Law & Order: SVU is nine years younger than its parent show, and just as revolutionary.
In some ways, it seems like the opposite of Law & Order.
While the original series emphasized cases over character development, Law & Order: SVU introduced characters with emotional home lives, revolutionizing crime dramas for a second time.

SVU Introduced Personal Stories with Purpose
Although Law & Order: SVU is my favorite show nowadays, when it first started in 1999, the emphasis on Benson and Stabler’s home lives annoyed me.
It was shockingly different from Law & Order, and as a 19-year-old who had seen every episode of the original series multiple times, I didn’t get the point.
However, after life dealt me some really crappy experiences, rewatching SVU as a survivor made it all make sense.
Benson and Stabler’s personal stories weren’t random or gratuitous.

They were part of the DNA of this spinoff because it dealt with intimate, painful crimes, and the show’s mission was to support and empower real-life survivors.
In order to do that, it couldn’t use cops that were almost interchangeable.
We had to identify with these characters so that we could trust them with the deeply personal and painful cases they were investigating.
Benson’s story was the more compelling. She was and is a survivor, helping other survivors.
That’s why that whole William Lewis saga on Law & Order: SVU Season 15 was entirely unnecessary and annoying — Benson already had enough trauma and ability to empathize with other victims without that.

In the early seasons, Benson’s status as a product of rape was discussed without being overemphasized.
The pilot even included her mother, a character who should have remained a part of her life instead of disappearing and then being killed off in the third season.
Stabler Arcs Showed the Toll Working With SA Survivors Takes on Cops
In real life, most SVU cops burn out after a few years on the job because of all of the horrific things they deal with on a daily basis.
Stabler’s family situation helped drive that point home.
Although Stabler stayed with the unit for far longer than real-life cops do, it took a psychological toll, and his marriage suffered for it.

Nowadays, fans keep looking back for signs that Benson was always Stabler’s true love, but when the series first began, it wasn’t about Stabler and Benson in that way.
Stabler shared things with Benson that he didn’t share with Kathy because they had the shared experience of seeing the worst of humanity, so Benson could understand things that Kathy never could.
Kathy’s jealousy caused friction in their marriage, but so did Stabler’s inability to communicate with her.
He also failed to be there for his kids as much as he needed to be, and was constantly worried about them, especially the girls — and sometimes, like Carisi in Law & Order: SVU Season 26, he saw predators around every corner and annoyed his wife and kids with his fears.
These stories weren’t random.

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Stabler was always meant to be the cop who was passionate about justice for sexual assault survivors to the point that he was burned out, angry, and secretly afraid for his kids.
That’s also why Cassidy’s first-season exit was so powerful, although it has been diluted by all the times he has returned unnecessarily.
Modern SVU Means Well, but Can Overemphasize the Personal

The danger of incorporating personal storylines is that a serious crime drama like SVU can become a soap opera about traumatized police officers.
That’s been a problem with Dick Wolf’s other franchise (looking at you, Chicago Med!), and SVU has slid slowly in that direction in recent years.
The worst was that horrible Maddie Flynn storyline in Law & Order: SVU Season 25, and all the back-and-forth between Stabler and Benson has distracted from the show’s main mission.
Hopefully, with new writers on board, we can return to focusing on trauma survivors who are making a difference for others, rather than the more melodramatic elements of Benson’s story that have been overemphasized since the William Lewis story.

Do you love or loathe the personal storylines on Law & Order: SVU? Let’s get a conversation started!
Your voice is what keeps the lights on here at TV Fanatic. Hit the comments with your thoughts and make sure to share this article with your SVU-loving friends so they can join in!
Law & Order: SVU Season 27 will premiere on NBC on September 25, 2025 — the 35th anniversary of the premiere of the original Law & Order.
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