Diane Haithman is contributing to Deadline’s TCA coverage:
As a Detroit native, I can confirm that Detroit is an economically troubled, crime-ridden, racially polarized city that for decades hasn’t seemed able to catch a break. And at today’s TCA, it became clear that the fact ABC has set and is shooting its new crime series Detroit 1-8-7 in the Motor City, while a boon to the local economy, is already causing controversy there. Discussed today were the clashes with the Detroit City Council over the possibility of negative stereotypes from a cop show about the town nicknamed “Murder City.” The code 1-8-7 stands for homicide. Detroit City Councilman Kwame Kenyatta has called for a resolution that asked the show to change its title, because he says it associates Detroit with murder. But executive producer Jason Richman said there is no plan to change the title: “1-8-7 is another way to say homicide. We think it’s cool and represents the visual identity of the show, “ he said. “It’s just kind of a pop culture reference. It wasn’t meant to mirror the radio codes of Detroit. It’s a crime show, and we’re sticking to the title.”
More woes: The reason that the show has scuttles its plans for using documentary elements also has to do with the real-life situation in Detroit. While executive producers Richman and David Zabel were in the city, a 7-year-old girl was accidentally shot and killed during a nighttime home police raid. (Police pursued a murder suspect into the house.) The raid was being followed by a documentary TV crew. The girl awoke during the commotion and ended up in the line of fire. Zabel said that some community leaders believed the police might have “amped up the situation a little” for the cameras and put the girl at higher risk. Said Richman: ”That was pretty real and pretty scary stuff and the city was very concerned about that. They patently said that no documentary film crews could follow the police. We were sensitive to their concerns. It was a huge, huge story that traumatized the city.”
Added Zabel: “At the end of the day, creatively we are convinced [that] while the documentary conceit was very interesting and compelling in the pilot [and later episodes], we were going to feel a little hampered and hemmed in by that.” The altered format, he said, has “freed us up to explore a lot more.”


You do realize that half of Hollywood is now in Detroit, filming. Let’s see, Hugh Jackman, Richard Gere, Topher Grace, Demi Moore, Miley Cyrus, Harold & Kumar… I now know Michigan like the freaking back of my hand, my husband has been on three shows there back to back. Detroit is turning into Mexico City — there’s plenty of people in the burbs w the have’s and plenty of people in the city without anything. Film people are looked upon by the locals as carpetbaggers — and we sorta are. There’s a big story there, Nikki/team.
Obviously, you don’t know as much as you think you do about Detroit and its suburbs.
“This is directed towards your comment of “there’s plenty of people in the burbs w the have’s and plenty of people in the city without anything”
Lot of people who lived in the suburbs worked for one of the big 3, we competed on and off for the highest unemployment rate in the country for 3 years and houses are selling in the suburbs for as low as 2,000.
My husband and I are about to close on a 1200 square ft. 3 bedroom cape cod with a finished basement and in ground swimming pool for 32,000. Less than it cost me for 2 years at university.
If that isn’t a sign that people have literally no options (even in the suburbs) than I don’t know what is.
“Hampered and hemmed in…” Wonder what this means for My Gen? No matter how interesting and compelling the doc conceit is in pilot, by episode 3 it’ll be a real drag.
I remember hearing a network series pitch seven or eight years ago titled “LA187″, about, what else, the LAPD. But at least, in that instance, “187″ actually had something to do with LA since 187 refers to the California statute for homicide (it has nothing to do with radio codes either in LA or anywhere else). The LA gangs appropriated the term to refer to murder, and then it entered pop culture.
As a Detroiter who mourns the firing of Chief Evans over this crappy five part canceled show I must say those who leave often kick the can too often.
I’m sure my cousins will avoid any connection with the show (DPD) I would never sign a release for this show.
While Michael P will thrive after the show is canceled no one wants to see violence when it is a part of our daily lives from coast to coast, sea to sea even in London with the rampant stabbings. As you in LA know so well, red, blue, green orange, even purple can be a dangerous color if wore at the wrong time.
The conundrum here is that if the show is really good then its pretty much a done deal everyone sipping up the pop culure stew will self ironically refer to Detroit as “DETROIT 187″.
I’m a Detroiter too and while I like that they’re filming “in” the city, seems they could film “outside” the city in the nearby suburbs…because all you’re going to see are rundown abandoned neighborhoods and poor-a** black people scraping for food and money….it’s not a good image the city wants to be known for.
Here we go about the “Image” of Detroit again. Let anyone know you’re from here and they already have an image about this city. I don’t care where in the world you go. They seem to take a step back. One television show won’t impact this one way or the other. Coleman, Kwame, Devil’s night burning’s, Race riot’s,The Murder Capital, 8-Mile divide, it goes on and on. Our media sells it every night. The “Old Girl” has been raped and robbed by too many City officials. Our schools are victims of the same. It is what it is. The best thing is to take responsibility for our own actions and to help our fellow man in the everyday life we live. STOP taking and start giving!! If we all do this….even the City Council, Detroit will have it’s great “Image”.
187 means murder in California criminal code, not in Michigan. stooopid
I guess Detroit 750.316 doesn’t roll off the tongue the same
Nope, sorry Kwame. It was your predecessor – Kwame Kilpatrick – that really gave Detroit a black eye. He deserves every day behind bars that he was senteneced to and to reimburse the citizens of Detroit every dollar he took from them. A silly little TV show – which will likely not last a year – is not the problem.
And does EVERY politican from Detroit have to be named Kwame?
Sorry, would you prefer Bill, Gary, George, or Tom?
Actually Kwame Kenyatta has been around long before Kilpatrick. And Kwame is not *that* rare of a name. Heaven forbid a guy have a name like “Michael” or “David”, no telling what kind of person you might share a name with!
Long live Deeeeeeetroit!
In California, Penal Code (P.C.) section 187 defines murder. In Michigan, the comparable statue is in 750.316 in the Michigan Compiled Statutes, (for first degree murder). Gangsta rap made 187 famous since many of the songs glorifying murder orginated in California, and most of the ‘ganstas’ were familiar with P.C. 187. So 187 became a cool shorthand for murder. It appears that the writers for the show Detroit 1-8-7 did not do the research to get it right, or were trying to bank on the cachet of using a ‘cool’ term for murder, as defined by pop culture.