It started so if you didn’t see it Saturday you missed the first episode.
The leftovers, six feet under, the good place, the Americans
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">What’s a show whose final season/episode actually WORKED and felt like a truly satisfying end to the journey? I’ll start: Criminal Minds <a href="https://t.co/Sp0OnnUV3i">https://t.co/Sp0OnnUV3i</a></p>— Sarah Marshall (@Remember_Sarah) <a href="https://twitter.com/Remember_Sarah/status/1264995758127734784?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
The leftovers, six feet under, the good place, the Americans
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">What’s a show whose final season/episode actually WORKED and felt like a truly satisfying end to the journey? I’ll start: Criminal Minds <a href="https://t.co/Sp0OnnUV3i">https://t.co/Sp0OnnUV3i</a></p>— Sarah Marshall (@Remember_Sarah) <a href="https://twitter.com/Remember_Sarah/status/1264995758127734784?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
The Wire, Justified, The Americans, Breaking Bad...
Good, but could have been better: Game of Thrones, Sons of Anarchy.
The Americans, The Wire, The Sopranos, Justified.
I started rewatching HIMYM from S1 (I missed S1 and 2 when it intitially aired) and if memory serves for me the biggest disappointment was the utter lack of emotinal appeal to the meeting of the mother. Hoping I'm misremebering that or I get a different reaction this time around.
No, the problem with HIMYM is that they actually made us care about the mother after introducing her at the end of the penultimate season, then the series finale turned it back to Robin despite spending 7 years telling us how they won't work.
No, the problem with HIMYM is that they actually made us care about the mother after introducing her at the end of the penultimate season, then the series finale turned it back to Robin despite spending 7 years telling us how they won't work.
No, the problem with HIMYM is that they actually made us care about the mother after introducing her at the end of the penultimate season, then the series finale turned it back to Robin despite spending 7 years telling us how they won't work.
The Americans, The Wire, The Sopranos, Justified.
I started rewatching HIMYM from S1 (I missed S1 and 2 when it intitially aired) and if memory serves for me the biggest disappointment was the utter lack of emotinal appeal to the meeting of the mother. Hoping I'm misremebering that or I get a different reaction this time around.
After about S2, maybe S3, no one really grew as a character outside of Barney. I gave up after S4.
The normal arc of a great show:
S1, intro and some false steps
S2, signs of greatness
S3, hits its stride, the best it will ever be
The plateau at peak almost never lasts more than one or two seasons. The Jump the Shark episode of Happy Days was S5, as was Puppet Angel.
Cheers ran 11 seasons. The plateau was S3-4. The decline that began in S5 was so quick the show was unwatchable by S6.
MASH (11 seasons) was a bit luckier. The plateau was S3-5. The decline was gradual but by S8 it was unwatchable.
HIMYM was a classic case of staying too long as the party. The writing had eroded to the point where it couldn't support a finale. This has happened many times (MASH, Galactica, BoJack Horseman, Buffy, OITNB, Crazy Ex-GF, Community). Most shows stay too long.The only finale I can remember that's also one of the best episodes in the show is The Good Place.
The writing is the only thing that really matters in a show (the actors are cute but they're instruments being played). If the writers are en banc then the later years are the Peter Principle where the good ones have moved on and only the bad ones or, worse, young fans of the show, are left. If the creator is the major writer then with a long run they exhaust their ideas and/or get high on their own supply.
Another reason HIMYM suffered from going too long was because the ending was clearly predetermined and probably would've made sense after season 4 or 5. By the end of season 7 or 8 or whatever, it didn't.
Colonel Flagg might be the greatest bit character in the history of TV.