deserve special mention.
* [[Dirty Harriet]]: Referred to as "mugging duty" and most members of the cast had to do it at least once. It wasn't the most anticipated assignment.
* [[Disposable Vagrant]]
* [[Double Standard Rape (Male on Male)]]: Wojo, who is wearing drag in order to catch muggers, is almost raped. Everyone finds this hilarious.
* [[Drop-In Character]]: Ray Brewer.
* [["El Niño" Is Spanish for "The Nino"]]: A recurring Latina character calls Officer Levitt (who is quite short) "poquito". He finally asks her what it means and she says, "It means macho,", and leaves.
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]: Arnold Ripner threatens to sue a lobotomist ''free of charge'' should he try to operate again on a patient who was rendered mentally incompetent by his amygdalectomy. (He then threatens Barney that trying to describe his actions as "noble" could be slander.)
{{quote|'''Levitt''': "I thought "macho" meant macho!"}}
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]: Arnold Ripner threatens to sue a lobotomist ''free of charge'' should he try to operate again on a patient who was rendered mentally incompetent by his amygdalectomy. (Hehe then threatens Barney that trying to describe his actions as "noble" could be slander.).
* [[The Fashionista]]: Harris is a male version.
* [[A Father to His Men]]: Wojo seems to view Barney this way.
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* [[The Ghost]]: Barney's family - wife Liz, son David, and daughter Rachel - turned into offscreen characters after the first season. Both Liz and Rachel did eventually return for guest appearances in later episodes, however.
* [[Her Codename Was Mary Sue]]: Harris' novel ''Blood on the Badge''.
* [[Instrumental Theme Tune]]: Apparently one Hal Linden didn't care for, at least compaired to some of his fellow actor's shows. Once on a talk show he appeared with some stars from other shows, all of who were introduced with a few note of their theme songs. When he was introduced Linden said "Man he has such a nice theme, and he has a great theme...me, I've got 'Bum...bumbumbum...bumbumbum...bababaddabadda bum'".
* [[Insistent Terminology]]: Wojo on the pronunciation of his name. It's almost a [[Catch Phrase]].
* [[Instrumental Theme Tune]]: Apparently one Hal Linden didn't care for, at least compairedcompared to some of his fellow actor's shows. Once on a talk show he appeared with some stars from other shows, all of who were introduced with a few note of their theme songs. When he was introduced Linden said "Man he has such a nice theme, and he has a great theme...me, I've got 'Bum...bumbumbum...bumbumbum...bababaddabadda bum'".
* [[Intoxication Ensues]]: The "hash brownies" episode, also the [[Crowning Moment of Funny]] for the show.
* [[In Vino Veritas]]: No alcohol or drugs are involved, but this is basically the effect of putting Wojo under hypnotism in one episode.
* [[Landslide Election]]: During an election day episode, Inspector Luger is a strong proponent of a good friend of his who is running for office, even though the only thing that anybody else can remember about the candidate is that he was accused of being involved with bribery and corruption in the sanitation department (the Inspector's awkward attempts to defend the candidate on the grounds that "[[Implausible Deniability|they couldn't prove any of that]]" only seem to confirm the truth of the accusations). Not surprisingly, the candidate loses by a margin of more than 5 to 1.
* [[Long-Lost Uncle Aesop]]: Deliberately averted. According to their [[DVD Commentary]], the writers made a rule that except for previously-established characters like Barney's wife, all the guest characters had to be people the cops were meeting for the first time.
* [[Mad Magazine]]: ''Blarney Miller''.
* [[Meaningful Name]]: The aging inspector who looks back fondly on the life-threatening shootouts of the old days, waxes nostalgic about his old comrades getting shot down in their prime, and doesn't understand the modern force's need for things like proper procedures, suspects' rights, and paperwork is named "Luger.".
* [[Mix and Match]]
* [[Mushroom Samba]]: In one of the most famous episodes, Wojo's girlfriend-of-the-week gave him a box of homemade brownies laced with hashish. Everyone but Barney (whose watching his weight) become affected by them in different ways - Yamana thinking his legs had walked off, Harris getting giggly, and giving Fish the energy to chase down and capture a suspect a third his age.
{{quote|'''Fish''': The first time in twenty-five years I've felt really good... and it has to be illegal!}}
* [[My Name Is Not Durwood]]: Inspector Luger's tendency to call officer Levitt "Levine.".
* [[New Year Has Come]]: Season 2's "Happy New Year" takes place on New Year's Eve.
* [[Non Sequitur Distraction]]: A riot breaks out in front of the precinct station. Barney gives an impassioned speech to a representative, saying among other things "Maybe we are all going to hell in a handbasket." When things quiet down, Dietrich says to Barney "Hell in a handbasket?"
* [[Noodle Incident]]: One one episode, a man is brought into the station for writing on the walls of a women's restroom, where he left his phone number and an offer to engage in an unspeakably disgusting sex act. The act itself is never named out loud, but characters read a transcription of the message and crack jokes about it throughout.
* [["El Niño" Is Spanish for "The Nino"]]: A recurring Latina character calls Officer Levitt (who is quite short) "poquito". He finally asks her what it means and she says, "It means macho," and leaves.
{{quote|'''Levitt''': "I thought "macho" meant macho!"}}
* [[Obstructive Bureaucrat]]: Scanlon of Internal Affairs. In fact, he takes malicious glee in targeting Barney's squad.
* [[Pilot]]: "The Life and Times of Captain Barney Miller", originally produced as a one-off installment of an ABC summer anthology series called ''Just for Laughs''.
* [[Police Procedural]]
* [[Promotion to Opening Titles]]: Ron Glass and Jack Soo in the second season; Ron Carey and Steve Landesberg in the fourth. James Gregory also got a promotion in season four, complete with an [[And Starring]] credit, but it didn't take, and he was back to guest star billing the following season (though he remained a regular throughout the show's run).
* [[The Problem with Pen Island]]: The broad white, all capital, rounded-corners [[Useful Notes/Fonts|font]] of the show's credits wasn't exactly complimentary to writer Theodore J. Flicker.
* [[Promotion to Opening Titles]]: Ron Glass and Jack Soo in the second season; Ron Carey and Steve Landesberg in the fourth. James Gregory also got a promotion in season four, complete with an [[And Starring]] credit, but it didn't take, and he was back to guest star billing the following season (though he remained a regular throughout the show's run).
* [[Put on a Bus]]: Fish, although he would [[The Bus Came Back|return as a guest]] in a couple later episodes.
* [[Reasonable Authority Figure]]: Barney.
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* [[Rule 34]]: In the episode "The Indian", the detectives catch a shoe fetishist. Wojo says "You can point to any object in the Sears catalog, and there's someone out there who wants to sleep with it."
* [[Sitcom]]
* [[Spin-Off]]: ''Fish''.
* [[Spiritual Successor]]: ''[[Night Court]]'', created by former ''Barney Miller'' writer Reinhold Weege.
* [[Stock Sitcom Grand Finale]]
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** At times during the three part final episode, the chuckles of the crew can be heard faintly in the background.
* [[Those Two Guys]]: Harris and Dietrich.
* [[Tontine]]: A seasonSeason 8 episode revolves around one of these.
* [[Uncanceled]]: The pilot was originally not picked up, and just "burned off" in the summer. However the ratings of that one showing revived interest in the concept, and more episodes were ordered the next season.
* [[Unintentional Period Piece]]: In particular, a rerun of the two part episode "Quarantine" inspired the revival of that trope's YKTTW.
* [[Vitriolic Best Buds]]: Harris and Dietrich again. They're even roomies at several points.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Police Procedural{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Work Com]]
[[Category:American Series]]
[[Category:Crime and Punishment Series]]
[[Category:BarneyPolice MillerProcedural]]
[[Category:TV Series]]
[[Category:Live-Action TV of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Live-Action TV of the 1980s]]