"The Wire (série télévisée)." . . "Wire (Television program)" . . "PHILOSOPHY AND TV" . . "Social classes on television." . . "Televizija Filozofski vidik Zborniki." . . "The Wire (Fernsehsendung)" . . "The Wire" . . "Television programs Criticism and interpretation." . . "Race relations on television." . . . . "GAMES Board." . . "Wire (Television program)" . . "The wire and philosophy this America, man" . . . "Electronic books"@en . "Electronic books" . . . . . . . . . . . "The wire and philosophy" . "The wire and philosophy"@en . . . "Criticism, interpretation, etc" . "By many accounts, HBO's The Wire was and remains the greatest and most important television drama of all time. Conceived by writers David Simon and ex-Baltimore homicide detective Ed Burns, this five-season, sixty-episode tour de force has raised the bar for compelling, intelligent television production. With each season addressing a different arena of life in the city of Baltimore, and each season's narratives tapping into those from previous seasons, The Wire was able to reveal the overlapping, criss-crossing, and colliding realities that shape?if not control?the pe."@en . . . . . . . . . . "The wire and philosophy : this America, man" . . . . . . . . "The Wire and philosophy : this America, man" . "The Wire and philosophy : this America, man"@en . .