Nathan Barksdale

Nathan Barksdale

Nathan Barksdale (born circa 1961[1]), is a former drug dealer in Baltimore, Maryland.[citation needed] He is a Baltimore drug dealer dramatized in the HBO series The Wire,[2] but the extent to which any of the show’s characters or plot lines are based on his life is disputed. His life is the subject of the unreleased docudrama Baltimore Chronicles: Legends of the Unwired, which purports to be the true story behind The Wire.

Contents

Early life

Barksdale was raised in the Lexington Terrace projects in Baltimore.[3] He was involved in boxing, as were other family members.[4] When he was young, a man ran over Barksdale’s leg with his truck after Barksdale stole from the man.[5] As a result, Barksdale underwent an amputation and subsequently became addicted to opiates.[6]

Criminal career

Barksdale was a drug dealer[citation needed] in West Baltimore who purportedly survived twenty-one gunshots, some of which were fired while Barksdale was in hospital after a prior, failed murder attempt.[7] In 1985, Barksdale was sentenced to fifteen years in state prison for battery.[8] In 2003, he was acquitted of a federal charge of being a felon with a gun.[9]

Barksdale’s name appeared in the Baltimore Sun's 1987 series Easy Money: Anatomy of a Drug Empire,[10] the author of which was David Simon, who went on to be the creator, executive producer, and head writer of The Wire. In the newspaper series, which focuses on the criminal career of Melvin Williams, Simon depicts Barksdale as a ruthless killer and a drug addict.[11] Simon also writes that Barksdale once tortured three people in the Baltimore projects and that his battery conviction was related to the torture incident.[12]

Legends of the Unwired

Baltimore Chronicles: Legends of the Unwired is the unreleased, low-budget docudrama that is based on Barksdale’s life.[13] It is directed by Bruce Brown, and Drew Berry is the writer and producer.[14] Kenneth A. Jackson is the executive producer, and singer Troy May of The Manhattans is the narrator.[15] Legends of the Unwired consists of dramatizations of alleged events in Barksdale’s criminal career, interviews with his family and friends, and interviews of Barksdale by actor Wood Harris, who plays drug kingpin Avon Barksdale on The Wire.[16] Its major claim is that it is the true story of Avon Barksdale,[17] but David Simon disputes that claim.

Disputed Connection to The Wire

Simon denies that Nathan Barksdale or any other individual is the basis for any specific character in The Wire.[18] A major point of contention is Barksdale’s claim that his middle name is Avon and his nickname is “Bodie” (Bodie Broadus is a character in The Wire who comes up in the Barksdale organization[19]). According to Simon, neither of those names is associated with Barksdale in any official document; and Barksdale has failed to produce any documentary evidence of having any middle name or nickname.[20]

Some connections between The Wire and Simon’s reporting on Barksdale, however, are evident. In addition to the name and the boxing background, for example, in Easy Money, Simon avers that Marlow Bates and Timmirror Stanfield were rivals of Barksdale.[21] In The Wire, Marlo Stanfield becomes a major rival of Avon Barksdale who eventually takes over the Baltimore drug trade.[22] (For his part, Barksdale claims that Bates is a close friend.[23])

References

External links



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