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Michael Westen (Burn Notice)

Created by Matt Nix

When the tough get burned, the burned get going…

When spies get fired, they don’t get a pink slip or a form letter from human resources. They get a “burn notice” and became untouchable.

In the USA Network series Burn Notice (2007-13), Jeffrey Donovan played MICHAEL WESTEN, a handsome, young, yogurt-loving former CIA operative who, in the middle of an overseas operation, is burned by the agency. With no funds and and no clue as to why he’s suddenly persona non grata in the intelligence community, he hightails it to his hometown of Miami, where he works as an unofficial P.I., drawing on his Special Ops training to use to help those who the police can’t or won’t help, as a way to fund his ongoing personal investigation.

He is helped and hindered by his once–and maybe once again–girlfriend Fiona, a trigger-happy ex-IRA operative played by Gabrielle Anwar. Also on board is Michael’s best friend and former partner Sam Axe, a boozy party animal and would-be ladies’ man who once worked as an informant for the FBI, dispatched to keep an eye on Michael. Sam’s played with considerable aplomb by cult film fave Bruce Campbell, while Michael’s manipulative mother is played by Sharon (Cagney and Lacey) Gless. It’s a strong cast, and they all look like they’re having fun.

It was probably the best new crime show of the 2007 season and got a lot of comparisons to Magnum P.I., though I’m more apt to liken it to The Rockford Files.  Heady company either way, and a lotta fun, although as the series progressed, the underlying and increasingly convoluted storyline featuring Michael’s attempts to be reinstated as a CIA operative grew wearisome. It was all fun and games when Michael was making ends meet (and helping others) as a sort of unlicensed private eye, but the ongoing mystery of why he had received the burn notice and how he could get back in the CIA’s good graces went on far too long.

I mean, how many loopholes for various dubious (and often expendable) handlers, helpers and former co-workers can one pink-slipped agent jump through? There always seems to be one more condition, one more betrayal or one more piece of bad luck piled on (and on and on…).

And then, just as I was about to give up on the show, Michael would crack wise, Fiona would want to kill someone, Sam would prove to be the best buddy anybody ever had and the team would blow something up. Blow it up real good.

UNDER OATH

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Report respectfully submitted by Glen Davis, with a bit by Kevin Burton Smith.

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