Summary

Bosch: Legacyis gearing up for its third and final season in March 2025, but the fight continues to save it with the fan-led petition on change.org.The show is a serialized crime epic, but for some reason, it keeps being referred to as a run-of-the-mill procedural show.This kind of thing harmsBosch: Legacy, as it doesn’t entice potential newcomers to watch the show.

No disrespect to procedurals, butBosch: Legacyis on a different level and isn’t the type of cop show where a case is solved at the end of each episode.If anything, sometimes the case doesn’t get solved at all, but that reflects the reality of police work.Michael Connelly’s booksare crime fiction at their best, but they have deep roots in reality.Bosch and Bosch: Legacyhave adapted a mixture of two books for each season from the very start, and this is one of many things that sets it apart from all the procedural shows out there.

harry bosch at his desk

Bosch: Legacy Season 3

Starring

Titus Welliver, Mimi Rogers, Madison Lintz, Chang, Denise G. Sanchez, Scott Klace, Gregory Scott Cummins, Troy Evans, Orla Brady, Michael Reilly Burke, Andrea Cortes, Dale Dickey, Mark Rolston, Anthony Gonzales, Tommy Martinez and Maggie Q

Based on the books by

Harry Bosch

Created by

Tom Bernardo, Michael Connelly, and Eric Ellis Overmyer

What exactly is a procedural television show? In a nutshell,an episode of a procedural television show sees a problem introduced at the start, and the middle section investigates it, and it gets solved by the end.That definition does not relate toBosch: Legacyin any way, shape or form. InBoschandBosch: Legacy, the main problem is introduced, investigated and (sometimes) solved over the course of a season, and not in the space of an episode. In fairness, the confusion comes from the fact thatit’s often police shows that are referred to as procedurals, and shows likeBosch: Legacyget thrown in with the rest of the bunch.Examples of procedural police shows areLaw & Order, CSIandNCIS, to name but a few. These shows are extremely well-made, with great casts, good stories and a talented creative team behind the scenes, but the audience doesn’t need to see every episode for it all to make sense. Everything is wrapped up in a tidy bow by the end of each episode, and the reset button is pressed the following week.

As real fans ofBosch: Legacyknow, Harry Bosch doesn’t always get justice for the victims he advocates for. . If he did, his police desk wouldn’t be full of pictures of unidentified Jane Doe murder victims. If Bosch was the lead character inLaw & Order, he’d solve multiple cases per season, but it wouldn’t be very interesting. The introduction ofthe library of lost soulscold cases in the upcomingBosch: Legacy season 3 andtheBallardspin-offperfectly sums up the fact that the Bosch-verse is far from a procedural.People who don’t watchBosch: Legacybut have heard a lot of surface information about it usually refer to it as a procedural show.It’s difficult to dislodge the procedural tag when it gets mentioned over and over.

Save Bosch: Legacy Petition Key Facts

The Procedural Tag Is Potentially Damaging To Bosch: Legacy, Especially As it Fights To Stay On The Air

Over the course of ten combined seasons ofBoschandBosch: Legacy, the eponymous detective turned private investigator has solved many complicated crime cases. However, he also suffered the frustration of seeing the bad guys slip through the net on more than one occasion. He also had his own personal demons to contend with, while trying to develop a relationship with his once estranged daughter, Maddie. Not the typical goings-on in a supposed procedural television show, right?Bosch: Legacyis not a run-of-the-mill police show. Unfortunately,Bosch: Legacyoften gets branded as a procedural and this could have a detrimental effect on the fight to keep it on television screens.For most procedurals, one season is more than enough, but they continue regardless, churning out the same formulaic content year upon year. After nearly ten seasons, the Bosch-verse consistently delivers new and interesting serialized storytelling. In fact,Bosch: Legacyfalls into the bracket of a hyper-serialized show with cliffhangers at the end of each of the first two seasons.

There’s a fire of a new day coming ‘round

It’s a feeling like a cool rain coming down

It’s a rhythm of a new song singing

Instead of becoming more formulaic as the years have gone on,Bosch: Legacyhas done the opposite. Everything is more intrinsically linked than it ever was, and the exciting introduction ofRenee Ballardinto the equation is proof that Michael Connelly’s crime universe was on the cusp of an exciting expansion. The plan was to haveBosch: LegacyandBallardcrossovers, which would have added more depth to the overarching story. Ironically,all the aforementioned procedural shows have all had multiple spin-off shows despite not possessing anywhere close to the dedication to a high quality serialized format thatBosch: Legacydoes.If procedurals can run forever, why can’t one of the best serialized shows on television do the same?