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Derrick Dunn

M.I.A. Review: Miami Heat, Family Blood, and a Queen Pin Story Worth Watching

When Will Smith dropped “Miami” in the late nineties, he sold the city as a paradise of beaches, nightlife, beautiful people, and endless possibilities. Peacock’s new crime drama “M.I.A.” takes that same sun-soaked fantasy and flips it on its head.  

In this version of Miami, the lights still shine, the water still glistens, and the city still looks like a dream. The difference is that every dream comes with a price. The nine-episode series follows Etta Tiger Jonze, played by Shannon Gisela, a young woman growing restless in the Florida Keys. Etta has dreams bigger than the life around her.  

Miami is calling, and to her, it looks like freedom, glamour, and reinvention. But when her family’s drug-running business is shattered by tragedy, Etta’s escape plan becomes a dangerous entry point into the city’s criminal underworld.

Created by Bill Dubuque and show run by Karen Campbell, “M.I.A.” is not just another crime-family saga. At its core, this is a story about identity. Etta is not simply chasing money or power. She is trying to figure out who she becomes after the life she knew burns down around her. That gives the series a stronger hook than just bullets, betrayals, and bodies on the floor.

Shannon Gisela gives Etta the kind of presence a show like this needs. She has to play ambition, grief, fear, anger, and calculation, sometimes in the same scene. The character works because you can see both versions of her fighting for control. She is young enough to dream still, but sharp enough to understand that survival may require becoming dangerous.

The supporting cast adds some needed weight. Cary Elwes, Danay Garcia, Brittany Adebumola, Dylan Jackson, Alberto Guerra, Maurice Compte, Gerardo Celasco, and Marta Milans help fill out a world where loyalty feels temporary, and everyone seems one bad decision away from betrayal.  

In a crime drama, you need characters who look like they have secrets before they even open their mouths, and “M.I.A. ” appears built for that kind of tension. What stands out most is the atmosphere. Miami is not just a backdrop here. It is the temptation. The Keys represent the life Etta wants to leave behind. Miami represents the life she thinks she wants. Somewhere between those two places, the real story begins.

Does “M.I.A.” reinvent the crime drama? Not entirely. We have seen queen pin stories, cartel-adjacent drama, family betrayal, and neon-drenched danger before. But sometimes it is not about reinventing the wheel. Sometimes it is about putting rims on it, giving it a clean paint job, and letting it ride down Ocean Drive.

At its best, “M.I.A.” is a slick, sun-soaked crime drama about a woman realizing survival is not enough. Etta does not just want a seat at the table. She may want to own the whole room.

For fans of stylish crime dramas with family tension, ambition, betrayal, and Miami heat, “M.I.A.” is worth putting on the radar.

Grade: B

“M.I.A.” is available to stream on Peacock today.

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