Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sometimes good series not only go bad, they do so at the worst of all possible times — as in, right when they’re coming to an end. As a result, instead of leaving us reflecting fondly on a ...
Maddie Crum of The Huffington Post selected "The End" as her choice for the most disappointing series finale of all time, saying that it was "a complete stock ending" with "cheap pathos plays". [63] In 2019, Kelly Lawler of USA Today named the episode the third worst series finale, describing the ending as "easy" and "schmaltzy". [64]
In May 2019, a poll for E! states that 66.88% of the audience disliked the finale, while the remaining 33.12% liked it, ranking it as the third worst series finale of all time. [40] In 2021, respondents to a survey conducted by the website OnBuy.com named it as one of the most disappointing series finales ever. [41]
The three programs covering the XFL are generally treated as one for the purposes of worst television show lists. The series ranked No. 3 on the 2002 TV Guide list of worst TV series of all time, #2 on ESPN's list of biggest sports flops, #21 on TV Guide's 2010 list of the biggest television blunders of all time, and #10 on Entertainment Weekly ...
“A lot of people hate how far into the religious elements they went, but it was there since Day 1. Over the course of the series, we watched both sides of the war change the way they saw the ...
The first-season finale was met with negative reviews from some critics. The Los Angeles Times called it "one of the most frustrating finales in TV history," [38] with Alan Sepinwall of HitFix.com calling the end "insulting." [39] Finally, Maureen Ryan of AOL TV said that the finale "killed off any interest I had in ever watching the show again."
TV’s 30 Best Series Finales, Ranked — Now Including, Yes, Lost View List. Seinfeld hails Mad Men — which ended in May 2015 with Don Draper in meditation at a retreat, and implied that the ad ...
"Not Fade Away" is the 22nd and final episode of the fifth season and the series finale of the American television series Angel. Written by series creator Joss Whedon and directed and co-written by Jeffrey Bell, it was originally broadcast on May 19, 2004 on the WB network.