Two strongly come to mind:
The Orville
I gave it a try. I watched the entire first season. Half-watched some of the new season. But I find it flat overall. Just not for me. I'd rather watch old episodes of TNG or DS9 or VOY if I need my 90s Trek fix.
There is a flatness to it, especially when you compare it to TNG, DS9 or Voyager, however, it is more interesting than
Star Trek Discovery. Discovery is just flat-out generic sci-fi.
The Orville does try to make itself to be more interesting sci-fi.
Gotham
I got three episodes in and tuned out. From those episode, it felt like the showrunners couldn't decide what the show actually was--prequel, gritty cop show, or whatever.
That's one problem with the prequel aspect of the show. Gotham City still needs to be a criminal's nest for Batman in the future, so
Gotham can't have Gordon putting The Penguin or The Riddler away for a very long time or even killing them, because they need to be Batman's enemies in the future. In a lot of ways
Gotham is a "monster of the week" show with the different Batman bad guys. I'm surprised that they haven't brought on the Bookworm yet (they brought on the Executioner who had only appeared in one comic way back in 1953!)
I thought The Spectacular Spider-Man was pretty good, although widely overrated, but not quite good enough to buy and watch season 2 (in part because after season 1 and being mixed about it I read spoilers for some of the big developments that happened later, I really don't like to keep watching something after I do that)..
I only bought the DVD's because I didn't get any channels that aired it.
Really, I would like to see Sony release on Blu-Ray the MTV
Spider-Man, since while its not as good the 67 or 94 series, the complete DVD series release was so jammed with extra's and even a DTS soundtrack, that when I watch it today, the picture quality looks just slightly better than a VHS SLP recording (each episode's bitrate is around the 2.5-2.9 Mbps range with an occasional peak of about 4.2 Mbps for high action scenes). I have a two of the "Best of" (
Mutant Menace & Extreme Threat)discs, and they look so much better because they only have 3 episodes on each disc, vs. the 7 and 6 episodes (and bonus features such Audio Commentaries) on 2 discs for the complete series, and just a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack (I prefer the DTS track). The main issue with the "Best of" discs, is that the 4 volumes released only contain 12 of the 13 episodes released in the series. Why they didn't put the 13th episode on one and just have one 4-episode disc, is unknown, rather than 4 sets with 3-episodes on each is unknown. At the very least, the Blu-Ray would give even better quality SD copies.