8 Great TV Shows With Awful First Seasons

Amazing TV shows nearly ruined by terrible first seasons - The Office, The Leftovers & more!

Star Trek The Next Generation Symbiosis
Paramount

When you're the first, you're often the worst. That's true of most things, especially television.

It's not uncommon to find an otherwise fantastic TV show hit most of its stumbling blocks in its first season, due to the writers being unsure as to what they want the show to be, the budget not being up to par with what they want to do with the material, the actors not knowing their parts as well yet, and many other contributing factors.

Some of the greatest TV shows in the history of the medium had an inaugural season that, looking back, makes you wonder why they were allowed to go any further.

The only rule for being on this list is that the show in question has to either be completed or close to being completed, so that this list doesn't choke on its own foot in the future.

These shows may have gone out on a high note, but that's not the way they came in.

8. The Office

Star Trek The Next Generation Symbiosis
NBC

The Office is easily one of the most influential TV shows of the 21st century, just look at any meme library and you'll see proof enough of that. Endlessly quotable, grounded enough to be compelling, but absurd enough that it got away with a lot of jokes that other shows would otherwise have veered away from.

But the version of The Office that we're all aware of was actually an Americanized sister series to a BBC show of the same name. And when you learn that, a lot of season 1 starts to make more sense.

The BBC Office was a completely different animal from what the American NBC version would end up becoming. Being British, it was a lot darker, with a cynical, downright bleak view of people and the British workforce (no prizes for guessing that it starred Ricky Gervais). The American version initially tried to reflect that, and by season's end it was clear that it needed to go its own direction if it wanted to stick around longer.

So season 2 onward, it still took the piss out of its cast every chance it got, but it also softened them a lot more than the BBC version was willing to.

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John Tibbetts is a novelist in theory, a Whatculture contributor in practice, and a nerd all around who loves talking about movies, TV, anime, and video games more than he loves breathing. Which might be a problem in the long term, but eh, who can think that far ahead?