Your favorite CANCELED TV show
- Anubis
- Legendary
- Posts: 6429
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2005 7:57 pm
- Custom Title: Eletist Jerk
- Gender: Male
- Location: Crossroads, ganking a hordie lowbie.
- Contact:
Your favorite CANCELED TV show
what i mean by canceled is that they WILL not make any new ones, they don't have to be necassaraly airing or not.
My favorite show is M*A*S*H, man i love Allan Alda he is so funny
My favorite show is M*A*S*H, man i love Allan Alda he is so funny
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 3203
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2004 3:07 pm
- Gender: Male
- Mood: Meh...
- Location: Where soul meets body
- Stone Wolf
- Legendary
- Posts: 522
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2005 11:55 am
- Location: Southern CA
-
- Legendary
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Thu Dec 08, 2005 11:43 am
- Custom Title: Present of Darkness
- Location: Somewhere in ALBERTA!!
- Contact:
- Morkulv
- Legendary
- Posts: 3185
- Joined: Tue Jun 14, 2005 10:31 am
- Custom Title: Panzer Division Morkulv
- Gender: Male
- Mood: RAR!
- Location: The Netherlands
Hamster wrote:Invader Zim, Ren & Stimpy (Both the G rated and the MA rated), Angry Beavers, Rocko's Modern life, Are you afraid of the Dark? and a few others I can't think of now.
I miss Rocko the most.
Especially Ren & Stimpy was great fun! But on the other hand, R&S started to suck anyway when the original founder was fired by Nickelodeon because the TV-show was becoming too 'scary' for kids (!).
Scott Gardener wrote: I'd be afraid to shift if I were to lose control. If I just looked fuggly, I'd simply be annoyed every full moon.
- Scott Gardener
- Legendary
- Posts: 4731
- Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2004 11:36 pm
- Gender: Male
- Mood: Excited
- Location: Rockwall, Texas (and beyond infinity)
- Contact:
Some favorite short-lived shows:
The Phoenix: aired around 1982, a show about an anicent astronaut awakened on Earth. He seeks his mate Mira, who is the only one who knows what his purpose is on Earth. The being wears a phoenix medallion that channels his psychic powers and helps him adapt to life on Earth.
I drove my fourth grade teacher nuts making and distributing fan medallions. It looked a bit like the Trans Am hood logo in a triangle inside a circle.
Manimal: aired around 1984, a show about a man who inherited a family ability to transform into various animals. (You can see why I liked it, huh?) He used these powers to help people in need.
Both Manimal and The Phoenix resurfaced a few years ago on the Sci Fi channel, and I hope to see them some time make it to DVD, though both are obscure enough that it's probably not likely soon.
Kindred: the Embraced: based on White Wolf's Vampire game, but unfortunately adapted by Arron Spelling. It none-the-less started getting good around the time it got the axe.
Werewolf: aired around 1988 on Fox when it was a brand new network, I saw it a year later when USA picked it up and it was finally available in Nacogdoches. It was basically an Incredible Hulk variant, with soap opera star John J. York playing the young displaced vagabond, searching for the werewolf who infected him. It was worth it alone for Chuck Conners as Jonas Scorziny, the said werewolf, though Lance LeGault played an equally memorable bounty hunter turned werewolf hunter.
Wolf Lake: recent victim of the same kill-the-series-as-it's-starting-to-get-good principle of the network executives. Lou Diamond Philips plays a police officer investigating the disappearance of a woman who briefly courted him; the trail led to a small town populated by eccentric people who were in fact wolves who had taken on a human form. You probably would never guess why I was so sad to see this show get axed so quickly.
Bottom line: Hollywood likes werewolves if they look really screwy, but TV network execs must work for Pentex.
The Phoenix: aired around 1982, a show about an anicent astronaut awakened on Earth. He seeks his mate Mira, who is the only one who knows what his purpose is on Earth. The being wears a phoenix medallion that channels his psychic powers and helps him adapt to life on Earth.
I drove my fourth grade teacher nuts making and distributing fan medallions. It looked a bit like the Trans Am hood logo in a triangle inside a circle.
Manimal: aired around 1984, a show about a man who inherited a family ability to transform into various animals. (You can see why I liked it, huh?) He used these powers to help people in need.
Both Manimal and The Phoenix resurfaced a few years ago on the Sci Fi channel, and I hope to see them some time make it to DVD, though both are obscure enough that it's probably not likely soon.
Kindred: the Embraced: based on White Wolf's Vampire game, but unfortunately adapted by Arron Spelling. It none-the-less started getting good around the time it got the axe.
Werewolf: aired around 1988 on Fox when it was a brand new network, I saw it a year later when USA picked it up and it was finally available in Nacogdoches. It was basically an Incredible Hulk variant, with soap opera star John J. York playing the young displaced vagabond, searching for the werewolf who infected him. It was worth it alone for Chuck Conners as Jonas Scorziny, the said werewolf, though Lance LeGault played an equally memorable bounty hunter turned werewolf hunter.
Wolf Lake: recent victim of the same kill-the-series-as-it's-starting-to-get-good principle of the network executives. Lou Diamond Philips plays a police officer investigating the disappearance of a woman who briefly courted him; the trail led to a small town populated by eccentric people who were in fact wolves who had taken on a human form. You probably would never guess why I was so sad to see this show get axed so quickly.
Bottom line: Hollywood likes werewolves if they look really screwy, but TV network execs must work for Pentex.
Taking a Gestalt approach, since it's the "in" thing...
- PariahPoet
- Legendary
- Posts: 2865
- Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 4:05 pm
- Custom Title: The one and only were-jaguarundi!
- Gender: Female
- Location: Texas
- Contact:
- Stone Wolf
- Legendary
- Posts: 522
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2005 11:55 am
- Location: Southern CA
-
- Legendary
- Posts: 3355
- Joined: Wed Dec 01, 2004 9:16 pm
- Custom Title: Aspiring "Reverse" Kitsune
- Gender: Male
- Location: Lakeville MN - (USA)
- Contact:
Megas XLR
Gargoyles
Knight Rider (Yeah...David Hasselhoff sucks as an actor...but KITT Rocked!)
The Muppet Show
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Duck Tales
"The Screen Savers" (As it was before the G4 corruption started)
Monty Pythons Flying Circus
Red Dwarf
...and I'm sure there are others that slip my mind at the moment.
M.A.S.H. was good too...though I never liked it nearly as much as my sister does.
Gargoyles
Knight Rider (Yeah...David Hasselhoff sucks as an actor...but KITT Rocked!)
The Muppet Show
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Duck Tales
"The Screen Savers" (As it was before the G4 corruption started)
Monty Pythons Flying Circus
Red Dwarf
...and I'm sure there are others that slip my mind at the moment.
M.A.S.H. was good too...though I never liked it nearly as much as my sister does.
Please Forgive the Occasional Outburst of my Inner Sage ... for he is Oblivious to Sarcasm, and not Easily Silenced.
=^.^'= ~
=^.^'= ~
- PariahPoet
- Legendary
- Posts: 2865
- Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 4:05 pm
- Custom Title: The one and only were-jaguarundi!
- Gender: Female
- Location: Texas
- Contact:
- Terastas
- Legendary
- Posts: 5193
- Joined: Thu Nov 25, 2004 4:03 pm
- Custom Title: Spare Pelican
- Gender: Male
- Location: Las Vegas
- Contact:
That was cancelled?!! I thought they just put the new season off so Genndy could make those stupid Clone Wars episodes!Aki wrote:I alree with many of these. But instead of reiterating, I'll throw another one out there.
Samurai Jack.
Such a cool show...
*sigh* If I'm wrong. . . Put that at the top of my list.
- PariahPoet
- Legendary
- Posts: 2865
- Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 4:05 pm
- Custom Title: The one and only were-jaguarundi!
- Gender: Female
- Location: Texas
- Contact:
-
- Legendary
- Posts: 3355
- Joined: Wed Dec 01, 2004 9:16 pm
- Custom Title: Aspiring "Reverse" Kitsune
- Gender: Male
- Location: Lakeville MN - (USA)
- Contact:
So sad...so true.PariahPoet wrote:Thank you! G4TV should die!Veruth wrote:The whole techtv network. I really do despise G4.
I miss Eye Drops and Screen Savers
G4 sucks. TechTV ruled. The only good show left is "X-Play".
...I swear...G4 killed the entire TechTV channel just to snag that one show, because of thier entire channel of Videogame shows, that one show was better then all of thiers. ...and still is.
-
- Legendary
- Posts: 307
- Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2006 7:11 pm
- Custom Title: Do You Believe In Magic ?
- Location: Superb Swimming At The La Brea Tar Pits
- Contact:
Hmmmm, hope folks don't mind if I do comments instead of making a list of my own.
Witchblade
The first season was over the top fantastic from the very first episode to the very last. During the interval between filming season one and season two, the star of the film, apparently developed some serious problems, which I guess were dealt with sufficiently to allow filming season two. Big problem was this, the writers had not a clue what to do for the second season. The writing was clearly and obviously lost and meandering all over the place with out any plan or purpose.
I have speculated since, that the only way they will sell any volume of season Two DVDs, is to bundle them with season One.
Manimal
There was not ONE drop of pathos or difficulty in the star character's life. All of his shape changing and challenges were just too damned easy. The entire series suffered from terminally vacuous and perfunctory writing. I kept hoping, but it NEVER got better. That a series could have so much potential for emotionally connecting to a characer, and the writers could not be bothered to do this, really REALLY annoyed me.
Werewolf on FOX
Ho Hum. I had high hopes for this. But it was formulaic to a fault. And that was the problem with the series. The writing was nothing to crow about and one could create a chart of events in a few episodes and essentially chart and anticipate the rest from this. And frankly lumbering lug werewolves are just not very impressive.
Wolf Lake
Hot damn. I really liked this. An excellent ensemble cast and writing that actually demonstrated that there is indeed intelligent life on Planet Earth. The titles of some of the episodes were often quite tongue in cheek and humorous. I think the one that stands out as titles goes, and sticks in my mind is: "Tastes Like Chicken".
The pacing was clearly not revelatory at a sufficient rate to hold an audience of persons with the attention span of a fruit fly. I however loved the way that various episodes revealed, bit by bit, more and more about the residents of Wolf Lake and how they interacted with one another. The great shame is that nowadays series television demands that any title hits the ground running at full speed and if it cannot garner a HUGE audience and hold on to it, the series will be toast in nearly the blink of an eye.
That's enough for now.
Witchblade
The first season was over the top fantastic from the very first episode to the very last. During the interval between filming season one and season two, the star of the film, apparently developed some serious problems, which I guess were dealt with sufficiently to allow filming season two. Big problem was this, the writers had not a clue what to do for the second season. The writing was clearly and obviously lost and meandering all over the place with out any plan or purpose.
I have speculated since, that the only way they will sell any volume of season Two DVDs, is to bundle them with season One.
Manimal
There was not ONE drop of pathos or difficulty in the star character's life. All of his shape changing and challenges were just too damned easy. The entire series suffered from terminally vacuous and perfunctory writing. I kept hoping, but it NEVER got better. That a series could have so much potential for emotionally connecting to a characer, and the writers could not be bothered to do this, really REALLY annoyed me.
Werewolf on FOX
Ho Hum. I had high hopes for this. But it was formulaic to a fault. And that was the problem with the series. The writing was nothing to crow about and one could create a chart of events in a few episodes and essentially chart and anticipate the rest from this. And frankly lumbering lug werewolves are just not very impressive.
Wolf Lake
Hot damn. I really liked this. An excellent ensemble cast and writing that actually demonstrated that there is indeed intelligent life on Planet Earth. The titles of some of the episodes were often quite tongue in cheek and humorous. I think the one that stands out as titles goes, and sticks in my mind is: "Tastes Like Chicken".
The pacing was clearly not revelatory at a sufficient rate to hold an audience of persons with the attention span of a fruit fly. I however loved the way that various episodes revealed, bit by bit, more and more about the residents of Wolf Lake and how they interacted with one another. The great shame is that nowadays series television demands that any title hits the ground running at full speed and if it cannot garner a HUGE audience and hold on to it, the series will be toast in nearly the blink of an eye.
That's enough for now.
The change, does it wrack the bones and rend the flesh ? Yes, indeed it does. But is this pain and agony alone ? No, in fact hardly at all. It is the Sacrament of the Moon. The flesh flows and so do the endorphins. It is, in truth, the agony ecstatic; The Pain That Is Pleasure