The Simpsons, Family Guy, The X-Files definitely (coincidence they're all Fox cashcows?) Happy Days, Diff'rent Strokes, Frasier and Mork and Mindy. I thought the last half of season 5 and all of season 6 of That 70s Show was pushing it, but it had a bit of a return to form for 7 and 8. Will & Grace (or Jack & Karen as it should've been known).
Voyager I think lost its way some time during season 6 and season 7 became a bit of a hard slog.
Scrubs. When your main character actually starts to irritate you and they have to rely on jokes that Turk may in fact be black and not white (I hadn't realised!
), and they make mention in the episode that JD/Elliot is Ross/Rachel all over again, it's time to pull the plug.
Smallville just seems to be going on and on for some reason, and Buffy. When you've killed off your main character, the clichéd resurrection plot line is NEVER a good idea, in my opinion
I feel like Heroes more than ran its course in the first season (I could get lynched for saying that). I also think Lost spent a lot of seasons 2 and 3 stalling for time, but I won't pass judgement on that until season 6 has aired. Prison Break and 24 - How can the same shit happen to the same guys that many times and they still act surprised?!
And the only British show I can think of offhand is My Family. The Lisa Kudrow clone is an added annoyance, and the plots have become so contrived, it doesn't at all resemble the original show. It really should've ended when Kris Marhsall left the cast.
Umm... yeah. They're just the ones I felt some kind of affinity for but felt like the producers tested my patience. Sorry!
Does "too long" necessarily mean "jumped the shark"? I'm not convinced some of the ones I mentioned actually jumped the shark, but it definitely became more of an effort to watch some of them.
Voyager I think lost its way some time during season 6 and season 7 became a bit of a hard slog.
Scrubs. When your main character actually starts to irritate you and they have to rely on jokes that Turk may in fact be black and not white (I hadn't realised!

Smallville just seems to be going on and on for some reason, and Buffy. When you've killed off your main character, the clichéd resurrection plot line is NEVER a good idea, in my opinion

I feel like Heroes more than ran its course in the first season (I could get lynched for saying that). I also think Lost spent a lot of seasons 2 and 3 stalling for time, but I won't pass judgement on that until season 6 has aired. Prison Break and 24 - How can the same shit happen to the same guys that many times and they still act surprised?!

And the only British show I can think of offhand is My Family. The Lisa Kudrow clone is an added annoyance, and the plots have become so contrived, it doesn't at all resemble the original show. It really should've ended when Kris Marhsall left the cast.
Umm... yeah. They're just the ones I felt some kind of affinity for but felt like the producers tested my patience. Sorry!

Does "too long" necessarily mean "jumped the shark"? I'm not convinced some of the ones I mentioned actually jumped the shark, but it definitely became more of an effort to watch some of them.
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