A critic described The Mod Squad as "the hippest and first young undercover cops on TV". Each of these characters represented mainstream culture's principal fears regarding youth in the era: long-haired rebel Pete Cochran (Michael Cole) was evicted from his wealthy parents'
Beverly Hills home, then arrested and put on probation after he stole a car; Lincoln Hayes (Clarence Williams III), who came from a family of 13 children, was arrested in the
Watts riots, one of the longest and most violent riots in
Los Angeles history;
flower child Julie Barnes (Peggy Lipton), the "canary with a broken wing," The concept was to take three rebellious, disaffected young social outcasts and convince them to work as unarmed undercover detectives as an alternative to being incarcerated. Their youthful,
hippie personas would enable them to get close to the criminals they would investigate. "The times are changing," Captain Greer explained. "They can get into places we (the regular police) can't." Examples included their infiltrations of a
high school to solve a teacher's murder, of an
underground newspaper to find a bomber, and of an acting class to look for a strangler who was preying on blonde actresses. Spelling intended the show to be about the characters' relationships, and he promised that the Squad "would never arrest kids... or carry a gun or use one." The show was loosely based on creator Bud "Buddy" Ruskin's experiences in the late 1950s as a squad leader for young undercover
narcotics cops, though it took almost 10 years after he wrote a script for the idea to be
green-lighted by ABC Television Studios. ==Impact==