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Hunter (1984)

 Hunter (1984)
type
TVTItem
 Hunter (1984)
label
Hunter (1984)
 Hunter (1984)
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Hunter1984
 Hunter (1984)
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Hunter, the first series in the Hunter collection of Buddy Cop media, is a drama series about two Los Angeles homicide detectives, sergeants Rick Hunter and Dee Dee McCall. It was created by Frank Lupo and produced by Stephen J. Cannell Productions, and ran on NBC for seven seasons starting in 1984 and ending in 1991.Rick Hunter (played by ex-football player Fred Dryer) has a reputation for being a Cowboy Cop, which makes him less than popular among his superiors. While he tends to bend the rules and disregard orders, he only does so to get evidence against the bad guys, and his intuition never fails in picking out who is a bad guy or who isn't. He would never stoop to manufacturing evidence or framing an innocent.Dee Dee McCall (Stepfanie Kramer) is Hunter's partner. As tough as she is good-looking, she is sometimes called the "brass cupcake". She is just as pro-active as Hunter when fighting crime and doesn't hesitate to get into physical fights with the criminals, but she is less hot-headed and often acts as a calming influence on her partner. In the last season, McCall leaves the series after getting married to an old flame and is replaced by two other female detectives.The entire series is available for free streaming on YouTube via Filmrise TV.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_10a6623b
type
Fair Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_10a6623b
comment
Fair Cop: McCall. Her good looks not only make her a suitable Dirty Harriet, but also attract romantic attention from both desirable and undesirable quarters.
 Hunter (1984) / int_10a6623b
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1235f055
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Dirty Coward
 Hunter (1984) / int_1235f055
comment
Dirty Coward: Rapists Raul Mariano ("Rape and Revenge") and Bigfoot ("City of Passion"), when faced with a gun pointing at them, Ain't Too Proud to Beg.
 Hunter (1984) / int_1235f055
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1237828f
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Anyone Can Die
 Hunter (1984) / int_1237828f
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Anyone Can Die: Ambrose Finn and Joanne Molenski. The latter is replaced by Chris Novak.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1439161f
type
Heroic BSoD
 Hunter (1984) / int_1439161f
comment
Sporty James witnesses a group of Colombians killing a pusher in "Love, Hate and Sporty James", and tries to blackmail them in exchange for silence. The Colombians instead kill Sporty's girlfriend when she delivers a message to them, leading to a Heroic BSoD as he tries to hunt down the killers.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_143939c1
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Trailers Always Spoil
 Hunter (1984) / int_143939c1
comment
Also overlaps with Trailers Always Spoil, as the "tonight, on Hunter" segments that aired before every episode (expect for the last season) would either spoil things that happened in the show, or deceive you to think something was happening that didn't.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1616e13
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Ripped from the Headlines
 Hunter (1984) / int_1616e13
comment
Ripped from the Headlines: In "Any Second Now", Theresa Saldana plays a character who is being stalked by a crazed fan. Saldana herself was the victim in an infamous stalking case.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_18cc27ca
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Accent Slip-Up
 Hunter (1984) / int_18cc27ca
comment
Accent Slip-Up: In "Lullaby," the Serial Killer (played by a pre-Forrest Gump Gary Sinise) has a refined British accent. When this trait is leaked to the media, he begins affecting a strong Texas drawl...until his car door is almost taken off by another vehicle, at which point he starts yelling in his native accent. His next intended victim hears him and runs away.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_19ebe383
type
Never Trust a Trailer
 Hunter (1984) / int_19ebe383
comment
Never Trust a Trailer: Also overlaps with Trailers Always Spoil, as the "tonight, on Hunter" segments that aired before every episode (expect for the last season) would either spoil things that happened in the show, or deceive you to think something was happening that didn't. Perhaps one of the most blatant of the examples is from "Change Partners and Dance", where Hunter is seen telling McCall "this partnership is over." He does say that in the episode, and McCall initially believes him, but it is a ruse; Captain Devane has temporarily partnered Hunter with another cop who is under investigation for doing assassination work for the mob. In "Requiem for Sergeant McCall", the "tonight, on Hunter" clips shows the D.A. saying that he's going to charge McCall with murder, and then cuts to her screaming a Big "NO!". In the actual show, we see that the Big "NO!" was a flashback to her reaction to the shooting of her husband, five years before she was framed for murder.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1b901025
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The Fagin
 Hunter (1984) / int_1b901025
comment
The Fagin: The antagonist of the episode appropriately named "Fagin 1986". Ironically, said Fagin has never read Oliver Twist.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1e7487cd
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Breaking the Fourth Wall
 Hunter (1984) / int_1e7487cd
comment
Breaking the Fourth Wall: Happens at the end of a few episodes, such as "The Beautiful and the Dead", when Hunter looks at the camera and lampshades a case of What Happened to the Mouse?.
 Hunter (1984) / int_1e7487cd
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1eb49c19
type
Stripperiffic
 Hunter (1984) / int_1eb49c19
comment
Many scenes involve streetwalkers or showgirls in more or less stripperiffic clothing. The trope is usually averted, however, when McCall goes undercover as a streetwalker: with the exception of a few early episodes she tends to cover up a lot more than her supposed "colleagues" (which makes sense for the plot, as she's there to collect information, not to seduce anyone).
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 Hunter (1984) / int_1f17e9fe
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High-Altitude Interrogation
 Hunter (1984) / int_1f17e9fe
comment
High-Altitude Interrogation: Hunter does this to the Dirty Cop in "The Big Fall" to make him confess to the killing, although the dirty cop only ended up there because he clumsily tried to escape.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_20314beb
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Cousin Oliver
 Hunter (1984) / int_20314beb
comment
Cousin Oliver: Hunter's final partner in the series, Chris Novak (Lauren Lane), is a single mom with a young daughter, Allison (Courtney Barilla).
 Hunter (1984) / int_20314beb
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 Hunter (1984) / int_241ca0d8
type
Back for the Dead
 Hunter (1984) / int_241ca0d8
comment
Back for the Dead: The season 4 episode "The Jade Woman" had Hunter helping one of his old Vietnam buddies Randall Fane (played by Dirk Blocker) rescue his kidnapped Asian wife. A season later, in "Dead on Target pt. 1" Fane returns, only to kill himself since his wife left him due to him being obsessed with learning the truth about something that happened in Vietnam.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_24e48d72
type
Dirty Harriet
 Hunter (1984) / int_24e48d72
comment
Dirty Harriet: In the first season McCall often goes undercover as a streetwalker or callgirl. Downplayed in later seasons, where she goes undercover more seldom, and then usually with more conventional covers, such as a singer (twice).
 Hunter (1984) / int_24e48d72
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2828fd9a
type
Promotion to Opening Titles
 Hunter (1984) / int_2828fd9a
comment
Promotion to Opening Titles: In the fourth season, Charles Hallahan as Captain Charlie Devane
 Hunter (1984) / int_2828fd9a
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2b2a1700
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Master of Unlocking
 Hunter (1984) / int_2b2a1700
comment
Master of Unlocking: Dee Dee McCall is adept at picking locks. She and Hunter often gain entry to the homes of suspects or missing persons this way, which is especially convenient when they can't call a locksmith because they don't have a search warrant.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2d6f00e4
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Psycho for Hire
 Hunter (1984) / int_2d6f00e4
comment
In "Death Machine", a couple steals money from a sleazy businessman who employs a Psycho for Hire to get it back. The latter kills so many people while looking for them, the terrified thieves mail the valuables back with a note attached saying We're sorry.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2d9a126a
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Recap by Audit
 Hunter (1984) / int_2d9a126a
comment
Recap by Audit: Da Chief does this about an offscreen car chase, before deciding to get Hunter and Dee Dee new partners.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2dddd99d
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False Flag Operation
 Hunter (1984) / int_2dddd99d
comment
False Flag Operation: "62 Hours of Terror" has a series of bombings against Qurac diplomats which were blamed on a dissident group. In reality they were organized by a diplomat (played by Persis Khambatta) to frighten the ambassador into leaving the country, so she could cover up a string of affairs.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_2ea2680a
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That One Case
 Hunter (1984) / int_2ea2680a
comment
That One Case: Sgt. Doyle, Hunter's former mentor, joins him and McCall in the episode "The Black Dahlia" when it appears that a recent murder may be the work of the infamous Black Dahlia killer. That case was the only one Doyle never solved.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_34960f22
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Vapor Wear
 Hunter (1984) / int_34960f22
comment
Vapor Wear: In "Overnight Sensation", an investigative TV reporter is depicting Hunter as a dirty cop. When McCall visits the reporter to try to persuade him that he's on the wrong track, she wears a thin, white sweater with her nipples and areolae clearly showing through. Unfortunately, it doesn't help persuade the journalist.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_34f590c9
type
Off on a Technicality
 Hunter (1984) / int_34f590c9
comment
Off on a Technicality: In "True Confessions", a group of teens spontaneously confess to accidentally killing a girl at a party, before the cops even had a chance to read them their Miranda Rights, so the confession supposedly becomes inadmissible. This sparks a vigilante-kills-the-killers plot. In Real Life, the technicality wouldn't have applied in the case of a spontaneous confession, and even if it did, the police could investigate to find other evidence that would support the case.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_355bc288
type
Lingerie Scene
 Hunter (1984) / int_355bc288
comment
There are some scenes with McCall in sleepwear or taking a bath.
 Hunter (1984) / int_355bc288
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 Hunter (1984) / int_35ab4cec
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You Watch Too Much X
 Hunter (1984) / int_35ab4cec
comment
You Watch Too Much X: In "High Noon in L.A.", Hunter tells Curuguyan National Carlos Mariano, who's determined to kill him in a shoot-out, that he's been watching too many John Wayne movies.
 Hunter (1984) / int_35ab4cec
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3678fbfa
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Mad Bomber
 Hunter (1984) / int_3678fbfa
comment
Mad Bomber: The villain in "Blow-Up" uses mail bombs to target those who helped lock him away previously, including Hunter.
 Hunter (1984) / int_3678fbfa
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3848c28a
type
Name of Cain
 Hunter (1984) / int_3848c28a
comment
Name of Cain: Captain Cain, Rick Hunter's exasperated superior early in season 1. While not an overt antagonist as he's just doing his job trying to rein in Hunter's maverick tendencies, he's a pretty venal example of the "obstructive chief" since he's far more concerned with maintaining the appearance of an orderly department than protecting his officers. Cain returns to the department in season 4, only to resign in disgrace after trying to get his officers to drop a solicitation charge on a prominent judge as a political favor.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3b113b7
type
Character Development
 Hunter (1984) / int_3b113b7
comment
Character Development: Hunter himself in later seasons. He becomes less of a Cowboy Cop and follows the rules, and also usually wears more suits (early seasons has him constantly being bawled out for his less professional attire). He also has a less fractious relationship with his superiors (to the point of actually being friends with Captain Devane).
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3bcef6d9
type
Camera Sniper
 Hunter (1984) / int_3bcef6d9
comment
Camera Sniper: Shown at the start of "The Avenging Angel" where the Villain of the Week is a vigilante who has become obsessed with Rick Hunter and is stalking him and his partner, in a montage with the song "I'll Be Watching You".
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3dd3951e
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Cowboy Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_3dd3951e
comment
"Last Run" has a Cowboy Cop searching for his missing female partner who was undercover. By the time he finds her she is already tortured to death. Against Hunter's advise, the cop kills the handcuffed drug lord in retaliation before turning the gun on himself, resulting in Hunter throwing his gun at a window in disgust.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3ec7c277
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Every Car Is a Pinto
 Hunter (1984) / int_3ec7c277
comment
Every Car Is a Pinto: Car chases often end with one car catching fire and/or exploding.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3f0b2f50
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Make It Look Like an Accident
 Hunter (1984) / int_3f0b2f50
comment
"Code 3" involves Dee Dee investigating the drunk driving death of a nurse friend, who she suspects is murdered. The villain turns out to be a property developer who exploited his medical connections to have a stubborn fruit shop owner killed during a medical episode with the wrong drugs, so it could be dismissed as an accident and he could take over the fruit shop which stood in the way of his building project. The nurse was killed for getting too close to the truth.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_3fe2b13f
type
Ungrateful Bastard
 Hunter (1984) / int_3fe2b13f
comment
Ungrateful Bastard: Typhoon Thompson (Isaac Hayes) in "The Return of Typhoon Thompson" is this toward Hunter. Rick went to bat for him with the Governor and got all charges against Thompson dropped (including auto theft and assault on a police officer) for crimes committed when he tried to clear his name after being paroled for murder. Thompson is still upset because it doesn't change the fact that people only see him now as an ex-con, despite the fact that he was innocent of the murder charge that sent him to prison. In fairness he'd spent eight years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, so it's not like Thompson didn't have reason to be bitter against Hunter, who put him in there.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4023b8c8
type
First-Name Basis
 Hunter (1984) / int_4023b8c8
comment
First-Name Basis: Hunter and McCall have this dynamic with Captain Devane due to all three having a very trusting, friendly relationship with each other.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4023b8c8
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 Hunter (1984) / int_40c57041
type
Manipulative Bastard
 Hunter (1984) / int_40c57041
comment
Played straight in the episode "Informant", where the recently released bank robber is actually innocent of the murders of his associates, and the real murderer is the criminal's girlfriend, who also poses as an informant for Hunter in order to manipulate them against one another while she plans to flee abroad with the stolen money. Hunter is understandingly pissed since he was almost sent to jail for refusing to disclose the identity of the witness for court.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_42262e0b
type
Firefighter Arsonist
 Hunter (1984) / int_42262e0b
comment
Firefighter Arsonist: "Fire Man" sees Hunter and McCall dealing with a masked firebug who torches abandoned buildings with a flame thrower. A traumatised veteran insists that it's a war criminal he served with in Vietnam, who randomly burned a native village to the ground, despite him officially dying several years earlier. As they eventually discover, the firebug actually murdered another person and stole their identity, and is presently working as a firefighter for their day job.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_42c9f1ec
type
Downplayed Trope
 Hunter (1984) / int_42c9f1ec
comment
Hunter has this reputation among his colleagues, and some journalists. While he does tend to play loose with the rules, he does not show the disregard for life and property that tends to be a sign of a true cowboy cop. In addition, many of Hunter's colleagues actually support him for his actions, while completely disdaining Captain Cain for being too much of a stick in the mud regarding police protocol.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_437820dc
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Villainous Crush
 Hunter (1984) / int_437820dc
comment
Villainous Crush: The crazy surveillance expert in "The Avenging Angel" who wants to be together with Hunter, and to that end he tries to kidnap and kill McCall and replace her as his partner.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_438e94fa
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Never the Obvious Suspect
 Hunter (1984) / int_438e94fa
comment
Never the Obvious Suspect: The show usually plays this straight. In the episode "True Confessions", though, there is a Bait-and-Switch. A girl dies during a drug-fuelled party, with the culprits let off on a technicality due to one of them confessing without being read their Miranda Rights. When they are shot one by one, the victim's sister is the obvious suspect. Then it looks like a Corrupt Corporate Executive brother of one of the victims has a motive, and she's being framed as a patsy. Nope, it was the sister all along. A similar bait and switch is used in the later episode "Heir of Neglect", where a young boy is suspected of shooting his parents, and then the investigation is shifted to a group of Corrupt Corporate Executive businessmen who the father was blackmailing. Only at the end the said boy was re-investigated, and turns out he did it in retaliation for parental abuse. Played straight in the episode "Informant", where the recently released bank robber is actually innocent of the murders of his associates, and the real murderer is the criminal's girlfriend, who also poses as an informant for Hunter in order to manipulate them against one another while she plans to flee abroad with the stolen money. Hunter is understandingly pissed since he was almost sent to jail for refusing to disclose the identity of the witness for court. "No Good Deed Ever Goes Unpunished" has an elderly woman trying to expose her Corrupt Corporate Executive daughter for strings of illegal dumpings and the murder of an EPA agent. All signs point to the said daughter due to her confrontational demeanor, until shortly before the episode's end where it is revealed that her supposedly retired husband, the former CEO, organized it all behind his daughter's back. "Hot Pursuit" has Hunter investigate a series of prostitute killings alone after a gunman severely wounds McCall. He focuses on a "honest" car dealer who secretly runs a prostitution ring, and receives help from a woman named Laura Decker who is supposedly a vicim of the said dealer. Hunter is later framed for murdering the dealer, a charge which he narrowly gets out of, and only later he finds out that Decker is actually the dealer's wife, organzing the killings behind his back and manipulating Hunter so he could be framed for murder. And she would've gotten away with it too, had she caught an earlier flight out of the country.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4415efaf
type
Serial-Killer Killer
 Hunter (1984) / int_4415efaf
comment
Serial-Killer Killer: A parole officer in "The Garbage Man" (played Ed O'Neill) hunts down and kills parolees who committed serious crimes such as murder, as well as one of his colleagues trying to expose him. In his last appearance in "Silver Bullet", Lieutenant Ambrose Finn becomes this in grief after his wife lay dying of a terminal illness, killing criminals he felt escaped the justice system.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4415efaf
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 Hunter (1984) / int_455f6a91
type
Long-Lost Relative
 Hunter (1984) / int_455f6a91
comment
Long-Lost Relative: In "Yesterday's Child", Hunter discovers a teenage murder suspect is his son, from a woman he was in a relationship with during the Vietnam War.
 Hunter (1984) / int_455f6a91
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1.0
 Hunter (1984) / int_455f6a91
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Hunter (1984) / int_455f6a91
 Hunter (1984) / int_4583a262
type
Shirtless Scene
 Hunter (1984) / int_4583a262
comment
Hunter has many ShirtlessScenes, has plenty of attractive female contacts and girlfriends, and is not above sleeping with female suspects and witnesses to solve the case.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4583a262
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4583a262
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Hunter (1984) / int_4583a262
 Hunter (1984) / int_45ed7d35
type
Homophobic Hate Crime
 Hunter (1984) / int_45ed7d35
comment
Homophobic Hate Crime: "The Fifth Victim" has Hunter and McCall alongside a gay detective investigate a string of killings targeting gay men. A homophobic Serial Killer confesses to all of the killings except one, which turns out to be a gay architect who was killed by a property developer for trying to whistleblow on substandard building practices.
 Hunter (1984) / int_45ed7d35
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Hunter (1984) / int_45ed7d35
 Hunter (1984) / int_48126ac0
type
CIA Evil, FBI Good
 Hunter (1984) / int_48126ac0
comment
CIA Evil, FBI Good: Brad Wilkes (Stanley Kamel), the CIA agent featured in several episodes, is depicted as amoral at best and not unwilling cross Hunter and McCall to protect suspects if they are deemed to be vital for US national interests. Meanwhile FBI agents are depicted as more moral but willing to follow rules to the letter.
 Hunter (1984) / int_48126ac0
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Hunter (1984) / int_48126ac0
 Hunter (1984) / int_491b0105
type
Sexy Sweater Girl
 Hunter (1984) / int_491b0105
comment
Sexy Sweater Girl: McCall often wears tight sweaters that show off her figure, though in winter she tends to wear a jacket on top.
 Hunter (1984) / int_491b0105
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Hunter (1984) / int_491b0105
 Hunter (1984) / int_4aa98555
type
Evil All Along
 Hunter (1984) / int_4aa98555
comment
Evil All Along: "Shillelagh" features Devane's girlfriend's brother, an Irish peace activist, visiting for a peace conference. Turns out he's an undercover IRA operative who is planning to assassinate the British ambassador during the conference, as the said ambassador killed their brother during The Troubles. Devane's girlfriend is devastated when she finds out the truth via Landline Eavesdropping, and even more so when Devane is forced to kill the brother.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4aa98555
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4cbc7f95
type
Blasting It Out of Their Hands
 Hunter (1984) / int_4cbc7f95
comment
Blasting It Out of Their Hands: In "Fagin 1986", Rick Hunter shoots an underage crook and is asked by a reporter why he didn't shoot the weapon out of his hands. Hunter ridicules the idea, yet "High Noon in L.A." shows Hunter doing this to a man who challenged him to a duel.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4cbc7f95
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4d45aa06
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Banana Republic
 Hunter (1984) / int_4d45aa06
comment
Raul Mariano, cultural attache of a Banana Republic in "Rape and Revenge", rapes McCall for daring to turn down a date with him.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4d45aa06
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 Hunter (1984) / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: "Rich Girl", with its Alas, Poor Villain ending. "Crime of Passion" has a woman killed and her estranged husband (played by Ray Wise) being the prime suspect. Turns out the real killer is a Hollywood director's wife whose young child actress daughter confided in the victim to being sexually abused by her husband, and the wife wanted to cover it up (and demanded that her own daughter allow it) to maintain their affluent lifestyle. Even Hunter's eyes wells up while the poor girl sobbingly tells McCall her story. "Last Run" has a Cowboy Cop searching for his missing female partner who was undercover. By the time he finds her she is already tortured to death. Against Hunter's advise, the cop kills the handcuffed drug lord in retaliation before turning the gun on himself, resulting in Hunter throwing his gun at a window in disgust. "Not Just Another John Doe" ends with the villains escaping justice due to intervention by the CIA, being "vital to the interests of national security". "Son and Heir" ends up with the mob boss (played by Jerry Orbach) eating his gun after losing both of his sons - one, an undercover cop, being unknowing killed by his mobster half-brother, who is later in turn killed by Hunter.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_4f4372e9
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Early-Installment Weirdness
 Hunter (1984) / int_4f4372e9
comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: Season 1 episodes tend to be more gritty and mostly set in the less savory parts of Los Angeles, plays up Hunter and McCall's conflicts with their superiors (one of whom is Captain Dolan played by John Amos before he was Put on a Bus), and contains an ongoing subplot about Hunter's familial connections with the mob. It also uses more licensed music every episode.
 Hunter (1984) / int_4f4372e9
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 Hunter (1984) / int_502b147b
type
Playing Drunk
 Hunter (1984) / int_502b147b
comment
Playing Drunk: When Dee Dee McCall investigates the trailer of a suspected cop killer parked next to a bar in "The Shooter", he comes back earlier than expected so she acts like a drunken patron who just stumbled into the wrong place.
 Hunter (1984) / int_502b147b
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 Hunter (1984) / int_50ca4422
type
Unresolved Sexual Tension
 Hunter (1984) / int_50ca4422
comment
Unresolved Sexual Tension: Hunter and McCall are obviously attracted to each other, and even admit that themselves, but manage to keep their relationship on a professional, Just Friends level, while dating other people. At least, they manage most of the time — one episode reveals that they actually did sleep with each other once.
 Hunter (1984) / int_50ca4422
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 Hunter (1984) / int_518de95b
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Always Murder
 Hunter (1984) / int_518de95b
comment
Always Murder: Subverted in "Allegra" and "Murder, He Wrote" where the "murders" turned out to be suicides.
 Hunter (1984) / int_518de95b
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 Hunter (1984) / int_519c2e3a
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Trashcan Bonfire
 Hunter (1984) / int_519c2e3a
comment
Trashcan Bonfire: In "The Beach Boy" a drug dealer is murdered by a Professional Killer, and at the end of the episode Hunter and McCall find his fellow dealers holding a wake in an alley around a burning trashcan. They explain that this was where the deceased made his first drug buy (and also where Hunter first busted him).
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 Hunter (1984) / int_52a8d3dc
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Pyromaniac
 Hunter (1984) / int_52a8d3dc
comment
Pyromaniac: "Fire Man" features a villain who uses a flame thrower to set various buildings on fire, with a backstory of burning civilians in the Vietnam War.
 Hunter (1984) / int_52a8d3dc
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 Hunter (1984) / int_5571b706
type
I Work Alone
 Hunter (1984) / int_5571b706
comment
I Work Alone: This is why Hunter and McCall team up in the first place. Captain Cain demands that Hunter work with a partner to keep his Cowboy Cop tendencies under control, so Hunter makes a deal with McCall (whom he already knows, but apparently hasn't been partnered with before) to pretend to be his partner while they work their separate cases. However Cain quickly gets wise to this trick and threatens to call them on the radio and if they both can't answer to show they're working together ("In the car, or in the can"), Hunter will be in trouble. However our heroes quickly find they like working together anyway.
 Hunter (1984) / int_5571b706
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 Hunter (1984) / int_5bdcc85a
type
Disney Villain Death
 Hunter (1984) / int_5bdcc85a
comment
Disney Villain Death: Several villains of week fall to their demises. The villainous psychologist in the pilot episode accidentally jumps off a building when he charges Rick Hunter during a final Rooftop Confrontation. The villain of The Return of Hunter: Everyone Walks in L.A. (played by Miguel Ferrer) deliberately jumps to his death after getting what he wanted from Hunter.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_5ce2ab52
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Police Psychic
 Hunter (1984) / int_5ce2ab52
comment
Police Psychic: In the episode "Second Sight", a psychic man with the apparent ability to predict the killings by a serial killer goes to the police with his predictions. Unsurprisingly, he is investigated as a possible suspect.
 Hunter (1984) / int_5ce2ab52
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6269a4b3
type
Psycho Psychologist
 Hunter (1984) / int_6269a4b3
comment
Psycho Psychologist: Dr. Bolin from the pilot episode, who is hired by Captain Cain to make psychological assessments of all his officers, in particular Hunter himself so Cain has grounds to fire him for being "unstable". It later turns out that Dr. Bolin is a Serial Killer who is being treated by another therapist for sociopathy. In fact, he specifically picks out blonde women because they resemble his therapist.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_63499260
type
VillainOfTheWeek
 Hunter (1984) / int_63499260
comment
Villain of the Week: With the exception of a few double episodes, Rick Hunter and Dee Dee McCall will always investigate one case a week involving a criminal who will be either locked up or shot dead by the end of the episode.
 Hunter (1984) / int_63499260
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Hunter (1984) / int_63499260
 Hunter (1984) / int_66bee5ea
type
Shooting Gallery
 Hunter (1984) / int_66bee5ea
comment
Shooting Gallery: In "Sniper", Hunter and McCall are investigating a mad sniper shooting women has them going to an army range, where they naturally encounter both the standard Red Herring suspect, who shoots all targets innocent or guilty with great enthusiasm, and his older sergeant who is the real killer. At the end Hunter chases the killer onto the range and activates the targets. The killer reacts to the first couple of targets, so when Hunter appears his reactions are lax enough that he gets shot.
 Hunter (1984) / int_66bee5ea
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6af8ebb5
type
Death by Falling Over
 Hunter (1984) / int_6af8ebb5
comment
Death by Falling Over: Happens to several people in the series, often accidentally as a result of fighting, such as the young mother in "A Girl Named Hunter" and the drug dealer in "Brotherly Love".
 Hunter (1984) / int_6af8ebb5
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6b00879d
type
Disconnected by Death
 Hunter (1984) / int_6b00879d
comment
Disconnected by Death: Happens to several associates of the villains who wanted to snitch to Hunter, such as the villains' accomplices in "Partners" and "Return of White Cloud".
 Hunter (1984) / int_6b00879d
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6b2b3b59
type
The Reveal
 Hunter (1984) / int_6b2b3b59
comment
In "Return of White Cloud", a woman who owned a museum is murdered and four Indian tribal masks in her possession are stolen. The investigation reveals they were stolen by a Native American guy who was her lover, and he also has a wife who aware of the affair. It was actually an archaeologist friend of the victim, who only appeared for a few minutes at the beginning of the episode, prior to the The Reveal.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6bc499da
type
Diplomatic Impunity
 Hunter (1984) / int_6bc499da
comment
Diplomatic Impunity: The episode "Rape and Revenge" has McCall being raped by a South American diplomat who claims immunity when Hunter tries to arrest him — and shoots Hunter just to twist the knife further. Said ambassador assaulted McCall for simply turning down a date, and strangled another woman in an earlier assault. In the following episode, Hunter tracks him down in his native country and kills him in self defense.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6bf93fc7
type
FanService
 Hunter (1984) / int_6bf93fc7
comment
Fanservice: Very mild by today's standard (this show is, after all, a decade older than NYPD Blue): there is no nudity and even sex scenes tend to be of the fully clothed variety, but there are still some instances. McCall's good looks are always prominently featured, and though she dresses professionally at work, she frequently wears tight tops and short skirts. There are some scenes with McCall in sleepwear or taking a bath. Hunter has many ShirtlessScenes, has plenty of attractive female contacts and girlfriends, and is not above sleeping with female suspects and witnesses to solve the case. Many scenes involve streetwalkers or showgirls in more or less stripperiffic clothing. The trope is usually averted, however, when McCall goes undercover as a streetwalker: with the exception of a few early episodes she tends to cover up a lot more than her supposed "colleagues" (which makes sense for the plot, as she's there to collect information, not to seduce anyone). Two of the most daring examples from the first season are shown in the opening credits: Dee Dee fighting in a backless top and tight pants, and her aiming her gun out of a foam bath, with bubbles acting as convenient Scenery Censors. As the series faced increasing competition from Miami Vice, there was a noticeable increase in Fanservice Extras.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6d332aea
type
Driven to Suicide
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: "Rich Girl" Cynthia, (the title character) has tried to kill her wealthy father, and succeeds in having his new younger wife Ginger killed by getting her partner to throw Ginger off a penthouse balcony, while making it look as if she jumped. Hunter and McCall soon come on to her, but unable to legally prove her involvement, decide to take an alternate route and explain to her father what's she's done. He then changes his will so that his daughter won't inherit unless the killer of his wife is found and convicted, puts in a stipulation that will force her to forfeit everything if she challenges the will, cuts her off from all of her funds, and refuses to speak to her when she tries to call him. This leaves Cynthia with a Sadistic Choice: if she keeps her mouth shut, she keeps her freedom, but will be completely cut off from her inheritance, and her father's money and resources and, having no job history, skills, or prospects, and likely little education, would be in for a long painful struggle, and if she confesses, she gets to keep her inheritance but will have to spend the better part of her life in prison (if not the rest of it) before she can enjoy any of it. The episode ends with Cynthia eating some ice cream laced with pills in a deliberate overdose, having decided to Take a Third Option and not live at all rather than live locked up and rich or live free and broke... "Son and Heir" features a mobster who shoots and kills an undercover cop, but unknown to him, the cop was his half-brother. The mob boss, his father, doesn't know that his cop son was killed by his mobster son, nor the fact that the latter is running smuggling operations from underneath him. He is devastated when he finds out the truth, and despite his pleas for his remaining son to give up, the son chooses Suicide by Cop when Hunter corners him. With both of his sons dead, the mob boss shoots himself at home.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6d786f8e
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Stock Unsolved Mysteries
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d786f8e
comment
Stock Unsolved Mysteries: The episode "The Black Dahlia" has Hunter and McCall investigate new leads in the famous unsolved 1947 murder known by that name.
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d786f8e
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1.0
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 Hunter (1984) / int_6d7cd3e
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Dead Person Impersonation
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d7cd3e
comment
Dead Person Impersonation: The episode "Fire Man" features a pyromaniac former Vietnam War soldier who, in order to hide his arsonous activities from the cops, poses as one of his deceased buddies because they looked so similar.
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d7cd3e
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Hunter (1984) / int_6d7cd3e
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d892421
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Teacher/Student Romance
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d892421
comment
Teacher/Student Romance: A subplot in "City Under Siege", where a high school teacher is in a relationship with a vulnerable student of his. A delinquent student discovers this and uses it to blackmail the teacher to reveal McCall's undercover status.
 Hunter (1984) / int_6d892421
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 Hunter (1984) / int_70bdac19
type
Honest John's Dealership
 Hunter (1984) / int_70bdac19
comment
"Hot Pursuit" has Hunter investigate a series of prostitute killings alone after a gunman severely wounds McCall. He focuses on a "honest" car dealer who secretly runs a prostitution ring, and receives help from a woman named Laura Decker who is supposedly a vicim of the said dealer. Hunter is later framed for murdering the dealer, a charge which he narrowly gets out of, and only later he finds out that Decker is actually the dealer's wife, organzing the killings behind his back and manipulating Hunter so he could be framed for murder. And she would've gotten away with it too, had she caught an earlier flight out of the country.
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Hunter (1984) / int_70bdac19
 Hunter (1984) / int_7301ae04
type
Serial Killer
 Hunter (1984) / int_7301ae04
comment
Iris Smith, the Serial Killer antagonist of the "City Under Siege" three-parter, murders a school teacher because she gave her detention when she was young.
 Hunter (1984) / int_7301ae04
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7301ae04
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Hunter (1984) / int_7301ae04
 Hunter (1984) / int_73328e84
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Suicide by Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_73328e84
comment
"Son and Heir" features a mobster who shoots and kills an undercover cop, but unknown to him, the cop was his half-brother. The mob boss, his father, doesn't know that his cop son was killed by his mobster son, nor the fact that the latter is running smuggling operations from underneath him. He is devastated when he finds out the truth, and despite his pleas for his remaining son to give up, the son chooses Suicide by Cop when Hunter corners him. With both of his sons dead, the mob boss shoots himself at home.
 Hunter (1984) / int_73328e84
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 Hunter (1984) / int_73328e84
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Hunter (1984) / int_73328e84
 Hunter (1984) / int_74c3078d
type
TheRashomon
 Hunter (1984) / int_74c3078d
comment
The Rashomon: "Unfinished Business" has Hunter and McCall visit a therapist to hash out their differences, they both give very different accounts of an incident that happened several years earlier—McCall recalls Hunter as being completely indifferent when she returned from a trip, virtually ignoring her while chatting happily with his replacement partner, while he remembers her being rather rude to him and the woman in question.
 Hunter (1984) / int_74c3078d
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Hunter (1984) / int_74c3078d
 Hunter (1984) / int_754df088
type
Put on a Bus
 Hunter (1984) / int_754df088
comment
Put on a Bus: Several of Hunter's police superiors throughout the series, including Captains Cain, Dolan, and Wyler. Captain Devane remained for the rest of the series.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_786d6cf6
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You Wouldn't Shoot Me
 Hunter (1984) / int_786d6cf6
comment
You Wouldn't Shoot Me: A pimp says this to Dee Dee McCall in the premiere episode. It's no surprise he turns out to be wrong. In the second episode McCall's old partner, who has become a hitman after getting fired from the force, says this to her when she tries to arrest him. He's right in this instance, and almost kills McCall before Hunter intervenes.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_78fdd115
type
Witless Protection Program
 Hunter (1984) / int_78fdd115
comment
Witless Protection Program: In "The Big Fall", the other team of detectives guarding a murder witness is comprised of a corrupt cop and an alcoholic. Hunter suspects that something bad is going to happen, and it does. The witness winds up taking a fatal fall from the hotel balcony.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7ae00dcc
type
Driven by Envy
 Hunter (1984) / int_7ae00dcc
comment
Driven by Envy: In season 1 there's an episode where a guy on a bike goes around killing cops in Quick Draw-style shootouts. There is a Wild West arcade game in his favorite bar where he's routinely the best, and he goes after people who beat his high score. Rick Hunter deliberately scores higher on the machine precisely because he knows it will draw out the cop killer.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7b454a57
type
White Sheep
 Hunter (1984) / int_7b454a57
comment
White Sheep: Hunter comes from a Mob family but has chosen to join the police. He sometimes uses his connections to get information from his relatives, who also try to use him to get inside police information (which he doesn't allow). This only happens in the first season, and Hunter's mob background is never mentioned in later seasons.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7d7a5f3
type
Carpet of Virility
 Hunter (1984) / int_7d7a5f3
comment
In "The Beach Boy", Dee Dee McCall puts a couple of bullets into a hitman from Hawaii and he doesn't even flinch. Hunter comments that he must have been wearing a bulletproof vest, but that doesn't explain why the audience doesn't see it given that the hitman spends the entire episode with his Hawaiian shirt half unbuttoned to show his Carpet of Virility. After that Hunter gets out a Desert Eagle to take the hitman on, and uses it to Shoot the Fuel Tank and blow him up, vest and all.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Hunter (1984) / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: In "On Air", Hunter gives one to the woman he was protecting and dating, a romantic advice dispensing radio host who was being stalked by a crazed fan. Hunter finds out that she blew his cover to get more publicity for herself, and let someone else take the blame. Coupled with Is This Thing On? when instead of listening to Hunter's criticisms she tries to do the same thing to him and ends up deriding her listeners. Not until she finishes does she realize that he's flipped the "On Air" switch.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_7e84a642
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Serial Rapist
 Hunter (1984) / int_7e84a642
comment
Serial Rapist: "Bigfoot", who targets single women with new houses, due to the fact that he works for a real estate company with spare keys to their houses.
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Hunter (1984) / int_7e84a642
 Hunter (1984) / int_7fbb13bf
type
Unfriendly Fire
 Hunter (1984) / int_7fbb13bf
comment
Unfriendly Fire: Detective Bernie Terwilliger is played up to be so incompetent that during a shoot-out in a hotel hallway, he opens fire on his fellow officers until McCall restrains him.
 Hunter (1984) / int_7fbb13bf
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Hunter (1984) / int_7fbb13bf
 Hunter (1984) / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 Hunter (1984) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: After leaving the show at the end of season 6 to be married, McCall returns in the 2002 special Hunter: Return to Justice, where she is married to a new husband, with zero mentions of the previous one. Hunter's de facto relationship with Chris Novak is not mentioned in the 1995 special The Return of Hunter: Everyone Walks in L.A., as he started a relationship with another woman. Hunter's half-Vietnamese son is not mentioned again after his sole appearance.
 Hunter (1984) / int_863fa679
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 Hunter (1984) / int_8797239c
type
Bait-and-Switch
 Hunter (1984) / int_8797239c
comment
The show usually plays this straight. In the episode "True Confessions", though, there is a Bait-and-Switch. A girl dies during a drug-fuelled party, with the culprits let off on a technicality due to one of them confessing without being read their Miranda Rights. When they are shot one by one, the victim's sister is the obvious suspect. Then it looks like a Corrupt Corporate Executive brother of one of the victims has a motive, and she's being framed as a patsy. Nope, it was the sister all along.
 Hunter (1984) / int_8797239c
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 Hunter (1984) / int_87bb6874
type
Villain with Good Publicity
 Hunter (1984) / int_87bb6874
comment
Villain with Good Publicity: The crime boss in "Playing God" likes to present himself as a charitable community leader, even though he engaged in various assaults, including the sexual assault of a woman. The women later committed suicide when she discovered that she was pregnant, leaving the distraught husband, who himself is infertile, to assassinate the crime boss.
 Hunter (1984) / int_87bb6874
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 Hunter (1984) / int_89434320
type
Protagonist-Centered Morality
 Hunter (1984) / int_89434320
comment
Protagonist-Centered Morality: While Hunter does get called on his actions from time to time, it's quite amazing he suffers no punishment for traveling to a foreign nation and killing one of its high-ranking diplomats in "Rape and Revenge", albeit in self defense. Yes, the guy was a Jerkass rapist/murderer who raped McCall and almost killed Hunter, and hid behind his Diplomatic Impunity, but still.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_89dcd4e
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Small-Town Tyrant
 Hunter (1984) / int_89dcd4e
comment
Small-Town Tyrant: While Hunter and McCall are escorting a prisoner through a small Midwestern town in "A Long Way from L.A.", a local girl is raped and beaten and the incident is blamed on the prisoner, who is later killed. In fact, the culprit is the sheriff, who has been abusing his power and his position as the stepson of the richest man in town. In "The Biggest Man in Town", the town sheriff is in the pockets of the corrupt tycoon who runs the town, and assassinates an employee trying to blackmail the tycoon. He also tries to kill Hunter and McCall on the tycoon's orders when they try to investigate the assassination while undercover.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_8a295a46
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Cool Car
 Hunter (1984) / int_8a295a46
comment
Cool Car: McCall's red Dodge Daytona.
 Hunter (1984) / int_8a295a46
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 Hunter (1984) / int_8cb4ea46
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By-the-Book Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_8cb4ea46
comment
By-the-Book Cop: Sgt. Bernie Terwilliger thinks Hunter is a disgrace for the department and never fails to point out any time he breaks a rule. Unfortunately, however, Terwilliger is not that good a detective himself, and usually fails where Hunter's "cowboy" methods succeed. In the second season, he gets transferred to Internal Affairs, a job which brings him into frequent confrontation with Hunter, before succumbing to the Chuck Cunningham Syndrome in the third season as his actor, James Whitmore, Jr., had begun working behind the scenes as a director.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_8d0785d5
type
Didn't Think This Through
 Hunter (1984) / int_8d0785d5
comment
Didn't Think This Through: McCall gets exposed in several undercover assignments such as "Double Exposure" because she carried her pistol along.
 Hunter (1984) / int_8d0785d5
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Hunter (1984) / int_8d0785d5
 Hunter (1984) / int_8ed5c6e4
type
Asshole Victim
 Hunter (1984) / int_8ed5c6e4
comment
Asshole Victim: Drug pusher Jimmy Duggan in "Brotherly Love", who succumbs to Death by Falling Over, thanks to one of his clients.
 Hunter (1984) / int_8ed5c6e4
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 Hunter (1984) / int_901046d2
type
The Informant
 Hunter (1984) / int_901046d2
comment
The Informant: Arnold "Sporty" James (played by Garrett Morris). In a subversion of this trope, however, Hunter and McCall see him as a valued friend.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_90e31482
type
Laser-Guided Karma
 Hunter (1984) / int_90e31482
comment
Laser-Guided Karma: In "Turning Point", a journalist survives an assassination attempt and decides to blackmail his attempted killers, using his wife as bait while he flees with the money. His wife, after realizing how little he cares about her safety and well-being, switches the bags at the last minute and flees to Mexico, leaving the journalist with nothing but a bunch of phone books in his bag. In "Boomerang", a housewife (played by Wendie Malick) finds out that her husband has disinherited her, and decides with his business partner who she is cheating with to kill him via a boat bomb. When the case went to court, she was found not guilty due to the unreliable evidence the detective collected. Just when she thought she got away with murder and consummates her relationship with the business partner, she was arrested again after another woman who was injured alongside the bomb died, and this time, the evidence is stacked against her.
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Hunter (1984) / int_90e31482
 Hunter (1984) / int_90ff49cb
type
Robbing the Mob Bank
 Hunter (1984) / int_90ff49cb
comment
Robbing the Mob Bank: In "The Jade Woman", a not very smart crook steals cocaine from a courier, and then tries to sell it to the courier's employer, who finds it very interesting that he's being sold the exact amount of coke that's just been stolen from him... Another small time crook robs a literal mob bank in "Payback", where the used money he stole turn out to be counterfeits that owner tries to pass off as legitimate damaged money, which he plans to give to the Federal Reserve to be destroyed and be given clean ones in exchange. Unsurprisingly, the crook finds out about the scheme and decides to blackmail the mob bank owner. In "Death Machine", a couple steals money from a sleazy businessman who employs a Psycho for Hire to get it back. The latter kills so many people while looking for them, the terrified thieves mail the valuables back with a note attached saying We're sorry. In "Brotherly Love", a drug addicted teen accidentally kills a dealer and steals his drug money, earning the wrath of the drug lord who sends a hitman after him. The teen eventually realizes that he went way over his head, and calls the drug lord to return the money, only to be murdered anyway...by the hitman who wants to keep the money for himself.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_91262aaa
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Racing the Train
 Hunter (1984) / int_91262aaa
comment
Racing the Train: An episode has Rick Hunter jump onto a train traveling from Los Angeles to San Francisco in order to tail a suspect, with his partner Dee Dee McCall having to chase after him by car to provide backup.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_927b2f11
type
The Bus Came Back
 Hunter (1984) / int_927b2f11
comment
The Bus Came Back: After leaving the show at the end of season 6, McCall returned in the 2002 Reunion Show Hunter: Return to Justice. Captain Cain was Kicked Upstairs after season 1, and came back to the division in season 4, only to resign in disgrace after he pressured the department to drop a soliciting charge on behalf of a powerful judge.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_92f863b6
type
Revival
 Hunter (1984) / int_92f863b6
comment
Revival: The original series ran from 1984 to 1991, plus a couple of Made-for-TV movies in the 1990s. There was also a very shortlived revival in 2003 starring an older Hunter and McCall that was Cut Short after only five episodes.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_945c8d7d
type
War Hero
 Hunter (1984) / int_945c8d7d
comment
War Hero: Hunter is a veteran of The Vietnam War, and regularly meet up with his former comrades.
 Hunter (1984) / int_945c8d7d
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 Hunter (1984) / int_945c8d7d
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 Hunter (1984) / int_984763bb
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555
 Hunter (1984) / int_984763bb
comment
555: Pretty much all phone numbers in the series start with 555.
 Hunter (1984) / int_984763bb
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 Hunter (1984) / int_984763bb
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Hunter (1984) / int_984763bb
 Hunter (1984) / int_9952b10b
type
Re-Release Soundtrack
 Hunter (1984) / int_9952b10b
comment
Re-Release Soundtrack: The DVD and streaming episodes removed several licensed songs and replaced them with more generic ones. The German DVD sets retained the original music.
 Hunter (1984) / int_9952b10b
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Hunter (1984) / int_9952b10b
 Hunter (1984) / int_9aef4f64
type
Propping Up Their Patsy
 Hunter (1984) / int_9aef4f64
comment
Propping Up Their Patsy: In "Case X", when pornographer Tony Cochran's brother appears to be a suspect in a series of strangulations, Tony deflects accusations against his brother Vinny to throw suspicion off himself, knowing full well that Vinny is innocent of the crime Tony committed. After Vinny dies confronting Tony over his crimes, Tony makes Vinny's death look like a suicide and tries to make it seem like Vinny was the murderer.
 Hunter (1984) / int_9aef4f64
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 Hunter (1984) / int_9aef4f64
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 Hunter (1984) / int_9c8701b5
type
A Day in the Limelight
 Hunter (1984) / int_9c8701b5
comment
A Day in the Limelight: "Girl on the Beach" and "Shillelagh" deal with Captain Devane and his love interests. Both episodes result in less than happy endings, with his ex-wife being murdered in the former, and his girlfriend leaving in the latter.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_9d5a2cdf
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Intimidating Revenue Service
 Hunter (1984) / int_9d5a2cdf
comment
Intimidating Revenue Service: In "Sniper", Hunter finds himself being audited by a visiting IRS accountant (played by James Cromwell) who is quite annoyed by Hunter's habit of paying police informants out of his own pocket and falsely declaring it as business expenses. Captain Dolan is initially amused by this, but quickly becomes a target of the accountant himself. Hunter even calls the accountant "a bloodsucking vampire" and keeps to the streets to avoid the guy.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a08199ec
type
The Dog Was the Mastermind
 Hunter (1984) / int_a08199ec
comment
The Dog Was the Mastermind: Used in at least two episodes: In "Partners", a border patrol officer is murdered, and much of the investigation focuses on his cop wife, who he abused, or her partner, who knew about the abuse and was in love with her, as the possible suspects. Turned out to be the owner of a garment warehouse who was using illegal immigrants for labor, who had been interviewed for maybe, two minutes and didn't appear again until the end. In "Return of White Cloud", a woman who owned a museum is murdered and four Indian tribal masks in her possession are stolen. The investigation reveals they were stolen by a Native American guy who was her lover, and he also has a wife who aware of the affair. It was actually an archaeologist friend of the victim, who only appeared for a few minutes at the beginning of the episode, prior to the The Reveal.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a2b998a0
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Wouldn't Hurt a Child
 Hunter (1984) / int_a2b998a0
comment
Wouldn't Hurt a Child: In the episode "Sniper", an army Sergeant goes on a shooting spree with a Sniper Rifle to kill random women in public parks who remind him of his ex-wife. When a young boy runs into him in the process of chasing after a football while he's scoping out his next target, he tells the kid to take a hike. This backfires when the boy alerts a police officer and the sniper has to flee the scene.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a3eea2ea
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Cop Killer
 Hunter (1984) / int_a3eea2ea
comment
The Cop Killer in "The Shooter" kills police officers who beat him in a Quick Draw arcade game.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a4be7043
type
Da Chief
 Hunter (1984) / int_a4be7043
comment
Da Chief: Hunter's captains in the first season, Captain Lester Cain and Captain Dolan have a very adversarial relationship with him. Cain especially views him as a dangerous loose cannon and a Cowboy Cop, and frequently threatens to take his badge away. While Dolan is also often frustrated with Hunter and would rather him not be on the streets, he's also a lot more reasonable than Cain was and will work with Hunter. His captains in later seasons, Captain Wyler in season 2 and Captain Charlie Devane in season 3 on, tend to have a more sympathetic attitude to Hunter, with Devane having a very trusting, friendly relationship with Hunter and McCall. Despite frequent irritation over Hunter's insubordination and liberal attitude to the regulations, they tolerate this (up to a limit) because of his good results. They will do their best to keep Hunter in line — with varied success.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a5fa9313
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Faked Kidnapping
 Hunter (1984) / int_a5fa9313
comment
Faked Kidnapping: In "The Contract", a rich man's wife is kidnapped by a masked robber. Turns out it's organized by the butler who is cheating with the wife.
 Hunter (1984) / int_a5fa9313
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a5fa9313
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Hunter (1984) / int_a5fa9313
 Hunter (1984) / int_a603eaec
type
Criminally Attractive
 Hunter (1984) / int_a603eaec
comment
Criminally Attractive: Hunter generally avoids romantic entanglements with female suspects. However in "Waiting for Mr. Wrong", while tracking down a jewel thief, he falls in love with the thief's girlfriend, and comes clean to her after she accidentally exposes his undercover status. She volunteers to act as bait to lure the thief out, but her greed got the best of her and she kills the thief and attempt to flee with the stolen jewels, only to get killed in a car crash. Hunter is visibly devastated as he cradles her body from the wreckage.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_a6fa41b
type
Recycled Premise
 Hunter (1984) / int_a6fa41b
comment
Recycled Premise: The show sure liked doing episodes that were basically "Hunter's old partner/friend/girlfriend gets in trouble/is killed and he takes the case."
 Hunter (1984) / int_a6fa41b
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Hunter (1984) / int_a6fa41b
 Hunter (1984) / int_a7aef9ff
type
Obfuscating Stupidity
 Hunter (1984) / int_a7aef9ff
comment
Obfuscating Stupidity: McCall is fond of doing this in her undercover work, specializing in playing ditzy girls, as is the Columbo expy Sergeant Kitty O'Hearn.
 Hunter (1984) / int_a7aef9ff
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Hunter (1984) / int_a7aef9ff
 Hunter (1984) / int_ac09dc0f
type
Alas, Poor Villain
 Hunter (1984) / int_ac09dc0f
comment
"Rich Girl", with its Alas, Poor Villain ending.
 Hunter (1984) / int_ac09dc0f
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Hunter (1984) / int_ac09dc0f
 Hunter (1984) / int_ad641426
type
Trademark Favorite Food
 Hunter (1984) / int_ad641426
comment
Trademark Favorite Food: Rick Hunter is often seen snacking on chili dogs or buying other people one. His partner McCall often protests Rick's cheap tastes. Hunter goes on a health food kick in later seasons and McCall isn't too thrilled about that either.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_aed59f28
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Girls Love Stuffed Animals
 Hunter (1984) / int_aed59f28
comment
Girls Love Stuffed Animals: Detective Dee Dee McCall has several stuffed animals in her bedroom, as noted by her new partner Rick Hunter. She counters that despite being an Action Girl, she's still a woman inside.
 Hunter (1984) / int_aed59f28
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Hunter (1984) / int_aed59f28
 Hunter (1984) / int_af5f2180
type
Avenging the Villain
 Hunter (1984) / int_af5f2180
comment
Avenging the Villain: In "High Noon in L.A.", a foreign man comes to LA to challenge Hunter to a duel. It turns out that he is the brother of a rapist diplomat who was killed by Hunter in an earlier episode. Hunter does not give the man what he wants, but shoots the gun out of his hands instead and has him deported, earning his Villain Respect.
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Hunter (1984) / int_af5f2180
 Hunter (1984) / int_afab5e94
type
Reunion Show
 Hunter (1984) / int_afab5e94
comment
After leaving the show at the end of season 6, McCall returned in the 2002 Reunion Show Hunter: Return to Justice.
 Hunter (1984) / int_afab5e94
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Hunter (1984) / int_afab5e94
 Hunter (1984) / int_b0852187
type
No Warrant? No Problem!
 Hunter (1984) / int_b0852187
comment
No Warrant? No Problem!: Hunter and McCall often bypass requests for warrants by either employing lockpicking skills or suggesting to the associates that they'd look into their own police records, in addition to the suspect's.
 Hunter (1984) / int_b0852187
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Hunter (1984) / int_b0852187
 Hunter (1984) / int_b1e9444f
type
Baby Factory
 Hunter (1984) / int_b1e9444f
comment
Baby Factory: In "A Girl Named Hunter", Felicia Greene, an adoption attorney, runs an illegal breeding operation exploiting vulnerable underage girls.
 Hunter (1984) / int_b1e9444f
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1.0
 Hunter (1984) / int_b1e9444f
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Hunter (1984) / int_b1e9444f
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2280b66
type
Retcon
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2280b66
comment
Retcon: In the third season episode "Requiem for Sergeant McCall", the murder of Dee Dee's husband Steve is revealed to be the result of a case he was working on, contradicting the first season episode "The Shooter" where he is said to have been killed by some punk kids during a routine traffic stop. Steve is also changed from a rookie cop into a seasoned homicide detective.
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Hunter (1984) / int_b2280b66
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2283870
type
Retool
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2283870
comment
Retool: The first was during the second season, when Roy Huggins became the executive producer. Among other things, Huggins toned down the violence, softened up Hunter and McCall's fractious relationships with their superiors, dropped a backstory concerning Hunter's family ties to the mob, played up the chemistry between the two leads, and moved the setting out of the backstreets and into the more desirable areas of Los Angeles. In a case of Tropes Are Tools, these changes helped the show fare better ratings-wise and with critics. Cannell himself also praised Huggins's work on the show. Cannell had previous experience with Huggins of couse. Following the departure of Roy Huggins as executive producer in season four, seasons five and six saw more complex stories for episodes, with Hunter and McCall working on separate cases and come together at the end. The theme tune was also jazzed up. After McCall was written off the show due to Stepfanie Kramer's departure, season seven saw Hunter and Devane moving from LAPD Homicide to Metro. As a result, the stories became more gritty while the show's action budget was reduced, together with a new intro and moodier lighting.
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2283870
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Hunter (1984) / int_b2283870
 Hunter (1984) / int_b275df3d
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Asian Babymama
 Hunter (1984) / int_b275df3d
comment
Asian Babymama: Rick Hunter, who is a Vietnam vet, finds out that he has a teenage son from a one-time Vietnamese girlfriend in "Yesterday's Child".
 Hunter (1984) / int_b275df3d
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Hunter (1984) / int_b275df3d
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2b2093c
type
Rape and Revenge
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2b2093c
comment
Rape and Revenge: The plot of the two-parter "Rape and Revenge". When McCall is raped by a foreign diplomat, who uses his Diplomatic Impunity to flee the country, Hunter tracks him down in his homeland and ends up killing him.
 Hunter (1984) / int_b2b2093c
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Hunter (1984) / int_b2b2093c
 Hunter (1984) / int_b4a6ae4c
type
Everyone Has Standards
 Hunter (1984) / int_b4a6ae4c
comment
Mike Snow later defends a housewife accused of murdering her husband in "Boomerang" and successfully gets her out of the conviction. He later drops her as a client, not because she committed the act, but because she lied to him about committing the act.
 Hunter (1984) / int_b4a6ae4c
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Hunter (1984) / int_b4a6ae4c
 Hunter (1984) / int_b5b3599d
type
Amoral Attorney
 Hunter (1984) / int_b5b3599d
comment
Amoral Attorney: Some lawyers depicted do fit the mold of "amoral person who almost seems to want their client to commit more crimes", which is not atypical for a Cowboy Cop show. On the other hand, some (usually female) lawyers do genuinely believe in the legal process and are willing to work with Hunter when they feel something obviously suspicious is going on. District attorney Esther Wyman is a recurring one. Hunter even uses Mike Snow, a lawyer he's butted heads with in the past, to defend himself in "Hot Pursuit" when he becomes a suspect in a murder, despite acknowledging that the lawyer would find this hilarious. The same lawyer is also hired by a man in "Playing God" who murdered an Asshole Victim who killed his wife — Snow openly wonders if Hunter recommended him, which would be illegal for a police officer to do, as Snows points out. Mike Snow later defends a housewife accused of murdering her husband in "Boomerang" and successfully gets her out of the conviction. He later drops her as a client, not because she committed the act, but because she lied to him about committing the act. "Burned" has a lawyer who faked his death after being indicted for bribing jurors. Felicia Greene is an adoption attorney who runs an illegal baby-breeding ring exploiting underage girls in "A Girl Named Hunter".
 Hunter (1984) / int_b5b3599d
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Hunter (1984) / int_b5b3599d
 Hunter (1984) / int_b9b635ea
type
One Thing Led to Another
 Hunter (1984) / int_b9b635ea
comment
One Thing Led to Another: An ex-girlfriend describes to Dee Dee McCall how she once got involved with Hunter by saying, "This lead to this, that lead to that..."
 Hunter (1984) / int_b9b635ea
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Hunter (1984) / int_b9b635ea
 Hunter (1984) / int_ba9073e6
type
Land Downunder
 Hunter (1984) / int_ba9073e6
comment
Land Down Under: Downplayed in the season 3 episode "Down and Under" where Hunter goes to Sydney, Australia, in search of a murderer. Apart from a few establishing city shots, most of the episode takes place indoors or in generic back streets. Only in the last ten minutes of the episode, where Hunter goes outdoors in the Outback together with the local constable, does the trope come into play.
 Hunter (1984) / int_ba9073e6
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Hunter (1984) / int_ba9073e6
 Hunter (1984) / int_babc974
type
Sadistic Choice
 Hunter (1984) / int_babc974
comment
"Rich Girl" Cynthia, (the title character) has tried to kill her wealthy father, and succeeds in having his new younger wife Ginger killed by getting her partner to throw Ginger off a penthouse balcony, while making it look as if she jumped. Hunter and McCall soon come on to her, but unable to legally prove her involvement, decide to take an alternate route and explain to her father what's she's done. He then changes his will so that his daughter won't inherit unless the killer of his wife is found and convicted, puts in a stipulation that will force her to forfeit everything if she challenges the will, cuts her off from all of her funds, and refuses to speak to her when she tries to call him. This leaves Cynthia with a Sadistic Choice: if she keeps her mouth shut, she keeps her freedom, but will be completely cut off from her inheritance, and her father's money and resources and, having no job history, skills, or prospects, and likely little education, would be in for a long painful struggle, and if she confesses, she gets to keep her inheritance but will have to spend the better part of her life in prison (if not the rest of it) before she can enjoy any of it. The episode ends with Cynthia eating some ice cream laced with pills in a deliberate overdose, having decided to Take a Third Option and not live at all rather than live locked up and rich or live free and broke...
 Hunter (1984) / int_babc974
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Hunter (1984) / int_babc974
 Hunter (1984) / int_bcd27e37
type
Improbable Aiming Skills
 Hunter (1984) / int_bcd27e37
comment
Improbable Aiming Skills: In the season 3 episode "Down and Under", Hunter stops an aircraft from taking off by firing a rifle through the window of a car going down a bumpy dirt road parallel to the runway, and taking out the plane's engine without hurting the pilot or passengers.
 Hunter (1984) / int_bcd27e37
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Hunter (1984) / int_bcd27e37
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd620d3c
type
In Love with the Mark
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd620d3c
comment
In Love with the Mark: Happens to a female assassin in ""Straight to the Heart", who was hired by the villains Hunter is planning to testify against, and pulls off a Sex–Face Turn and betrays her employers.
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd620d3c
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Hunter (1984) / int_bd620d3c
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd79d896
type
Minor Crime Reveals Major Plot
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd79d896
comment
Minor Crime Reveals Major Plot: Happens in several episodes, especially the three-part "City of Passion" where a judge arrested for soliciting prostitutes led to the discovery that he was involved in a satanic cult practicing human sacrifice.
 Hunter (1984) / int_bd79d896
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Hunter (1984) / int_bd79d896
 Hunter (1984) / int_bda2a088
type
Did They or Didn't They?
 Hunter (1984) / int_bda2a088
comment
Did They or Didn't They?: At the conclusion of "Unfinished Business", Dee Dee invites Hunter in for coffee, and we cut to credits just as Hunter is about to reply. As viewers now know that this is how a previous romantic liaison started, we're left wondering if it happened again.
 Hunter (1984) / int_bda2a088
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Hunter (1984) / int_bda2a088
 Hunter (1984) / int_be0f728
type
Shoo Out the New Guy
 Hunter (1984) / int_be0f728
comment
Shoo Out the New Guy: When Stepfanie Kramer left the show in 1990 after six years as Sgt. Hunter's partner/sidekick Dee Dee McCall, her character was replaced by Officer Joanne Molenski, who quickly became Hunter's new beat partner. However, actress Darlanne Fluegel was unable to get along with series star Fred Dryer or others on the show's staff, and she soon resigned less than three months into the 1990-1991 season. It was decided the new girl — Molenski — would be murdered by a Serial Killer.
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Hunter (1984) / int_be0f728
 Hunter (1984) / int_c19bdbe1
type
Good Cop/Bad Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_c19bdbe1
comment
Good Cop/Bad Cop: Before interrogating someone, Dee Dee McCall (a short Fair Cop) insists that she be allowed to play "bad cop" despite Hunter's (tall, middle-aged) claims that he's usually the "bad cop" in these situations for a reason. The perp immediately sees through the act and tells them to get lost, so she upgrades to breaking in his door and threatening him with a baseball bat.
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Hunter (1984) / int_c19bdbe1
 Hunter (1984) / int_c2393191
type
Show Within a Show
 Hunter (1984) / int_c2393191
comment
Show Within a Show: Street Heat. Hunter and McCall are sent to be technical advisers on the show in "Killer in the Halloween Mask", only to be dragged into a homicide case when the main star of the show is unexpectedly murdered.
 Hunter (1984) / int_c2393191
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Hunter (1984) / int_c2393191
 Hunter (1984) / int_c2cedc1c
type
Big "NO!"
 Hunter (1984) / int_c2cedc1c
comment
In "Requiem for Sergeant McCall", the "tonight, on Hunter" clips shows the D.A. saying that he's going to charge McCall with murder, and then cuts to her screaming a Big "NO!". In the actual show, we see that the Big "NO!" was a flashback to her reaction to the shooting of her husband, five years before she was framed for murder.
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Hunter (1984) / int_c2cedc1c
 Hunter (1984) / int_c3a7dcab
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Qurac
 Hunter (1984) / int_c3a7dcab
comment
Qurac: The fictional country of Baraq, which is under threat by a group called the Students Revolutionary League in "62 Hours of Terror". The group claimed responsibility for a car bombing but Hunter suspects something else.
 Hunter (1984) / int_c3a7dcab
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Hunter (1984) / int_c3a7dcab
 Hunter (1984) / int_c547cd6d
type
Bulletproof Vest
 Hunter (1984) / int_c547cd6d
comment
Bulletproof Vest In "The Shooter", the Villain of the Week is a Cop Killer using silicone bullets that go right through their vests. Hunter goes on a rant about how such bullets should be outlawed because the only reason for owning them is to kill cops. Apparently no-one told Hunter that they were originally developed for cops, for better penetration of windshields and automobile doors. In "The Beach Boy", Dee Dee McCall puts a couple of bullets into a hitman from Hawaii and he doesn't even flinch. Hunter comments that he must have been wearing a bulletproof vest, but that doesn't explain why the audience doesn't see it given that the hitman spends the entire episode with his Hawaiian shirt half unbuttoned to show his Carpet of Virility. After that Hunter gets out a Desert Eagle to take the hitman on, and uses it to Shoot the Fuel Tank and blow him up, vest and all.
 Hunter (1984) / int_c547cd6d
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 Hunter (1984) / int_c547cd6d
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Hunter (1984) / int_c547cd6d
 Hunter (1984) / int_c737726c
type
You're Not My Type
 Hunter (1984) / int_c737726c
comment
You're Not My Type: In "Dead or Alive", a Bounty Hunter shows an interest in Hunter's partner Dee Dee McCall. Hunter tells him curtly, "She's not your type." The bounty hunter smirks and says they're all his type. Pretty much repeated a few episodes later by Dirty Cop Jackie Molinas in "The Snow Queen".
 Hunter (1984) / int_c737726c
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Hunter (1984) / int_c737726c
 Hunter (1984) / int_c868a42a
type
Freudian Excuse
 Hunter (1984) / int_c868a42a
comment
Freudian Excuse: While most of the villains on the show are motivated by either Greed or For the Evulz, there are a few culprits that have sad backstories or mental problems that caused their actions, such as one of the killers in "Fatal Obsession" and "Kill Zone."
 Hunter (1984) / int_c868a42a
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Hunter (1984) / int_c868a42a
 Hunter (1984) / int_c8f68e1b
type
Don't Answer That
 Hunter (1984) / int_c8f68e1b
comment
Don't Answer That: It's Rick Hunter who does this despite being a Cowboy Cop, in an episode involving a Vigilante Man who killed a gangster who raped his wife. The man is just about to confess when Hunter says "Stop!", and then advises him of his right to contact a lawyer — who just happens to be a skilled Amoral Attorney who's frustrated Hunter in the past. Of course, a police officer advising a suspect to contact a particular lawyer would be illegal, as said lawyer points out.
 Hunter (1984) / int_c8f68e1b
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 Hunter (1984) / int_c8f68e1b
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Hunter (1984) / int_c8f68e1b
 Hunter (1984) / int_ca072e8c
type
I Made Copies
 Hunter (1984) / int_ca072e8c
comment
I Made Copies: In "The Hot Grounder", a private investigator is blackmailing the police commissioner for photographs of a homosexual affair, then the latter asks if the blackmailer made copies. The PI just smirks and says that if his friends call with another demand, he'll know they made copies. Unsurprisingly the commissioner decides to take the chance of shooting him on the spot, in the belief the PI is working alone, but Hunter and McCall interrupts before they can finish each other off.
 Hunter (1984) / int_ca072e8c
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Hunter (1984) / int_ca072e8c
 Hunter (1984) / int_cbe687ab
type
Corrupt Corporate Executive
 Hunter (1984) / int_cbe687ab
comment
"No Good Deed Ever Goes Unpunished" has an elderly woman trying to expose her Corrupt Corporate Executive daughter for strings of illegal dumpings and the murder of an EPA agent. All signs point to the said daughter due to her confrontational demeanor, until shortly before the episode's end where it is revealed that her supposedly retired husband, the former CEO, organized it all behind his daughter's back.
 Hunter (1984) / int_cbe687ab
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Hunter (1984) / int_cbe687ab
 Hunter (1984) / int_ceec4df5
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Roaring Rampage of Revenge
 Hunter (1984) / int_ceec4df5
comment
Captain Devane himself becomes one after his ex-wife was murdered in "Girl on the Beach", as he goes on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge after turning in his badge. Hunter is the one who has to talk him out of killing the culprit.
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Hunter (1984) / int_ceec4df5
 Hunter (1984) / int_d308cbb0
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Character Catchphrase
 Hunter (1984) / int_d308cbb0
comment
Character Catchphrase: Hunter's "Works for me".
 Hunter (1984) / int_d308cbb0
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 Hunter (1984) / int_d308cbb0
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Hunter (1984) / int_d308cbb0
 Hunter (1984) / int_d3422f70
type
Overt Rendezvous
 Hunter (1984) / int_d3422f70
comment
Overt Rendezvous: Played for Laughs in "The Jade Woman" where a small-time crook steals a package of drugs from a crime boss, and says he'll sell it back to him. To avoid his inevitable death, the exchange takes place in the foyer of a police station.
 Hunter (1984) / int_d3422f70
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 Hunter (1984) / int_d3422f70
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 Hunter (1984)
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Hunter (1984) / int_d3422f70
 Hunter (1984) / int_d62184c3
type
Theme Serial Killer
 Hunter (1984) / int_d62184c3
comment
Theme Serial Killer: Another recurring threat, appearing in episodes such as the three part "City Under Siege", "Lullaby" and the two part "Fatal Obsession" (a.k.a. the one where Molenski gets killed).
 Hunter (1984) / int_d62184c3
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Hunter (1984) / int_d62184c3
 Hunter (1984) / int_d6901d5a
type
Dress Hits Floor
 Hunter (1984) / int_d6901d5a
comment
Dress Hits Floor: "Hot Prowl" has a rich woman (played by Cindy Morgan) who was robbed by some criminal, and later finds him and bargains for return of some jewelry piece. When the robber suggests she is "wired", she drops her clothes to the floor to prove she is not. This leads to Karmic Death of said robber, at the hands of the woman's jealous husband who wrongly assumes she's having an affair — she is, but not with the burglar.
 Hunter (1984) / int_d6901d5a
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Hunter (1984) / int_d6901d5a
 Hunter (1984) / int_d7472e4f
type
Kicked Upstairs
 Hunter (1984) / int_d7472e4f
comment
Captain Cain was Kicked Upstairs after season 1, and came back to the division in season 4, only to resign in disgrace after he pressured the department to drop a soliciting charge on behalf of a powerful judge.
 Hunter (1984) / int_d7472e4f
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Hunter (1984) / int_d7472e4f
 Hunter (1984) / int_d84b22a5
type
Immoral Journalist
 Hunter (1984) / int_d84b22a5
comment
Immoral Journalist: In "Saturday Night Special", an Intrepid Journalist is being stalked by a Serial Killer after investigating the murders of several homeless people. It is later revealed that the said journalist herself committed the serial killings and reports them to boost her ratings. "Turning Point" features a journalist targeted for assassination by a crime boss when his investigation got too close, but survives thanks to an unlucky car thief. Instead of reporting the incident, he decides to blackmail the crime boss for money, using his own wife as bait.
 Hunter (1984) / int_d84b22a5
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Hunter (1984) / int_d84b22a5
 Hunter (1984) / int_dae5c997
type
Action Girl
 Hunter (1984) / int_dae5c997
comment
Action Girl: McCall. Despite being much smaller than Hunter, she is just as active in fights and or chasing down criminals on foot — often in high heels. Sergeant Kitty O'Hearn is another example.
 Hunter (1984) / int_dae5c997
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 Hunter (1984) / int_dae5c997
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Hunter (1984) / int_dae5c997
 Hunter (1984) / int_db38d6ca
type
Torture Technician
 Hunter (1984) / int_db38d6ca
comment
Torture Technician: "The Nightmare" features a master torturer and Former Regime Personnel of a Banana Republic, noted for giving victims slow and agonizing deaths while listening to Mozart. When the regime was overthrown, he faked his death and fled to the US by pretending to be one of his own victims and cutting himself with his own incisions, all while using the money stolen from his victims to create a new identity as a philanthropist. When one of his victims recognized him, he and his henchman begins to track down her associates, even torturing one to death, to ensure his real identity never gets revealed.
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Locked Room Mystery
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comment
Locked Room Mystery: "Night on Bald Mountain", where Hunter and McCall are trapped in a mansion with murder suspects during a heavy snowstorm. "Murder He Wrote", where Hunter and McCall are invited to a dinner party by an eccentric millionaire and a Jessica Fletcher expy, which escalates into a murder investigation after the said millionaire is found dead.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_df4edb04
type
Corrupt Bureaucrat
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comment
Corrupt Bureaucrat: Judge Unger in "City of Passion" is a corrupt legal worker who uses his connections to get away with major crimes. He was initially busted for solicitation by McCall, but it is revealed that the sex workers were ritually murdered as part of a Satanic ritual. Deputy Chief Curtis Moorehead (played by Robert Vaughn) in "City Under Siege", a tough-on-crime bureaucrat, uses his connections to get a popular vigilante released, which inadvertently led to the latter being murdered. He also blackmails the local DA to get what he wants, having gotten the DA off a drink driving charge years before.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_df582b0b
type
Continuity Snarl
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comment
Continuity Snarl: In the pilot Hunter said that has never met McCall's late husband, Steve, but in a flashback in the later episode "Requiem for Sergeant McCall", they worked in the same squad and were on a friendly basis, and Rick actually meets Dee Dee through him (and he later informs her about his death). In addition, in the pilot, they were both rookies and newly married and McCall says he was shot by some joyriding hoodlums, but in said later episode, Steve was now a full-fledged homicide detective while Dee Dee was still a rookie and he was working on a major homicide case which got him killed.
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Hollywood Satanism
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Hollywood Satanism: The Sons and Daughters of Darkness in "City of Passion" are a satanic cult that engages in sex orgies with prostitutes then sacrifices them as part of their ritual. One of their leaders works as a judge in the daytime, so when McCall busts him on a solicitation charge she gets more than she bargained for.
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Not Quite Dead
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comment
In "Turning Point", a journalist writing a story on the mob is apparently blown up in his car. Later his wife is shocked to find him turn up at their home in the middle of the night; when she asks who was in the car he replies: "The unluckiest car thief who never lived."
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Bounty Hunter
 Hunter (1984) / int_e44a1a70
comment
In "Dead or Alive", a Bounty Hunter shows an interest in Hunter's partner Dee Dee McCall. Hunter tells him curtly, "She's not your type." The bounty hunter smirks and says they're all his type.
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Hunter (1984) / int_e44a1a70
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type
Quick Draw
 Hunter (1984) / int_e5a6888c
comment
Quick Draw: The brother of a man who Hunter has killed turns up for revenge in "High Noon in L.A.". He's a fan of Westerns so he kidnaps Hunter and says he will duel him for his life. Hunter shoots the gun out of his hand, then repeatedly shoots the pistol as the man keeps grabbing for it. This is despite Hunter having ridiculed the idea of Blasting It Out of Their Hands in a previous episode.
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Gunman with Three Names
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Gunman with Three Names: In the "City Under Siege" three-parter, William Joseph Powell, AKA "Billy Joe", is a notorious serial killer who conspires with his paramour, fellow serial killer Iris Smith, to go on a murderous rampage across Los Angeles.
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type
Follow That Car
 Hunter (1984) / int_e933b1f7
comment
Follow That Car: Detective McCall does this in an episode, with the grizzled cab driver replying "I've been waiting twenty years for someone to say that!"
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 Hunter (1984) / int_ea2c8da6
type
Watch the Paint Job
 Hunter (1984) / int_ea2c8da6
comment
Watch the Paint Job: Sometimes Hunter manages (by audacity, oversight or sheer luck) to requisition a new car from the department, rather than the Alleged Car he will usually be given. The people in charge of the car pool will invariably be very upset about serial wrecker Hunter getting his hands on a pristine vehicle, and there is a lot of angst over in which shape he'll return it. Of course, the car is totaled or at least severely damaged during the episode. This leads to another show of angst and anger when the car is returned.
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Hunter (1984) / int_ea2c8da6
 Hunter (1984) / int_eb251937
type
Dirty Cop
 Hunter (1984) / int_eb251937
comment
Pretty much repeated a few episodes later by Dirty Cop Jackie Molinas in "The Snow Queen".
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Hunter (1984) / int_eb251937
 Hunter (1984) / int_eb5b71fe
type
Clingy Jealous Girl
 Hunter (1984) / int_eb5b71fe
comment
Clingy Jealous Girl: In "Unfinished Business", McCall comes across as this both professionally and personally regarding female detective Megan Malone, who has a good rapport with Hunter. This would normally be just Ship Tease but for the surprise reveal that McCall and Hunter had a one-night stand the last time she met Malone, and it brought back concerns that she'd just been pushed aside by Hunter afterwards.
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Hunter (1984) / int_eb5b71fe
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type
Not a Morning Person
 Hunter (1984) / int_ebf8fc6
comment
Not a Morning Person: Hunter's informant Sporty James is a night owl. In "Shades", McCall has asked him to meet her at a bar in the morning, and when she arrives he's not happy:
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Hunter (1984) / int_ebf8fc6
 Hunter (1984) / int_eda30d58
type
0% Approval Rating
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comment
0% Approval Rating: Captain Lester Cain, Hunter's captain in the first season, is this to everyone else in the squadroom, except for By-the-Book Cop Professional Butt-Kisser Sgt. Bernie Terwilliger, as they feel he is too out of touch to really know how dangerous the crime filled streets of Los Angeles can really be.
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Hunter (1984) / int_eda30d58
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type
Undercover Model
 Hunter (1984) / int_ee548e05
comment
Undercover Model: In the third-season episode "Double Exposure", McCall goes undercover as a photo model to infiltrate a model agency suspected of foul play. She doesn't even have to Clean Up Nicely: using her natural good looks, she has no problems producing a portfolio that impresses the agency into hiring her on the spot.
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Hunter (1984) / int_ee548e05
 Hunter (1984) / int_f0001923
type
Fire-Breathing Weapon
 Hunter (1984) / int_f0001923
comment
Fire-Breathing Weapon: There's an episode where a Pyromaniac villain uses a flamethrower to commit arson as well as burning the occasional Innocent Bystander. Naturally the song played during the teaser is "Burning Down the House".
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Hunter (1984) / int_f0001923
 Hunter (1984) / int_f0926237
type
AllegedCar
 Hunter (1984) / int_f0926237
comment
McCall being unable to open the side door of the Alleged Car and having to crawl out the window.
 Hunter (1984) / int_f0926237
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Hunter (1984) / int_f0926237
 Hunter (1984) / int_f12c6fb1
type
Surprisingly Sudden Death
 Hunter (1984) / int_f12c6fb1
comment
Surprisingly Sudden Death: In the episode "Overnight Sensation", an Intrepid Reporter called Raul Marcado continues to butt heads with Hunter over his policing tactics, and even accuses Hunter of trying to stalk him. After Hunter catches the culprits who tried to kill Marcado, the reporter appears to reconcile with Hunter and would clear his name on his program, only to be blown up in a car bomb. Turns out the culprit is the station manager seeking revenge on Marcado for cheating with his wife.
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Hunter (1984) / int_f12c6fb1
 Hunter (1984) / int_f237981e
type
The Alleged Car
 Hunter (1984) / int_f237981e
comment
The Alleged Car: Any car driven by Hunter in the first season either is this, or becomes this during the episode. Sometimes it is literally falling to pieces. Because of his reputation for wrecking cars, the police department will always give him the worst vehicle available. On the occasions where he, through luck or trickery, can obtain a new car, he will invariably get in a car chase and wreck it. This is downplayed in later seasons, where several episodes can go by without even a scratched fender.
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Hunter (1984) / int_f237981e
 Hunter (1984) / int_f4d00fb0
type
Deadline News
 Hunter (1984) / int_f4d00fb0
comment
Deadline News: A non-lethal version happens when Hunter and McCall chase a criminal into a news studio during a live broadcast. Captain Devane is at home watching all this on television. He just shakes his head at the sight of his two detectives looking embarrassed at the camera.
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Hunter (1984) / int_f4d00fb0
 Hunter (1984) / int_f627b434
type
Platonic Life-Partners
 Hunter (1984) / int_f627b434
comment
Platonic Life-Partners: Hunter and McCall are extremely close, spend a lot of time together outside of work, and though they sometimes date other people, even then they seem to prioritize each other above their current boy/girlfriends. Despite this, their relationship stays non-sexual, apart from a single occasion (which is referenced in the episode "Unfinished Business").
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Hunter (1984) / int_f627b434
 Hunter (1984) / int_f70710ae
type
Blackmail Backfire
 Hunter (1984) / int_f70710ae
comment
Blackmail Backfire: Witnesses who try to blackmail the perpetrators in exchange for silence generally doesn't end up well, often with either themselves or their loved ones dead. Sporty James witnesses a group of Colombians killing a pusher in "Love, Hate and Sporty James", and tries to blackmail them in exchange for silence. The Colombians instead kill Sporty's girlfriend when she delivers a message to them, leading to a Heroic BSoD as he tries to hunt down the killers. In "Broken Dreams", Hunter's high school classmate recognizes a killer from a newspaper photo, but her greedy husband pressures her not to identify him at a police lineup. The husband then blackmails the killer for a large sum of money, which he pretends to deliver, but kills the husband instead and gets the address of the wife from his corpse.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_f70bcdc3
type
External Combustion
 Hunter (1984) / int_f70bcdc3
comment
External Combustion: In the third-season episode "Overnight Sensation", this happens to a journalist who is investigating Hunter, convinced that Hunter is a dirty Cowboy Cop dealing out vigilante justice. The real culprit uses this to frame Hunter for the murder. In "Turning Point", a journalist writing a story on the mob is apparently blown up in his car. Later his wife is shocked to find him turn up at their home in the middle of the night; when she asks who was in the car he replies: "The unluckiest car thief who never lived." "The Hot Grounder" has the bomber using "someone else starts the car" to his advantage. He wants to kill his wife, so he leaves his car in the driveway so that she will have to move his car to get hers out, activating the car bomb that was supposedly left for him.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_f777d4b9
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You Got Murder
 Hunter (1984) / int_f777d4b9
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You Got Murder: In "Blow-Up", explosives expert Otto Minsky uses exploding parcels to kill his targets, detonating them using a phone line.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_f98356f
type
Right-Wing Militia Fanatic
 Hunter (1984) / int_f98356f
comment
Right-Wing Militia Fanatic: In "Bad Company", Hunter and McCall are captured by a White supremacist militia and has to figure out a way of escape, along with the leader's daughter who defected.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Hunter (1984) / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: The CB Radio handset getting disconnected in Hunter's Alleged Car. McCall being unable to open the side door of the Alleged Car and having to crawl out the window. The mortician Carlos who practices his tuba hobby at work, often when Hunter and McCall are trying to visit.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_fb3576b2
type
The Dog Bites Back
 Hunter (1984) / int_fb3576b2
comment
The Dog Bites Back: In "City of Passion, part 3" McCall entraps a Serial Rapist, nicknamed "Bigfoot" to her home for the purpose of killing him, but can't bring herself to do it. The next day, the guy is going to be let out when his wife, whom he frequently abused, arrived at the police station, and realizing people were right about him being a sadistic rapist, takes an officer's gun and shoots him dead.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_fe64d5a1
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Evil Is Petty
 Hunter (1984) / int_fe64d5a1
comment
Evil Is Petty: Raul Mariano, cultural attache of a Banana Republic in "Rape and Revenge", rapes McCall for daring to turn down a date with him. Iris Smith, the Serial Killer antagonist of the "City Under Siege" three-parter, murders a school teacher because she gave her detention when she was young. The Cop Killer in "The Shooter" kills police officers who beat him in a Quick Draw arcade game.
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 Hunter (1984) / int_feac0f90
type
Ephebophile
 Hunter (1984) / int_feac0f90
comment
Ephebophile: Judge Unger, in addition to using his status as a court official to impede legal action against him, is a cult leader who has partaken in sex rituals and human sacrifice involving underage girls.
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Hunter (1984)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Hunter (1984)
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 Hunter (1984)
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 Hunter (1984)
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 Hunter (1984)
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