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The War on the Electoral College – The American Conservative

After the disastrous Covid-inspired changes to the 2020 election, you might think the left is finished with voting reforms. But an even bigger effort is coming, one that promises to permanently hand Democrats a built-in advantage and all but ensure no Republican wins the presidency again.

Meet National Popular Vote, the group spearheading the campaign to destroy the Electoral College and abandon centuries of constitutional history in the name of saving democracy (read: electing Democrats). If NPVs plans succeed, it would mean the end of elections as we know them, with would-be presidents shunting aside swing states and ignoring flyover country to schmooze voters in Manhattan and San Francisco. It would create the top-down nightmare that Americas founders fought desperately to prevent.

This campaign isnt being waged just by left-wing activists but by trusted conservative lobbyists targeting Republican politicians in bright-red states. Its the kind of deception mastered by leftists from Margaret Sanger to Saul Alinsky, fooling your opponents into believing theyre fighting you when theyre really fighting for you.

My colleagues and I at the Capital Research Center have exposed the plan to effectively federalize all future elections through a combination of hastily adopted vote-by-mail rules, privately funded drop boxes in major U.S. cities, and nonprofits that specialize in flooding mailboxes with absentee ballot forms in battleground states. That plan sits astride a larger voting machine, big foundations that pumped up 2020 Census figures in blue states, nonprofits that specialize in registering Democratic constituencies to vote, and a slew of pro-gerrymandering lawyers led by Eric Holder.

Together they reveal the radical lefts vision: one-party rule from Washington, D.C., with no pesky Constitution to stop them. NPV is the latest step in that plan.

* * *

According to Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution, each state receives a certain number of electoral votes equal to its total number of U.S. senators and U.S. representatives (anywhere from 3 to 55 votes), which are reapportioned after each census. Those electors meet as a body every four years to vote for the next president and vice president, with the results sent to the president of the Senate (who is also the vice president) for approval during a joint session of Congress, during which objections to individual electors are considered. The candidate who receives a simple majority (270 votes) wins.

If that sounds inefficient or clunky, thats the point. The founders careful strategy in establishing a representative republic hobbled by checks and balances also extended to the Electoral College, which was just as plodding in 1787 as it is in 2021. Elections were intended to be the domain of state legislatures, not the federal government, giving them broad discretion to run elections as they see fit including how to award electoral votes.

For most states, that means a winner-take-all system in which the statewide winner takes all of that states electoral votes. (Maine and Nebraska have opted for a different approach. Two electors are selected on a statewide basis, the rest by congressional district.) Its meant to ensure smaller communities are represented at the national level instead of being drowned out by big cities. It isnt actually that uniquenumerous countries with parliamentary systems select their executives through the legislature, including the United Kingdom, Italy, Germany, Australia, and Japan.

But this is hopelessly undemocratic and out of date, according to National Popular Vote. The group formed in 2006 with the mission to eliminate the Electoral College by ignoring it.

NPV proposes that the candidate who wins the popular vote at the national levelwhich happens to be the Democrat in every election since 2008should receive all electoral votes from states that adopt the NPV plan, regardless of whether the candidate wins that states popular vote. If every state were to pass NPV legislation, the winner of the popular vote would win all 538 electoral votes and the loser would win none.

NPV believes that its plan would cure the nations deep political polarization. But is that true?

Imagine an alternate 2016 election in which every state adopted the NPV plan. Hillary Clinton, not Donald J. Trump, would emerge the winner by a scant two million votes out of an electorate of nearly 124 million voters. Each of the 30 states that voted for Trumpincluding Pennsylvania and Michigan, which flipped into the GOP column for the first time since 1988would have instead sent their 308 electoral votes to Clinton, even though she lost those and other swing states.

What message would that send to the Trump voters in the purple states that decided the 2016 election? Far from mending fences, bypassing the Electoral College would permanently alienate tens of millions of already disillusioned Americans by proving what they currently suspect: Their vote doesnt matter.

American elections would never be the same. Instead of wooing voters in battleground states with small-to-middling populationsthink North Carolina, Iowa, and Arizonasavvy campaigners would dedicate all their time to churning out absurdly high turnouts in the biggest states: New York, Texas, California, Florida, Illinois. Time spent campaigning in smaller states would be time wasted.

Few people realize the extent and power of the lefts network of professional voter registration and get-out-the-vote groups, which exist to produce votes for Democrats. Those groups are currently hindered by having to focus on swing states. Eliminating the Electoral College would simplify their strategy to greasing up a handful of major citiesPhiladelphia, New York, and Chicagoinstead of winning voters across entire states.

Deciding presidents by popular vote does away with the entire reason the Constitution gives states, not the federal government, the power to run elections. Urban voter turnout machines would decide the outcome of every election. It would transform presidential elections from a contest in which candidates sell their vision of the future to a skeptical nation to a twisted version of Americas Got Talentin short, a popularity contest.

* * *

Amending the Constitution to remove the Electoral College is virtually impossible in todays political climate, so instead NPV has opted for a compact of states that have passed national popular vote legislation, which will only take effect after enough states join, representing 270 electoral votes.

To date, the compact has reached 195 electoral votes, entirely from Democratic-run statesCalifornia, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washingtonand the District of Columbia. But that still leaves 75 electoral votes to nab, a challenge given that the campaigns momentum ceased in 2019 when NPV bills failed in Democratic-run Maine and Nevada.

More importantly, NPV is running out of Democratic states. Shifting strategy to bring on Republicans has proven challenging. NPV has an image problem among conservatives, as it should.

NPV founder John Koza is a former Stanford University computer science professor best known for popularizing state-run lotteries and inventing the lottery scratch card. Hes also a regular donor to Democratic candidates who has twice-served as a Democratic elector. Koza says that President George W. Bushs unfair election inspired him to found NPV.

Koza is the main donor behind NPV, pumping perhaps as much as $28 million into the group, half of it in $2 million annual grants since 2014 (the exact amount is unclear). NPV denies that the project is left-wing, since over 90% of its donations have come in roughly equal quantities from Koza (a pro-choice, pro-Buffett-rule, registered Democratic businessman) and Tom Golisano (a pro-life, anti-Buffett-rule, registered Republican businessman), founder of the payroll services company Paychex.

But Golisano pulled back from the campaign in recent years and is no longer involved, according to Politico in 2017, and no other right-leaning donors besides him have been identified. Fred Lucas, an investigative journalist for the Daily Signal, also uncovered a few million dollars in grants to NPV from the left-wing Tides Foundation and the philanthropy of Jonathan Soros, son of George Soros, buttressing accusations of partisanship.

Most recently, the group used concerns over 2020 election integrity to try to whip up Republican support for its plan. Saul Anuzis, NPVs top lobbyist and spokesman, blames the Electoral College for conservative frustration over election irregularities and problems. Americans everywhere will have to live with another four years of questioned legitimacy surrounding another president, Anuzis wrote in December 2020, all because not every voter in every state was relevant in the 2020 election The candidate with the most votes should win. Thats an American ideal.

Anuzis points out that NPVs plan is distinct from proposals from the left to simply abolish the Electoral College. National Democrats favor the elimination of the Electoral College and using a direct national popular vote to elect the president, he says, whereas NPVs plan is a bipartisan proposal that takes a federalist approach to preserve the Electoral College and states rights to regulate, administer, and determine how electors are chosen to [it] by using the national popular vote.

Anuzis is head of the conservative 60 Plus Association and former chair of the Michigan Republican Party who ran for RNC chairman in 2011. He lost to Reince Priebus, in part because of his support for gutting the Electoral College. Anuzis resurfaced as an adviser to Sen. Ted Cruzs 2016 presidential campaign and later as a delegate representing Michigan in that years Republican Convention, where he voted to nominate Cruz despite Trump winning the states primary.

Anuzis got in hot water in 2011 for circulating a pro-NPV letter on bogus RNC letterhead after his request to use the elephant logo was denied by Priebus. When an Alaska Republican lawmaker confronted him, he told her, Anyone can get the elephant off the internet.

Anuzis represents the tip of the spear aimed at winning Republican support for NPVs plan. The strategy is meant to make Republican lawmakers feel like theyre strengthening the Constitution when theyre actually undermining it.

* * *

NPV typically approaches GOP legislators in targeted states using well-known and trusted Republican lobbyists like Constantin Querard, a campaign consultant whose firm, Grassroots Partners, has been hired by at least 40 Republican state representatives and 19 senators in Arizona.

Querard was a registered lobbyist for NPV from 2015 to 2019, yet there are almost no registered transactions between him and any elected officials save two small food or beverages expenditures in 2016 for state Rep. Don Shooter, who was expelled from the house in 2018 after allegations of sexual harassment.

Sean Parnell, senior legislative director for the proElectoral College watchdog group Save Our States, believes he knows why. For the last decade, National Popular Vote has invited legislators on swanky weekend trips to expensive resorts in Sedona, Hawaii, and other luxury destinations to sell them on the groups plan, paid for by its 501(c)(3) arm, the Institute for Research on Presidential Elections.

Although NPV has bristled at the mention of these lavish resort trips and in one instance denied paying for them, these junkets are well-documented across multiple states and numerous news articles. Strategically, they present a slick way to butter up elected officials on the institutes dime, thereby avoiding embarrassing public disclosure forms.

The first day is basically free time, according to what Ive been told by legislator attendees, Parnell explainsgolfing, spas, dinner, whatever they want. Day two is when they get down to business with half-day seminars on how this legislation is not only good for ensuring one-person, one-vote, but how its good for getting Republicans elected. Thats the main thrust of their presentation.

To his knowledge, the group has targeted Republican lawmakers, not Democrats, with few exceptions. Nor was it just legislatorsin 2017 Politico reported that the institute flew eleven journalists to Panama for a three-day, all-expenses-paid seminar on election reform, where they were aggressively educated in the pool, at the bar, overlooking the Panama Canal.

Parnell, who learned of the seminars from elected officials whove attended them, stresses that hes found no evidence of illegality or official ethics violations. He also admits that, in many states, no one was visiting legislators offices to explain why they should support the Electoral College, something Save Our States regrets. We couldve done a better job educating folks back then.

In February 2016, Arizona house Republicans introduced national popular vote legislation (HB 2456) matching almost word for word the text of NPVs model bill. It passed 40 to 16, with 20 Republicans and 20 Democrats voting for the bill against 14 Republican and two Democratic nays. The bill only died in the state senate after local conservative groups flooded Republican state senators with messages urging them to oppose the compact.

Many of the lawmakers who voted for it still regret their vote, Parnell says, and blame NPV for bamboozling them. Yeah, I got sucked in, one Republican told him. Another frustrated legislator blamed lobbyists for getting him to vote for this stupid thing. A third blames the vote for him losing reelection in a 2020 primary.

Parnell believes that Anuzis and Querard were again trying to woo Arizona legislators as late as August 2021 with a seminar held in Sedona, but Republican interest has waned. Republican legislators who felt burned by NPVs lobbyists in 2016 are literally warning their new colleagues to avoid the compact, he told me.

* * *

A similar story unfolded in early 2014 in Oklahoma, one of the countrys most conservative states, with large Republican majorities in the state house and senate.

Two former candidates for state house, Darren Gantz and David Tackett, reportedly served as NPVs liaisons with local lawmakers, who were invited on expenses-paid, invitation-only panel educational seminars in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Miami, Las Vegas, and elsewhere.

As in Arizona, none of the expenses were reported on public disclosure forms because they were paid for by FairVote, a Maryland-based leftist group and NPV ally. FairVote is funded by George Soross Open Society Foundations, eBay founder Pierre Omidyars Democracy Fund, and the Tides Foundation.

One official FairVote invitation to the JW Marriott resort in Scottsdale, Arizona, touted the benefits: three nights of guest accommodations and reimbursement for meals, provided attendees commit to reviewing a collection of reading materials that will be provided by email before the meeting so that all participants can [be] ready to share their insights and questions in panel sessions the following day.

In February, two senate Republicans and one Democrat introduced SB 906 to join the NPV compact, and sixteen Republicans joined all of the chambers twelve Democrats to pass the bill against eighteen Republican naysthis despite the fact that the state GOP officially opposed national popular vote legislation.

One local blogger called the vote a betrayal: Im told that Saul Anuzis, a consultant for the NPV movementwas working the corridors for the bill. Anuzis and his colleagues persuaded some of our friends in the Senate that NPV could improve the Republican Partys chances. Never mind that the NPV movement is funded and run by leftists who are hardly likely to back an idea that would help conservatives win the White House.

Again, once grassroots groups caught wind of the bill, it soon died in the state House. Several Republican senators quickly recanted their support for the compact. But that wasnt the end of the story. NPV returned a year later to push the same legislation through the House again, introduced by Republican Rep. Lee Denney. The Okie, Oklahomas self-described top political news blog, reported that NPV lobbyists were at the Capitol every day, pushing the issue, but it never left committee.

* * *

NPVs crusade extended to Georgia in 2016, when five Republicansjoined by then-Rep. Stacey Abramsintroduced a national popular vote bill in the state house. Companion legislation followed in the state senate, also with five Republican sponsors and one Democrat. Neither bill left its respective chamber after conservative groups met with the Republican legislators. Democrats have since introduced three more NPV bills in 2017, 2019, and 2021, but none garnered GOP support.

In 2018, NPV turned its sights on Michigan, which leans Democratic in presidential elections but has a comfortable Republican majority in the state legislature. Republican state senator Dave Hildenbrand introduced an NPV bill in September, which quickly died in committee. That death was in no small part thanks to local investigative reporters who unearthed evidence that the Institute for Research on Presidential Elections paid for 20-plus Republican lawmakers to travel to resorts in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and California (which, again, went unreported in public disclosure forms).

NPV is still trying to win over Michiganders with a ballot initiative started in September 2021, run by Anuzis and Mark Brewer, an election law attorney and former Michigan Democratic Party chair. It remains to be seen whether the initiative will reach enough signatures to make the next ballot.

* * *

Theres one more element to the story the public should know.

According to its latest Form 990 filing, Saul Anuzis is vice president and board member for the Institute for Research on Presidential Elections, earning $104,000 in 2020 for the ten hours per week (thats $200 per hour) he provided undescribed services to the organization, making him by far its highest-paid staffer. By comparison, Larry Lessler, the groups board secretary and a Cupertino-based financial advisor, earned $31,500 last year in CPA fees from the group.

Anuziss salary is important because it represents nearly one-third of the institutes $358,000 budget, and one sixth of its total revenues in 2020. The institutes 2019 Form 990 also suggests that Anuzis collected $100,000 in fees as part of Medaglia, possibly referring to a difficult-to-trace firm in Washington, D.C. (Medaglia & Associates) listed in an older NPV Form 990 filing.

Anuzis political consulting firm, Coast to Coast Strategies, has pulled in at least another $330,000 in consulting fees from the institutes 501(c)(4) sister, National Popular Vote, across three years (2019, 2016, and 2010).

Institute president Ray Haynes, a former Republican California assemblyman and state senator, is another principal at Anuziss Coast to Coast Strategies. Haynes has also received personal payments from both the institute and NPV for consulting services totaling at least $159,000 since 2016.

As consultants, these payments present no problem and are in fact quite common. But as board members, the payments paint a picture of elite operatives enriching themselves off of a left-wing campaign that threatens to undermine the Constitution.

Whats clear is that the campaign to replace the Electoral College has hit the stumbling block of public perception. Conservatives in 2021 now understand what many folks misunderstood a decade ago: Any effort to dismantle, replace, or bypass the Constitution is a threat to the republic Americas founders established. Stripping out the Electoral College isnt fixing the Constitution, but disemboweling it. Dont expect the left to let up as long as activists believe their best chances at seizing power rest in destroying it.

This convoluted history also presents a clear message to conservative elected officials: If you back attempts to gut or ignore the Electoral College, be prepared to reap the whirlwind with your constituents and grassroots groups. After so many embarrassments, it seems Republican politicians have finally gotten the messagefor now.

Hayden Ludwig is senior investigative researcher for the Capital Research Center.

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The War on the Electoral College - The American Conservative

CSI (franchise) – Wikipedia

Franchise of American television series (20002016)

CSI (Crime Scene Investigation) is a media franchise of American television series created by Anthony E. Zuiker. The first three CSI series follow the work of forensic scientists as they unveil the circumstances behind mysterious deaths, while the fourth series, CSI: Cyber, emphasizes behavioral psychology and how it can be applied to cyber forensics.

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation began on October 6, 2000, and ran for fifteen full seasons. Starring (at various times) William Petersen, Ted Danson, Marg Helgenberger, Elisabeth Shue, and Laurence Fishburne, the series concluded its run with a two-hour finale entitled "Immortality" on September 27, 2015. The series' original lead characters, Gil Grissom and Catherine Willows, were based upon Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) Crime Scene Analysts Daniel Holstein and Yolanda McClary.[1] CSI's first spin-off and the second series within the franchise is CSI: Miami, which ran for ten seasons between 2002 and 2012, and was canceled on May 13, 2012. Miami stars David Caruso and Emily Procter, with its lead character, Horatio Caine, based upon Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) bomb squad technician Detective John Haynes.[2]

In 2004, CSI: Miami spun off CSI: NY, the third series in the franchise and the only indirect spin-off of CSI. It was canceled on May 10, 2013, after nine seasons.[3] The series starred Gary Sinise, Melina Kanakaredes, and Sela Ward. In 2014, CSI spun off CSI: Cyber, its second direct spin-off and the fourth series in the franchise. Cyber premiered in 2015, and starred Patricia Arquette and franchise alumnus Ted Dansonthe only actor to appear as a series regular in more than one CSI series. The lead character, Avery Ryan, was inspired by cyber-psychologist Mary Aiken, who was attached to the series as a producer.[4] CSI: Cyber was canceled on May 12, 2016.[5]

In 2020, CBS began considering a limited series revival featuring original CSI: Crime Scene Investigation cast members, William Petersen and Jorja Fox.[6] It was eventually greenlighted, with a video teaser for CSI: Vegas released on March 31, 2021.

As of December 8, 2021, 807 episodes of the CSI franchise have aired.

The CSI franchise is available in 200 territories with an audience of two billion people.[7] Various spin-offs have been developed to cater for the market including novels, comic books, and computer games.

The franchise has had a large cultural impact. It has spawned what has been called the "CSI effect", in which juries often have unreasonable expectations of real-life forensics because of what they have seen on CSI. Equally, the new-found popularity of forensics dramas on television has led to an increase in applications for courses dealing with forensic science or archaeological sciencein the United Kingdom applications are up by 30%.[8] The franchise is so influential that fellow CBS show How I Met Your Mother advertised itself as "not a Crime Scene Investigation show".[9] In some ways the franchise may also fill a cultural need:

"We started in 2000 and it was a success, but our ratings really shot up after the September 11 attacks," Zuiker says in a documentary about the CSI phenomenon to be aired at Christmas [2007]. "People were rushing to us for their comfort food. There was a sense of justice in CSI: Crime Scene Investigation it helped to know that there were people like our characters out there helping to solve crimes. And, of course, 9/11 was the world's largest crime scene."[7]

The "CSI effect" is considered by some experts to be responsible for helping criminals covering up evidence that could be used to trace them using techniques learned by watching CSI and other shows in the same genre.[10] A 2018 study could not find conclusive evidence for the existence of this effect.[11]

CSI: Miami and CSI: Cyber spun off from CSI, and CSI: NY spun off from CSI: Miami, all via backdoor pilot episodes. CSI: Vegas was not launched via a backdoor pilot episode, and instead premiered 21 years to the day of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation's launch.

CSI:Miami and CSI:Cyber spun off from CSI, and CSI:NY spun off from CSI:Miami, all via backdoor-pilot episodes.

The Las Vegas team are scientists foremost, and follow the evidence. LVPD CSIs are not employed as police officers. The crimes the Las Vegas CSI team face (other than the standard murders, attempted murders, kidnappings, and rapes) include casino robberies, bodies buried in the Nevada desert, and murders during different conventions at casinos.

Crime labThe Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Crime Lab is a modern crime lab and shares a lot (but not a building) with the Las Vegas Police Department. It reports to the sheriff's office. In early episodes of season one the lab is frequently referred to as the number two crime lab in the United States, solving cases believed unsolvable. The lab consists of specialist laboratories, a larger office (usually used by the Grave Supervisor), a smaller office used by Catherine Willows between seasons 5 and 12, a locker room, an AV room, a break-room, and stairs leading to a second floor, housing offices for senior staff.

The Miami team are detectives foremost, and mainly use theories to solve crimes. The crimes the Miami CSI team face (other than the standard murders, attempted murders, kidnappings, and rapes) include drug running, murdered refugees from Cuba, bodies found washed up on the beach and dumped in the Everglades, and crimes involving the rich and famous who have secrets to hide in their mansions and beachfront properties.

Crime labThe Miami CSIs were firstly, in the backdoor pilot, stationed out of a broom closet next to the MDPD's bull pen. They were given their own building prior to the start of the first season. Originally dark and technical, this building housed Horatio's office, Megan's office, specialist labs, and a locker room. During the fourth season a government grant meant that slanted glass walls, multiple modern labs, an interrogation room, and a new locker room were all constructed. Horatio's office is not seen following the lab's reconstructionalthough a state-of-the-art ballistics suite was added, acting as Calleigh's office. The lab has reinforced windows and shutters to protect against hurricanes and tsunamis.

The New York team are equally scientists and detectives, and frequently use criminal profiling (as well as evidence and theories) to solve cases. The crimes the New York CSI team face (other than the standard murders, attempted murders, kidnappings, and rapes) include organised crime activity involving the Italian Mafia, street-gang violence, and ethnic, cultural, and ability differences.

Crime labDuring the first season, the NYPD CSI lab is in an old underground building with rustic brick walls. The lab houses Mac's office, a locker room, the autopsy suite, and specialist forensic laboratories. As of the second season the lab is on the 35th floor of a high-rise building in Manhattan. Equipped with glass walls and state-of-the-art equipment, this lab consists of the Supervisors office (belonging to Mac, and for a short time Jo), specialist laboratories, an observation walkway, a break-room and kitchen, a locker room, and an office belonging to the Assistant Supervisor (first Stella, then Jo), containing an additional hot-desk used by Hawkes, Danny, Lindsay, and Aiden. Part of this second lab is blown up in the season three finale, "Snow Day", but is restored by the beginning of season four.

The Cyber team focuses on the technical aspect of crimes, with NextGen forensics providing it with a real-world crime scene investigative counterpart. The FBI Cyber Crime Division investigates cyber-based terrorism, internet-related murders, espionage, computer intrusions, major cyber-fraud, cyber-theft, hacking, sex offenses, blackmail, and any other crime deemed to be cyber-related within the FBI's jurisdiction.

Divisions Cyber Crime DivisionThe FBI Cyber Crime Division operates out of Washington, D.C. and is housed in the Cyber Threat Operations Center. The CTOC consists of Ryan's office, Russell's office, a communications bull pen housing the desks of Krumitz, Nelson, and Ramirez, a cyber lab, a glass walkway, and a 'tear-down room'. Due to their nomadic nature the team are often seen interviewing suspects at various FBI field offices and police departments.

Next Generation Cyber Forensics DivisionThe Next Generation Cyber Forensics Division is a lab-based facility within the Cyber Crime Division used for the processing of evidence in cyber-related cases.

The opening themes for all five series are remixes of songs performed by The Who.

Crossovers are possible between CSI series as well as with other programs within the same creative stable. Between the series the baton is passed to the new CSI series via a crossover/pilot where cases are overlapped and personnel are shared. Many actors have appeared in two of the series. Five actors have appeared in three: David Caruso, Laurence Fishburne, and Gary Sinise all appeared in CSI, CSI: Miami, and CSI: NY, while Ted Danson appeared as a guest star on CSI: NY and a series regular on both CSI and CSI: Cyber, making him the first actor to be a main character in more than one CSI series. Before becoming a regular as "Danny Messer" on CSI: NY, Carmine Giovinazzo had a small role as "Thumpy G" in an episode of CSI, making him the only lead actor to play two characters within the franchise.[12] Crossovers have also, on occasion, taken place between a CSI series and a series outside the franchise.

In the UK, Channel 5 edited together related episodes to make one whole feature. These include:

Also Channel 5 will sometimes group episodes with similar themes together such as:

There have been a number of comic books based on all three series published by IDW Publishing. Writers include Jeff Mariotte and Max Allan Collins.

The CSI franchise has spawned 11 computer games published by Ubisoft across the three shows.

Gameloft has also published a series of mobile games based on the CSI series including CSI: The Mobile Game (Vegas) and CSI: Miami.

In addition, several board games and puzzles based on all three series have seen release, all published by Canadian game manufacturer Specialty Board Games, Inc. In 2011, the CSI Board Game was released by another Canadian company, GDCGameDevCo Ltd. It is the first game to include all three CSI shows.[20]

A pinball game machine called CSI: Crime Scene Investigation was released in 2008.[21]

Chicago's Museum of Science & Industry opened an exhibit in CSI's honor on May 25, 2007 called: "CSI: The Experience".[22] In October 2011 it was at Discovery Times Square in New York City.[23] There is also a game on the website where you are trained in forensic biology, weapons and tool mark analyses, toxicology and the autopsy.

Various tie-in novels have appeared based on the series. Authors include Max Allan Collins (CSI: Crime Scene Investigation), Donn Cortez (CSI: Miami), Stuart M. Kaminsky (CSI: NY), and Keith R.A. DeCandido (CSI: NY).

Titan Magazines published 11 issues of CSI Magazine starting in November 2007. They contained a mixture of features and interviews looking into the world of the three CSIs and the people who help create it.[24] They were available in the UK and US.[25]

A range of toys have been developed. These include:

However, they have been the source of some controversy. The Parents Television Council, who have complained about CSI in general, in 2004 released a statement specifically aimed at the toys.[26] The PTC e-mailed letters to their supporters, telling them the content of the games were entirely inappropriate for children to be exposed to "because the CSI franchise often displays graphic images, including close-ups of corpses with gunshot wounds and other bloody injuries." The letter went on to say "The PTC doesn't think the recreation of blood, guts and gore should be under a child's Christmas tree this year," PTC concluded. "This so-called 'toy' is a blatant attempt to market CSI and its adult-oriented content directly to children."

In urging members to file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, PTC said CBS parent company Viacom needed to hear from parents who are concerned about the "graphic scenes of blood, violence, and sex" in their product. They also asked their supporters to contact Target and Toys "R" Us.

Producers announced intentions to break the Guinness World Record for largest ever TV simulcast drama on March 4, 2015, with the episode "Kitty" airing in 150 countries in addition to digital streaming.[27] They succeeded in breaking the record by airing CSI: Cyber's backdoor pilot in 171 countries.[28]

Because of the popularity of the CSI franchise in the United Kingdom, Channel 5 created two documentaries about CSI. The first one called The Real CSI follows real crime scene investigators as they work on crime scene. The second documentary, True CSI, features true tales of how forensic science has helped solve some of the world's best known crimes. True CSI had actors re-enacting the crime as well as interviews with people involved in the solving of the crimes themselves. Cases featured included the Sam Sheppard case.

In early 2007, British channel ITV1 broadcast a special of its flagship documentary Tonight with Trevor McDonald discussing the ramifications of the "CSI effect", highlighting the effect not only of the franchise but of several other British and American TV police procedurals.

The popularity of the series has also spawned forensic based reality television/documentary programs, including A&E's The First 48 and truTV's North Mission Road.

In April 2012, PBS' Frontline aired a documentary called "The Real CSI" investigating the limitations of the CSI techniques in forensic science.[29]

As well as fictional books based on the franchise there have also been a number of guides published:

Articles and topics related to CSI (franchise)

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CSI (franchise) - Wikipedia

This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The CSI Franchise – Looper

If you're watching the "CSI" franchise in release order, then you have a pretty obvious starting point. The first season of the original "Crime Scene Investigation" series, which came out in 2000, will serve as the beginning of your journey. From there, according to the watch guide on the blogIt's A Stampede, you'll need to progress through Season 2 before jumping your very first ship into "CSI: Miami." From here on, your "CSI: Miami" viewing should always be one season behind the original "CSI."

This pattern should continue for another two seasons of each series until you finish "CSI: Miami" Season 3, and start "CSI: New York." With this new addition, "CSI: New York" should always be two seasons behind "Miami." Thankfully, things become a whole lot simpler once you finish "Miami" and "New York," which are ten and nine seasons long, respectively. After that, there are simply three more seasons of the original "CSI" series before you can watch all two seasons of "CSI: Cyber" and start the first (and so far only) season of "CSI: Vegas."

With this basic outline, you should be able to enjoy the entirety of "CSI" relatively problem-free. Most episodes of the series are self-contained, meaning you don't need context from the events of "Miami" to get what's going on in "New York," at least for the most part. Crossovers do occur at times, but they are rare enough that one can identify them and modify their watchlist accordingly.

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This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The CSI Franchise - Looper

‘Mike & Molly’: Tim Conway on Set had Stars Billy Gardell and Reno Wilson ‘Cracking Up’ – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

As New Years Eve comes around each year, programs and actors often reflect on friends and co-stars they lost in years past. For fans of the CBS show Mike & Molly, Tim Conway has appeared in their minds in 2021, even though the comedian died in May 2019. Actor Reno Wilson said that he and Bob Hearts Abishola star Billy Gardell were cracking up when Tim Conway guest-starred on Mike & Molly.

Tim Conway guest-starred in Mike & Molly Season 3, Episode 22, School Recital. He appeared in the episode with another guest star, Jim Beaver.

Molly is so focused on directing a school recital that she doesnt realize a fellow teacher is hitting on her. Meanwhile, Vince convinces Mike to join him in an unusual money-making scheme, IMDb lists the episode description.

The Carol Burnett Show actor played the exhibitionist arrested by Billy Gardell and Renos characters. However, Conway found himself stumbling over his lines.

It was a dream for Billy Gardell and I when Tim Conway was on Mike & Molly. He was struggling a bit with his lines but had us cracking up the whole time. You can feel his beautiful spirit here when he laughs, Wilson remembered on Facebook in 2019. We were so blessed to have you. Thank you, sir.

And the Bob Hearts Abishola star posted about Conways impact on him as well.

Gardell has never been shy about opening up about his co-stars. However, when news of Conways passing reached him, he posted on Twitter.

Tim Conway, one of the legends of the game, Gardell said in 2019. And one of the kindest people Ive ever worked with.

A week before Conways death, the new Chuck Lorre sitcom Bob Hearts Abishola had received a series order. However, Gardell took time out of his day to reflect on Conway. And the two had only ever worked together once on the Mike & Molly episode.

Even though he only guest-starred in one episode, Wilson, Gardell, and Conway all clicked instantly, joking and laughing on set.

However, he impacted more shows on CBS beyond Mike & Molly.

Besides appearing on Chuck Lorres Mike & Molly, Tim Conway also appeared on several other CBS shows.

In CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, he appeared in season 10, episode 20, Take My Life, Please, as Knuckles Pratt, fittingly a famous comedian.

He appeared in another Lorre show, Two and a Half Men, in season 11, episode 13.

Conway plays himself in Newhart when Dick Loudon (Bob Newhart) drives him away from poker.

Tim was just fearless. He would do anything he really would do anything. He could easily have paid for the ticket. It wasnt about him saving money, Newhart told Variety in 2019, it was just being a part of a stunt. It was a gag, and he wanted to be a part of it.

RELATED: Bob Hearts Abishola Season 3: How Much Weight has Billy Gardell Lost?

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'Mike & Molly': Tim Conway on Set had Stars Billy Gardell and Reno Wilson 'Cracking Up' - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

‘Dirty Harry’ turns 50: How Clint Eastwood blew away the cop genre and forged a film classic – USA TODAY

Jim McKairnes| Special to USA TODAY

Clint Eastwood's 'American tragedy'

Director Clint Eastwood discusses the need to tell the story of Richard Jewell, a man unfairly accused of planting a bomb at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. (Nov. 21)

AP

Fifty years ago, Clint Eastwood knew what you were thinking.

Youre thinking an ultraviolent film about a rules-busting cop on the trail of a bloodthirsty serial killer can never make it as a holiday release. Arent you,punk?

Released Dec. 23,1971, "Dirty Harry" could and did, becoming one of the years biggest hits. It spawned four sequels and landed Eastwood the most iconic role of his long and Oscar-winning career.

San Francisco Police Department Inspector Dirty Harry Callahan gave R-rated new meaning in the loner-cop-with-an-attitude tale as the curtain lifted on 1970s New Hollywood. Assigned to track down a serial sniper whos terrorizing the city named the Scorpio Killer(Andrew Robinson in his film debut) Callahan makes quick work of the Fourth Amendment in his pursuit, more than living up to the movies promotional hype about a detective who doesnt break murder cases, he smashes them.It all leads to a mano-a-mano shootout between hunter and hunted at the films close, made famous by the gun-aiming inspectors taunt of the cornered Scorpio, his own gun within reach:

"I know what you're thinking, punk: Youre thinking, 'Did he fire six shots or only five?' Now to tell you the truth, I forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world, and will blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself a question: 'Do I feel lucky?'Well, do you, punk?"

(Spoiler alert: He didand he wasnt.)

William Smith dies:Action star who fought Clint Eastwood and other icons onscreenwas88

Frequent Eastwood writer Dean Riesner and the husband-and-wife team of Harry Julian Fink and R.M. Finkcrafted the neo-noir script (original title"Dead Right"), using elements of the real-life Zodiac killingsthat unfolded in Northern California in the late 1960s and of the real-life detective, Dave Toschi, who investigated them. The script bounced around amongwriters (John Milius, Terrence Malick), directors (Sydney Pollack, Irvin Kershner) and actors (John Wayne, Frank Sinatra, Robert Mitchum, Steve McQueen), its violent content a recurring concern.It even landed at ABCfor a brief minute, as TV was beginning to show interest in original-film production. But following the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy, network television had come to be in a crosshair of its own for depictions of violence.ABC passed.

Eastwoodgot the gig when Newman suggested it after turning down the role himself. Production got underway with director Don Siegel and marked the actors fourth pairingwith Siegel in three years, following "Coogans Bluff," "Two Mules for Sister Sara"and"The Beguiled." ("Escape from Alcatraz" in 1979 was their fifth and final film teaming.)

With "Dirty Harry," the door to the antihero coprecently breached by "Bullitt"and "The French Connection"blasted wide open. "The Seven-Ups" and "Walking Tall"followed. Eastwood's Callahan returned twice over the next six years, first in 1973s "Magnum Force," squaring off against a quartet of vigilante patrolmen, and again in 1976s "The Enforcer,"which in keeping with the era paired him, reluctantly, with a female partner (Tyne Daly). The franchise exploded all over again in 1983 with "Sudden Impact"and its own meme-before-its-time catchphrase (Go ahead, make my day), before fading with the less successful "The Dead Pool" in 1988.

Eastwood has become a Hollywood legend in the intervening years, Oscar-nominated eleven times since 1993 as either actor, producer, or director. Hes won four statues a pair each for directing and producing best picture winners "Unforgiven" in 1992 and "Million Dollar Baby" in 2004. In 1995, he received the Academys career-saluting Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. "Cry Macho," released earlier this year, marked the 91-year-olds latest release. It may or may not be his last: No future projects have been announced.

In 2005, the American Film Institute named Dirty Harrys Do I feel lucky? speech one of the 100 best quotes in film history. (It ranked No. 51.) It was the second of two times he gave it in the film, the first coming earlier following a botched bank robbery. But its the movie-ender with The Scorpio that made history.

Do you feel lucky enough to point out the difference?Well, do you?

Reni Santoni:'Dirty Harry' star, who played Poppie in 'Seinfeld,' has died at 81

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'Dirty Harry' turns 50: How Clint Eastwood blew away the cop genre and forged a film classic - USA TODAY