logo
Terry Louise Fisher, a Creator of ‘L.A. Law,' Dies at 79

Terry Louise Fisher, a Creator of ‘L.A. Law,' Dies at 79

New York Times20-06-2025
Terry Louise Fisher, who channeled her experience as a Los Angeles prosecutor into an Emmy Award-winning television career as a writer and producer for 'Cagney & Lacey,' the groundbreaking female-oriented police procedural, and a creator, with Steven Bochco, of the sleek drama 'L.A. Law,' died on June 10 in Laguna Hills, Calif. She was 79.
Her death was confirmed in a social media post by Mark Zev Hochberg, a family member. He did not cite a cause.
Ms. Fisher was best known for her work on shows about cops and lawyers, and she certainly knew the terrain. Before turning her attention to the small screen, she worked as a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles for two and a half years.
She quickly grew disillusioned with a revolving-door criminal justice system that seemed to her to boil down to a jousting match between opposing lawyers, with little regard for guilt or innocence.
In a 1986 interview with The San Francisco Examiner, she recalled being handed an almost certain victory in an otherwise weak case involving a knife killing because of an oversight by the defense: 'I felt really challenged, and my adrenaline was pumping. I realized I could win this case. And I slept on it. I went, 'My God, has winning become more important than justice?''
Her unflinching view of the system informed her tenure in television. In 1983, she began writing for 'Cagney & Lacey,' bringing depth and realism to a CBS series that shook up the traditional knuckles-and-nightsticks cop-show genre by focusing on two female New York City police detectives, Christine Cagney (Sharon Gless) and Mary Beth Lacey (Tyne Daly).
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

3 officers injured in a Utah shooting and a man is taken into custody
3 officers injured in a Utah shooting and a man is taken into custody

Associated Press

time7 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

3 officers injured in a Utah shooting and a man is taken into custody

TREMONTON, Utah (AP) — Three police officers were injured in a shooting in a northern Utah city and a man was taken into custody, police said. The officers were responding to a disturbance call late Sunday in a neighborhood in Tremonton. The extent of their injuries and their conditions weren't immediately known. 'Upon arrival, they immediately began taking fire,' Police Detective Crystal Beck of neighboring Brigham City told reporters. 'They requested additional units. And then stopped answering their radio.' Beck said once additional police arrived, 'they were able to locate the subject of the shooting and take him into custody.' Beck said she did not have the man's name. She said there was no threat to the public. Tremonton, which has about 10,000 people, is about 75 miles (121 kilometers) north of Salt Lake City.

Man dies after Liberty City shooting
Man dies after Liberty City shooting

CBS News

time10 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Man dies after Liberty City shooting

A man is dead after a shooting early Monday morning in Liberty City. The Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office said just after 4 a.m., they received word of the shooting in the area of NW 18 Avenue and NW 66 Street. When deputies arrived, they found a man who had been shot in his upper body. He was rushed to an area hospital where he died, according to the sheriff's office. The name of the man has not been released. Sheriff's homicide detectives are trying to determine what led to the shooting.

Making cash off ‘AI slop': The surreal video business taking over the web
Making cash off ‘AI slop': The surreal video business taking over the web

Washington Post

time10 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Making cash off ‘AI slop': The surreal video business taking over the web

Luis Talavera, a 31-year-old loan officer in eastern Idaho, first went viral in June with an AI-generated video on TikTok in which a fake but lifelike old man talked about soiling himself. Within two weeks, he had used AI to pump out 91 more, mostly showing fake street interviews and jokes about fat people to an audience that has surged past 180,000 followers, some of whom comment to ask if the scenes are real.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store