I felt like the writers went a long way in their efforts to make Omar Little into a real human being in the third and fifth seasons. Brother Mouzone, on the other hand, is much more of "a force of nature," as David Simon puts it, which was probably why he was one of the few recurring characters not brought back for the final season.
I'm confused about the remark about Prez during season four, though. It was pretty clear at the end of season three that, regardless of the inquest's findings into the Prez's shooting of the cop, Prez himself wasn't happy being a cop anymore (it's clear he chose to path due to pressure from Valcheck).
And I'd go as far to say that The Wire didn't just control its plot to prevent anything from fundamentally changing, it was about how things don't change in the city environment. But of course lots of changes did happen. McNulty ascends from City Council Member to Mayor to Governor; Daniels ascends from a Lieutenant to Major to Deputy Ops to Police Commisioner in just seven years. But in the end, the series rather cynically concludes, the institution is more powerful than any actions by these individuals.
I'm confused about the remark about Prez during season four, though. It was pretty clear at the end of season three that, regardless of the inquest's findings into the Prez's shooting of the cop, Prez himself wasn't happy being a cop anymore (it's clear he chose to path due to pressure from Valcheck).
And I'd go as far to say that The Wire didn't just control its plot to prevent anything from fundamentally changing, it was about how things don't change in the city environment. But of course lots of changes did happen. McNulty ascends from City Council Member to Mayor to Governor; Daniels ascends from a Lieutenant to Major to Deputy Ops to Police Commisioner in just seven years. But in the end, the series rather cynically concludes, the institution is more powerful than any actions by these individuals.