Cold Case/Trivia

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • The Danza: John Finn as John Stillman.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!: You will recognize a lot of the victims or people involved in cases, usually before they became famous--or in some cases, even afterwards. Such as Maggie Grace, Summer Glau, Seamus Dever, Aldis Hodge, Kirk Acevedo, Brea Grant, and Apollo. A Hey, It's That Voice! variant is in the episode Thrill Kill, where the killer is played by Raphael Sbarge, known to gamers as BioWare's Mr. Fanservice.
    • And if they're playing the Victim Of The Week, depending on their level of fame, this can even result in a few minor examples of Dead Star Walking.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: In the Japanese-dubbed version: Well, let's say that both Claudette and Motoko Kusanagi are trying to solve the murders of Claudette's both sisters and many other members from the cast of Queen's Blade along with Motoko's Batou's death and the other members from Section 9.
  • Keep Circulating the Tapes: Extensive use of hit music from different eras has made it prohibitively expensive to release on DVD[1] It's still heavily shown in syndication in the US at least.
  • Recycled Script: Season 3's "Beautiful Little Fool" was remade in practice as Season 4's "Torn". Both begin with a young woman bringing the case of a long deceased relative, a young woman that was murdered. Both are the team's new record for oldest case reopened, the only case in the series from that decade, and take place in the last year of said decade ("BLF"'s victim is a 1929 flapper, "Torn"'s is a 1919 socialite). In both cases, the clue that solves the crime is provided by an old woman, who was a little girl when the murder was committed, and is the only witness still alive, with every other testimony being provided by books, records, diaries, historians of the era or descendants of the people involved. The perpetrator is long deceased in both (as it could only be realistically) but left a recorded confession. The murder was committed during the arrival of a big historical event that destroyed the fortune of a man related to the victim (a member of the Vanderbilt family that lost his fortune in the Crash of 1929 in "BLF", a beer magnate that went out of business with Prohibition in "Torn").
  • Screwed by the Network: A good 70% of episodes start late due to football in the US. They refuse to do anything about it.
    • Which is amusing because football fans complain about CBS's obsessive Ad Nauseam promos during the games themselves.
    • And if it isn't football, its usually something else...
    • Cases that took place during the 2000s became more frequent during the final seasons thanks to budget cuts.
    • The last screw driven into this show was cancellation. It's gone for good now.
  1. Royalties are cheaper for broadcasting than they are for distribution.