


God, do I love the internet.
My TV experience started back in the '50's. and as Greg Cox wrote, TV from the '50's, '60's, etc gets glamorized by many who may not have been there to experience some of these shows in first run. Keep in mind, it's easy to watch them now "ironically" in reruns and think you really are seeing high quality (Batman '66, anyone?).
Yeah, the Twilight Zone, Playhouse 90, The Dick Van Dyck Show, were great, but for every one of those great ones, there were two or three (or more) clunkers like The Hathaways, a show about a family who owned a bunch of chimps, My Mother the Car, a show about a guy who's dead mother talked to him through a car, Mr. Ed, a talking horse, My Favorite Martian two talented leads, stuck in a badly written show, and on it went.
As I'm sure someone has pointed out to you by now, there were only 3 networks back then that put on first run shows. Today there are dozens of outlets for original programming. That is primarily the reason TV today is so much better than it used to be. Today, the competition to put on great show is fierce. Back in the day, the 3 networks knew they were the only game in town so they catered to the lowest common denominator because that's all they had to do.
When I occasionally see these "today's TV is terrible" threads pop up, the first thing I think is that maybe this is someone who fell asleep in maybe the 1960;s and just woke up.
Just this past week I polished off Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, a niche show, granted, but VERY good, the movie, Spotlight, a rewatch of the 4 Hunger Games movies, which I loved, and am currently on ep 4 of a Netflix show called Stranger Things and am enthralled by it. This was ALL on TV.
So, take my word for it bro, for a "millenial" who has been watching since the '50's, TV today is a revelation. We are currently living in the Golden Age of TV...maybe, because (brace yourself) it could get even better.