Number Seven: Missing Person's Department

Improved Essays
Number Seven: Missing a Missing Persons Department

In ‘Front Man’ (Season 1, Episode 13) when Peter is describing fellow FBI agent Kimberly Rice, he tells Neal that she works in “Missing Persons and Kidnapping.” The FBI doesn’t have such a department in real life. They only investigate missing persons crimes under special circumstances.

Number Six:

Willie Garson (Mozzie) Sex and the City

Tiffany Theisen Kelly Kapowski

Number Five: FBI or XYZ

Located on the Avenue of the Americas, the XYZ Buildings were built as part of the Rockefeller Centre expansion in the 1960s - 1970s. White Collar filmed scenes here as if they were outside the FBI building in ‘Deadline’ (Season 3, Episode 3), when Neal is introduced to Diana’s partner, Christie.

Number Four: Father Son Bond

White Collar was a
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Peter and Elizabeth’s dog, Satchmo, was named after Armstrong. Satchmo was Armstrong’s infamous nickname, short for “satchel mouth.”

Number Two: Frank Abagnale Jr. Was a Fan

Abagnale, the original white collar con man who was the subject of the 2002 film Catch Me If You Can, is a big fan of the show! He sent Jeff Eastin (creator) a signed poster, and told him personally how much he enjoyed the show. Abagnale almost made it into the finale for a cameo, but in the end couldn’t make it due to a scheduling conflict.

Number One: Crime Doesn’t Pay

Although it was one of USA Network’s best critically received TV shows, ratings fell when Season 5 was airing because of in-season competition, and things ended on a cliffhanger. The New York City location shoots and celebrity cast made the show expensive to produce, and despite the fact that USA Network’s parent company NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment owned the show, USA was responsible for production costs. Nevertheless, they opted to give the show a proper send-off, and a six-episode sixth and final season aired in

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