>Okay, we?ll stick to the
work. Eads didn?t need to go on the requisite ride-along to prepare for the part, since he?d been doing it much of his life. His father has been a district attorney in Texas for two decades, and a young George would frequently hitch rides with the highway patrol. He?s probed law enforcement officials about "what the jobs do to them personally, why their dispositions are the way they are."
The way they are, Eads says, is often fairly stoic, a necessity in a job where the customers are corpses.
"A common denominator seems to be a hard time with stability in relationships?because you?re so desensitized by all the violence that?s around," Eads observes. He recalls the aftermath of a particularly bloody massacre his father witnessed in the ?80s. "He said the thing that bothered him the most was that he wasn?t bothered by it, you know what I mean?"
While a world of poker faces sounds like a stark contrast to the drama queen thespian realm, Eads points out, "It?s kind of opposite in one way, but in another way it?s kind of similar because (CSIs) have to act like things don?t bother them when maybe they do."
A little comic relief helps: "I talked to one of the criminalist tech advisors on the set and I said to her, ?You?re standing around with a dead body. Are there ever any lewd comments made that are inappropriate?? She said, ?Oh, God, you should hear us!?"
OPENING CBS' EYE
So far, viewers are listening. In its two weeks on the air (Fridays at 9 p.m.), "C.S.I." has boasted the top ratings of the night, on any network. So even though Eads had reservations about doing a show with the network that canceled the uniquely quirky "Grapevine" -? "The word ?conservative? would pop in my head, or the word ?older demographic?" -? he is confident.
"I?ve been on a set like ?Savannah,? where maybe for whatever reason you could feel the ship sinking and you?re getting close to being canceled," says Eads, who?s also enjoyed the well-oiled comfort of a multiple-episode stint on "ER." "This show reminds me of a show that?s a hit."
It?s not just the soundtrack or the camera tricks or the PT Cruiser that decorates the set in an upcoming episode. "There?s a chemistry," Eads says, even though "we?re all individuals." For a show about dead bodies, the network that favors senior citizens has a live one on its hands.
'C.S.I.' airs Fridays at 9 p.m. ET on CBS.