• DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    The Mandalorian

    Noped out after season 1. They revealed his face during a filler episode, during a boring scene, instead of waiting an episode or two longer for the real gut punch reveal at the end of the last episode.

    It was stupid. It killed what would have been one of the best face reveals in cinema history. I had no patience for the show after that. Almost didn’t bother finishing the rest of the season. I don’t really care what their reasons were. Contractual. Whatever. Don’t care.

  • temporal_spider@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    Most of the popular ones. Especially Game of Thrones. As soon as the incestuous couple threw the little boy off the tower, I was outta there. I’m so tired of shows about horrible people doing horrible things.

    • razm@sh.itjust.works
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      27 minutes ago

      I completely understand and it took me three tries to get through the first few episodes… and then the biggest shock is that you end up partly understanding and feel these horrible people. At times, you may even root for some of them. It’s definitely taxing for most of us but that’s what makes it a great show.

  • Billy2600@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    Vikings. It started off okay. I just wanted to see vikings do cool viking stuff. But it became a drama about Christianity taking over, which might be historically accurate, but didn’t interest me at all. I straight up didn’t like any of the characters at a certain point.

  • griefreeze@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Rick & Morty. Then the whole szechuan sauce thing happened and I can’t look at any content from that show without cringing. LOOK GUYS IM PICKLE RI-stop please it’s not funny.

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      The “community” is insufferable, but the show is solid. You might like Solar Opposites. The wall substory is amazing

    • KittyKalledKarma@slrpnk.net
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      3 hours ago

      Is there even still any Rick and morty fans left in the wild? After the whole case against one of the voice actors I never see them around too much anymore.

      • Rob T Firefly@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Justin Roiland wasn’t just the voice actor for Rick, Morty, and various other roles, he was the co-creator, writer, and executive producer of the show alongside Dan Harmon. The whole thing is very much Roiland’s baby, and even after it came out that he’s an abuser and predator and the show fired him it continues to be his celebrated legacy.

        Fuck that guy and his stupid show.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          36 minutes ago

          Roiland is a co-creator, but it is very obvious that Dan Harmon took over the show for the better.

          Hell, the takeover happened while Roiland was still voicing Rick, so it isn’t like something important was lost after Roiland was fired.

    • Rob T Firefly@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      I initially found that show a bit interesting, but I found myself feeling more and more cringey about what the show was churning out. I outgrew the whole thing just as the sauce thing was happening

      It later became well known what an actual piece of shit Justin Roiland is, and I felt pretty glad not to have been stuck in that fandom still feeling like his work was of any importance to me.

      • griefreeze@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        Don’t even get me started about the SA scene(s?), especially the grape-man. I try not to judge people too harshly by their choice of mindless entertainment, but if you found that funny, or at least continue to find it funny, I don’t think I can take you seriously.

        Really triggered my partners PTSD too, so I wasn’t surprised at all when the Rolland stuff came to light.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Handmaid’s Tale.

    Never got through even a single episode.

    Would it be worth it? Is there vindication or is it just endless boring patriarchy?

    Walking Dead. There’s like several shows and a dozen seasons each, although I actively avoided it since it started about, not into zombies shows.

    Squid Game, never really like dubs and just didn’t get into listening Korean yet.

    • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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      2 hours ago

      I thought Handmaid’s Tale was absolutely amazing. Really felt like I was witnessing late stage america with its path towards a christo fascist path

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Yeah, but like, I watch shows to escape from the brutal crutch of reality.

        Like Star Trek. Or something set in the past.

        There’s a whole bunch or drug shows I haven’t watched which people think I would like, because I advocate for the legalisation of drugs. But that’s exactly why I don’t like them; they show the shitty reality that would be so easy to change.

        Oh I never watched “man in the high castle” either. Well a lot of S1 but got bored of it.

  • darkishgrey@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I agree with a lot of the shows listed. I loved TWD but after the Negan stuff, I was so incredibly bored that I gave up, couldn’t get into Parks and Rec. Tried 3 episodes before deciding it wasn’t for me, etc.

    But the one show I haven’t seen listed yet is Supernatural. I was obsessed with that show for the first 5 seasons (which was how many the show creator wanted it to go on for) and then it just became so unbearable and ridiculous that I completely gave up by season 7. This one died, but not really. This one died and got brought back - 3 times. This one swapped bodies. This character is actually this character, but SIKE! it was THIS character all along!

    Give me a break.

    Then it went on for like 8 more seasons and I just cannot fathom that.

    • dumples@midwest.social
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      4 hours ago

      I watched Supernatural one or two seasons too long. The first five were great all around and then it got weird.

    • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I lasted about half an episode when I realized they were directly making fun of me and my friends in a pretty horrific way.

  • exchange12rocks@lemm.ee
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    8 hours ago

    The Umbrella Academy: in the first couple of series like nothing happens and everyone is very sad.

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Anything with more than 3 seasons usually fails to maintain my attention. Eventually it’s just more of the same.

  • 2ugly2live@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Game of Thrones - I’m not good with seeing sexual violence and it felt like it was happening every five minutes.

    My Dress up Darling - I understand why people would like it, but I don’t understand why it was so huge. But I’m getting old.

    Beastars - my friend and I watched it in one day and it just didn’t do anything for us. I found most of the characters kind of a annoying.

    My Hero Academia - I mean this in the best way possible, but I could see myself loving this if I was a kid.

    Mushoku Tensi - I know people love this one. I watched the entire first season and I found the protagonist so revolting. I didn’t care that he was a cute kid now and gets better and what have you, I thought he was gross.

    Friends - I could never get it. I found it boring and unfunny.

    Stranger Things - I actually really enjoyed the first season, but I got tired of the kids as they got older. It felt like it was shifting into a teen drama and I found myself skipping through it before I let it go.

    YOU - Weird guy stalks a girl. Glad someone enjoys it, but I got tired of it real quick.

    • adhocfungus@midwest.social
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      5 hours ago

      Definitely agree on Stranger Things. Season 1 was actually really good, but they kept ramping everything up in later seasons and it lost all of what made S1 good.

      I tried watching My Hero Academia with a friend and it was rough. Basically every trope that made me burn out on anime was dialed up to 11. My friend tried to explain that it was satirizing those tropes, but I couldn’t handle it.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      It makes me happy to see others shit on Friends.

      When it first aired, my mom was a fan and it would regularly be on in the living room, which was the crossroads of my childhood house - you had to go through it to get anywhere else. Which meant that Friends was impossible to ignore. Walking by, the highest praise I could conjure was, “Wow, that laugh track is doing a lot of heavy lifting.”

      At the time of its popularity, I never heard anyone else dislike it. When the show ended, I felt alone in not being sad about it. Since then, I can’t tell if people look back on it with nostalgia or if they are truly still amused by the bland, low-fruit, celebration of stupidity that makes up most of that show’s humor.

      The theme song was good though.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        2 hours ago

        Friends was created in a different time for media.

        Part of it fulfilled the parasocial relationships we see in modern social media. People developed real relationships with these fake characters.

        Second is that most television had to have broader comedy because they had larger audience. Over 10% of America watched Friends regularly. I can’t think of any show nowadays that even approaches that.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 hours ago

        At the time of its popularity, I never heard anyone else dislike it.

        We were out there… What a terrible show.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 hours ago

      Friends has to be the most overrated TV show of all time. I feel like an insane person whenever I hear people saying that it’s a funny show.

      • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        I dont k ow if you watched it when it was new, but today it’s not very funny. In the 90s, it was funny, but comedy has changed a lot since then, and some of the show is not very “woke” if you will excuse the term.

        I think there are still funny and quotable moments but i dont think any of it would resonate with a younger audience. Comedy today is so much better and different to then. And a lot of shows that have come along since friends have used plots and jokes from the show and done them to death so it seems unoriginal and derivative.

        I think this is all true of a lot of old shows. Tv is just a different beast now.

    • SSTF@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      My Hero Academia

      I really enjoyed this, but one day I kind of just stopped watching. I think I get bored with anime shows that are set up to go on and on with endless hundred episode arcs.

      Stranger Things

      The first season really felt like something the creators had been developing for years as a creative idea. The ending with a sandwich left for Eleven was just the right amount of ambiguous to end off the story. The second season felt like a rushed idea pumped out when offered more money where the creators just leaned into full 80s nostalgia by copying ALIENS rather than forging something 80s inspired but unique like the first season.

      Friends

      I don’t get it either. It’s just vapid interpersonal dynamics comedy. I’ve watched a little and it has the wide and low appeal, it never did anything interesting.

    • CatZoomies@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I was sort of with you on My Hero Academia as I’m currently watching it for the first time. Parts of it were good and it was enjoyable for the most part watching it as an adult. Dragon Ball Z doesn’t hold up as well but I still love it as I grew up with that.

      However, just yesterday I finished s03e11 “One For All”. And holy shit was that a gut-wrenching and emotional episode about the legendary hero “All Might”. Seeing this Superman like hero being broken and exposed while the whole world watches was incredible. I won’t say anymore, but it was incredibly moving how that episode turned out. Cemented it as an incredible anime for me so far. I’m looking forward to watching the rest of it, and hopefully I will still enjoy it. But boy did it take a long time of watching and filler episodes to get to this point.

  • dustyData@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I watch quite a lot of series and enjoy some of them. TV has never been too good, and nowadays its the most obvious that write-as-you-go model has blatant flaws. Storytelling is difficult enough already, but it’s worse when you don’t know how many episodes you actually have to tell the story, and you have to argue with other writers to include your scenes and plot lines.

    I constantly find myself enjoying miniseries the most. The ending makes the story. So, the second best shows are those where every season or series has a self-contained opening and ending arcs. Cliffhangers bore me, most hooks are lost on me. Usually when characters seem to meander and roam aimlessly is because the writers are lost as well. And plots of convenience (where magically something just happened by chance to create or resolve a new plotline, or deus ex machina) just completely bore me.

    So, anyways, to answer the question. True Blood lost me completely midway second season. Awesome world, but the writers didn’t know how to write for shit.