Wes and Travis investigate a cop's shooting and take care of the injured officer's police dog.Free Download Video Common Law 14th July 2012 Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch Common Law Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.Common Law centers on Travis Marks (Michael Ealy) and Wes Mitchell (Warren Kole), two cops with a problem... each other. Wes, a methodical former lawyer with a passion for cars, gardening and his ex-wife, and Travis, a maverick ladies' man who served time in juvenile hall, can't stand each other. As partners, they were LAPD's dream team on the homicide squad but constant bickering got in the way of their work and the two ended up on probation. To revive their flagging professional relationship, their Captain (Jack McGee) sends them to couples therapy to help understand and resolve their conflicts. We soon learn that a successful relationship or partnership doesn't mean you have to like the same things; you just have to hate the same things.The motto of USA is “characters welcome,” and over the years, those characters have developed something of a pattern — the women are feisty and single, the men come in mismatched pairs. “Common Law,” which premieres Friday, does little to advance the brand. It is nowhere near as smart as “White Collar” or as strangely touching as “Necessary Roughness” and seems content to hit well-worn marks, though more than occasionally with welcome style. Call it USA Lite.
That said, the central conceit of co-creators Cormac and Marianne Wibberley is the amusing and inevitable culmination of a narrative device that began with Achilles and Patroclus and made its way through Butch and Sundance to become de rigueur on modern television: When a bromance goes wrong, should the couple call it quits or try a little therapy first?
Travis Marks (Michael Ealy) and Wes Mitchell (Warren Kole) may be the best detectives to ever hit the LAPD but they spend as much time arguing as they do detecting. In a last-ditch effort to save their seven-year partnership, and their individual careers, their captain (Jack McGee) orders them into couples therapy.
And not just couples therapy, but group couples therapy, which is where we meet them attempting to explain their cantankerous relationship to a handful of married folk and the sexy but take-no-prisoners psychiatrist, Dr. Ryan (Sonya Walger). So while they’re solving murders and keeping various department vultures off their backs, they’re also, reluctantly, attempting to learn something about adult communication.
It’s an almost fatally cutesy set-up, complete with the requisite opposites-attract tension — Travis is a free spirited Lothario with foster child issues and street cred while Wes is a tightly wound former lawyer carrying the weight of OCD tendencies and a torch for his ex-wife. Fortunately, like all USA shows, it is brilliantly cast.
Both leads -- young (check), handsome (check, check) -- have recently done yeoman’s work on shows that did not succeed, so there is the added satisfaction of seeing them land in roles well-suited to their talents.
Oh, and they catch some bad guys, too. Though it’s tough to keep track of the work when there’s so much going on at home.
I loved this show by far my favorite show and there's only been two episodes I can't wait for the next episode I hope this show stays on for a long time best show on TV they are not uptight they act like people who are around each other a lot act like brothers or sisters and they wouldn't split them up because they are the two best detectives together anyone who doesn't get that didn't watch the second episode I really loved this show its not like psych that's about a fake psychic its like the mentalist common law is a buddy cop show they act like my sister and I act the yelling and fighting they are just like brothers and of course there's murder its a detective show duh
It’s an almost fatally cutesy set-up, complete with the requisite opposites-attract tension — Travis is a free spirited Lothario with foster child issues and street cred while Wes is a tightly wound former lawyer carrying the weight of OCD tendencies and a torch for his ex-wife. Fortunately, like all USA shows, it is brilliantly cast.
Both leads -- young (check), handsome (check, check) -- have recently done yeoman’s work on shows that did not succeed, so there is the added satisfaction of seeing them land in roles well-suited to their talents.