Once upon a crime, "The A-Team," "Starsky & Hutch" and "Magnum P.I." charmed viewers with a balance of action and laughs. Even "Hill Street Blues," the greatest cop drama of all time, had its fair share of black humor.
But somewhere along the line, most crime procedurals lost their sense of humor. The graphic violence that runs through franchises like "Law & Order" and "NCIS" are designed to make you grimace more than guffaw.
"The Rookie: Feds" is determined to offer some comic relief. In the series, debuting at 9 p.m. Tuesday in KSTP, Ch. 5, Simone Clark (Niecy Nash-Betts) is a former high school guidance counselor who becomes the FBI's oldest rookie. She also happens to be a Black woman, a demographic woefully underrepresented in the bureau. The setup is ripe for drama but the writers leave plenty of room for mischief.
Among the comical bits: A fellow agent once starred in a TV series called "Vampire Cop," a clear dig at TV's current obsession with the supernatural. In one early episode, Clark makes an arrest in a wedding dress and freaks out when she dings up her father's car.
She's also shocked when colleagues and crooks don't find her charming.
"Simone thinks everyone is in love with her," Nash-Betts said during a virtual news conference earlier this month.
The show's light-hearted moments wouldn't work without its lead, who previously played law enforcers on "Reno 911!" and "Scream Queens."
"Those were more like Keystone Kops," said Nash-Betts. "This is more like the real deal."