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  1. 1. a. : to break or smash especially with force. bust a window. also : to make inoperative. busted my watch. : to bring an end to : break up. helped bust trusts Newsweek.

  2. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › BustingBusting - Wikipedia

    Busting is a 1974 American buddy cop film, directed by Peter Hyams in his theatrical directorial debut, starring Elliott Gould and Robert Blake as police detectives of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD).

  3. Apr 13, 1974 · Busting: Directed by Peter Hyams. With Elliott Gould, Robert Blake, Allen Garfield, Antonio Fargas. Defying orders to lay-off the case, two Los Angeles vice-squad cops go after a local mobster and use unorthodox methods to achieve results.

  4. Two Los Angeles vice squad officers find themselves up against their corrupt superiors when they try to bring a crime boss to justice. During the course of their investigation, the two cops disguise themselves as gay men and raid a gay bar.

  5. Busting is a cop show encapsulated, purely episodic in structure as the two vice cop heroes team on various assorted cases, with unstable degrees of success.

  6. Two Los Angeles vice squad officers find themselves up against their corrupt superiors when they try to bring a crime boss to justice. During the course of their investigation, the two cops disguise themselves as gay men and raid a gay bar.

  7. Mar 21, 2018 · Defying orders to lay-off the case, two Los Angeles vice-squad cops go after a local mobster and use unorthodox methods to achieve results. Directed by Peter Hyams. Starring: Elliott Gould, Robert...

  8. Los Angeles vice cops Michael Keneely (Elliott Gould), tall and hunched, and Patrick Farrell (Robert Blake), short and resentful, tidy up the streets...

  9. bust noun [C] (MODEL) a model of someone's head and shoulders: a bronze bust of Mozart. a drug bust. an occasion when the police catch people selling or using illegal drugs: Officers arrested two men in a major drug bust last night.

  10. busting is of multiple origins. Partly a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Partly formed within English, by derivation.

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