NYPD Blue (season 10)

The tenth season of NYPD Blue premiered on ABC on September 24, 2002, and concluded on May 20, 2003.

NYPD Blue
Season 10
Season 10 U.S. DVD Cover
Country of originUnited States
No. of episodes22
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseSeptember 24, 2002 (2002-09-24) 
May 20, 2003 (2003-05-20)
Season chronology
ActorCharacterMain castRecurring cast
Dennis FranzAndy Sipowiczentire seasonN/A
Mark-Paul GosselaarJohn Clark, Jr.entire seasonN/A
Gordon ClappGreg Medavoyentire seasonN/A
Henry SimmonsBaldwin Jonesentire seasonN/A
Charlotte RossConnie McDowellentire seasonN/A
Garcelle BeauvaisValerie Haywoodentire seasonN/A
Jacqueline ObradorsRita Ortizentire seasonN/A
Bill BrochtrupJohn Irvinentire seasonN/A
Esai MoralesTony Rodriguezentire seasonN/A
John F. O'DonohueEddie GibsonN/Aepisode 9
Kim DelaneyDiane RussellN/Aepisode 21

Episodes

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.S. viewers
(millions)
1981"Ho Down"Mark TinkerStory by: Bill Clark & Nicholas Wootton
Teleplay by: Nicholas Wootton
September 24, 2002 (2002-09-24)HA01/510113.20[1]
Sipowicz and Clark go to arrest a shooting suspect and Sipowicz ends up pushing a woman down to the floor; a bystander informs them she's Money T's woman, and Sipowicz is in danger. Medavoy and Jones catch the case of an older woman who has been severely beaten and bound with tape. A friend of Clark's shows up at the 15th to tell Clark his name has come up in the investigation of a murdered prostitute.
1992"You’ve Got Mail"Mark PiznarskiStory by: Bill Clark & Matt Olmstead
Teleplay by: Matt Olmstead
October 1, 2002 (2002-10-01)HA02/510212.70[1]
A call comes in from the FBI reporting a bomb threat at the Family Court building; as the detectives evacuate the building, McDowell and Ortiz witness a letter bomb explode in a Judge's chamber. Clark gets grief from the uniforms about his involvement with a pross and is called in to talk to IAB, where Fraker informs him he is a suspect in her murder.
2003"One in the Nuts"Michael SwitzerStory by: Bill Clark & Jody Worth
Teleplay by: Jody Worth
October 8, 2002 (2002-10-08)HA03/510313.00[1]
Sipowicz and Clark catch a DOA who has been shot in his apartment, once in the groin and once in the head, his gun lying at his side. Medavoy and Jones respond to a shoot-out at a food mart, where the store owner chased out and may have shot the Hispanic robber. A few blocks away, McDowell and Ortiz respond to a Hispanic man who claims he was shot by a robber down the street. Connie has a visit from her very pregnant sister, who is sporting a black eye given to her by her husband.
2014"Meat Me in the Park"Jesse BochcoGreg PlagemanOctober 15, 2002 (2002-10-15)HA04/510413.00[1]
Sipowicz and Clark respond to a call about a missing 5-year old girl whose father claims that he notified a friend's nanny to watch her while he went to the bathroom. McDowell and Ortiz, soon joined by Medavoy and Jones, catch the case of a seventeen year old girl who was dragged by a car and then shot. Connie, after finding her sister has once again been beaten by her husband, Frank, has him arrested.
2025"Death by Cycle"Jake PaltrowStory by: Bill Clark & Keith Eisner
Teleplay by: Keith Eisner
October 22, 2002 (2002-10-22)HA06/510614.20[2]
Sipowicz and Clark work the case of a 16 year old boy stabbed to death for his fancy new bicycle; Medavoy and Jones also work the case. Connie once again finds her sister Michelle badly beaten and bleeding and has an ambulance take her to the hospital; Ortiz heads out to find Frank.
2036"Maya Con Dios"Mark TinkerStory by: Bill Clark & Tom Szentgyorgyi
Teleplay by: Tom Szentgyorgyi
October 29, 2002 (2002-10-29)HA05/510514.60[2]
The detectives investigate the fatal shooting of a police officer. A call shortly after to a break-in leads to the discovery of one of the perps dead on the roof. McDowell and Ortiz are split off to investigate the kidnapping of a young adopted boy. Clark gets a call that his father is at a bar, drunk and causing problems.
2047"Das Boots"Mark TinkerStory by: Bill Clark & Greg Plageman
Teleplay by: Greg Plageman
November 12, 2002 (2002-11-12)HA07/510712.10[2]
Connie has brought her dead sister's baby home; Clark Jr. is still trying to deal with his father having been flipped by the Rat Squad. A dead pross is found in a vacant lot; another dead woman is found in the laundry room of her building. Lt. Rodriguez meets his ex-wife Angela for lunch.
2058"Below the Belt"Mark PiznarskiStory by: Bill Clark & Nicholas Wootton
Teleplay by: Nicholas Wootton
November 19, 2002 (2002-11-19)HA08/510812.00[2]
Clark and McDowell investigate the death of a 17-year-old female auxiliary cop, who turns out to have been sleeping with a number of the uniform cops, including the Auxiliary Captain. McDowell and Ortiz respond to the firebombing of a car. Haywood asks Jones to investigate when her grandmother appears to be the victim of a phone scam. Tony continues seeing Angela.
2069"Half-Ashed"Steven DePaulStory by: Bill Clark & Matt Olmstead
Teleplay by: Matt Olmstead
November 26, 2002 (2002-11-26)HA09/510912.40[2]
Theo has responded negatively to Andy and Connie's announcement that he and his dad are moving into Connie's apartment. At the scene of a dead Child Protection Services worker, Carla Solomon, her neighbor thinks it's suicide, as she says Carla has been depressed lately. More disturbing, the uniforms on scene are throwing a lot of attitude at Sipowicz and Clark. The reason: all of them have been called in to talk to IAB, despite Sipowicz and Clark having solemnly promised not to rat on them. The widow of a former 15th Squad detective arrives with some of her husband's ashes, wanting to give them a permanent home at the squad. Angela's more recent ex-husband tells Rodriguez she stole his BMW.
20710"Healthy McDowell Movement"Tawnia McKiernanStory by: Bill Clark & Jody Worth
Teleplay by: Jody Worth, Nicholas Wootton & Matt Olmstead
December 10, 2002 (2002-12-10)HA10/511012.30[2]
Andy bids goodbye to his apartment, which he has sub-let to a delighted John Irvin. Angela misses a breakfast date with Tony. Clark is upset and moody, having found out it was his father that ratted on the uniforms. Sipowicz and Clark, with help from Medavoy and Jones, work the case of a young bipolar man who has vandalized his father's apartment; Ortiz and McDowell a dead party girl, who was adopted at the age of 8 and apparently has a history of attacking people.
20811"I Kid You Not"Joe Ann FogleStory by: Bill Clark & Tom Szentgyorgyi
Teleplay by: Tom Szentgyorgyi
January 7, 2003 (2003-01-07)HA11/511111.70[2]

Clark, Sipowicz, Medavoy, and Jones arrive at a DOA and find Laughlin back on the job, entirely ungrateful that he is. The DOA is accused of trying to hijack the car of a young errand-runner for a record company. When two ounces of cocaine are found in the car, the young woman is arrested. McDowell and Ortiz find three obviously neglected small children alone at the DOA's last known address. Angela failed to meet with Tony to go to the rehab last night; he's called to a DOA, who turns out to be Angela, dead of an overdose.

Note

20912"Arrested Development"Jesse BochcoStory by: Bill Clark & Keith Eisner
Teleplay by: Keith Eisner
January 14, 2003 (2003-01-14)HA12/511211.90[2]
An unpleasant woman is found beaten to death in her apartment. First impressions implicate the illegal immigrant who was doing work for her, but he's a weak suspect. Medavoy and Jones investigate the stabbing death of an abrasive do-gooder who rubbed everyone the wrong way with his holier-than-thou harangues. IAB arrive, on an anonymous tip, and find two ounces of heroin in Clark's car. Theo regresses and is wetting his bed, despite having stopped more than two years before.
21013"Bottoms Up"Donna DeitchStory by: Bill Clark & Greg Plageman
Teleplay by: Greg Plageman
February 4, 2003 (2003-02-04)HA13/511311.00[2]
Sipowicz works to prove that Laughlin is the one who planted the heroin in Clark's car. John is visited in jail by his father, who wants to help, but seems more concentrated on being upset that his son trusts Sipowicz more than his father to clear his name. The other detectives investigate the rapes of two young women at a local park; both were with their boyfriends, who were tied up and forced to watch.
21114"Laughlin All the Way to the Clink"JoAnne McCoolStory by: Bill Clark & Sonny Postiglione
Teleplay by: Sonny Postiglione
February 11, 2003 (2003-02-11)HA14/511411.00[2]
Officer Shannon finally realizes he can't live with himself if he doesn't come clean about Laughlin and Clark; Clark is released and Laughlin arrested. Clark, Sr., shows up at the station house, drunk, and shouts at the uniforms that he was the one that ratted, not his son. A wealthy gay man, who has been serving as an unofficial halfway-house for newly-released convicts, is found dead, as is an activist working to help young gang women get out of their gangs.
21215"Tranny Get Your Gun"Rick WallaceStory by: Bill Clark & Eric Rogers
Teleplay by: Eric Rogers
February 18, 2003 (2003-02-18)HA15/511511.70[2]
Andy and Connie are having a hard time blending their lives, to the point that Andy hints at John Irvin he might want his apartment back. Cases investigated are a man robbed in a Murphy scheme with a transvestite hooker and a young Pakistani woman who appears to be the victim of an "honor killing" by her father.
21316"Nude Awakening"Mark TinkerStory by: Bill Clark & Matt Olmstead
Teleplay by: Matt Olmstead
February 25, 2003 (2003-02-25)HA16/5116TBA

Julian Pisano, the half-helpful, half-worthless snitch from Season 9, is shot and wounded during what he claims was a carjacking, though Andy and Clark Jr. don't really buy his story. Connie and Rita catch a case where a woman was scammed for $100 in the street; the woman gets increasingly annoyed and complains to a high level of the NYPD when she feels her case is being neglected. Clark goes to check on his father and finds he has committed suicide; Andy quickly finds Clark Sr.'s gun cleaning kit so the death can be credited as an accident.

Indecency fine[lower-alpha 1]
21417"Off the Wall"John HyamsStory by: Bill Clark & Nicholas Wootton
Teleplay by: Nicholas Wootton
April 8, 2003 (2003-04-08)HA17/511710.90[2]
While investigating a drug dealer's murder, Baldwin and Greg end up in a shootout with the suspect, which results in the death of a 13-year-old boy, an apparent innocent bystander. Rita and Connie investigate the death of a belligerent drunk, who is found a long way outside his usual orbit.
21518"Marine Life"Matthew PennStory by: Bill Clark & Jody Worth
Teleplay by: Jody Worth
April 15, 2003 (2003-04-15)HA18/511810.70[2]
Things are uneasy between John and Rita after their breakup over his inability to accept her offer to help him deal with his father's suicide. One of the cases investigated is the murder of a record promoter, next to whose body a note reading "Die bitch" is found. The other is the assault of a mail-order bride from Russia, whose husband has obviously tired of her. Valerie tells Baldwin about threats she's been receiving.
21619"Meet the Grandparents"Jake PaltrowStory by: Bill Clark & Greg Plageman
Teleplay by: Greg Plageman
April 29, 2003 (2003-04-29)HA19/511911.40[2]
In court to finalize her adoption of her dead sister's daughter, Connie and Andy are blindsided by the abusive father's parents, who challenge Connie and Andy's fitness as parents. A Nigerian man is killed, possibly having been mistaken for his petty criminal brother. McDowell and Ortiz investigate when a waitress complains of being stalked by a doctor. Valerie is beaten up, and Baldwin tries to make good on the threats he made against the man the week before.
21720"Maybe Baby"Bob DohertyStory by: Bill Clark & Keith Eisner
Teleplay by: Keith Eisner
May 6, 2003 (2003-05-06)HA20/512011.60[2]
The squad continues to work to help Connie keep custody of baby Michelle by researching the Colahans. Medavoy discovers that Frank had a sister no one knew about, who had some sort of crisis, turning from a happy child to a withdrawn teenager. Medavoy also gets a break in the beating of Valerie Heywood: fingerprints in her apartment lead to an associate of the man Baldwin threatened. An old AA friend of Sipowicz' makes the break in the case of a jerk found dead in a shop.
21821"Yo, Adrian"Carol BankerStory by: Bill Clark & Tom Szentgyorgyi
Teleplay by: Tom Szentgyorgyi
May 13, 2003 (2003-05-13)HA21/512111.80[2]

Andy reaches out to Diane Russell, working now in SVU, to try to get Adrian, Frank's sister, to open up about her relationship with her father, pointing out that the same thing will likely happen to her niece Michelle as she grows up. When a mild young woman is found dead, her nearest and dearest are unconcerned: her brother-in-law was using her apartment for affairs and her boyfriend is deep in debt to loan sharks. John and Dr. Jennifer Devlin kindle a torrid relationship.

21922"22 Skidoo"Mark TinkerStory by: Bill Clark & Matt Olmstead
Teleplay by: Matt Olmstead
May 20, 2003 (2003-05-20)HA22/512212.50[2]
Rita is finding it harder and harder to deal with John's flaunting his relationship with Jennifer in her face and requests a transfer. Andy and Connie plan an "under-the-radar" wedding. When a Korean, a Pakistani, and an Arabian-American are all gunned down, initial suspicion falls on a Korean young man, posing as an honors student while running a gang. Fraker shows up at the squad, ranting at both Sipowicz and Lt. Rodriguez after the revelation of his affair, which neither had a hand in revealing.

Notes

    • In January 2008, the FCC announced that they would seek a $1.4 million fine against ABC for the opening sequence, in which Theo Sipowicz walks in on a nude Connie in the bathroom preparing to take a shower. The scene featured full rear nudity and partial frontal nudity on the part of actress Charlotte Ross. The complaint alleged that the nude shot of Ross was held onscreen longer than it should have been, and that Ross' character didn't react fast enough to cover herself. The fine was the largest against a network in recent history. ABC said they would appeal the fine on the grounds that it came over five years after the episode was originally broadcast. If they failed, each of 52 affiliates would pay $27,500 for broadcasting the episode. On January 4, 2011, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals threw out the fine, citing FCC rules as 'unconstitutionally vague and chilling'. [ABC, Inc., et al. v. Federal Communications Commission, No. 08-0841-ag(L) (2nd Cir.)]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.