• ameancow@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    late '90s - early aughts.

    Around that time, the show “Cops” became one of the most popular shows on television and people believed it was real and unedited. As well as a slew of “realistic and gritty” cop shows hit the airwaves (ask your parents what an “airwave” is) and there was a wave of pro-cop sentiment after the LA riots because media selectively showed cops being “heroes against the mobs” which at the time, was very new to see playing out on live-ish television.

    There was some pushback because of the Rodney King beating and others that were being caught on video, the term “police brutality” became a buzzword, but it also seemed like it was a small, isolated problem that went away because people carried cameras all the time and “a few bad apples” and all that. (Not shown before body-cams: cops beating or shooting the people carrying cameras.)

    • Machinist@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      24 was another one that legitimized brutality.

      I’ve occasionally seen early episodes of Cops, the difference in uniform is notable. Don’t know how you’d ever measure it, but I bet Cops is actually responsible for a lot of deaths due to the cultural shift.