Traylor Howard was perfection in that show.I was smitten with Ryan Reynolds and Traylor Howard
Damn skippy. That was a good one.Traylor Howard was perfection in that show.
Really liked this one too, 4th season was better than 3rd, and it ended on a huge unresolved cliffhanger. I read pre-COVID that some network was planning on rebooting it. CW maybe?.The 4400. (4 seasons) This one actually lasted but went downhill in seasons 3/4.
Looks like a futuristic Charlie's Angels from your linkPaired with Cleopatra 2525 iirc. What’s that, Voice? Turrible.![]()
Almost mentioned this one too. First season was the best, super dark show. They lightened the show up after that, I don’t even really remember the last few seasons other than they brought in a new love interest.I think I've seen all of these.This is my wheelhouse.
Unmentioned so far, but, I absolutely loved The John Laroquette Show back in the day. I recently found bootleg recordings of maybe 75% of the episodes. Working up to plowing through them all. Doubting it'll hold up to what I remember, though.
Never was able to recover from Bill Clinton breastfeeding opening episode. Critics and public were turned off. Show got progressively better as they worked out the bumps.As OP mentioned TV shows in addition to sitcoms, The Dana Carvey Show comes to mind. I thought it was pretty funny, but everyone just seems to remember the Bill Clinton breastfeeding bit.
Most, but not all for me. Was a lot easier - way fewer channels, premium cable was movies and for rich families, no smart phones/internet in its infancy if there at all for much of the time period.Yet to see a show in here I didn't watch at least one season of![]()
One of the first ones I thought of when I saw this thread. Jason Bateman's been playing basically the same role his entire life.peaces said:It's your move
Was a good show as far as sitcoms go and a modest hit during its 1st season. They tried to salvage it after he passed but it wasn’t the same. Didn’t help that ABC moved it to a Friday night death slot for season 3 either.8 simple rules - lasted 3 seasons/76 episodes but Ritter passed after season one.
Kaley Cuoco got her first role has his daughter.
What, no Firefly? Earth 2? Cancelled Sci-Fi could be its own thread.rick6668 said:ETA: Title says sitcoms, so these don't fit, but I'll leave the post.
I'm a sucker for Sci-Fi shows, almost every one I watch gets cancelled
00's-
Veritas the Quest (1 season) - Really liked this, Gulf War happened and it was never shown on US TV again. Caught up on youtube years later as it was shown in Australia. Cobie Smulders was so hot.
The 4400. (4 seasons) This one actually lasted but went downhill in seasons 3/4.
Journeyman (1 season) - Thought this was excellent, still bummed it was not renewed.
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (2 seasons) - Another favorite.
Flashforward (1 season) - Was liking this, cancelled.
Pretty sure every show my kids watch right now is a Dan Schnieder show. And thanks the last few months I have seen marathons of all of them.Gally said:Head of the Class was not bad for the time
I recall this show so vividly that on Ozark when they did a flashback to Bateman's youth and used another actor, I found it distracting to the point of not paying attention to the dialogue.One of the first ones I thought of when I saw this thread. Jason Bateman's been playing basically the same role his entire life.
How about Eisenhower & LutzHoly cow, there was a TV show called Gung Ho that starred Scott Bakula?
Was this in another universe? I have never heard of this.
I'm sure the success of this film to TV transition paved the way for the TV show Ferris Bueller starring a young Jennifer Aniston.Holy cow, there was a TV show called Gung Ho that starred Scott Bakula?
Was this in another universe? I have never heard of this.
I had never heard of this show, and now I've heard about it twice in one week. I listen to the Conan O'Brien podcast and he had Jeff Goldblum on. It was a great listen (not sure about the show).SDJohnny said:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenspeed_and_Brown_Shoe
8 year old me love this show, all 14 episodes.
Reminds me of Wheels and the Legman.I had never heard of this show, and now I've heard about it twice in one week. I listen to the Conan O'Brien podcast and he had Jeff Goldblum on. It was a great listen (not sure about the show).SDJohnny said:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenspeed_and_Brown_Shoe
8 year old me love this show, all 14 episodes.
It was a spinoff of the hit movie which had starred Michael Keaton. Bakula played Keaton's role. Gedde Watanabe reprised his role from the film, but the character was changed to make him more like the strict Japanese bosses from the film. The show lasted 9 episodes.Holy cow, there was a TV show called Gung Ho that starred Scott Bakula?
Was this in another universe? I have never heard of this.
I watched a lot of those Fox shows. "Flying Blind" was everything that "Dharma & Greg" tried to be, but without the watered-down sitcom tropes. Téa LeoniJeez, I must have watched a ton of TV in the 80's and 90's (still do, I guess) because I remember 95% of the shows being mentioned in this thread and even more obscure ones that were not, like the ones that had shows like Herman's Head as their lead in: "Flying Blind" and "Woops!" I even remember that fall of 1992 Sunday lineup for Fox: Ben Stiller Show, In living Color, Roc, Married With Children, Herman's Head, Flying Blind, Woops!
I'm like the Marilu Henner of TV schedules. Whenever someone mentions a show I recognize, I can usually recall the day and time slot it aired.
Loved it, and it got two seasons, so not quite a failure. I watched the DVDs not too long ago and the humor itself still holds up, but only if you get the dated references used to convey it. A Gen X'er discovering it now would probably enjoy it, but the under 30 set wouldn't really get it.I enjoyed a Jon Lovitz voice animated TV show called The Critic. It was really funny in a droll way.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zOKUTzN9Wk
It certainly moved too slow for the masses. I expect the humor hasn't held up either.
HOLY CRAPOK, this is a far, far, reach, but, perhaps the best sitcom I'd ever seen at the time was a completely obscure show that I'm nearly positive no one else watched. And certainly no one else loved as much as I did:
The Steven Banks Show
It was really, really good. I have no idea how it came to be: it was a sitcom made for PBS of all things. But it was genuinely one of the best shows on TV at that time in the mid 90s. Just well written and performed. It lasted 13 episodes. Steven Banks went on to become the head writer on Spongebob Squarepants.