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  1. It is the fifty-sixth episode of the series overall. It premiered on February 10, 2008. The episode was written by Ed Burns and directed by Seith Mann. Dickensian refers to narratives that evoke British author Charles...

  2. As Marlo 's crew searches in vain, an injured Omar hides himself in the same building where he was ambushed by Michael, O-Dog, Partlow, and Snoop. He threatens Fat Face Rick and takes his gun, which he uses to wound a Stanfield soldier before setting fire to one of Marlo's cash pickups.

  3. A page for describing Recap: Wire S 05 E 06 The Dickensian Aspect. Omar managed to survive his encounter with Chris, Michael and Snoop, though not unscathed …

  4. Feb 11, 2008 · One might argue that the most Dickensian moment in the entire series comes when Bunk, in his back-to-square-one investigation of the rowhouse bodies, is led to the grim institution that is now home to Randy Wagstaff, who he pledges not to arrest out of respect for “that crazy motherfucker Pryzbelewski.”

  5. Summaries. Mystified by Omar's disappearance, Marlo and Chris ramp up their efforts to locate their nemesis. After a sparsely attended waterfront ceremony, Carcetti fires away at a larger press event--and recasts himself as a champion for the homeless. — Anonymous.

  6. Feb 14, 2008 · Episode 6 of this 10 episode final season was called "The Dickensian Aspect", something Gus' bosses at the Sun seem to think adds some poetry to a story, and which yes, is terminology used by...

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  8. Feb 11, 2008 · Two big cliffhangers from last week: How in the world did Omar survive that three-story fall from the Chris/Snoop/Michael ambush? And what was that strange interference on Marlo’s cell phone tap?

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