I've watched just enough of this show to discover that they cast the fellow who plays Neal most likely by sitting him down with the show's tailor, and comparing him to the dressmaker's form. Because I don't think I've seen him wear anything that isn't form-fitting, and he changes outfits 5-6 times in an episode (even if the episode takes place over 2 days). (Okay one of those times it was clearly an editing issue, with the story rearranged post-shooting, because Neal wore the same outfit twice in three days, and I totally disbelieve he would do such a thing.)
It's one of those shows that has to tread verrry lightly. The minute you spare a thought for the people Neal has scammed -- they can't all be jerks -- the premise stops being enjoyable. Hence my focus on the sartorial.
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It's one of those shows that has to tread verrry lightly. The minute you spare a thought for the people Neal has scammed -- they can't all be jerks -- the premise stops being enjoyable. Hence my focus on the sartorial.