Classic Comedies Canceled After One Season, Ranked

Bring back ‘The Oblongs,’ you cowards
Classic Comedies Canceled After One Season, Ranked

Sometimes, shows get not only good but could possibly have achieved greatness if they’d had more than one season to work with. Here's a ranking of those specific comedies and what we couldve had...

‘Wonderfalls’

The 2004 comedy-drama created by Todd Holland and Bryan Fuller was a hit among people who actually saw it. (Its got a 100 percent audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.) Centered around twentysomething Jaye Tyler, who works at Niagara Falls and has chats with animal figurines come to life, like many a FOX show of the era, it lacked proper promotion and suffered from time-slot switcharoos. As a result, it was dropped after only four episodes, even though the show was planned out for three seasons. 

‘The Muppets’

Already a classic (because its the freaking Muppets and any time prior to 2020 is widely known as the Before Times), this 2015 sitcom revolving around the everyday lives of our favorite star puppets got canned by ABC because the ratings didnt match expectations. 

The show was a parody of mockumentary shows like explained, the idea was to bring Kermit and company back to a more mature audience and not just have them be a product solely for the entertainment of kids. However, folks at the time apparently didnt care to see these furry puppets hungover at work following a wild karaoke night.

‘The Oblongs’

The adult animated sitcom featuring a kooky family who lives in a toxic wasteland underneath the sprawling hills of wealth and apathy had so much potential. Created by Angus Oblong (animator of everything.

‘Happyish’

The year 2015 clearly wasnt kind to good comedies — probably because everyone was too busy doing some politics than having a laugh (let alone a laugh with a dash of existentialism). The satire starring Steve Coogan, Kathryn Hahn, Bradley Whitford and Ellen Barkin was, perhaps, a tad too out there for folks at the time, but its dark humor and absurd nature made it unlike anything else on television and, in many ways, served as an outlet for people whod had it up to here with the ridiculousness of corporate synergies and the idea of feeling happy in a world so bizarrely upside-down.

‘Freaks and Geeks’

Probably the majority of peoples favorite single-season comedies, Freaks and Geeks propelled so many currently successful comedians careers. Actors like Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, Martin Starr and Busy Philipps all started out playing 1980s teenagers navigating the madness that is high school. Its cancelation also famously gave Judd Apatow a hernia: When it went down, I really felt like it was like shutting a band down in the middle of recording a great album," Apatow told NPR. I was devastated. I had back surgery afterward because I had so much stress I herniated a disc because I just didnt want to acknowledge that the show ended.

As they say, though: When one door closes, a filmmaker will get funding to build a dozen more doors. And thats pretty much what Apatow did. As he explained, In my head, everything felt like an episode of Freaks and Geeks. Knocked Up is an episode of Freaks and Geeks, Forgetting Sarah Marshall is an episode of Freaks and Geeks. And it was a way to stay connected to all these people who I loved and believe in.

‘Undeclared’

Following the failure of Freaks and Geeks to secure a second season, Apatow jumped back into the TV pool with the FOX sitcom Undeclared in 2001 — this time graduating up to following a group of college freshmen in the early aughts, including Jay Baruchel and Rogen. It was, as far as cult status goes, another success, but its Saturday night time slot didnt help ratings, and we never got to see Linda Cardellini the cast in Season Two as Erics new girlfriend, who gets to have her face decorated onto a cake.

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