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Stringer Bell Was Very Dumb, Very Bad at His Job, and Deserved to Die

Although The Wire had a sprawling ensemble cast, it was largely built around his position, his power, his decisions, and his fall.

Welcome to VSB Ruins Your Favs, a series where weโ€™ll take a look at some of the most beloved parts of our cultureโ€”movies, cities, television characters, people, foods, decades, etc.โ€”and ruin them for you. Youโ€™re welcome.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

I began watching The Wire in 2003, on the strength of a recommendation from my cousin (a cop in Washington, D.C.) who shared that it was the most nuanced and realistic depiction of his life heโ€™d ever seen. Season Three hadnโ€™t aired yet, so I had time to go back and watch the first two seasonsโ€”and I was immediately hooked.

Among the many now-iconic characters from those first three seasonsโ€”Omar Little, Bubbles, Avon Barksdale, Bodie Broadus, Jimmy McNulty, etcโ€”Idris Elbaโ€™s Russell โ€œStringerโ€ Bell stood apart. Although The Wire had a sprawling ensemble cast, it was largely built around his position, his power, his decisions, and his fall. And Stringerโ€™s influence stretched well beyond the show, as that character became the visual archetype for the quasi-mythical โ€œeducated thugโ€ who ran the block and the boardroom. This status was largely due to Elbaโ€™s star-making performance, as he possessed a presence and a smoldering charisma that leaped off the screen. He was (and still is) one of the few people who, if your partner has a thing for him, leaves you thinking โ€œYeah...I get itโ€ and impressed with their taste.

Unfortunatelyโ€”for fans of this character, and for the Barksdale crime familyโ€”that status is woefully undeserved. On repeated viewings of the series, it becomes apparent that The Wire is just a chronicle of increasingly bad (and dumb!) decisions that Stringer Bell made. If he was a better number two, the Barksdales might still be running West Baltimore today instead of selling Prepaid Legal in PG county barbershops.

There were too many terrible decisions to list them all here, so Iโ€™ll just focus on one from each season.

1. The torture and mutilation of Brandonย 

Omarโ€™s partner-in-crime (and in bed), Brandon met a very unfortunate end when members of the Barksdale crew caught him slipping at a restaurant, kidnapped him, and killed him. Although String didnโ€™t commit any violence himself, he arranged it and oversaw the torture.

Brandonโ€™s murder was, well, part of the game. If you make a living robbing drug dealers, death is an occupational hazard. Omar understood this, but what inspired his specific vendetta against the Barksdalesโ€”a grudge that eventually led to Stringerโ€™s deathโ€”was the torture. They didnโ€™t have to go there, and they only went there because of Stringerโ€™s overcompensation. Why so insecure, String?

2. Going against Avon to run Brother Mouzone out of Baltimore

A recurring theme in those first three seasons was the growing tension between String and Avon. String wanted to give their business a legitimacyโ€”or, rather, a veneer of legitimacyโ€”while Avonโ€™s focus was narrower.

When first viewing the show, String feels like the one with the best argument and most deserving of our sympathy. Who wouldnโ€™t want to remove the violence from that game, since thatโ€™s what causes feuds and attracts the police? But Avon knew that was both impossible and silly. The threat of violence was necessary to control and regulate that unregulated (and lucrative!) business. And even if they werenโ€™t actively at war, they needed enough territory to put the fear of God into anyone whoโ€™d challenge them.

Of Stringerโ€™s bad decisions, what happened with Brother Mouzone might have been his worst. (And dumbest!) Recruited by Avon to provide necessary muscle, String believes Mouzoneโ€™s presence is hurting the business, and concocts a story blaming him for Brandonโ€™s death; a lie that puts a battery in Omarโ€™s back and makes a rival crew (Prop Joeโ€™s) stronger.

Of course, this plan backfires as both Omar and Mouzone soon realize theyโ€™re being played by Stringer, and they eventually have a meeting with him to, um, discuss things.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5xRvIF-zBI

3. Getting played by Clay Davis

The Wire did an excellent job of lathering String with intelligence markers. He was tall, handsome, mild-mannered, and articulate. He dressed like a Bachrach mannequin and took community college courses. He instituted Robertโ€™s Rules of Order and said things like โ€œyoโ€™ and โ€œmotherfuckerโ€ with rigor. But, as Bomani Jones articulated in a thread about him last week, this was merely the sort of โ€œsmartโ€ presentation that fools people. We see someone who possesses that, and we presume a savvy that ainโ€™t always there.

https://twitter.com/bomani_jones/status/1260588073148198913

In Stringerโ€™s case, this presentation shielded the reality that he was actually a simpleton. Perhaps even dumb.

I canโ€™t think of another television character who embodied โ€œI wouldnโ€™t trust him as far as I can spitโ€ better than Clay Davis did. Everything about himโ€”his clothes, his demeanor, his words, his smileโ€”screamed โ€œThis niggaโ€™s a con!โ€ Of course, confidence men are who they are because theyโ€™re gifted at grift and shameless with it, but anyone as street- and book- smart as String was supposed to be wouldโ€™ve sniffed that shit out. Instead, he was played โ€”for years!โ€”by a man my four-year-old daughter wouldnโ€™t trust to blow a bubble.

In summary, The Wireโ€™s depiction of him was smartโ€”as was Idris Elbaโ€™s performance. But Stringer Bell was dumb as rocks.

(Updated 3/3/22 with new details)

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