Leverage: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
m (revise quote template spacing)
Line 3: Line 3:




{{quote| ''"[[Screw the Rules, I Have Money|The rich and powerful take what they want]]; [[Just Like Robin Hood|we steal it back for you.]] We provide... [[Title Drop|leverage]]."''}}
{{quote|''"[[Screw the Rules, I Have Money|The rich and powerful take what they want]]; [[Just Like Robin Hood|we steal it back for you.]] We provide... [[Title Drop|leverage]]."''}}


''[[Leverage]]'' is a crime [[Dramedy]] which follows the exploits of Leverage Consulting & Associates, a team of criminals led by a former insurance investigator. The team takes a [[Just Like Robin Hood|modern-day Robin Hood approach]] of finding people and corporations who have committed wrongs and [[Pay Evil Unto Evil|attempting to restore justice as they see it]], using their skills to run elaborate [[Ocean's Eleven]]-style cons on their targets. Think of them as a modern-day version of ''[[The A-Team]]''.
''[[Leverage]]'' is a crime [[Dramedy]] which follows the exploits of Leverage Consulting & Associates, a team of criminals led by a former insurance investigator. The team takes a [[Just Like Robin Hood|modern-day Robin Hood approach]] of finding people and corporations who have committed wrongs and [[Pay Evil Unto Evil|attempting to restore justice as they see it]], using their skills to run elaborate [[Ocean's Eleven]]-style cons on their targets. Think of them as a modern-day version of ''[[The A-Team]]''.

Revision as of 02:36, 8 August 2014

Sometimes bad guys make the best good guys.


Leverage is a crime Dramedy which follows the exploits of Leverage Consulting & Associates, a team of criminals led by a former insurance investigator. The team takes a modern-day Robin Hood approach of finding people and corporations who have committed wrongs and attempting to restore justice as they see it, using their skills to run elaborate Ocean's Eleven-style cons on their targets. Think of them as a modern-day version of The A-Team.

The series just ended its fourth season and has been renewed for a fifth.

One of the show creators is John Rogers, better known on the Internet as Kung Fu Monkey. If you see something about the show cited as Word of God, it probably comes from somewhere on his blog.

This show has a work-in-progress character sheet.

It's also so full of Shout Outs it's practically Reference Overdosed, so be sure to check out the new Shout Out page.

It has an across-the-pond counterpart in Hustle. While the general concept is the same and at least one prominent guest star appeared on both shows, the two shows are unrelated.


Alright, let's go steal ourselves some tropes...