Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 demonstrates that Stabler (Christopher Meloni) should not return to Law & Order: SVU full-time. Stabler originated on SVU, and many of the best episodes of Law & Order: SVU during these early years featured Stabler and Benson working together to solve sexual assault cases. Thus, when Law & Order: Organized Crime premiered 10 years after Stabler left Law & Order: SVU, there was widespread speculation about whether he and Benson would resume their relationship.
Although Benson (Mariska Hargitay) appeared regularly in Law & Order: Organized Crime season 1, the series has focused more on Stabler than on his past relationships. Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 has been even more focused on Stabler than in past seasons. Many of his cases feature a personal connection, and in the latter half of the season, Stabler has been in charge of the unit while Bell (Danielle Moné Truitt) is not available. These changes have allowed Stabler to become more central to the Organized Crime Unit.
Law & Order: Organized Crime Season 5 Has Been About Stabler & His Family
Most Stories Have Included Conflicts With His Family
Law & Order: Organized Crime has focused on Stabler's family to a greater degree than any other season. Stabler's mother (Ellen Burstyn) was reintroduced in season 2 after appearing in one episode of Law & Order: SVU season 10, eleven years earlier. However, in season 5, the Stabler family can't tell whether his mother's insistence that she is talking to his missing brother, Joey (Michael Trotter), is a sign of increasing cognitive decline. Stabler also has an ongoing issue with Randall (Dean Norris), who has been pressuring him to attend therapy sessions and otherwise interfering in Stabler's personal life.

Law & Order: Organized Crime Season 5, Episode 9 Ending Explained: How A Stabler Family Death Sets Up The Finale
A shocking death now sets in motion a pivotal and consequential decision for Elliot as Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 heads towards its finale.
These stories have allowed Stabler to have meatier conflicts between job and family obligations than he has had in the past. Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5, episode 8, was the most intense example, as Stabler's mother was hospitalized with a serious heart issue, and Stabler had to find a way to wait with his family for news about her condition while continuing to lead an investigation into a terrorist group that was targeting wealthy CEOs, including hospital executives.
SVU Cannot Only Be About Stabler Or Anyone's Personal Story
The Focus is On Victims And How They Are Impacted
Law & Order: SVU sometimes has subplots where characters deal with personal or family issues. However, these stories are always secondary to the cases, as they should be. Law & Order: SVU is about empowering survivors, so the focus needs to be on Benson and her team attempting to bring perpetrators to justice and reassuring survivors that they have not given up on their case. Overly focusing on personal storylines would distract from this goal. Law & Order: SVU season 26 has had even fewer of these types of stories than past seasons.
Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 has made Stabler's family central to each story rather than a secondary story that is dealt with between procedural-oriented scenes.
When SVU first began, Stabler's family was prominent. However, even these subplots were secondary to the case of the week. Most of the time, the purpose of these stories was to illustrate the challenges Stabler faced in being there for his kids due to the demanding nature of his job. Conversely, Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 has made Stabler's family central to each story rather than a secondary story that is dealt with between procedural-oriented scenes.
Why Stabler-Centric Law & Order: Organized Crime Is Better Off In Streaming
Fewer Content Restrictions Allows This Series To Tell The Stories It Wants To Tell
Law & Order: Organized Crime is a distinct series from the other shows in the franchise. It is more character-driven, focused mostly on how the cases affect Stabler's mental health and family relationships, and utilizes a small cast that makes progress toward solving complicated cases that span multiple episodes. These types of dramas are more suited to streaming than to broadcast TV, where audiences have different expectations, and there are more restrictions on the type of content that can be shown.

Organized Crime Season 5 Is The Antithesis To Everything That Made Law & Order Iconic (But That Isn't A Bad Thing)
Law & Order: Organized Crime season 5 demonstrates that the series doesn't fit the franchise's formula, but that is ultimately a good thing.
In addition to being focused on Stabler and his family, Law & Order: Organized Crime is often more violent than the other Law & Order shows. This makes sense for the series because cases deal with mob bosses and other violent criminals. Thus, the procedural can be written more realistically with a streaming service like Peacock than it could when it was broadcast on NBC. The looser restrictions and ability to focus more closely on Stabler make Peacock the perfect fit for this series, and it would not be satisfying for Stabler to return to Law & Order: SVU after going in this new direction.
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Law & Order: Organized Crime
- Release Date
- April 1, 2021
- Network
- NBC, Peacock
- Directors
- Jean de Segonzac, John Polson, Jon Cassar, Stephen Surjik, Alex Hall, Alex Zakrzewski, Bethany Rooney, Eriq La Salle, Jonathan Brown, Ken Girotti, Michael Slovis, Tess Malone, Gonzalo Amat, Milena Govich, Simón Brand, Sharon Lewis, Carlos Bernard, Cherie Nowlan, Jim McKay, John David Coles, Juan José Camla, Kate Woods, Laura Belsey, Leslie Hope
Cast
- Christopher MeloniDet. Elliot Stabler
- Frank WoodME Dr. Abel Truman
- Writers
- Amy Berg, John Shiban, Liz Sagal, Will Pascoe, Davon Briggs, Katrina Cabrera Ortega, Nichole Beattie, Josh Fagin, Michael Konyves, Alec Wells, Bridget Tyler, Candice Sanchez McFarlane, Emmy Higgins, Rick Eid, Gwen Sigan, Sean Jablonski, David Graziano, Daniel Beaty, Katie Letien, Nick Culbertson, Jean Kyoung Frazier, Christina Piña
- Creator(s)
- Dick Wolf, Matt Olmstead, Ilene Chaiken
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