There honestly aren't a lot of shows where I got all the way through the first season then didn't want to continue. Either I quit after the first few episodes or I'm in it for the long haul, generally.
Yeah, that's kinda me too. Although there are a handful of shows where I've watched most of them but just can't quite muster up the interest to finish them. I've still never finished the last half-season of
Battlestar Galactica. I've seen scattered episodes from the last two seasons of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer but never gave them a full watch-through the way I did Seasons 1-5. I do plan on watching the final season of
Community but it's pretty low on my to-do list.
I binged the first seasons of
The Walking Dead and
Game of Thrones. The Walking Dead just wasn't for me. I don't like zombies or post apocalyptic asssholery, so I'm done.
Game of Thrones interests me but my current plan is to wait until it ends and then binge the whole thing in one go. I don't think that I can keep track of it otherwise.
I think we should probably call it BSG2004 at this point.

It's now 15 years old.
"Old" and "new" are easy to determine when there are only two versions. It gets harder when you have something like 4 different versions of
The Twilight Zone. I still refer to the 1987-2005 shows as "modern
Star Trek" because I can't muster up enough interest to remember that
Discovery exists (or to understand why it's a prequel).
Long story short, they basically bullied Gil/Sara shippers more than once during an episode when Gil/Sara were divorcing.
How did they bully the shippers during the episode? (Keep in mind, I've never seen the show. I just think it's interesting, the relationship between creators and shippers.
Lost Girl seemed to be held hostage by the militant Doccubus shippers, who, to be fair, are probably the only reason why the show lasted as long as it did. The writers seemed to be stretching to placate them in the last couple seasons even though the writers had totally lost interest in that pairing by then. The scene in the finale where it's implied that they get together is one of the most halfhearted, perfunctory things I've ever seen.)