The format of "Chicago Justice" may be deeply comforting — familiar, durable, entertaining —but it doesn't bother humanizing its crime victims and their families, not in the episode made available to critics. ("L&O" would at least give them a line or two that told you something about their lives.) Philosophically, the show is all over the place and in ways that feel disingenuous. That's always the risk with a ripped-from-the-headlines approach. These real-world events are not specific to Chicago; they don't need to be, but it's a nagging element of all the Wolf shows that, other than the visuals, they don't particularly feel rooted in Chicago.