If journalism is only based on simplification and caricature, then what is David Simon so mad about? I mean, if that's all it is anyway. . .
Even he realizes that journalism is over-simplified and doesn't tell the whole story when, for instance, Omar and Prop Joe's deaths aren't seen for the big deals they really are. There is no finger-pointed with those angles, it's just how it is.
What I mean is the way that the Slate guys are picking tiny little nits and making a big deal out of them. But any time a journalist writes about something I happen to know a lot about (law, technology, whatever) there are tons of little things wrong. The wrong terms are used. Similar, but different, categories are conflated. One recurring example is the average journalist's inability to distinguish between different categories of intellectual property. It drives me nuts, but I don't really expect journalists to even have to be up on these things. There are too many details in the world for a generalist to get everything right all the time. That's fine.
The level of nit-picking undertaken by the Slate guys, though ("No one would say that" "That character isn't believable enough" "No one would wear that t-shirt in that situation") is the level of nit-picking that could be unleashed against what they write all the time. Hell, they even get points about the show they are supposed to be talking about wrong.
Writing off a show because some little details about some tiny corner of the world aren't just so is the wrong kind of persnickety.
I'm not sure how anyone could think that this season isn't a disappointment (admittedly, it's still a very good show, but the fake serial killer/newsroom angle isn't so hot).
Sorry, but I just don't agree. I think the newsroom story is great, and the fake serial killer angle is no more far-fetched than any number of fictional contrivances, including ones that have happened in the Wire in past seasons. I like the focus on the crazy, horrible unintended consequences of the lies.