I watched the first season of War of the Worlds and enjoyed it. But then the second season moved to the local Fox affiliate, and back then you had to watch Fox while standing on one leg standing on a chair holding a metal pole in one hand and ten feet of tin foil in the other, so I missed out on the whole season.
I remembered liking the first season of WotW, but when I
revisited it some years back, I found it was pretty terrible overall, clumsily written with cheap production values. The one thing I really liked about it was the chemistry among the four leads, but they were broader actors than I remembered.
But I always found season 2 terrible. You're better off having missed it. They brought in a new producer, Frank Mancuso, Jr., who killed off both the nonwhite cast members (including the show's most popular character, Col. Ironhorse), destroying the great chemistry that was the only really good thing about the show. Not only that, but Jared Martin's endearingly eccentric lead character was stripped of all his personality and became a bland, generic protagonist, and the alien-looking and alien-sounding invaders from season 1 were killed off and replaced by a new faction that changed themselves into English-speaking humanoid forms, all of them white. Mancuso basically stripped away any trace of diversity from the cast. (And his excuses for killing off the nonwhite leads were unconvincing. He claimed to be unaware that Ironhorse was the breakout character, which would at best be sheer negligence for someone taking over the show. And he claimed he killed Norton Drake because the team would be on the run and a guy in a wheelchair couldn't manage -- but then he moved them into a new permanent base in the second episode.)
He also soft-rebooted the world of the show to be inexplicably far more post-apocalyptic than it had been in season 1, and it was just relentlessly grim and dismal and unpleasant, which was a weird way to try to make the show more popular. (The idea was to make the world more like it
should have been 35 years after a cataclysmic alien invasion, but the massive inconsistency with season 1's more ordinary world was never explained.) The wriitng did improve moderately in the back half of the season, but then the series finale retconned the entire movie and series in a ridiculous way in order to force a happy ending, saying that the relentless and unprovoked invasion in the original movie was just a misunderstanding, the result of the one truly bad alien tricking the otherwise good aliens into thinking we were the aggressors, or something. Even though the very first thing the aliens did in the movie after landing was to vaporize a guy waving a truce flag. It was an insult to the audience's intelligence, and a bizarrely incongruous Pollyanna ending to such a dystopian, depressing season.