I bailed when they went all in with Time Travel, the SF writer's universal crutch when they're out of ideas. Networks really have always been resistant to shows with strong story arcs. It doesn't syndicate well, and they've got at least 23 shows per season to sell. Even good shows are half filler. Imagine if X-files had 13 show seasons of all "mythology" and allowed to bring it to a conclusion in 5 seasons instead of trying for show immortality and dragging on and on.StCapps wrote:I think it started falling apart before the last episode, you could tell they were trying to answer too many of the shows mysteries in the last season and it was leading in one direction.Kath wrote:Lost was pretty fantastic until the final episode. These guys had no plan all along and just threw some shit at the wall.... "god done it." blech
I don't watch much network TV, but several friends said to watch "Person of Interest". If they had only 13 shows per season and gotten rid of all the ridiculous gunplay and fight scenes it could have been a pretty good show. But standalone shows and lots of action is what the networks think we want.