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Maxwell Cross

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Brooklyn Nine-Nine is a comedy TV series about a team of poor detectives in Brooklyn. It aired from 2013 to 2021 with 153 episodes. The main character, Jake Peralta, is a brilliant detective but acts immature. The show has funny crawl-opens and occasional serious moments. It's available on Netflix and worth watching for its humor. Do you live in Brooklyn? Are you a fan of police shows with dramatic moments and high stakes? And please leave because Brooklyn Nine-Nine is not for you. Because it's about the opposite of that. It's about a team of detectives in an office dearly situated in Brooklyn. And they're all very poor detectives and often get into interesting situations and break a lot of glass. Like a lot of glass. Anyway, Brooklyn Nine-Nine is an American police prodigal comedy television series that airs on Fox and later NBC from September 17, 2013 to September 16, 2021. 38 seasons, in fact. Totaling about 153 episodes. Created by Dan Gore and Michael Schur. Now, Brooklyn Nine-Nine had characters that were interestingly made for specific actors. Best example of this is this being the character Sergeant Terry Giffords, who wasn't a character at first, but then was specifically made for the actor Terry Crews. This is why this was done isn't explained, and it's not known how much control or input Terry Crews had with production. But it's likely he requested it as the main character. The main character himself is a detective named Jake Peralta. He doesn't act like an adult, but still is a brilliant detective at times. Brooklyn Nine-Nine has its serious moments. Sometimes. It still remains a comedy series and plays out as such, with many episodes just being pure humor, and nearly all episodes start with crawl-opens. Crawl-opens are small comedy bits that don't contribute to the main plot in any way. Nearly all episodes open with these, and they're pretty funny. Most of the time. Other times, when it doesn't have crawl-opens, they're still pure comedy. They're never serious, mainly because the show doesn't take itself seriously, and so it doesn't open with anything serious because all through it can be nice to have moments where it's not what the viewers are here for. They're here for the dopamine hit every half-minute. That's what they get from the very start of an episode. The mind-numbing dopamine that hits your brain like a freight train. And the serious moments are a break from that, to let your brain heal for a moment, from drowning in dopamine. I'm saying dopamine a lot. Which isn't a bad thing, and it's nice to have these moments. Anyway, watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine, it's pretty funny, and you'll probably enjoy it. And it's available on Netflix right now. Thank you for listening.

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