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Wikipedia

Miami Vice

Miami Vice is an American crime drama television series created by Anthony Yerkovich and produced by Michael Mann for NBC.[1] The series stars Don Johnson as James "Sonny" Crockett and Philip Michael Thomas as Ricardo "Rico" Tubbs, two Metro-Dade Police Department detectives working undercover in Miami. The series ran for five seasons on NBC from 1984 to 1989. The USA Network began airing reruns in 1988 and broadcast a previously unaired episode during its syndication run of the series on January 25, 1990.

Miami Vice
One variation of the title screen, which changed the secondary color (present in the word Vice and the glow around the text) throughout the intros
Genre
Created byAnthony Yerkovich
Starring
Theme music composerJan Hammer
Opening theme"Miami Vice Theme"
Ending theme"Miami Vice Theme"
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes114 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • John Nicolella (S1–2)
  • Richard Brams (Co-prod: S1–2)
  • Dick Wolf (Co-prod: S3)
Running time46–49 minutes, plus three 96-minute episodes (excluding commercials)
Production companies
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseSeptember 16, 1984 (1984-09-16) –
January 25, 1990 (1990-01-25)

Unlike standard police procedurals, the show drew heavily upon 1980s New Wave culture and is noted for its integration of contemporary pop and rock music and stylish or stylized visuals. People magazine states that Miami Vice was the "first show to look really new and different since color TV was invented".[2]

Michael Mann directed a film adaptation of the series, which was released July 28, 2006.

Conception edit

The conception of the show is unclear. One version of events states that the head of NBC's Entertainment Division, Brandon Tartikoff, wrote a brainstorming memo that simply read "MTV cops",[2][3][4][5] and later presented it to series creator Anthony Yerkovich, formerly a writer and producer for Hill Street Blues.[4] Yerkovich, however, has indicated he devised the concept after learning about asset forfeiture statutes allowing law enforcement agencies to confiscate the property of drug dealers for official use.[6] The initial idea was for a movie about a pair of vice cops in Miami.[4] Yerkovich then wrote a script for a two-hour pilot, titled Gold Coast, but later renamed it Miami Vice.[2][4] Yerkovich was immediately drawn to South Florida as a setting for his new-style police show.[4]

Production edit

In keeping with the show's title, most episodes focus on combating drug trafficking and prostitution. Episodes often end in an intense gun battle, claiming the lives of several criminals before they can be apprehended. An undercurrent of cynicism and futility underlies the entire series. The detectives repeatedly refer to the "Whac-A-Mole" nature of drug interdiction,[citation needed] with its parade of drug cartels quickly replacing those that are apprehended. Co-executive producer Yerkovich explained:

Even when I was on Hill Street Blues, I was collecting information on Miami, I thought of it as a sort of a modern-day American Casablanca. It seemed to be an interesting socio-economic tide pool: the incredible number of refugees from Central America and Cuba, the already extensive Cuban-American community, and on top of all that the drug trade. There is a fascinating amount of service industries that revolve around the drug trade—money laundering, bail bondsmen, attorneys who service drug smugglers. Miami has become a sort of Barbary Coast of free enterprise gone berserk.[4]

The choice of music and cinematography borrowed heavily from the emerging New Wave culture of the 1980s. As such, segments of Miami Vice sometimes used music-based stanzas, a technique later featured in Baywatch. As Lee H. Katzin, one of the show's directors, remarked, "The show is written for an MTV audience, which is more interested in images, emotions and energy than plot and character and words."[4] These elements made the series into an instant hit, and in its first season saw an unprecedented fifteen Emmy Award nominations.[4][7] While the first few episodes contain elements of a standard police procedural, the producers soon abandoned them in favor of a more distinctive style. Influenced by an Art Deco revival, no "earth tones" were allowed to be used in the production by executive producer Michael Mann.[4] A director of Miami Vice, Bobby Roth, recalled:

There are certain colors you are not allowed to shoot, such as red and brown. If the script says "A Mercedes pulls up here," the car people will show you three or four different Mercedes. One will be white, one will be black, one will be silver. You will not get a red or brown one. Michael knows how things are going to look on camera.[4]

Miami Vice was one of the first American network television programs to be broadcast in stereophonic sound.[8] It is mixed in stereo for its entire run.[9]

Casting edit

Nick Nolte and Jeff Bridges[10][11] were considered for the role of Sonny Crockett, but since it was not lucrative for film stars to venture into television at the time, other candidates were considered.[12] Mickey Rourke was also considered for the role, but he turned down the offer.[13] Larry Wilcox, of CHiPs, was also a candidate for the role of Crockett, but the producers felt going from one police officer role to another would not be a good fit.[14] After dozens of candidates and a twice-delayed pilot shooting, Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas were chosen as the vice cops.[4] For Johnson, who was by then 34 years old, NBC had particular doubts about the several earlier unsuccessful pilots in which he starred.[4] Jimmy Smits played Eddie Rivera, Crockett's ill-fated partner, in the pilot episode.

After two seasons, Don Johnson threatened to walk from the series as part of a highly publicized contract dispute. The network was ready to replace him with Mark Harmon, who had recently departed St. Elsewhere, but the network and Johnson were able to resolve their differences and he continued with the series until its end.[15]

Locations edit

Despite the Miami setting, the producers initially planned to film the series in Los Angeles[citation needed]. However, by the time production began, the decision had been made to shoot in Miami itself. Many episodes of Miami Vice were filmed in the South Beach[16] section of Miami Beach, an area which, at the time, was blighted by poverty and crime, with its demographic so deteriorated that there "simply weren't many people on the street. Ocean Drive's hotels were filled with elderly, mostly Jewish retirees, many of them frail, subsisting on meager Social Security payments. ... They were filming all over Miami Beach. ... They could film in the middle of the street. There was literally nobody there. There were no cars parked in the street".[17] In early episodes in particular, local elderly residents were frequently cast as extras.

Some street corners of South Beach were so run down that the production crew actually decided to repaint the exterior walls of some buildings before filming. The crew went to great lengths to find the correct settings and props. Bobby Roth recalled, "I found this house that was really perfect, but the color was sort of beige. The art department instantly paints the house gray for me. Even on feature films people try to deliver what is necessary but no more. At Miami Vice they start with what's necessary and go beyond it."[18]

Miami Vice is to some degree credited with causing a wave of support for the preservation of Miami's famous Art Deco architecture in the mid-1980s to early 1990s;[16] and many of those buildings, among them many beachfront hotels, have been renovated since filming, making that part of South Beach one of South Florida's most popular places for tourists and celebrities.[19]

Other places commonly filmed in the series include locations around Broward and Palm Beach counties.[citation needed]

Interior scenes were initially supposed to be filmed at Universal Studios in Los Angeles, but to simplify cross-country logistics, the decision was made to use the facilities of Greenwich Studios[20] in North Miami instead, and only carry out post-production in L.A. In a few scenes, particularly in earlier episodes, Greenwich Studios' rear loading dock is repeatedly used as the back room of the Gold Coast Shipping building, where the offices of the vice squad are located.[21]

Music edit

Miami Vice is noted for its innovative use of stereo broadcast music, particularly pop and rock hits of the 1980s and the distinctive, synthesized instrumental music of Jan Hammer. While other television shows used made-for-TV music, Miami Vice would spend $10,000 or more per episode to buy the rights to original recordings.[4] Getting a song played on Miami Vice was a boost to record labels and artists.[22] In fact, some newspapers, such as USA Today, would let readers know the songs that would be featured each week.[23] Among the many well-known bands and artists, as well as underground or 'new wave' associated acts, who contributed their music to the show were:

Several artists guest-star in episodes, including Leonard Cohen, Phil Collins,[24] Miles Davis,[25] the Power Station,[26] Glenn Frey,[27] Suicidal Tendencies, Willie Nelson,[28] Ted Nugent,[29] Frank Zappa,[30] the Fat Boys,[31] Sheena Easton, Gloria Estefan, and[32] Gene Simmons. An iconic scene from the Miami Vice oeuvre involves Crockett and Tubbs driving through Miami at night to Phil Collins' song "In the Air Tonight".[33][34]

Jan Hammer credits executive producer Michael Mann with allowing him great creative freedom in scoring Miami Vice.[4] The collaboration resulted in memorable instrumental pieces, including the show's title theme, which climbed to the top of the Billboard charts in November 1985.[35]

The Miami Vice original soundtrack, featuring the theme song and Glenn Frey's "Smuggler's Blues" and "You Belong to the City" (a No. 2 hit), remained at the top of the U.S. album chart for 11 weeks in 1985, making it the most successful TV soundtrack at the time. The theme song was so popular that it also garnered two Grammy Awards in 1986.[35][36] It was also voted the number-one theme song of all time by TV Guide readers.[citation needed] "Crockett's Theme", another recurring tune from the show, became a No. 1 hit in several European countries in 1987.[37]

During the show's run, three official soundtrack albums with original music from the episodes were released. Hammer also released several albums with music from the series; among them are Escape from Television (1987), Snapshots (1989), and after many requests from fans, Miami Vice: The Complete Collection (2002).

Fashion edit

 
Don Johnson epitomizing the dress style that became a hallmark of the series.

The clothes worn on Miami Vice had a significant influence on men's fashion. They popularized, if not invented, the "T-shirt under Armani jacket"–style,[38] and popularized Italian men's fashion in the United States.[4] Don Johnson's typical attire of Italian sport coat, T-shirt, white linen pants, and slip-on sockless loafers became a hit.[4][39] Crockett initially wore an 18k Rolex Day-Date "President" model in the first season, until Ebel won the contract for the remaining seasons. Similarly, Crockett's perpetually unshaven appearance sparked a minor fashion trend, inspiring men to wear designer stubble at all times.[38] In an average episode, Crockett and Tubbs wore five to eight outfits,[2][4] appearing in shades of pink, blue, green, peach, fuchsia, and the show's other "approved" colors.[4] Designers such as Vittorio Ricci, Gianni Versace, and Hugo Boss were consulted in keeping the male leads looking trendy.[2][4] Costume designer Bambi Breakstone, who traveled to Milan, Paris, and London in search of new clothes, said that, "The concept of the show is to be on top of all the latest fashion trends in Europe."[4] Jodi Tillen, the costume designer for the first season, along with Michael Mann, set the style. The abundance of pastel colors on the show reflects Miami's Art-deco architecture.[39]

During its five-year run, consumer demand for unstructured blazers, shiny fabric jackets, and lighter pastels increased.[4][39] After Six formal wear even created a line of Miami Vice dinner jackets, Kenneth Cole introduced Crockett and Tubbs shoes, and Macy's opened a Miami Vice section in its young men's department.[4] Crockett also boosted Ray Ban's popularity by wearing a pair of Model L2052, Ray-Ban Wayfarers,[40] which increased sales of Ray Bans to 720,000 units in 1984.[41] In the spring of 1986, an electric razor became available named the "Stubble Device", allowing users to have a beard like Don Johnson's character. It was initially named the "Miami Device" by Wahl, but in the end the company opted to avoid a trademark infringement lawsuit.[42] Many of the styles popularized by the TV show, such as the T-shirt under pastel suits, no socks, rolled up sleeves, and Ray-Ban sunglasses, have become the standard image of 1980s culture.[38][41] The influence of Miami Vice's fashions continued into the early 1990s and, to some extent, has had a lasting impact.[38][43]

Firearms edit

Miami Vice also popularized certain brands of firearms and accessories.[44][45] After Johnson became dissatisfied with his gun holster, the Jackass Leather Company (later renamed Galco International) sent their president, Rick Gallagher, to personally fit Don Johnson with an "Original Jackass Rig", later renamed the Galco "Miami Classic".[45]

The Bren Ten, manufactured by Dornaus & Dixon, was a stainless-steel handgun used by Don Johnson during Miami Vice's first two seasons.[44] Dornaus & Dixon went out of business in 1986,[44] and Smith & Wesson was offered a contract to outfit Johnson's character with a S&W Model 645 during season three.[44][46][47]

Several firearms never before seen on TV were featured prominently for the first time in the show, including the Glock 17 pistol. In addition, firearms not yet well known to the public, including the Steyr AUG, MAC-10 and the Desert Eagle, were showcased to a wide audience on this show. Even heavy guns came to use, as Zito is seen maneuvering an M60 machine gun from a roof top in the episode "Lombard".

Cars edit

Two automobiles drew a lot of attention in Miami Vice, the Ferrari Daytona and Testarossa. During the first two seasons and two episodes of the third season, Detective Sonny Crockett drove a black 1972 Ferrari Daytona Spyder 365 GTS/4[48] kit replica built on a Chevrolet Corvette C3 chassis.[49] The car was fitted with Ferrari-shaped body panels by specialty car manufacturer McBurnie Coachcraft.[50] Once the car gained notoriety,[49] Ferrari Automobili filed suit demanding that McBurnie and any others cease and desist producing and selling Ferrari replicas and infringing upon the Ferrari name and styling.[49] As a result, the Daytona lasted until season 2, at which point it was 'blown-up' in the season three premiere episode, "When Irish Eyes Are Crying".[48][50] Neither the kit car nor its backup were actually destroyed, as the production company simply blew up a small, plastic model for both cost and safety reasons. The fake Ferraris were removed from the show, with Ferrari donating two brand new 1986 Testarossas as replacements.[51] The Ferrari Daytona is the subject of a huge continuity goof on the show, when it suddenly reappears in "El Viejo", six episodes after its destruction, without explanation. Originally "El Viejo" was set to be the third-season premiere, but studio executives felt the Daytona's destruction would serve as a more dramatic opening to the season. Don Johnson's contract-holdout at the start of the season also played a part, delaying filming to the point where "El Viejo" could not finish in time for the season premiere.

The series' crew also used a third Testarossa look-alike, which was the stunt car.[51] Carl Roberts, who had worked on the Daytona kit cars, offered to build the stunt car.[51] Roberts decided to use a 1972 De Tomaso Pantera, which had the same wheelbase as the Testarossa and thus was perfect for the body pieces.[50][51] The vehicle was modified to withstand daily usage on-set, and continued to be driven until the series ended.[51]

Crockett was also seen driving a black 1978 Porsche 911 SC Targa in a flashback to 1980 in the Season 3 episode "Forgive Us Our Debts."

Crockett's partner, Ricardo Tubbs, drove a 1964 Cadillac Coupe de Ville Convertible.[50][52][53] Stan Switek drove a turquoise 1961 Ford Thunderbird.[50] Gina Calabrese drove a 1971 Mercury Cougar XR-7 convertible.[citation needed] When Stan and Larry were undercover, they drove a Dodge Ram Van.[54][55] Other notable vehicles that appear in Miami Vice include Lamborghinis,[55] AMG Mercedes-Benzes, BMWs, Maseratis, Lotuses, DeLoreans, Porsches, and Corvettes.[55] American muscle cars, such as the Pontiac GTO and Firebird Trans Am, Ford Mustang, Chevrolet Camaro, Plymouth GTX and Barracuda, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, and the Buick Grand National also made appearances.[50][55]

Boats and flying boats edit

Throughout the series, Sonny Crockett lived on an Endeavour sailboat, St. Vitus' Dance,[56] while in the pilot episode, Crockett is seen on a 38-foot Cabo Rico sailboat.[56] In season 1, he is seen living on an Endeavour 40 sailboat, while in the rest of the series (seasons 2 to 5) he is seen living on an Endeavour 42 sailboat (priced at $120,000 in 1986). The allure of the sailboats was such that the Endeavour 42 used for the 1986 season of Miami Vice was sold to a midwest couple, while the Endeavour 40, was sold to a chartering service in Fort Lauderdale. At the same time, Endeavour was building a new 42 for the 1987 season of Miami Vice.[56]

In the pilot episode, and for the first season,[57] Crockett piloted a Chris-Craft Stinger 390 X – a 39-foot deep-v offshore racing boat. For the other four Stingers, Chris-Craft showed the production crew a color scheme that included the red – however, since Michael Mann decided that the color red was to never show up on the show, a blue color scheme was chosen instead. The Stingers used on the show were not free from Chris-Craft. This situation caused the production team to switch to using Wellcraft 38 Scarab KVs for the remainder of the show.[46][56][58] The Scarab 38 KVs were a 28-hued, twin 440-hp boat that sold for $130,000 in 1986.[56]

As a result of the attention the Scarab 38 KV garnered on Miami Vice, Wellcraft received “an onslaught of orders", increasing sales by 21% in one year.[56] In appreciation, Wellcraft gave Don Johnson an exact duplicate of the boat. Afterward, Johnson was frequently seen arriving to work in it.[56] Altogether, 100 copies of the boat , dubbed the Scarab 38KV Miami Vice Edition, were built by Wellcraft.[59] The Miami Vice graphics and color scheme, which include turquoise, aqua, and orchid, was available by special order on any model Scarab from 20 to 38 feet.[46]

Don Johnson also participated in the design of the Scarab Excel 43 ft, Don Johnson Signature Series (DJSS), and raced a similar one.[60] The DJSS was powered by twin 650-hp Lamborghini V-12 engines, which caused some problems to the design of the boat due to their size.[60] Overall the boat cost $300,000 with each engine amounting to between $60–$70,000.[60] His interest in boat racing eventually led Johnson to start his own offshore powerboat racing team, named Team USA.[61] Joining him were Hollywood stars including Kurt Russell and Chuck Norris. Johnson won the Offshore World Cup in 1988 and continued racing into the 1990s.[61]

In both the pilot episode, "Brother's Keeper", and the season 4 episode, "Baseballs of Death", a Grumman Turbo Mallard (G-73T) amphibious airplane (registration # N2969) made an appearance. In the former episode, the drug dealer Calderone used N2969 to successfully escape from Crockett and Tubbs at the climax of the episode.[62] In the latter episode, Guerrero made an attempt to escape from the vice team in N2969 but ran out of fuel and was killed after he stole a fisherman's boat which then ran ashore and exploded.[63] In December 2005, N2969 suffered a catastrophic structural failure when the right wing separated from the fuselage as the plane climbed out of Miami bound for the Bahamas. Both crew members and all 18 passengers were killed upon impact with the water.[64]

Episodes edit

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
123September 16, 1984 (1984-09-16)May 10, 1985 (1985-05-10)
223September 27, 1985 (1985-09-27)May 9, 1986 (1986-05-09)
324September 26, 1986 (1986-09-26)May 8, 1987 (1987-05-08)
422September 25, 1987 (1987-09-25)May 6, 1988 (1988-05-06)
522November 4, 1988 (1988-11-04)January 25, 1990 (1990-01-25)

Overview edit

Scripts were loosely based on actual crimes that occurred in Miami over the years.[2] This included both local and international and global organized crime. Many episodes focused on drug trafficking (for which real-life Miami was a main hub and entrance point into North America in the early 1980s). Other episodes were based on crimes such as firearms trafficking,[65] for which Miami was equally a gateway for sales to Latin America, as well as the Miami River Cops scandal (a real police corruption ring that involved narcotic thefts, drug dealing and murders), street prostitution, serial home burglaries,[66] crimes committed by Cuban immigrants to Miami following the Mariel boatlift,[67] and yakuza and Mafia activity in Miami.[68] The series also took a look at political issues such as the Northern Ireland conflict,[69] the drug war in South America (e.g. "Prodigal Son"), U.S. support of generals and dictators in Southeast Asia and South America,[70] and the aftermath of the Vietnam War.[71] Social issues like child abuse, homophobia,[72] and the AIDS crisis[73] were also covered.

Personal issues also arose: Crockett separated from his wife Caroline (Belinda Montgomery) in the pilot and divorced in the fourth episode, and later his second wife Caitlin Davies (Sheena Easton) was killed by one of his enemies. In the three episodes "Mirror Image", "Hostile Takeover", and "Redemption in Blood", a concussion caused by an explosion caused Crockett to believe he was his undercover alter ego Sonny Burnett, a drug dealer. Tubbs had a running, partly personal vendetta with the Calderone family, a member of which ordered the death of his brother Rafael, a New York City police detective. Lieutenant Martin Castillo is also frequently haunted by his past in Southeast Asia, which he had spent as a DEA agent in the Golden Triangle.[74]

In the first seasons[vague] the tone was lighter, especially when comical characters such as police informants Noogie Lamont (Charlie Barnett) and Izzy Moreno (Martin Ferrero) appeared. Later the content was darker and cynical, with Crockett and Tubbs fighting corruption, and storylines emphasizing the aspect of human tragedy behind a crime. The darker episodes sometimes lacked a denouement, each episode ending abruptly after a climax involving violence and death, often giving the episodes a despairing and sometimes nihilistic feel, despite the trademark glamour and conspicuous wealth.

Given its idiosyncratic "dark" feel and touch, Miami Vice is frequently cited as an example of made-for-TV neo-noir. Michael Mann, who serves as executive producer for the majority of the show's five-year run, is often credited with being one of the most influential neo-noir directors. The second-season episode "Out Where the Buses Don't Run" ranks #90 on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time list.[75]

Changes edit

During its five-year run, Miami Vice underwent several noticeable changes in its formula and content. Between seasons one and two, however, these changes were mostly subtle and involves details such as the degree of perfection with which color shades of scene backdrops, props and clothing are matched to each other.

For its third season in 1986–87 after the cancellation of Knight Rider, the show moved from its traditional time slot of 10 pm on Friday nights to 9 pm, which now put it up against perennial Top 10 show Dallas. This began the show's decline, and in March, 1987, TV Guide ran a cover story entitled, "Dallas Drubs the Cops: Why Miami Vice Seems to be Slipping."[76] Miami Vice's season ratings slipped from #9 in Season 2 down to #27 by the end of Season 3.[77]

Before leaving the series to work on his new television series, Crime Story,[78] Michael Mann handed the role of executive producer to future Law & Order creator Dick Wolf[79] prior to the third season (1986–1987).[78] Wolf had the show focus on contemporary issues[78] like the Troubles in Northern Ireland and capital punishment.[78]

In addition to losing the battle against new timeslot rival Dallas, the general tone of season 3 episodes started to become more serious and less lighthearted than in previous seasons. Comedic scenes and subplots became distinctly rare. True to Dick Wolf's "grabbed from the headlines" approach which he later employed in TV series like Law & Order, storylines focused more on the serious human aspect of crime than on glamorizing the tropical lifestyles of drug dealers and other high-profile criminals. This shift in tone also reflected in the series' fashions, color schemes, and its choice of music. The cast started wearing pronouncedly dark clothing and even earthtones, which had famously been avoided by executive producer Michael Mann in seasons one and two. Color palettes of scene backdrops started becoming much darker as well, with pastels replaced by harsher-appearing shades of neon.[80] Whereas seasons one and two always featured a diverse selection of contemporary, mostly "upbeat" chart music and classic rock and pop, the third season's music lineup became much more somber, with songs like "In Dulce Decorum" by The Damned, "Lives in the Balance" by Jackson Browne, "Mercy" by Steve Jones,[81] and "Never Let Me Down Again (Aggro Mix)" by Depeche Mode.[82] All these changes were decidedly unwelcome both by critics and by many viewers who had become fans of the TV series due to the package that the first two seasons delivered.[80] It caused the producers to retool their approach to Miami Vice for the following fourth season.

By Season 4, most of the original writers had left the series. Stories and story arcs included a courtship and marriage between Sonny Crockett (Don Johnson) and Caitlin Davies (Sheena Easton), and a plot in which Crockett developed amnesia, during which he mistook himself for his drug dealer alter ego and became a hitman. Caroline Crockett, Sonny's first wife, as well as his son Billy reappeared briefly.

Jan Hammer departed from the series at the end of the fourth season, having already handed much of the weekly scoring workload during the season over to John Petersen. The tone of many season 4 episodes grew lighter again, albeit sometimes veering off into the bizarre, e.g. episodes like "The Big Thaw", "Missing Hours", and "The Cows of October". Fashions and scene backdrops largely reassumed the pastel hues of seasons 1 and 2, and the choice of music became more varied again. Hopes by the producers of propitiating former and remaining fans this way only materializing very mutedly, and reception was lukewarm, as evidenced by the show's still declining ratings during season four.[83]

The fifth season (1988–1989) saw the show return to its original timeslot, 10 pm on Friday nights and took the show on a yet more serious tone,[84] with storylines becoming dark and gritty – enough so that even some of the most loyal fans were left perplexed.[84] Tim Truman took over scoring the episodes for the remainder of the series' run and brought with him a style of instrumental synthesizer music that was markedly different from Jan Hammer's.

Cancellation edit

After still-deteriorating ratings during the fourth season, NBC originally planned to order just a shortened fifth season of only 13 episodes, but eventually settled for another full run, which was, either way, going to be the final season. At the beginning of season five, Olivia Brown recalled, "The show was trying to reinvent itself."[85] Dick Wolf said in an interview for E! True Hollywood Story, after the fifth season, it was all just "...kind of over",[86] and that the show had "run its course".[86]

In May 1989, NBC aired the two-hour series finale, "Freefall". Despite its status as the "series finale", there were three episodes that did not air ("World of Trouble", "Miracle Man", and "Leap of Faith"), which appeared during the June re-runs as "Lost Episodes". A fourth, previously unaired episode, "Too Much Too Late", was aired for the first time in 1990, on the USA Network. It has since been run by other networks in syndication with the fifth-season episodes.

Cast edit

 
Group photo of the cast members of Miami Vice (from left to right): (top) John Diehl, Michael Talbott, Saundra Santiago (middle) Edward James Olmos, Olivia Brown, Philip Michael Thomas (bottom) Don Johnson, taken during the second season.
Name Portrayed by Occupation Seasons Duration
1 2 3 4 5
James "Sonny" Crockett Don Johnson Detective Sergeant Main 1x01–5x21
Ricardo "Rico" Tubbs Philip Michael Thomas Detective Sergeant Main 1x01–5x21
Gina Navarro Calabrese Saundra Santiago Detective Main 1x01–5x21
Stanley "Stan" Switek Michael Talbott Detective Main 1x01–5x21
Trudy Joplin Olivia Brown Detective Main 1x01–5x21
Lawrence "Larry" Zito John Diehl Detective Main 1x01–3x13
Lou Rodriguez Gregory Sierra Detective Lieutenant Main 1x01–1x04
Martin "Marty" Castillo Edward James Olmos Detective Lieutenant Main 1x06–5x21

Main characters edit

  • Don Johnson as Detective James "Sonny" Crockett: An undercover detective of the Metro-Dade Police Department. A former University of Florida Gators star wide receiver,[87] he sustained a knee injury which put an end to his sports career. He served two tours in Vietnam – or as he calls it, the "Southeast Asia Conference". He joined Metro-Dade as a uniformed patrol officer and later an undercover detective of the vice unit. Crockett's alias is Sonny Burnett, a drug runner and middleman. His vehicles include a Ferrari Daytona Spyder[50] (later a Ferrari Testarossa),[49] a "Scarab" offshore power-boat,[58] and a sailboat[56] on which he lives with his pet alligator Elvis. The name "Sonny Crockett" had previously been used for a criminal played by actor Dennis Burkley on Hill Street Blues in 1983, where creator Anthony Yerkovich was a writer. Coincidentally, Gregory Sierra who later plays Crockett's boss on Vice appears in the same episodes.
  • Philip Michael Thomas as Detective Ricardo "Rico" Tubbs: A former New York police detective[87] who traveled to Miami as part of a personal vendetta against Calderone, the man who murdered his brother Rafael.[87] After temporarily teaming up with Crockett, Tubbs follows his friend's advice and transfers to "a career in Southern law enforcement", fearing that after his serious violations of NYPD codes of conduct in the pilot episode, he would not be able to resume his job in New York. He joins the Miami department and becomes Crockett's permanent partner. He often poses as Rico Cooper, a wealthy buyer from out of town.
  • Edward James Olmos as Lieutenant Martin "Marty" Castillo: He replaces the slain Rodriguez as head of the OCB. A very taciturn man,[88] Castillo lives a reclusive life outside of work. He was formerly a DEA agent in the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia during the late 1970s. During his time with the DEA he opposed the CIA in endorsing the trafficking of heroin to finance their overseas operations.
  • Saundra Santiago as Detective Regina "Gina" Navarro Calabrese: A fearless female detective, who after Crockett's divorce, had a brief romance with him. Even though their relationship did not progress they still had a strong friendship.
  • Olivia Brown as Detective Trudy Joplin: Gina's patrol partner. Though tough, she sometimes struggles to cope with the consequences of her job, such as when she shoots and kills a man. Later in the series she has an encounter with a UFO and an alien portrayed by James Brown.
  • Michael Talbott as Detective Stanley "Stan" Switek: A fellow police detective and Larry Zito's best friend. Although a good policeman, later on in the series he falls prey to a gambling addiction. He is also a big fan of Elvis Presley.
  • John Diehl (1984–1987) as Detective Lawrence "Larry" Zito:[89] A detective and Switek's surveillance partner and best friend. He is killed in the line of duty when a drug dealer gives him a fatal overdose.[89]
  • Gregory Sierra (1984) as Lieutenant Louis "Lou" Rodriguez: A police lieutenant who serves as commander of the Vice Unit. He is killed in the fourth episode by an assassin hired to kill Crockett.

Recurring characters edit

  • Charlie Barnett (1984–1987) as Nugart Neville "Noogie" Lamont: A friend of Izzy's and informant for Crockett and Tubbs. His role was largely taken over by Izzy Moreno after the first season. In his final appearance in Season 4, his role is reduced from street informant to comic relief.
  • Sheena Easton (1987–1988) as Caitlin Davies-Crockett: A pop singer who is assigned a police bodyguard, Crockett, for her testimony in a racketeering case. While protecting Caitlin, Sonny falls in love with her and they marry. Months after their marriage, Caitlin is killed by one of Crockett's former nemeses. Sonny later learns she was seven weeks pregnant, causing him further emotional turmoil.
  • Martin Ferrero (1984–1989) as Isidore "Izzy" Moreno: A petty criminal and fast talker, Izzy is always known for getting into quick money schemes and giving Crockett and Tubbs the latest information from the street.
  • Jose Perez (1985, 1989) as Juan Carlos Silva, a drug dealer and father of Rosetta Silva, and as Jorge "Georgie" Esteban, cousin of Izzy Moreno.
  • Pam Grier (1985, 1989) as Valerie Gordon: A New York Police Department Officer and on-and-off love interest of Tubbs.
  • Belinda Montgomery (1984–1989) as Caroline Crockett/Ballard: Crockett's former wife who moves to Ocala, Florida to remarry and raise their child, Billy. Caroline was having a baby with her second husband in her last appearance.

Guest appearances edit

 
Edward James Olmos, Bruce Willis (center), and Don Johnson in the episode "No Exit"

Many actors, actresses, musicians, comedians, athletes and celebrities appear throughout the show's five-season run. They play many different roles from drug dealers to undercover cops to madams. The full list can be seen at the link above, as this is just a partial list. Musicians include Sheena Easton, John Taylor, Andy Taylor, Willie Nelson,[28] Gene Simmons,[32] and Ted Nugent[29] Additionally Glenn Frey,[27] Frank Zappa,[30] Phil Collins,[24] Miles Davis,[25][90] Frankie Valli,[91] Little Richard,[92] James Brown,[93] Leonard Cohen,[94] the Power Station,[26] Coati Mundi,[27][95] and Eartha Kitt.[26]

Other personalities include auto executive Lee Iacocca[96] and Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy.[97][98][99] Athletes include Boston Celtics center Bill Russell, Bernard King,[100] racecar driver Danny Sullivan,[31] and boxers Roberto Durán,[30] and Randall "Tex" Cobb.[101][102]

Notable actors include Dean Stockwell,[103] Pam Grier,[32][104][105] Clarence Williams III,[106] and Brian Dennehy.[107]

The show frequently features guest appearances from up-and-coming actors and actresses, including: Laurence Fishburne, Viggo Mortensen, Dennis Farina,[108][109][110] Stanley Tucci,[111][112][113] Jimmy Smits,[114] Bruce McGill,[92] David Strathairn,[92] Ving Rhames,[54][115] Liam Neeson,[69] Lou Diamond Phillips,[116] Bruce Willis,[95] Ed O'Neill,[117] and Julia Roberts.[118] Additionally Michael Madsen,[119] Ian McShane,[120][121] Bill Paxton,[122] Luis Guzmán,[32][123] Kyra Sedgwick,[24] Esai Morales,[73][124] Terry O'Quinn,[119] Joaquim de Almeida,[125] Wesley Snipes,[122] John Turturro,[104] Melanie Griffith[126] and Annie Golden to name a few. Notable comedians included: John Leguizamo,[96][127][128] David Rasche,[103] Ben Stiller,[107] Chris Rock,[93] Tommy Chong,[129] Richard Belzer,[129] and Penn Jillette.[32]

Reception edit

Awards and nominations edit

Ratings edit

Season Time slot (ET) Rank Rating[130]
1984–85 Sunday at 9:00 pm (Episode 1: 2 hour pilot)
Sunday at 10:00 pm (Episodes 2-23)
Not in the Top 30
1985–86 Friday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 1 and 2: 2 hour season premiere)
Friday at 10:00 pm (Episodes 3–23)
9 21.3
1986–87 Friday at 9:00 pm 26 16.8 (Tied with Knots Landing)
1987–88 Friday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 1–18)
Friday at 10:00 pm (Episodes 19–22)
Not in the Top 30
1988–89 Friday at 10:00 pm (Episodes 1–8, 14)
Friday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 9–13, 15–16)
Sunday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 17 and 18: 2 hour finale)
Wednesday at 10:00 pm (Episodes 19–21)

Series Finale: 22 million viewers & a 14.7 rating on May 21, 1989 from 9 to 11 pm. Competition: Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure (22.9 rating) & Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer: Murder Takes All (12.8 rating)

Final Airing on NBC: 16.1 million viewers/11.1 rating (June 28, 1989) China Beach drew 10.8 million viewers/8 rating.

Critical response edit

Critics object to the show's usage of violence by dressing it with pretty photography.[4] Others complain that the show relies more on visual aspects and music than on coherent stories and fully drawn characters.[4] Civic leaders in Miami have also objected to the show's airing of the city's crime problems all across America.[4] Most civic leaders, however, were placated due to the show's estimated contribution of $1 million per episode to the city's economy and because it boosted tourism to Miami.[4] Gerald S. Arenberg of the National Association of Chiefs of Police criticized the show's glamorous depiction of vice squads, saying "no real vice cops chase drug dealers in a Ferrari while wearing $600 suits. More often than not, they're holed up in a crummy room somewhere, wearing jeans with holes in them, watching some beat-up warehouse in a godforsaken part of town through a pair of dented binoculars".[131]

At the 1985 Emmy Awards Miami Vice was nominated for 15 Emmy Awards,[4][7] including "Outstanding Writing in a Dramatic Series", "Outstanding Film Editing", "Outstanding Achievement for Music Composition for a series (dramatic underscore)", and "Outstanding Directing".[7] At the end of the night, Miami Vice only won four Emmys. The following day, the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner could only conclude that the conservative Emmy voters (at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences) simply refused to recognize an innovative new series that celebrates hedonism, violence, sex, and drugs.[132]

Television critics Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz ranked Miami Vice as the 51st greatest American television series of all time in their 2016 book titled TV (The Book), with Seitz stating how the show was more influenced by 1960s art house cinema from Europe than by any other contemporary television drama: "Miami Vice superimposed 'ripped-from-the-headlines' details about drug smuggling, arms dealing, and covert war onto a pastel noir dreamscape. It gave American TV its first visionary existential drama".[133]

Impact on popular culture edit

 
Replica 1972 Ferrari Daytona Spyder (actually a modified Chevrolet Corvette), The car driven by Don Johnson in Miami Vice until season three.

Miami Vice was a groundbreaking police program of the 1980s.[134] It had a notable impact on the decade's popular fashions[4][38] and set the tone for the evolution of police drama. Series such as Homicide: Life on the Street, NYPD Blue, and the Law & Order franchise, though being markedly different in style and theme from Miami Vice, follows its lead in breaking the genre's mold; Dick Wolf, creator and executive producer of the Law & Order franchise, was a writer and later executive producer of Miami Vice.[134] Parodies and pastiches of it have continued decades after it airs, such as the Only Fools and Horses Christmas episode "Miami Twice" (1991) and Moonbeam City (2015).

The video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, published by Rockstar Games in 2002, is heavily inspired by Miami Vice in multiple ways. It is set in a stylized 1980s Miami inspired fictional city named "Vice City".[135] One of the main characters, Lance Vance, was actually voiced by Philip Michael Thomas. Two undercover police officers appear in a police sports car within the game when the player obtains a three-star wanted level. The two officers, one white and one black, resemble the two leading characters of Miami Vice. In the prequel, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, there are two officers in the multiplayer mode named Cracker and Butts, a parody of Crockett and Tubbs; these characters share the same role as the undercover cops in Vice City.

Many of the fashion styles and trends popularized by the TV show, such as fast cars and speed boats, unshaven beard stubble, a T-shirt under pastel suits, no socks, rolled up sleeves, boat shoes and Ray Ban sunglasses symbolize the stereotypical image of 1980s fashion and culture.[38][41]

It has built an awareness of Miami in young people who had never thought of visiting Miami.

—William Cullom[4]
Former President of the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce

The show also had a lasting impact on Miami itself. It drew a large amount of media attention to the beginning revitalization of the South Beach and Art Deco District areas of Miami Beach, as well as other portions of Greater Miami, and increases tourism and investment. Even 30 years after Miami Vice first airs, it is still responsible for its share of tourist visits to the city.[136] The fact that Crockett and Tubbs were Dade County officers and not City of Miami police represents the growing notion of metro government in Miami. In 1997, a county referendum changed the name from Dade County to Miami-Dade County. This allows people to relate the county government to recognize notions and images of Miami, many of which were first popularized by Miami Vice. The Dade County Sheriff's Office now became the Miami-Dade Police Department.

Home media edit

Universal Studios has released all Miami Vice seasons on DVD for regions 1, 2, and 4. Seasons 1 & 2 were released in 2005, and seasons 3 through 5 were released in 2007.[137][138][139][140] The DVD release of the series had been significantly slow due to one of the signature features of the show: the heavy integration of 1980s pop and rock music. The music was difficult to source the rights to and acquire permission to use.[141] (On at least one MCA/Universal Home Video VHS release of the pilot, The Rolling Stones' song "Miss You" had been replaced by generic rock music.[142]) In the November 2004 announcement for the DVD release of the series, Universal promises that all original music in the series would be intact.[137][143][144] On August 21, 2007 Universal announces the November 13, 2007 release of the complete series, with all five seasons on 27 single-sided DVDs.[145] The seasons are in their own Digipak-style cases, and the set is housed in a faux alligator-skin package.[145] Seasons 1 & 2 contained six single-sided discs, rather than the three double-sided discs in the initial release.[145] The Region 2 version has different packaging, does not use double-sided discs, and although there are no special features stated on the packaging they are contained within the season 1 discs.

On March 8, 2016, it is announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to the series in Region 1; they subsequently re-released the first two seasons on DVD on May 3, 2016.[146]

On October 4, 2016, Mill Creek re-released Miami Vice – The Complete Series on DVD and also released the complete series on Blu-ray.[147]

DVD name Ep# Release dates Special features
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
Season One 22 February 8, 2005[137] April 25, 2005[148] July 13, 2005[149] "The Vibe of Vice", "Building the Perfect Vice",
"The Music of Vice", "Miami After Vice"
Season Two 22 November 22, 2005[138] July 24, 2006[150] July 20, 2006[151]
Season Three 24 March 20, 2007[139] May 14, 2007[152] July 5, 2007[153]
Season Four 22 March 20, 2007[139] August 13, 2007[154] December 4, 2007[155]
Season Five 21 June 26, 2007[140] December 26, 2007[156] July 29, 2009[157]
Seasons One & Two 44 N/A November 27, 2006[158] N/A
The Complete Series 111 November 13, 2007[145][159] October 8, 2007[160][161] TBA Same special features from season one.

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External links edit

miami, vice, other, uses, disambiguation, american, crime, drama, television, series, created, anthony, yerkovich, produced, michael, mann, series, stars, johnson, james, sonny, crockett, philip, michael, thomas, ricardo, rico, tubbs, metro, dade, police, depa. For other uses see Miami Vice disambiguation Miami Vice is an American crime drama television series created by Anthony Yerkovich and produced by Michael Mann for NBC 1 The series stars Don Johnson as James Sonny Crockett and Philip Michael Thomas as Ricardo Rico Tubbs two Metro Dade Police Department detectives working undercover in Miami The series ran for five seasons on NBC from 1984 to 1989 The USA Network began airing reruns in 1988 and broadcast a previously unaired episode during its syndication run of the series on January 25 1990 Miami ViceOne variation of the title screen which changed the secondary color present in the word Vice and the glow around the text throughout the introsGenreAction Crime drama Neo noir Mystery thrillerCreated byAnthony YerkovichStarringDon Johnson Philip Michael Thomas Saundra Santiago Michael Talbott John Diehl Olivia Brown Gregory Sierra Edward James OlmosTheme music composerJan HammerOpening theme Miami Vice Theme Ending theme Miami Vice Theme ComposersJan Hammer S1 4 Tim Truman S5 Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons5No of episodes114 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersMichael Mann Anthony Yerkovich exec S1 George Geiger Co exec S4 Dick Wolf Co exec S4 Robert Ward Co exec S5 Richard Brams Co exec S5 ProducersJohn Nicolella S1 2 Richard Brams Co prod S1 2 Dick Wolf Co prod S3 Running time46 49 minutes plus three 96 minute episodes excluding commercials Production companiesMichael Mann Productions Universal TelevisionOriginal releaseNetworkNBCReleaseSeptember 16 1984 1984 09 16 January 25 1990 1990 01 25 Unlike standard police procedurals the show drew heavily upon 1980s New Wave culture and is noted for its integration of contemporary pop and rock music and stylish or stylized visuals People magazine states that Miami Vice was the first show to look really new and different since color TV was invented 2 Michael Mann directed a film adaptation of the series which was released July 28 2006 Contents 1 Conception 2 Production 2 1 Casting 2 2 Locations 2 3 Music 2 4 Fashion 2 5 Firearms 2 6 Cars 2 7 Boats and flying boats 3 Episodes 3 1 Overview 3 2 Changes 3 3 Cancellation 4 Cast 4 1 Main characters 4 2 Recurring characters 4 3 Guest appearances 5 Reception 5 1 Awards and nominations 5 2 Ratings 5 3 Critical response 5 4 Impact on popular culture 6 Home media 7 References 8 External linksConception editThe conception of the show is unclear One version of events states that the head of NBC s Entertainment Division Brandon Tartikoff wrote a brainstorming memo that simply read MTV cops 2 3 4 5 and later presented it to series creator Anthony Yerkovich formerly a writer and producer for Hill Street Blues 4 Yerkovich however has indicated he devised the concept after learning about asset forfeiture statutes allowing law enforcement agencies to confiscate the property of drug dealers for official use 6 The initial idea was for a movie about a pair of vice cops in Miami 4 Yerkovich then wrote a script for a two hour pilot titled Gold Coast but later renamed it Miami Vice 2 4 Yerkovich was immediately drawn to South Florida as a setting for his new style police show 4 Production editIn keeping with the show s title most episodes focus on combating drug trafficking and prostitution Episodes often end in an intense gun battle claiming the lives of several criminals before they can be apprehended An undercurrent of cynicism and futility underlies the entire series The detectives repeatedly refer to the Whac A Mole nature of drug interdiction citation needed with its parade of drug cartels quickly replacing those that are apprehended Co executive producer Yerkovich explained Even when I was on Hill Street Blues I was collecting information on Miami I thought of it as a sort of a modern day American Casablanca It seemed to be an interesting socio economic tide pool the incredible number of refugees from Central America and Cuba the already extensive Cuban American community and on top of all that the drug trade There is a fascinating amount of service industries that revolve around the drug trade money laundering bail bondsmen attorneys who service drug smugglers Miami has become a sort of Barbary Coast of free enterprise gone berserk 4 The choice of music and cinematography borrowed heavily from the emerging New Wave culture of the 1980s As such segments of Miami Vice sometimes used music based stanzas a technique later featured in Baywatch As Lee H Katzin one of the show s directors remarked The show is written for an MTV audience which is more interested in images emotions and energy than plot and character and words 4 These elements made the series into an instant hit and in its first season saw an unprecedented fifteen Emmy Award nominations 4 7 While the first few episodes contain elements of a standard police procedural the producers soon abandoned them in favor of a more distinctive style Influenced by an Art Deco revival no earth tones were allowed to be used in the production by executive producer Michael Mann 4 A director of Miami Vice Bobby Roth recalled There are certain colors you are not allowed to shoot such as red and brown If the script says A Mercedes pulls up here the car people will show you three or four different Mercedes One will be white one will be black one will be silver You will not get a red or brown one Michael knows how things are going to look on camera 4 Miami Vice was one of the first American network television programs to be broadcast in stereophonic sound 8 It is mixed in stereo for its entire run 9 Casting edit Nick Nolte and Jeff Bridges 10 11 were considered for the role of Sonny Crockett but since it was not lucrative for film stars to venture into television at the time other candidates were considered 12 Mickey Rourke was also considered for the role but he turned down the offer 13 Larry Wilcox of CHiPs was also a candidate for the role of Crockett but the producers felt going from one police officer role to another would not be a good fit 14 After dozens of candidates and a twice delayed pilot shooting Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas were chosen as the vice cops 4 For Johnson who was by then 34 years old NBC had particular doubts about the several earlier unsuccessful pilots in which he starred 4 Jimmy Smits played Eddie Rivera Crockett s ill fated partner in the pilot episode After two seasons Don Johnson threatened to walk from the series as part of a highly publicized contract dispute The network was ready to replace him with Mark Harmon who had recently departed St Elsewhere but the network and Johnson were able to resolve their differences and he continued with the series until its end 15 Locations edit Despite the Miami setting the producers initially planned to film the series in Los Angeles citation needed However by the time production began the decision had been made to shoot in Miami itself Many episodes of Miami Vice were filmed in the South Beach 16 section of Miami Beach an area which at the time was blighted by poverty and crime with its demographic so deteriorated that there simply weren t many people on the street Ocean Drive s hotels were filled with elderly mostly Jewish retirees many of them frail subsisting on meager Social Security payments They were filming all over Miami Beach They could film in the middle of the street There was literally nobody there There were no cars parked in the street 17 In early episodes in particular local elderly residents were frequently cast as extras Some street corners of South Beach were so run down that the production crew actually decided to repaint the exterior walls of some buildings before filming The crew went to great lengths to find the correct settings and props Bobby Roth recalled I found this house that was really perfect but the color was sort of beige The art department instantly paints the house gray for me Even on feature films people try to deliver what is necessary but no more At Miami Vice they start with what s necessary and go beyond it 18 Miami Vice is to some degree credited with causing a wave of support for the preservation of Miami s famous Art Deco architecture in the mid 1980s to early 1990s 16 and many of those buildings among them many beachfront hotels have been renovated since filming making that part of South Beach one of South Florida s most popular places for tourists and celebrities 19 Other places commonly filmed in the series include locations around Broward and Palm Beach counties citation needed Interior scenes were initially supposed to be filmed at Universal Studios in Los Angeles but to simplify cross country logistics the decision was made to use the facilities of Greenwich Studios 20 in North Miami instead and only carry out post production in L A In a few scenes particularly in earlier episodes Greenwich Studios rear loading dock is repeatedly used as the back room of the Gold Coast Shipping building where the offices of the vice squad are located 21 Music edit See also List of Miami Vice soundtracks Miami Vice is noted for its innovative use of stereo broadcast music particularly pop and rock hits of the 1980s and the distinctive synthesized instrumental music of Jan Hammer While other television shows used made for TV music Miami Vice would spend 10 000 or more per episode to buy the rights to original recordings 4 Getting a song played on Miami Vice was a boost to record labels and artists 22 In fact some newspapers such as USA Today would let readers know the songs that would be featured each week 23 Among the many well known bands and artists as well as underground or new wave associated acts who contributed their music to the show were Roger Daltrey Pete Townshend El Debarge Duran Duran The Power Station Devo Sinead O Connor Russ Ballard Black Uhuru Jackson Browne Kate Bush Meat Loaf Phil Collins Bryan Adams Tina Turner Public Image Limited Peter Gabriel Pink Floyd ZZ Top The Smiths The Tubes Dire Straits Depeche Mode The Hooters Iron Maiden The Alan Parsons Project The Ward Brothers Godley amp Creme Corey Hart Glenn Frey U2 Underworld Frankie Goes to Hollywood 4 Propaganda Foreigner The Police Red 7 Ted Nugent Suicidal Tendencies The Damned Billy Idol The Church Billy Ocean Eric Clapton Several artists guest star in episodes including Leonard Cohen Phil Collins 24 Miles Davis 25 the Power Station 26 Glenn Frey 27 Suicidal Tendencies Willie Nelson 28 Ted Nugent 29 Frank Zappa 30 the Fat Boys 31 Sheena Easton Gloria Estefan and 32 Gene Simmons An iconic scene from the Miami Vice oeuvre involves Crockett and Tubbs driving through Miami at night to Phil Collins song In the Air Tonight 33 34 Jan Hammer credits executive producer Michael Mann with allowing him great creative freedom in scoring Miami Vice 4 The collaboration resulted in memorable instrumental pieces including the show s title theme which climbed to the top of the Billboard charts in November 1985 35 The Miami Vice original soundtrack featuring the theme song and Glenn Frey s Smuggler s Blues and You Belong to the City a No 2 hit remained at the top of the U S album chart for 11 weeks in 1985 making it the most successful TV soundtrack at the time The theme song was so popular that it also garnered two Grammy Awards in 1986 35 36 It was also voted the number one theme song of all time by TV Guide readers citation needed Crockett s Theme another recurring tune from the show became a No 1 hit in several European countries in 1987 37 During the show s run three official soundtrack albums with original music from the episodes were released Hammer also released several albums with music from the series among them are Escape from Television 1987 Snapshots 1989 and after many requests from fans Miami Vice The Complete Collection 2002 Fashion edit nbsp Don Johnson epitomizing the dress style that became a hallmark of the series The clothes worn on Miami Vice had a significant influence on men s fashion They popularized if not invented the T shirt under Armani jacket style 38 and popularized Italian men s fashion in the United States 4 Don Johnson s typical attire of Italian sport coat T shirt white linen pants and slip on sockless loafers became a hit 4 39 Crockett initially wore an 18k Rolex Day Date President model in the first season until Ebel won the contract for the remaining seasons Similarly Crockett s perpetually unshaven appearance sparked a minor fashion trend inspiring men to wear designer stubble at all times 38 In an average episode Crockett and Tubbs wore five to eight outfits 2 4 appearing in shades of pink blue green peach fuchsia and the show s other approved colors 4 Designers such as Vittorio Ricci Gianni Versace and Hugo Boss were consulted in keeping the male leads looking trendy 2 4 Costume designer Bambi Breakstone who traveled to Milan Paris and London in search of new clothes said that The concept of the show is to be on top of all the latest fashion trends in Europe 4 Jodi Tillen the costume designer for the first season along with Michael Mann set the style The abundance of pastel colors on the show reflects Miami s Art deco architecture 39 During its five year run consumer demand for unstructured blazers shiny fabric jackets and lighter pastels increased 4 39 After Six formal wear even created a line of Miami Vice dinner jackets Kenneth Cole introduced Crockett and Tubbs shoes and Macy s opened a Miami Vice section in its young men s department 4 Crockett also boosted Ray Ban s popularity by wearing a pair of Model L2052 Ray Ban Wayfarers 40 which increased sales of Ray Bans to 720 000 units in 1984 41 In the spring of 1986 an electric razor became available named the Stubble Device allowing users to have a beard like Don Johnson s character It was initially named the Miami Device by Wahl but in the end the company opted to avoid a trademark infringement lawsuit 42 Many of the styles popularized by the TV show such as the T shirt under pastel suits no socks rolled up sleeves and Ray Ban sunglasses have become the standard image of 1980s culture 38 41 The influence of Miami Vice s fashions continued into the early 1990s and to some extent has had a lasting impact 38 43 Firearms edit Main article Firearms in Miami Vice Miami Vice also popularized certain brands of firearms and accessories 44 45 After Johnson became dissatisfied with his gun holster the Jackass Leather Company later renamed Galco International sent their president Rick Gallagher to personally fit Don Johnson with an Original Jackass Rig later renamed the Galco Miami Classic 45 The Bren Ten manufactured by Dornaus amp Dixon was a stainless steel handgun used by Don Johnson during Miami Vice s first two seasons 44 Dornaus amp Dixon went out of business in 1986 44 and Smith amp Wesson was offered a contract to outfit Johnson s character with a S amp W Model 645 during season three 44 46 47 Several firearms never before seen on TV were featured prominently for the first time in the show including the Glock 17 pistol In addition firearms not yet well known to the public including the Steyr AUG MAC 10 and the Desert Eagle were showcased to a wide audience on this show Even heavy guns came to use as Zito is seen maneuvering an M60 machine gun from a roof top in the episode Lombard Cars edit Main article Cars in Miami Vice Two automobiles drew a lot of attention in Miami Vice the Ferrari Daytona and Testarossa During the first two seasons and two episodes of the third season Detective Sonny Crockett drove a black 1972 Ferrari Daytona Spyder 365 GTS 4 48 kit replica built on a Chevrolet Corvette C3 chassis 49 The car was fitted with Ferrari shaped body panels by specialty car manufacturer McBurnie Coachcraft 50 Once the car gained notoriety 49 Ferrari Automobili filed suit demanding that McBurnie and any others cease and desist producing and selling Ferrari replicas and infringing upon the Ferrari name and styling 49 As a result the Daytona lasted until season 2 at which point it was blown up in the season three premiere episode When Irish Eyes Are Crying 48 50 Neither the kit car nor its backup were actually destroyed as the production company simply blew up a small plastic model for both cost and safety reasons The fake Ferraris were removed from the show with Ferrari donating two brand new 1986 Testarossas as replacements 51 The Ferrari Daytona is the subject of a huge continuity goof on the show when it suddenly reappears in El Viejo six episodes after its destruction without explanation Originally El Viejo was set to be the third season premiere but studio executives felt the Daytona s destruction would serve as a more dramatic opening to the season Don Johnson s contract holdout at the start of the season also played a part delaying filming to the point where El Viejo could not finish in time for the season premiere The series crew also used a third Testarossa look alike which was the stunt car 51 Carl Roberts who had worked on the Daytona kit cars offered to build the stunt car 51 Roberts decided to use a 1972 De Tomaso Pantera which had the same wheelbase as the Testarossa and thus was perfect for the body pieces 50 51 The vehicle was modified to withstand daily usage on set and continued to be driven until the series ended 51 Crockett was also seen driving a black 1978 Porsche 911 SC Targa in a flashback to 1980 in the Season 3 episode Forgive Us Our Debts Crockett s partner Ricardo Tubbs drove a 1964 Cadillac Coupe de Ville Convertible 50 52 53 Stan Switek drove a turquoise 1961 Ford Thunderbird 50 Gina Calabrese drove a 1971 Mercury Cougar XR 7 convertible citation needed When Stan and Larry were undercover they drove a Dodge Ram Van 54 55 Other notable vehicles that appear in Miami Vice include Lamborghinis 55 AMG Mercedes Benzes BMWs Maseratis Lotuses DeLoreans Porsches and Corvettes 55 American muscle cars such as the Pontiac GTO and Firebird Trans Am Ford Mustang Chevrolet Camaro Plymouth GTX and Barracuda Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS and the Buick Grand National also made appearances 50 55 Boats and flying boats edit Throughout the series Sonny Crockett lived on an Endeavour sailboat St Vitus Dance 56 while in the pilot episode Crockett is seen on a 38 foot Cabo Rico sailboat 56 In season 1 he is seen living on an Endeavour 40 sailboat while in the rest of the series seasons 2 to 5 he is seen living on an Endeavour 42 sailboat priced at 120 000 in 1986 The allure of the sailboats was such that the Endeavour 42 used for the 1986 season of Miami Vice was sold to a midwest couple while the Endeavour 40 was sold to a chartering service in Fort Lauderdale At the same time Endeavour was building a new 42 for the 1987 season of Miami Vice 56 In the pilot episode and for the first season 57 Crockett piloted a Chris Craft Stinger 390 X a 39 foot deep v offshore racing boat For the other four Stingers Chris Craft showed the production crew a color scheme that included the red however since Michael Mann decided that the color red was to never show up on the show a blue color scheme was chosen instead The Stingers used on the show were not free from Chris Craft This situation caused the production team to switch to using Wellcraft 38 Scarab KVs for the remainder of the show 46 56 58 The Scarab 38 KVs were a 28 hued twin 440 hp boat that sold for 130 000 in 1986 56 As a result of the attention the Scarab 38 KV garnered on Miami Vice Wellcraft received an onslaught of orders increasing sales by 21 in one year 56 In appreciation Wellcraft gave Don Johnson an exact duplicate of the boat Afterward Johnson was frequently seen arriving to work in it 56 Altogether 100 copies of the boat dubbed the Scarab 38KV Miami Vice Edition were built by Wellcraft 59 The Miami Vice graphics and color scheme which include turquoise aqua and orchid was available by special order on any model Scarab from 20 to 38 feet 46 Don Johnson also participated in the design of the Scarab Excel 43 ft Don Johnson Signature Series DJSS and raced a similar one 60 The DJSS was powered by twin 650 hp Lamborghini V 12 engines which caused some problems to the design of the boat due to their size 60 Overall the boat cost 300 000 with each engine amounting to between 60 70 000 60 His interest in boat racing eventually led Johnson to start his own offshore powerboat racing team named Team USA 61 Joining him were Hollywood stars including Kurt Russell and Chuck Norris Johnson won the Offshore World Cup in 1988 and continued racing into the 1990s 61 In both the pilot episode Brother s Keeper and the season 4 episode Baseballs of Death a Grumman Turbo Mallard G 73T amphibious airplane registration N2969 made an appearance In the former episode the drug dealer Calderone used N2969 to successfully escape from Crockett and Tubbs at the climax of the episode 62 In the latter episode Guerrero made an attempt to escape from the vice team in N2969 but ran out of fuel and was killed after he stole a fisherman s boat which then ran ashore and exploded 63 In December 2005 N2969 suffered a catastrophic structural failure when the right wing separated from the fuselage as the plane climbed out of Miami bound for the Bahamas Both crew members and all 18 passengers were killed upon impact with the water 64 Episodes editMain article List of Miami Vice episodes SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired123September 16 1984 1984 09 16 May 10 1985 1985 05 10 223September 27 1985 1985 09 27 May 9 1986 1986 05 09 324September 26 1986 1986 09 26 May 8 1987 1987 05 08 422September 25 1987 1987 09 25 May 6 1988 1988 05 06 522November 4 1988 1988 11 04 January 25 1990 1990 01 25 Overview edit Scripts were loosely based on actual crimes that occurred in Miami over the years 2 This included both local and international and global organized crime Many episodes focused on drug trafficking for which real life Miami was a main hub and entrance point into North America in the early 1980s Other episodes were based on crimes such as firearms trafficking 65 for which Miami was equally a gateway for sales to Latin America as well as the Miami River Cops scandal a real police corruption ring that involved narcotic thefts drug dealing and murders street prostitution serial home burglaries 66 crimes committed by Cuban immigrants to Miami following the Mariel boatlift 67 and yakuza and Mafia activity in Miami 68 The series also took a look at political issues such as the Northern Ireland conflict 69 the drug war in South America e g Prodigal Son U S support of generals and dictators in Southeast Asia and South America 70 and the aftermath of the Vietnam War 71 Social issues like child abuse homophobia 72 and the AIDS crisis 73 were also covered Personal issues also arose Crockett separated from his wife Caroline Belinda Montgomery in the pilot and divorced in the fourth episode and later his second wife Caitlin Davies Sheena Easton was killed by one of his enemies In the three episodes Mirror Image Hostile Takeover and Redemption in Blood a concussion caused by an explosion caused Crockett to believe he was his undercover alter ego Sonny Burnett a drug dealer Tubbs had a running partly personal vendetta with the Calderone family a member of which ordered the death of his brother Rafael a New York City police detective Lieutenant Martin Castillo is also frequently haunted by his past in Southeast Asia which he had spent as a DEA agent in the Golden Triangle 74 This paragraph possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the first seasons vague the tone was lighter especially when comical characters such as police informants Noogie Lamont Charlie Barnett and Izzy Moreno Martin Ferrero appeared Later the content was darker and cynical with Crockett and Tubbs fighting corruption and storylines emphasizing the aspect of human tragedy behind a crime The darker episodes sometimes lacked a denouement each episode ending abruptly after a climax involving violence and death often giving the episodes a despairing and sometimes nihilistic feel despite the trademark glamour and conspicuous wealth Given its idiosyncratic dark feel and touch Miami Vice is frequently cited as an example of made for TV neo noir Michael Mann who serves as executive producer for the majority of the show s five year run is often credited with being one of the most influential neo noir directors The second season episode Out Where the Buses Don t Run ranks 90 on TV Guide s 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time list 75 Changes edit During its five year run Miami Vice underwent several noticeable changes in its formula and content Between seasons one and two however these changes were mostly subtle and involves details such as the degree of perfection with which color shades of scene backdrops props and clothing are matched to each other For its third season in 1986 87 after the cancellation of Knight Rider the show moved from its traditional time slot of 10 pm on Friday nights to 9 pm which now put it up against perennial Top 10 show Dallas This began the show s decline and in March 1987 TV Guide ran a cover story entitled Dallas Drubs the Cops Why Miami Vice Seems to be Slipping 76 Miami Vice s season ratings slipped from 9 in Season 2 down to 27 by the end of Season 3 77 Before leaving the series to work on his new television series Crime Story 78 Michael Mann handed the role of executive producer to future Law amp Order creator Dick Wolf 79 prior to the third season 1986 1987 78 Wolf had the show focus on contemporary issues 78 like the Troubles in Northern Ireland and capital punishment 78 In addition to losing the battle against new timeslot rival Dallas the general tone of season 3 episodes started to become more serious and less lighthearted than in previous seasons Comedic scenes and subplots became distinctly rare True to Dick Wolf s grabbed from the headlines approach which he later employed in TV series like Law amp Order storylines focused more on the serious human aspect of crime than on glamorizing the tropical lifestyles of drug dealers and other high profile criminals This shift in tone also reflected in the series fashions color schemes and its choice of music The cast started wearing pronouncedly dark clothing and even earthtones which had famously been avoided by executive producer Michael Mann in seasons one and two Color palettes of scene backdrops started becoming much darker as well with pastels replaced by harsher appearing shades of neon 80 Whereas seasons one and two always featured a diverse selection of contemporary mostly upbeat chart music and classic rock and pop the third season s music lineup became much more somber with songs like In Dulce Decorum by The Damned Lives in the Balance by Jackson Browne Mercy by Steve Jones 81 and Never Let Me Down Again Aggro Mix by Depeche Mode 82 All these changes were decidedly unwelcome both by critics and by many viewers who had become fans of the TV series due to the package that the first two seasons delivered 80 It caused the producers to retool their approach to Miami Vice for the following fourth season By Season 4 most of the original writers had left the series Stories and story arcs included a courtship and marriage between Sonny Crockett Don Johnson and Caitlin Davies Sheena Easton and a plot in which Crockett developed amnesia during which he mistook himself for his drug dealer alter ego and became a hitman Caroline Crockett Sonny s first wife as well as his son Billy reappeared briefly Jan Hammer departed from the series at the end of the fourth season having already handed much of the weekly scoring workload during the season over to John Petersen The tone of many season 4 episodes grew lighter again albeit sometimes veering off into the bizarre e g episodes like The Big Thaw Missing Hours and The Cows of October Fashions and scene backdrops largely reassumed the pastel hues of seasons 1 and 2 and the choice of music became more varied again Hopes by the producers of propitiating former and remaining fans this way only materializing very mutedly and reception was lukewarm as evidenced by the show s still declining ratings during season four 83 The fifth season 1988 1989 saw the show return to its original timeslot 10 pm on Friday nights and took the show on a yet more serious tone 84 with storylines becoming dark and gritty enough so that even some of the most loyal fans were left perplexed 84 Tim Truman took over scoring the episodes for the remainder of the series run and brought with him a style of instrumental synthesizer music that was markedly different from Jan Hammer s Cancellation edit After still deteriorating ratings during the fourth season NBC originally planned to order just a shortened fifth season of only 13 episodes but eventually settled for another full run which was either way going to be the final season At the beginning of season five Olivia Brown recalled The show was trying to reinvent itself 85 Dick Wolf said in an interview for E True Hollywood Story after the fifth season it was all just kind of over 86 and that the show had run its course 86 In May 1989 NBC aired the two hour series finale Freefall Despite its status as the series finale there were three episodes that did not air World of Trouble Miracle Man and Leap of Faith which appeared during the June re runs as Lost Episodes A fourth previously unaired episode Too Much Too Late was aired for the first time in 1990 on the USA Network It has since been run by other networks in syndication with the fifth season episodes Cast edit nbsp Group photo of the cast members of Miami Vice from left to right top John Diehl Michael Talbott Saundra Santiago middle Edward James Olmos Olivia Brown Philip Michael Thomas bottom Don Johnson taken during the second season Name Portrayed by Occupation Seasons Duration1 2 3 4 5James Sonny Crockett Don Johnson Detective Sergeant Main 1x01 5x21Ricardo Rico Tubbs Philip Michael Thomas Detective Sergeant Main 1x01 5x21Gina Navarro Calabrese Saundra Santiago Detective Main 1x01 5x21Stanley Stan Switek Michael Talbott Detective Main 1x01 5x21Trudy Joplin Olivia Brown Detective Main 1x01 5x21Lawrence Larry Zito John Diehl Detective Main 1x01 3x13Lou Rodriguez Gregory Sierra Detective Lieutenant Main 1x01 1x04Martin Marty Castillo Edward James Olmos Detective Lieutenant Main 1x06 5x21Main characters edit Don Johnson as Detective James Sonny Crockett An undercover detective of the Metro Dade Police Department A former University of Florida Gators star wide receiver 87 he sustained a knee injury which put an end to his sports career He served two tours in Vietnam or as he calls it the Southeast Asia Conference He joined Metro Dade as a uniformed patrol officer and later an undercover detective of the vice unit Crockett s alias is Sonny Burnett a drug runner and middleman His vehicles include a Ferrari Daytona Spyder 50 later a Ferrari Testarossa 49 a Scarab offshore power boat 58 and a sailboat 56 on which he lives with his pet alligator Elvis The name Sonny Crockett had previously been used for a criminal played by actor Dennis Burkley on Hill Street Blues in 1983 where creator Anthony Yerkovich was a writer Coincidentally Gregory Sierra who later plays Crockett s boss on Vice appears in the same episodes Philip Michael Thomas as Detective Ricardo Rico Tubbs A former New York police detective 87 who traveled to Miami as part of a personal vendetta against Calderone the man who murdered his brother Rafael 87 After temporarily teaming up with Crockett Tubbs follows his friend s advice and transfers to a career in Southern law enforcement fearing that after his serious violations of NYPD codes of conduct in the pilot episode he would not be able to resume his job in New York He joins the Miami department and becomes Crockett s permanent partner He often poses as Rico Cooper a wealthy buyer from out of town Edward James Olmos as Lieutenant Martin Marty Castillo He replaces the slain Rodriguez as head of the OCB A very taciturn man 88 Castillo lives a reclusive life outside of work He was formerly a DEA agent in the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia during the late 1970s During his time with the DEA he opposed the CIA in endorsing the trafficking of heroin to finance their overseas operations Saundra Santiago as Detective Regina Gina Navarro Calabrese A fearless female detective who after Crockett s divorce had a brief romance with him Even though their relationship did not progress they still had a strong friendship Olivia Brown as Detective Trudy Joplin Gina s patrol partner Though tough she sometimes struggles to cope with the consequences of her job such as when she shoots and kills a man Later in the series she has an encounter with a UFO and an alien portrayed by James Brown Michael Talbott as Detective Stanley Stan Switek A fellow police detective and Larry Zito s best friend Although a good policeman later on in the series he falls prey to a gambling addiction He is also a big fan of Elvis Presley John Diehl 1984 1987 as Detective Lawrence Larry Zito 89 A detective and Switek s surveillance partner and best friend He is killed in the line of duty when a drug dealer gives him a fatal overdose 89 Gregory Sierra 1984 as Lieutenant Louis Lou Rodriguez A police lieutenant who serves as commander of the Vice Unit He is killed in the fourth episode by an assassin hired to kill Crockett Recurring characters edit Charlie Barnett 1984 1987 as Nugart Neville Noogie Lamont A friend of Izzy s and informant for Crockett and Tubbs His role was largely taken over by Izzy Moreno after the first season In his final appearance in Season 4 his role is reduced from street informant to comic relief Sheena Easton 1987 1988 as Caitlin Davies Crockett A pop singer who is assigned a police bodyguard Crockett for her testimony in a racketeering case While protecting Caitlin Sonny falls in love with her and they marry Months after their marriage Caitlin is killed by one of Crockett s former nemeses Sonny later learns she was seven weeks pregnant causing him further emotional turmoil Martin Ferrero 1984 1989 as Isidore Izzy Moreno A petty criminal and fast talker Izzy is always known for getting into quick money schemes and giving Crockett and Tubbs the latest information from the street Jose Perez 1985 1989 as Juan Carlos Silva a drug dealer and father of Rosetta Silva and as Jorge Georgie Esteban cousin of Izzy Moreno Pam Grier 1985 1989 as Valerie Gordon A New York Police Department Officer and on and off love interest of Tubbs Belinda Montgomery 1984 1989 as Caroline Crockett Ballard Crockett s former wife who moves to Ocala Florida to remarry and raise their child Billy Caroline was having a baby with her second husband in her last appearance Guest appearances edit Main article List of Miami Vice guest appearances nbsp Edward James Olmos Bruce Willis center and Don Johnson in the episode No Exit Many actors actresses musicians comedians athletes and celebrities appear throughout the show s five season run They play many different roles from drug dealers to undercover cops to madams The full list can be seen at the link above as this is just a partial list Musicians include Sheena Easton John Taylor Andy Taylor Willie Nelson 28 Gene Simmons 32 and Ted Nugent 29 Additionally Glenn Frey 27 Frank Zappa 30 Phil Collins 24 Miles Davis 25 90 Frankie Valli 91 Little Richard 92 James Brown 93 Leonard Cohen 94 the Power Station 26 Coati Mundi 27 95 and Eartha Kitt 26 Other personalities include auto executive Lee Iacocca 96 and Watergate conspirator G Gordon Liddy 97 98 99 Athletes include Boston Celtics center Bill Russell Bernard King 100 racecar driver Danny Sullivan 31 and boxers Roberto Duran 30 and Randall Tex Cobb 101 102 Notable actors include Dean Stockwell 103 Pam Grier 32 104 105 Clarence Williams III 106 and Brian Dennehy 107 The show frequently features guest appearances from up and coming actors and actresses including Laurence Fishburne Viggo Mortensen Dennis Farina 108 109 110 Stanley Tucci 111 112 113 Jimmy Smits 114 Bruce McGill 92 David Strathairn 92 Ving Rhames 54 115 Liam Neeson 69 Lou Diamond Phillips 116 Bruce Willis 95 Ed O Neill 117 and Julia Roberts 118 Additionally Michael Madsen 119 Ian McShane 120 121 Bill Paxton 122 Luis Guzman 32 123 Kyra Sedgwick 24 Esai Morales 73 124 Terry O Quinn 119 Joaquim de Almeida 125 Wesley Snipes 122 John Turturro 104 Melanie Griffith 126 and Annie Golden to name a few Notable comedians included John Leguizamo 96 127 128 David Rasche 103 Ben Stiller 107 Chris Rock 93 Tommy Chong 129 Richard Belzer 129 and Penn Jillette 32 Reception editAwards and nominations edit Main article List of accolades received by Miami Vice Ratings edit Season Time slot ET Rank Rating 130 1984 85 Sunday at 9 00 pm Episode 1 2 hour pilot Sunday at 10 00 pm Episodes 2 23 Not in the Top 301985 86 Friday at 9 00 pm Episodes 1 and 2 2 hour season premiere Friday at 10 00 pm Episodes 3 23 9 21 31986 87 Friday at 9 00 pm 26 16 8 Tied with Knots Landing 1987 88 Friday at 9 00 pm Episodes 1 18 Friday at 10 00 pm Episodes 19 22 Not in the Top 301988 89 Friday at 10 00 pm Episodes 1 8 14 Friday at 9 00 pm Episodes 9 13 15 16 Sunday at 9 00 pm Episodes 17 and 18 2 hour finale Wednesday at 10 00 pm Episodes 19 21 Series Finale 22 million viewers amp a 14 7 rating on May 21 1989 from 9 to 11 pm Competition Everybody s Baby The Rescue of Jessica McClure 22 9 rating amp Mickey Spillane s Mike Hammer Murder Takes All 12 8 rating Final Airing on NBC 16 1 million viewers 11 1 rating June 28 1989 China Beach drew 10 8 million viewers 8 rating Critical response edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2017 Critics object to the show s usage of violence by dressing it with pretty photography 4 Others complain that the show relies more on visual aspects and music than on coherent stories and fully drawn characters 4 Civic leaders in Miami have also objected to the show s airing of the city s crime problems all across America 4 Most civic leaders however were placated due to the show s estimated contribution of 1 million per episode to the city s economy and because it boosted tourism to Miami 4 Gerald S Arenberg of the National Association of Chiefs of Police criticized the show s glamorous depiction of vice squads saying no real vice cops chase drug dealers in a Ferrari while wearing 600 suits More often than not they re holed up in a crummy room somewhere wearing jeans with holes in them watching some beat up warehouse in a godforsaken part of town through a pair of dented binoculars 131 At the 1985 Emmy Awards Miami Vice was nominated for 15 Emmy Awards 4 7 including Outstanding Writing in a Dramatic Series Outstanding Film Editing Outstanding Achievement for Music Composition for a series dramatic underscore and Outstanding Directing 7 At the end of the night Miami Vice only won four Emmys The following day the Los Angeles Herald Examiner could only conclude that the conservative Emmy voters at the Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences simply refused to recognize an innovative new series that celebrates hedonism violence sex and drugs 132 Television critics Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz ranked Miami Vice as the 51st greatest American television series of all time in their 2016 book titled TV The Book with Seitz stating how the show was more influenced by 1960s art house cinema from Europe than by any other contemporary television drama Miami Vice superimposed ripped from the headlines details about drug smuggling arms dealing and covert war onto a pastel noir dreamscape It gave American TV its first visionary existential drama 133 Impact on popular culture edit nbsp Replica 1972 Ferrari Daytona Spyder actually a modified Chevrolet Corvette The car driven by Don Johnson in Miami Vice until season three Miami Vice was a groundbreaking police program of the 1980s 134 It had a notable impact on the decade s popular fashions 4 38 and set the tone for the evolution of police drama Series such as Homicide Life on the Street NYPD Blue and the Law amp Order franchise though being markedly different in style and theme from Miami Vice follows its lead in breaking the genre s mold Dick Wolf creator and executive producer of the Law amp Order franchise was a writer and later executive producer of Miami Vice 134 Parodies and pastiches of it have continued decades after it airs such as the Only Fools and Horses Christmas episode Miami Twice 1991 and Moonbeam City 2015 The video game Grand Theft Auto Vice City published by Rockstar Games in 2002 is heavily inspired by Miami Vice in multiple ways It is set in a stylized 1980s Miami inspired fictional city named Vice City 135 One of the main characters Lance Vance was actually voiced by Philip Michael Thomas Two undercover police officers appear in a police sports car within the game when the player obtains a three star wanted level The two officers one white and one black resemble the two leading characters of Miami Vice In the prequel Grand Theft Auto Vice City Stories there are two officers in the multiplayer mode named Cracker and Butts a parody of Crockett and Tubbs these characters share the same role as the undercover cops in Vice City Many of the fashion styles and trends popularized by the TV show such as fast cars and speed boats unshaven beard stubble a T shirt under pastel suits no socks rolled up sleeves boat shoes and Ray Ban sunglasses symbolize the stereotypical image of 1980s fashion and culture 38 41 It has built an awareness of Miami in young people who had never thought of visiting Miami William Cullom 4 Former President of the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce The show also had a lasting impact on Miami itself It drew a large amount of media attention to the beginning revitalization of the South Beach and Art Deco District areas of Miami Beach as well as other portions of Greater Miami and increases tourism and investment Even 30 years after Miami Vice first airs it is still responsible for its share of tourist visits to the city 136 The fact that Crockett and Tubbs were Dade County officers and not City of Miami police represents the growing notion of metro government in Miami In 1997 a county referendum changed the name from Dade County to Miami Dade County This allows people to relate the county government to recognize notions and images of Miami many of which were first popularized by Miami Vice The Dade County Sheriff s Office now became the Miami Dade Police Department Home media editUniversal Studios has released all Miami Vice seasons on DVD for regions 1 2 and 4 Seasons 1 amp 2 were released in 2005 and seasons 3 through 5 were released in 2007 137 138 139 140 The DVD release of the series had been significantly slow due to one of the signature features of the show the heavy integration of 1980s pop and rock music The music was difficult to source the rights to and acquire permission to use 141 On at least one MCA Universal Home Video VHS release of the pilot The Rolling Stones song Miss You had been replaced by generic rock music 142 In the November 2004 announcement for the DVD release of the series Universal promises that all original music in the series would be intact 137 143 144 On August 21 2007 Universal announces the November 13 2007 release of the complete series with all five seasons on 27 single sided DVDs 145 The seasons are in their own Digipak style cases and the set is housed in a faux alligator skin package 145 Seasons 1 amp 2 contained six single sided discs rather than the three double sided discs in the initial release 145 The Region 2 version has different packaging does not use double sided discs and although there are no special features stated on the packaging they are contained within the season 1 discs On March 8 2016 it is announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to the series in Region 1 they subsequently re released the first two seasons on DVD on May 3 2016 146 On October 4 2016 Mill Creek re released Miami Vice The Complete Series on DVD and also released the complete series on Blu ray 147 DVD name Ep Release dates Special featuresRegion 1 Region 2 Region 4Season One 22 February 8 2005 137 April 25 2005 148 July 13 2005 149 The Vibe of Vice Building the Perfect Vice The Music of Vice Miami After Vice Season Two 22 November 22 2005 138 July 24 2006 150 July 20 2006 151 Season Three 24 March 20 2007 139 May 14 2007 152 July 5 2007 153 Season Four 22 March 20 2007 139 August 13 2007 154 December 4 2007 155 Season Five 21 June 26 2007 140 December 26 2007 156 July 29 2009 157 Seasons One amp Two 44 N A November 27 2006 158 N AThe Complete Series 111 November 13 2007 145 159 October 8 2007 160 161 TBA Same special features from season one References edit Archived copy Archived from the original on August 18 2020 Retrieved March 28 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d e f About the Show NBC Universal Inc Archived from the original on April 23 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 28 Janeshutz Trish 1986 The Making of Miami Vice New York Ballatine Books p 12 ISBN 0 345 33669 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Zoglin Richard September 16 1985 Cool Cops Hot Show Time Magazine Time Inc Archived from the original on August 22 2013 Retrieved November 2 2007 Boyer Peter J April 19 1988 Guiding No 1 The Man Who Programs NBC The New York Times Retrieved February 8 2008 Miami Vice Season One Featurette Making the Perfect Vice a b c Advanced Primetime Awards Search Academy of Television Arts and Science emmys tv Archived from the original on November 3 2009 Retrieved November 3 2007 Farber Stephen July 9 1984 TV Series to be Broadcast in Stereo The New York Times Retrieved August 27 2021 Farber Stephen July 9 1984 TV Series to be Broadcast in Stero The New York Times Jeff Bridges Biography IMDb com Archived from the original on June 12 2019 Retrieved May 19 2014 Miami Vice 1984 1990 Trivia IMDb com Archived from the original on March 22 2017 Retrieved May 19 2014 E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 8 11 minutes in E Entertainment Mickey Rourke Biography Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on February 19 2019 Retrieved April 28 2012 E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 10 27 minutes in E Entertainment Johnson s Looking Out for No 1 June 26 1986 a b Schmalz Jeffrey May 18 1989 Miami Journal Sun Sets on Show That Redefined a City The New York Times Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved February 8 2008 Viglucci Andres September 28 2014 The Vice Effect 30 years after the show that changed Miami Miami Herald Archived from the original on July 20 2020 Retrieved June 3 2016 Zoglin Richard September 16 1985 Cool Cops Hot Show time com Time Retrieved June 3 2016 The Vice Effect 30 years after the show that changed Miami by Andres Viglucci Archived July 20 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Miami Herald September 28 2014 Greenwich Studios History Greenwich Studios 2016 Archived from the original on January 29 2019 Retrieved January 30 2019 Miami Vice Filming Locations miamivicelocations org Archived from the original on March 31 2016 Retrieved June 3 2016 Millman Joyce November 9 1998 Dancing with the television Salon Entertainment Archived from the original on July 26 2008 Retrieved July 31 2008 Breznican Anthony July 26 2006 Miami Vice makes series of changes USA Today Archived from the original on September 25 2009 Retrieved July 31 2008 a b c Phil the Shill Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 11 December 13 1985 NBC a b Junk Love Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 6 November 8 1985 NBC a b c Whatever Works Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 2 October 4 1985 NBC a b c Smuggler s Blues Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 15 February 1 1985 NBC a b El Viejo Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 7 November 7 1986 NBC a b Definitely Miami Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 12 January 10 1986 NBC a b c Payback Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 19 March 14 1986 NBC a b Florence Italy Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 16 February 14 1986 NBC a b c d e Prodigal Son Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 1 September 27 1985 NBC Murray Noel August 2 2012 How Miami Vice launched the 80s on TV then died with its decade TV A Very Special Episode The A V Club The Onion Archived from the original on October 18 2013 Retrieved August 9 2012 Bowles Scott July 27 2006 Too much Vice not enough Miami USA Today Archived from the original on July 13 2009 Retrieved July 31 2008 a b Friedman Roger July 25 2006 Miami Vice Theme Axed but Alive Fox News Archived from the original on May 24 2010 Retrieved July 30 2008 Grammy Award Winners The Recording Academy grammy com Archived from the original on October 2 2009 Retrieved 2007 11 05 DE NEDERLANDSE TOP 40 in Dutch Radio 538 Archived from the original on November 10 2008 Retrieved July 30 2008 a b c d e f Trebay Guy July 20 2006 Roll Up Your Sleeves and Indulge in a Miami Vice The New York Times Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved December 19 2007 a b c Hunter Stephen July 28 2006 Miami Vice Way Cool Then Now Not So Hot The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved February 7 2008 South Beach and Miami Vice past and present USA Today September 29 2006 Archived from the original on March 3 2011 Retrieved November 25 2007 a b c Leinster Colin September 28 1987 A Tale of Mice and Lens Fortune Magazine CNN Archived from the original on July 14 2019 Retrieved November 25 2007 Augustin Hedberg David Lanchner Tyler Mathisen Michele Willens September 1 1986 Hair s the Look That s in These Days Money Magazine CNN Archived from the original on August 13 2020 Retrieved August 28 2008 Janeshutz Trish 1986 The Making of Miami Vice New York Ballatine Books p 65 ISBN 0 345 33669 0 a b c d SOF Staff October 1986 Hollywood Heat in Miami New Hardware Muscles in on the Action Soldier of Fortune s 40 43 a b The History of the Galco Miami Classic Holster Rig used in the TV series Miami Vice Galco International usgalco com Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Retrieved September 28 2007 a b c Cole Tim May 1986 The Machines of Miami Vice The car the boats the guns that make it TV s hottest show Popular Mechanics Hearst Corp 152 5 89 91 Janeshutz Trish 1986 The Making of Miami Vice New York Ballatine Books p 72 ISBN 0 345 33669 0 a b Spaise Kevin September 1987 Twice as Vice Kit Car 13 a b c d Spaise Kevin September 1987 Twice as Vice Kit Car 14 a b c d e f g Gromer Cliff July 1987 The Cars of Miami Vice Popular Mechanics Hearst Corp 164 7 85 a b c d e Spaise Kevin September 1987 Twice as Vice Kit Car 15 Klieger Jeff November 1987 Caddy s a 64 Popular Mechanics Heartst Corp 164 11 6 Retrieved May 18 2009 Archived copy Archived from the original on March 27 2016 Retrieved March 15 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b The Maze Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 17 February 22 1985 NBC a b c d Miami Vice TV Series 1984 1989 Internet Movie Car Database imcdb org Archived from the original on September 5 2020 Retrieved November 11 2007 a b c d e f g h Davis Chris June 1986 The Boats of Miami Vice Motor Boating and Sailing 157 6 36 40 Miami Vice Original Race Boat up for Auction Press release PR Web emediawire com November 15 2006 Archived from the original on May 8 2008 Retrieved 2007 12 20 a b Wellcraft Scarab 38 Auto Salon Singen autosalon singen de Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved December 21 2007 Benoit Ellen April 7 1986 Just Like On TV Forbes 106 a b c Schryver Doug February 1988 Don Johnson s new Scarab gets all the bells and whistles Wellcraft can muster plus a few new tricks You can own one too for a price Starship 116 119 202 203 a b Friedman Jack Cindy Dampier May 28 1990 With Kurt Russell and Chuck Norris in Tow Don Johnson Risks His Neck on a New Miami Vice superboat Racing People Magazine 33 21 101 102 Brothers Keeper Part 2 Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 2 September 16 1984 NBC Baseballs of Death Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 14 February 19 1988 NBC In flight Separation of Right Wing Flying Boat Inc doing business as Chalk s Ocean Airways Flight 101 Grumman Turbo Mallard G 73T N2969 Port of Miami Florida December 19 2005 PDF National Transportation Safety Board May 30 2007 Retrieved August 27 2021 e g episodes No Exit airing November 9 1984 Evan airing May 3 1985 When Irish Eyes Are Crying airing September 26 1986 episode The Home Invaders airing March 15 1985 e g episode Brother s Keeper airing September 16 1984 e g episodes Lombard airing May 10 1985 The Rising Sun of Death airing December 4 1987 a b When Irish Eyes Are Crying airing September 26 1986 Golden Triangle Pt 1 airing January 22 1985 Episodes Back in the World airing December 6 1985 Stone s War airing October 3 1986 Duty And Honor The Savage airing February 6 1987 Episode Evan airing May 3 1985 a b God s Work Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 06 November 6 1987 NBC e g episodes Golden Triangle Pt I airing January 11 1985 Golden Triangle Pt II airing January 18 1985 Bushido airing November 22 1985 Duty and Honor The Savage airing February 6 1986 Heart of Night airing November 18 1988 Special Collectors Issue TV Guide No June 28 July 4 1997 Looking for old Vice articles Miami Vice Chronicles Miamivicechronicles com November 27 2008 Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved October 29 2013 The Miami News April 22 1987 Retrieved October 29 2013 permanent dead link a b c d E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 32 37 minutes in E Entertainment Strachan Alex April 30 2008 Longevity the order of the day Canwest News Service Calgary Herald Archived from the original on July 23 2009 Retrieved 2008 05 08 a b What s Black and Blue and Hurtin All Over Miami Vice Pal TV Guide March 11 1987 p 26 f Miami Vice II soundtrack album released December 29 1986 Episode Everybody s in Showbiz airing May 1 1987 If It s Not Too Late Here s How Miami Vice Can Revive Its Magic TV Guide March 19 1988 a b E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 36 28 minutes in E Entertainment E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 36 44 minutes in E Entertainment a b E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 36 46 minutes in E Entertainment a b c O Connor John J June 28 1985 Critics Choice Broadcast TV The New York Times Archived from the original on November 13 2020 Retrieved December 18 2007 Museum of Broadcast Communications October 7 2004 Horace Newcomb ed Encyclopedia of television second ed Taylor and Francis p 1487 ISBN 1 57958 394 6 a b Bennetts Leslie January 9 1987 Miami Vice Frees Actor By Killing Lieutenant Zito The New York Times Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved December 18 2007 Kelley Robin D G May 13 2001 Miles Davis The Chameleon of Cool A Jazz Genius In the Guise Of a Hustler The New York Times Archived from the original on November 13 2020 Retrieved January 2 2008 Buddies Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 5 November 1 1985 NBC a b c Out Where the Buses Don t Run Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 3 October 18 1985 NBC a b Missing Hours Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 7 November 13 1987 NBC French Twist Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 17 February 21 1986 NBC a b No Exit Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 07 November 9 1984 NBC a b Sons and Lovers Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 22 May 9 1986 NBC Back in the World Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 10 December 6 1985 NBC Stone s War Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 2 October 3 1986 NBC Liddy in Miami Vice The New York Times Associated Press October 31 1985 Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved December 18 2007 The Fix Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 18 March 7 1986 NBC Down for the Count Pt 1 Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 12 January 9 1987 NBC Down for the Count Pt 2 Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 13 January 16 1987 NBC a b Bushido Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 30 November 22 1985 NBC a b Rites of Passage Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 16 February 8 1985 NBC Too Much Too Late Miami Vice Season 5 Episode 21 January 25 1990 NBC The Dutch Oven Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 4 October 25 1985 NBC a b Amen Send Money Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 02 October 2 1987 NBC One Eyed Jack Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 6 November 2 1984 NBC Lombard Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 22 May 10 1985 NBC World of Trouble Miami Vice Season 5 Episode 18 June 14 1989 NBC Baby Blues airing November 21 1986 Contempt of Court Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 1 September 25 1987 NBC Blood and Roses Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 19 April 1 1988 NBC Brother s Keeper Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 1 September 16 1984 NBC Child s Play Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 5 October 30 1987 NBC Red Tape Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 19 March 13 1987 NBC Heart of Darkness Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 02 September 28 1984 NBC Mirror Image Miami Vice Season 4 Episode 22 May 6 1988 NBC a b Give a Little Take a Little Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 10 December 7 1984 NBC Knock Knock Who s There Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 21 March 27 1987 NBC Freefall Pt 1 amp 2 Miami Vice Season 5 Episode 17 May 21 1989 NBC a b Streetwise Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 17 December 5 1986 NBC Free Verse Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 20 April 4 1986 NBC Home Invaders Miami Vice Season 1 Episode 19 March 15 1985 NBC Bought and Paid for Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 9 November 29 1985 NBC By Hooker By Crook Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 20 April 3 1987 NBC Afternoon Plane Miami Vice Season 3 Episode 17 February 20 1987 NBC Victims of Circumstance Miami Vice Season 5 Episode 16 May 5 1989 NBC a b Trust Fund Pirates Miami Vice Season 2 Episode 21 May 2 1986 NBC Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present Ninth ed Ballantine Books p 1691 ISBN 978 0 345 49773 4 David Friedman July 6 1986 Real cops blow cover on fantasyland of police shows St Petersburg Times Archived from the original on March 29 2017 Retrieved April 22 2011 E True Hollywood Story Miami Vice E True Hollywood Story Season 5 Episode 24 June 3 2001 34 11 minutes in E Entertainment Sepinwall Alan Seitz Matt Zoller September 6 2016 TV The Book Two Experts Pick the Greatest American Shows of All Time Grand Central Publishing ISBN 978 1455588190 a b Jeremy Butler Miami Vice U S Police Drama Museum of Broadcast Communications museum tv Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved November 3 2007 The Making Of Grand Theft Auto Vice City Edge December 7 2012 Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved August 26 2014 Valerie Conners December 11 2014 The show that redefined Miami BBC Travel Archived from the original on August 20 2019 Retrieved July 1 2016 a b c Cover Art Extras And Info On Original Music tvshowsondvd com November 8 2004 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 a b New Improved Street Date Ride With Vice Season 2 Before Thanksgiving tvshowsondvd com August 16 2005 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 a b c Seasons 3 amp 4 Artwork And Music Info tvshowsondvd com January 10 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 a b Final Season In June Artwork Added tvshowsondvd com March 26 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Agreement over music costs could not be reached tvshowsondvd com July 6 2003 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Miami Vice Brother s Keeper TV Episode 1984 IMDb IMDb Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved June 5 2018 ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1ST SEASON tvshowsondvd com November 8 2004 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Uni s Exec VP Responds To 5 1 Sound Demands tvshowsondvd com October 20 2004 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 a b c d Uni To Deliver Complete Vice In Faux Alligator Skin Box tvshowsondvd com August 21 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved September 3 2007 Miami Vice DVD news Re Release for Season 1 and Season 2 TVShowsOnDVD com tvshowsondvd com Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Miami Vice DVD news Announcement for The Complete Series on Blu ray TVShowsOnDVD com tvshowsondvd com Archived from the original on July 3 2016 Miami Vice Series 1 Complete amazon co uk Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved August 4 2008 Miami Vice 1984 Season 1 8 Disc Box Set EzyDVD Archived from the original on August 9 2008 Retrieved August 2 2008 Gould Chris Miami Vice Season Two UK DVD R2 DVD Active dvdactive com Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved December 28 2007 Miami Vice 1984 Season 2 6 Disc Box Set EzyDVD Archived from the original on August 9 2008 Retrieved August 2 2008 Gould Chris Miami Vice Season Three UK DVD R2 DVD Active dvdactive com Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved December 28 2007 Miami Vice 1984 Season 3 6 Disc Set EzyDVD Archived from the original on August 1 2008 Retrieved August 2 2008 Miami Vice Series 4 1987 Amazon amazon co uk August 13 2007 Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved December 28 2007 Miami Vice 1984 Season 4 6 Disc Set EzyDVD Archived from the original on August 9 2008 Retrieved August 2 2008 Gould Chris Miami Vice Season 5 UK DVD R2 DVD Active dvdactive com Archived from the original on March 9 2016 Retrieved December 28 2007 Miami Vice 1984 Season 5 Archived from the original on July 21 2009 Gould Chris Miami Vice Seasons One amp Two UK DVD R2 DVD Active dvdactive com Archived from the original on March 10 2016 Retrieved December 28 2007 Scoop Exclusive First Picture of Complete Series Faux Alligator Skin Package tvshosondvd com August 21 2007 Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Miami Vice The Complete Collection amazon co uk October 8 2007 Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved August 4 2008 Miami Vice Complete Collection Zavvi co uk Archived from the original on February 17 2009 Retrieved August 4 2008 External links editMiami Vice at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Miami Vice at IMDb nbsp Miami Vice at Rotten Tomatoes Miami Vice on Hulu com Miami Vice on NBC com Miami Vice Archived September 21 2013 at the Wayback Machine at the Museum of Broadcast Communications Portals nbsp Television nbsp United States nbsp 1980s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miami Vice amp oldid 1192453830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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