- J. H. Brodie
Infobox character
name = J.H. Brodie
caption = J.H. Brodie
first = ""
last = ""
cause = Left to pursue directorial career
gender = Male
age = Approx 25
born =
death =
family =
spouse =
episode = 38 ("")
portrayer =Max Perlich
creator =Tom Fontana J.H. Brodie is a fictional character in the television series "". He appeared in a recurring role in the show's fourth season and was a regular in the show's fifth season, after becoming an official crime scene recorder.
Professional life
Brodie first appeared as a trainee cameraman for a local news station, often intruding on crime scenes or getting in the way of investigating police in order to get the most dramatic shots possible. However, his career was cut short when he discovered that he had recorded evidence from a crime scene and chose to hand the tape over to Lt.
Al Giardello and then-Lt.Megan Russert to help solve a time-critical crime rather than wait for it to be shown on the evening news.Recognising that he had sacrificed his job in the pursuit of justice, Gee and Megan offered him a role as a crime scene recorder, a job that he took up with some gusto - although he continued to film for his own entertainment, eventually constructing a documentary about the homicide squad that was revealed in the episode "The Documentary".
Being young, shy and prone to getting caught underfoot, Brodie found himself struggling to gain respect in the office, something that bothered him throughout his time at the station. However, he would occasionally surprise the detectives by chipping in with some observation that they had missed. At one point, he correctly deduced that Det.
Frank Pembleton had stopped taking his stroke medication. Caught off-guard, Pembleton noted that he had underestimated Brodie. "Most people do," the cameraman replied. In Season 5, Brodie helped expose an arrogant college classmate of his as a murderer by using software to create a fake video that caught the classmate in a lie.Brodie left the squad between the fifth and sixth seasons; after his documentary won an Emmy, he moved to Los Angeles to develop his career. He next appeared in "Homicide: Life Everlasting", the TV movie that capped off the series, when he returned to Baltimore to visit Gee, who had been shot. His role in the film was small, and he spent most of his time off-camera, recording an operation. However, he had a pivotal scene at the very end of the film, when he informed the squad that Gee had died while in the hospital.
Personal life
Brodie's quiet personality, coupled with his passion for serious film-makers and documentary directors, set him apart from most of the squad, who saw him as something of a
nebbish . A humorous running storyline throughout season five saw Brodie kicked out of his apartment and being shipped from one detective's house to the next, upsetting each one in turn:John Munch was horrified to learn that Brodie had looked in his medicine cabinet (it is implied that he storedcannabis in there),Tim Bayliss objected to Brodie's highbrow taste in television andMeldrick Lewis was annoyed when Brodie instigated an argument with his wife.Brodie eventually ended up sleeping in the squad's video room.
Kay Howard found out and offered him a place at hers, but Brodie turned her down because of an intense crush he harboured on her. Eventually, he moved in with an attractive blonde girl of his own age, and it was implied in several episodes that she had become his girlfriend.David Simon who Brodie is based off of is Jewish and although Brodie's religion was never really discussed, in the episode "Kaddish", he was shown to have an intimate knowledge of the Jewish religion, suggesting that he is Jewish himself.
Trivia
After learning that Brodie won an Emmy for his documentary, Bayliss comments that "they'll give those to anybody" - a reference to "Homicide" itself winning several Emmys.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.