10 Things Everyone Hates About Modern TV

5. A Lack Of One-Off Shows

Loki finale
HBO

While one-off shows certainly aren't unheard of - recently we've had Watchmen, The Queen's Gambit, and apparently WandaVision - the general rule is that if a show's first season performs well, it'll be back for more whether the story necessitates it or not.

By far the most egregious example in recent times is Big Little Lies, a terrifically entertaining mystery-thriller show that was milked for a second season it absolutely didn't need.

It speaks to the general issue with sequelising anything: studios love it because it's less of a gamble than making something new, but that often results in an inferior season two that struggles to justify its own existence.

There are other examples - True Detective never managed to recapture the brilliance of its first season, nor did Killing Eve. Would it surprise anyone at all if HBO dumped a truck of money on Kate Winslet's lawn to greenlight a wildly unnecessary second season of Mare of Easttown, for instance?

There's a beauty and a purity to shows that do their thing and then just disappear, leaving viewers wanting more while preserving their own integrity.

It's easy to see why networks won't let a good thing lie, but that doesn't mean it's the right thing to do - artistically-speaking at least.

Contributor
Contributor

Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.