The last new case of Law & Order aired just under six months ago, with the Season 22 finale doubling as longtime star Sam Waterston's 400th episode. At the time, the WGA writers strike had begun, but the SAG-AFTRA actors were not striking yet, and there was reason to hope that the long-running NBC drama could be back in September as usual for the franchise. Nearly six months later, the strikes are finally both over. With production on L&O Season 23 expected to begin before the end of November, I flashed back to some comments from actor Mehcad Brooks from last season, and they make me more hopeful than ever for what comes next.
First things first! The actors strike ended on November 9 when SAG-AFTRA struck a deal with the AMPTP, followed by reports that Law & Order (along with SVU, Organized Crime, and the other shows in the Wolf Entertainment franchise) was aiming to salvage a 13-episode TV season with production for the 2023-2024 lineup beginning after Thanksgiving. It's unlikely that fans will see characters like Mehcad Brooks' Jalen Shaw, Sam Waterston's Jack McCoy, or any of the other L&O series regulars any sooner than February 2024, but this is definitely progress that left me thinking about how Season 23 could pick up on Season 22, and that took me back to an interview from nearly a year ago.
I'd spoken with Mehcad Brooks for a key episode of Season 22, before the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes began. Shaw took center stage in last season's fall finale, as he dealt with what the actor described as his character's "worst nightmare" of putting somebody behind bars after unknowingly taking a false confession. Fittingly called "The System," the episode also touched on how the system had failed an innocent Black man to the point that he had no good choices, and there really was no way for a happy ending. Shaw had left a career in law behind to try and change the system, and this episode forced him to consider whether he had just become part of it.
It wasn't a fun hour of television for Jalen Shaw in Season 22, but "The System" was a standout episode for me both as a showcase of Law & Order's newest series regular and one that asked viewers to reconsider their preconceptions not only about the show and the characters, but also real life. When it aired in 2022, I asked Mehcad Brooks how important he felt it was for a show as successful and long-running as Law & Order to tackle the topic, and his comments leave me hoping that Season 23 will revisit it. Brooks said that he thinks it's "really important," and elaborated:
Law & Order hasn't amassed nearly 500 episodes over 22 seasons and counting because it fails to reach an audience; as Mehcad Brooks pointed out, the show potentially sparking conversations could help to spread understanding. The specific case of a given episode doesn't have to be ripped from real-life headlines to get people talking, and that could lead to positive changes. The actor continued:
While it's much too early to say if Law & Order will air more episodes that examine the shortcomings of the system through the perspectives of characters (including Mehcad Brooks' Jalen Shaw), I'm ready to start crossing my fingers. This is a procedural show, but Law & Order moving on to a different case each week doesn't mean only tackling a certain topic once. On the whole, between revisiting my conversation with Brooks and celebrating the news that TV shows can finally start production, I'm feeling freshly hopeful for Season 23.
For now, you can always revisit "The System" as well as every other episode of Season 22 streaming with a Peacock Premium subscription. Law & Order will return with new episodes at some point in the 2024 TV schedule, and it's just a matter of waiting to find out when.
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Laura Hurley
Senior Content Producer
Laura turned a lifelong love of television into a valid reason to write and think about TV on a daily basis. She's not a doctor, lawyer, or detective, but watches a lot of them in primetime. CinemaBlend's resident expert and interviewer for One Chicago, the galaxy far, far away, and a variety of other primetime television. Will not time travel and can cite multiple TV shows to explain why. She does, however, want to believe that she can sneak references to The X-Files into daily conversation (and author bios).
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