• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Has there ever been a show with six successful seasons?

"Weeds" will be the 'yes' example after its next season, I reckon...in spite of those who say it should have ended after season 3. I still like it! :angryrazz:
 
LOST is going to the only great six year show. If we're counting shows that kept going afterwards, X-Files and Stargate SG1 were good through S6 and then went to seed in S7.
 
I can barely think of any shows with only six seasons. Five or seven are far more common.

Xena is the only show I can think of that ended after six seasons, but its final season was pure shit.
 
DS9, if you delete the first half of S1 and the first half of S7.

And very soon, Lost.

I was talking about shows that have ended after six good seasons.

Why should a show with six good seasons get more credit than a show with six good seasons and a couple sucky ones? If the good-six-season show had gone on longer, maybe it would have been sucky too, so it can't claim any kind of superiority.
 
As others have mentioned, TNG and DS9 ran for seven pretty successful seasons and went out on top. Lost is about to begin its sixth and final year - and while I can't read the future, I dare say it'll be very good. Also, the success of a series can be subjective. I, personally, think Buffy the Vampire Slayer ran for seven successful seasons. Others may disagree and argue that it should have ended after season five, but I was very happy with the way things turned out.

I thought Buffy was great from start to finish. You're not alone!
 
I can barely think of any shows with only six seasons. Five or seven are far more common.

Xena is the only show I can think of that ended after six seasons, but its final season was pure shit.

There's also Oz, although I can't say whether it was consistently good as I've only seen to the end of Season 4...
 
NCIS, it's actually gained viewers over the course of its run and has been holding the #1 spot in the 2009-2010 TV season. This is its 7th season.

Yep. This is what I was gonna say.

NCIS is in the extremely rare position of getting more and more popular as the years go by.

And it's an awesome show, by the way. :)

Seinfeld and M*A*S*H would both make this list.

I think The Rockford Files ran 6 seasons, and it was good. I mean, seriously - what's not to love about James Garner?

I am also confident that LOST will be in this list in a few months.

I think alot of shows that went a long while are good through the sixth season. It's just that they stay on too long and eventually wear out their welcome. ER is in this boat, I think. And in some ways, The X-Files are in this boat too...although I like the last few seasons okay. They weren't as great as when DD was on the show...but they were reasonably decent. Another show that is in this boat (although it was good alot longer than 6 seasons) is Stargate: SG-1.
 
I would borrow Roger Maris's asterisk and note the original Twilight Zone. Technically, The Twilight Zone lasted for 5 seasons, but it had 156 episodes. By modern standards, 156 episodes would equal roughly 6 to 7 seasons.
 
NCIS, it's actually gained viewers over the course of its run and has been holding the #1 spot in the 2009-2010 TV season. This is its 7th season.

I was going to say NCIS as well. There are other good examples on this thread, but NCIS is definitely the best example of a currently running show that shows no sign of slowing down.

CSI is also a good example. That show still manages to do really well and it's 10 years old almost. And if you roll it back to Year 6, it was particularly huge.

The shows that I find have the biggest challenge continuing past a few seasons are the arc-heavy shows. It's very hard to keep that momentum going. However shows that at their core are standalone weekly stories, like NCIS and CSI, and Doctor Who, are the ones with the flexibility that allows them to keep going for years on end. There is no coincidence in the fact that two of the most arc-less shows on the air right now - original Law & Order and The Simpsons - have survived into their 20th years (like them or hate them, if people weren't watching they'd be gone), while arc-heavy shows like Heroes and Ugly Betty are hanging on by their fingernails. And even Lost's producers have had the good sense to call it quits while they were ahead.

Alex
 
I don't believe Shakespeare ever had a police officer forced to fellate another man at gunpoint... which probably means that The Shield is better than Shakespeare.
 
Anyone here ever heard of the series "Dream On"? Very funny, edgy, and occasionally touching show about a single father/book publisher that happened in the '90s. It was pretty heavy on sex, but it was surprisingly thoughtful. It was way ahead of its time, in my opinion. It not only had explicit sex, but also profanity, yet it was written with intelligence and didn't just use those things for shock value.

Its cutting to old black and white movie clips to show the thoughts of its main character was a precursor to the cutaways on "The Simpsons" and "Family Guy", and it used them in a consistently clever manner. It ran from 1990-1996 - exactly six seasons. I've been watching it. I haven't got to season six yet, but so far so good.
 
As others have mentioned, TNG and DS9 ran for seven pretty successful seasons and went out on top. Lost is about to begin its sixth and final year - and while I can't read the future, I dare say it'll be very good. Also, the success of a series can be subjective. I, personally, think Buffy the Vampire Slayer ran for seven successful seasons. Others may disagree and argue that it should have ended after season five, but I was very happy with the way things turned out.

I thought Buffy was great from start to finish. You're not alone!

Nope, you're not. I liked the 6th season, too (the fourth season on the other hand is a different subject).
 
I was talking about shows that have ended after six good seasons.

Typically, shows lasting exactly six seasons are canceled rather than allowed to end naturally. It's either shorter or longer season orders that allow writers to end their shows naturally. That's just the way the industry has evolved.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top