Shows that have overstayed their welcome - Why won't they end?

ONCE UPON A TIME
It took you until season 5 to realize this? lol
I haven't watched it in awhile, according to a friend Regina is being cool again (not that she ever wasn't even when she was being a moralfag )
It's like the writers actively seek out and destroy any chances of it having any compelling future plots.
I agree with doctor who. it needs to take a break again. like two years though, not 20.
 
Hell's Kitchen. After seeing Gordon's closer to real self in Masterchef I can repeat the obvious everyone is thinking: Put a fork in it already, it pales in comparison to Gordon's other series he stars in. You'd think working for fox would put a strain on Gordon at this point on, considering who played Tuco Salamanca in Breaking Bad was hating his role.
 
Sailor Moon Crystal is an abomination and needs to die yesterday.
Fuck everyone involved with producing this. You have women who grew up with Sailor Moon and now have money and possibly children who will gladly throw Sanrio levels of money at you AND THEY STILL FUCK IT UP. Sailor Moon is a money printing franchise requiring a very basic level of competency and they couldn't even do that right.

On another note, apparently Survivor is still a show.
 
Count me another for the "How the hell did Once Upon a Time last this long" train. Oh well, it guess since it runs on Disney $$$, it can be as long as 30 seasons.

Otoh, it's hard to believe Glee finished. That shit never seemed to end when it was on.
 
Fuck everyone involved with producing this. You have women who grew up with Sailor Moon and now have money and possibly children who will gladly throw Sanrio levels of money at you AND THEY STILL FUCK IT UP. Sailor Moon is a money printing franchise requiring a very basic level of competency and they couldn't even do that right.
Blame Toei, all their shows within the past decade or so are either shit or turning into shit.

RWBY. Not that it was welcome to begin with. That one looked like "Secondhand Embarrasment: The Animu" to me with it's horrible VA, animation, soundtrack and childlike dialogue.

It baffles me why people like it when most of the things I mentioned would usually deter the fanbase it has.
The fact it's got 4 seasons now baffles me. Aside from RT fanboys and usual suspects like dA and FF.net, who really liked the series unironically.

I'll also add Red vs. Blue to the list. Once the drama started pouring in, the show took a turn for the worse, and I pretty much conked out after episode 100.
 
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I guess for me that would be Dexter.

By the time I got about partway through Season 3, I realized that the show became a bit formulaic for my tastes.

1. There's a big bad that is prevelent throughout the entire season until Dexter kills him/her.

2. Debra enters a relationship and then leaves and is bitchy towards everyone.

3. The side characters go through some relationship drama as well which doesn't really affect the plot that much,

Really, the only thing that changes at all in the show was Dexter and his relationship with his girlfriend. Everything else just seems to reset as if nothing happened.

It didn't really help that I couldn't like anyone in that show other than Dexter. (The sociopath of all people!)

I stopped watching after the end of the Horsemen of the Apocalypse season. I realize afterwards things get changed up a bit, but at that point I just stopped caring.
 
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Rumor has it Dexter was supposed to go off the rails and on a spree after the final season, but I guess that cannot happen, because the pace was already ruined three seasons ago.
 
I agree with doctor who. it needs to take a break again. like two years though, not 20.
The advantage Doctor Who has is that it's about the most flexible show on TV. Genre, setting, characters, none of it's set in stone. They've done serials with no monsters, with no TARDIS, no companions - the only element you have to have is the Doctor himself. And even he can be radically overhauled when needed. So basically yeah, while I think Who is tired at the moment, it shouldn't be scrapped.

I've been watching some of the newer Simpsons episodes, and they are a lot funnier than they were when I stopped watching, but they're still nowhere near the level of the classics. It doesn't feel like a dying show so much as one that's in a rut - I can't remember much about the episodes other than that I laughed. Maybe that's a good point to call it a day.
 
I've seen a lot of people say Doctor Who and I totally agree, but not too many reasons as to why.

Doctor Who actually has some pretty rich lore (which inevitably happens after what, 53 years?) and a lot of it is totally untapped or fleshed out. Whilst I know the show needs more new ideas, I think 50 years is good enough to come back and feel new. They did do an episode with an d enemy in this series but it fell on its face.

I think Doctor Who's main issue is it never wants to break from what it has been. And when it tries to, it likes to do it in a way that feels disjointed from the rest of the show. Moffat tries to push buttons with the Doctors name, his death and even retconning the drama behind the Doctor's persona. But ultimately, these don't change anything, they end up hyped up, only to be whisked away and forgotten come next episode. Every twist feels like some businessman with a clipboard had to stand behind Moffat as he wrote.

The final episode where David Tennant left had the Timelords as the antagonists who literally wanted to End of Evangelion everyone into just being consciousnesses without bodies. And then the latest movie type special went and had the Doctor turn around and save them, simultaneously removing all tension in the backstory of a man who's meant to carry the weight of billions of deaths on his head.

Despite writing a storyline about how the doctor didn't actually kill all of his people, a later episode goes on to have the Doctor give a big speech about how many people he's killed and how terrible he is. Like sure, he racked up a huge kill streak after the whole time war, but he at least can strike a few billion off of the list.

What I'm saying is that Doctor Who tries to move the show in the most superficial ways possible. A new TARDIS, screwdriver and the latest Retcon about the Doctors past never actually alter anything or give you greater insight, the false notion of change is grand at first, but you walk out feeling like you've got a new coat of paint on the same old car. It looks kind of better, I guess, but it's still the same thing you were sick of underneath.

Got to agree with Adventure Time too. It angles itself as a coming of age show but never really does anything and nothing's learned or changes. As much as I know KF hates SU, that show actually has some great development and feels like it has some direction whilst maintaining the sort of 'slice-of-life' vibe AT also has. If you forget the fan base for a bit and ignore the jokes obviously for kids, it has some great moments. Rebecca Sugar is also pretty chill for a person with a fanbase so ravenous and she was responsible for some of the better episodes of Adventure Time.

I'm sure I'll get some responses about being way too over the top about a show aimed at kids, and you're right, kids don't give a fuck and I don't mind that. I just wanted to answer the thread from my perspective, since I used to watch these things a lot when stoned with friends and ultimately got tired of them.
 
I'd have been totally fine with it if they'd just stopped Doctor Who after Peter Davison like they should have.
 
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