Back in 2013, Gary Dourdan spoke to Red Carpet News TV on YouTube and pulled back the curtain on his experience as a “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” regular. From the perspective of someone working on the show, he shared what he feels was a driving force behind its early success and its ability to stand out in a crowded television marketplace. “The computer industry was growing so vastly. Information was growing so vastly…The science element of the show, I think, was a big hit with people who wanted to know more,” he explained, adding that the episodic format also made it easy for new viewers to jump in.
Dourdan’s theory makes a lot of sense. “CSI” was an accessible series that folks could watch episode by episode, and it covered topics that an increasingly online culture could find interest in. At the same time, series creator and executive producer Anthony Zuiker had his own understanding of what made “CSI” a smash hit so quickly. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, he said, “On the worst day of your life, the CSI investigators would come in, solve the crime, and bring peace of mind to the survivors, and/or the victim, and put the bad guy away.” That, to him, is a universal concept that everyone on Earth can relate to in some way.
Regardless of the reason why, “CSI” is a small screen classic no matter how you slice it — one that hardly struggled to find its footing at the beginning of its television stint.
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