Last year Ms. Panjabi won the Emmy for best Links of London Sale actress. In the second season she has a meatier story arc.Loosely taking the Eliot Spitzer scandal as a starting point, "The Good Wife" follows Alicia Florrick, the wife of a disgraced politician who goes back to work as an associate at a Chicago law firm after her husband goes to jail. Alicia works on a different case each week but sprinkled within episodes are the ongoing dramas of her personal life, her husband's re-entry to politics and power struggles within the firm.The pilot episode played on the image of Silda Spitzer standing next to her embattled husband during a tense press conference, a ploy that got the series an initial burst of attention when it Links of London Bracelets last year. The first season focused on Alicia gaining balance. The second and current season focuses on her gaining control.Married 24 years, the Kings still churn out many scripts in a converted garage behind their L.A. home that serves as an office and guest bedroom, complete with storable Murphy bed.They met just as they were wrapping up college, fledgling writers selling athletic shoes at FrontRunners. ("We spotted each other over a sock wall," Mr. King says.) Prior to creating TV together, Mrs. King, now 48, read scripts for production companies and Mr. King, now 50, wrote screenplays "with minimal success," he says.The Kings get nostalgic when they discuss their failed pilots -- like the drama about cops on the San Diego and Tijuana sides of the border who must work Links of London Flutter & Wow 18ct Gold Stiletto Earrings despite culture clashes, or the show about a Dominick Dunne-style journalist in the Hamptons. "That was us saying 'OK, grunge in Tijuana doesn't work, so let's go to the Hamptons,'" Mrs. King says.Their ABC series "In Justice," a legal procedural about wrongly convicted felons, was canceled after 13 episodes. The premise was too earnest. "The world doesn't want to be told that everyone in jail is innocent," says Mr. King. Most recently, ABC passed on the Don Quixote idea. "We just weren't the flavor," Mr. King says.It turns out the time was right for one of the Kings' hybrids to break through. Long-running procedurals were aging. Last spring NBC canceled "Law & Order" after two decades. CBS moved its "CSI: NY" spinoff to Friday night, considered the final step before cancelation. At the same time serialized dramas like ABC's short-lived "FlashForward" have had trouble building an audience. The rerun market isn't what it used to be, either. But the DVD success of serialized shows like "The Sopranos" has created new ways to cash in down the line.CBS executives wanted to move into this area, but they were cautious about it, reluctant to alienate the network's core audience. Even though years ago CBS Links of London Four Leaf Clover Charm been the network of "Dallas" and "Knots Landing," more recent attempts at serialized dramas have foundered. Critics loved "Swingtown," a short-lived series about sexual liberation in a 1970s suburb, but the open marriages and run-on stories didn't play well with CBS viewers.
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