Greatest Sitcoms Ever
#21
Posted 2012-November-21, 10:45
#22
Posted 2012-November-21, 10:47
#23
Posted 2012-November-21, 11:16
dwar0123, on 2012-November-21, 10:45, said:
Fantastic indeed!
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#24
Posted 2012-November-21, 11:17
mike777, on 2012-November-21, 08:43, said:
How one puts a 12 episode show on a list and not put on I love lucy does seem like a very biased list of greatest sitcoms ever.
Because they got more good gags in 12 episodes than some of the US shows got in 3 seasons.
I also enjoyed drop the dead donkey (a sitcom about a TV news channel) and red dwarf.
#25
Posted 2012-November-21, 11:26
Cyberyeti, on 2012-November-21, 11:17, said:
I also enjoyed drop the dead donkey (a sitcom about a TV news channel) and red dwarf.
Please note I am not knocking FT..I am knocking not having lucy on your list..
again so I love lucy has no quality. I mean you dont even bother to put it on a list of greatest sitcoms ever..
Or do you just dismiss all of the sitcoms from the 1950's
A show that defined the word sitcom..
A show with more than more than a hundred quality episodes not on your list..a show that could barely make 12 shows does..
any show watched by hundreds of millions or more fans, that was the number one show on tv for 4 years....
popular bad....almost never seen show...great....
A tv show 50-60 years later still on tv in over 40 countries ..not worthy of being on great sitcom list...
#26
Posted 2012-November-21, 12:20
mike777, on 2012-November-21, 11:26, said:
again so I love lucy has no quality. I mean you dont even bother to put it on a list of greatest sitcoms ever..
Or do you just dismiss all of the sitcoms from the 1950's
A show that defined the word sitcom..
A show with more than more than a hundred quality episodes not on your list..a show that could barely make 12 shows does..
any show watched by hundreds of millions or more fans, that was the number one show on tv for 4 years....
popular bad....almost never seen show...great....
A tv show 50-60 years later still on tv in over 40 countries ..not worthy of being on great sitcom list...
I love Lucy may well be wonderful, I just haven't seen enough of it to know (I wasn't born till the mid 60s and we didn't have a TV till well into the 70s), I've seen maybe 2 part episodes. The decision to only make 12 shows is fairly common over here, means you don't have to spread the ideas thinly and can use them up without having to worry about how you fill the next series.
And while Fawlty Towers may be almost never seen in the US, it was hugely watched in the UK, have been trying without success to find the audience figures, but 12 million or around a quarter of the population at that time (not sure if it was shown in Scotland) watched it IIRC at one point.
#27
Posted 2012-November-21, 12:22
Cyberyeti, on 2012-November-21, 03:06, said:
Basil would suppose the german conspiracy behind this mis.....
#28
Posted 2012-November-21, 12:31
dwar0123, on 2012-November-21, 10:45, said:
They have just started a new season.
#30
Posted 2012-November-21, 13:28
I would think you would at least watch all the major contenders or simply not make a list.
Sort of like making a greatest movie list of all time but you have only seen 100 movies in your lifetime
I mean do you make a list of greatest bridge players ever and only include the ones you played against
Now if the list is all about you and your favorites ok....no problem....
#32
Posted 2012-November-21, 14:13
Cyberyeti, on 2012-November-21, 12:20, said:
This is something that makes no sense to me about British television. If it is wildly popular, why not make more episodes? Fans enjoy, producers and broadcasters profit, what's not to like? This would never happen in the US, unless perhaps a critical performer left the show.
-gwnn
#34
Posted 2012-November-21, 14:51
And the descriptions of the shows in this "top 10" collection don't even explain why they think those shows are superior. They give a brief synopsis of the show, a few honors and quotes from entertainment magazines or Emmy awards, and some production notes (including the theme song writers of several of them). It looks like it might be just one guy's personal favorites.
#35
Posted 2012-November-21, 15:17
billw55, on 2012-November-21, 14:13, said:
Connie Booth became a virtual recluse after separating from Cleese and was tempted out for the second series, also the episodes were written and edited VERY slowly, which didn't sit well with recommissioning.
#36
Posted 2012-November-21, 15:33
Top 10
1.Seinfeld (NBC, July 5, 1989 May 14, 1998)
2.I Love Lucy (CBS, October 15, 1951 May 6, 1957)
3.The Honeymooners (CBS, October 1, 1955 September 22, 1956)
4.All in the Family (CBS, January 12, 1971 April 8, 1979)
5.The Sopranos (HBO, January 10, 1999 June 10, 2007)
6.60 Minutes (CBS, September 24, 1968 present)
7.Late Show with David Letterman (CBS, August 30, 1993 present)
8.The Simpsons (Fox, December 17, 1989 present)
9.The Andy Griffith Show (CBS, October 3, 1960 April 1, 1968)
10.Saturday Night Live (NBC, October 11, 1975 present
#37
Posted 2012-November-21, 15:39
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#39
Posted 2012-November-21, 17:10
dwar0123, on 2012-November-21, 10:45, said:
Have you been watching the new series Red Dwarf X?
#40
Posted 2012-November-21, 17:49
billw55, on 2012-November-21, 14:13, said:
Traditionally British sitcoms have a very small team of writers, normally one or two. This is the limiting factor.