TMC
12-12-2017, 01:32 AM
TV shows tend to make some rather questionable decisions with certain plot lines, so which one was the worst?
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View Full Version : What was the worst plot introduced in a TV show ever? TMC 12-12-2017, 01:32 AM TV shows tend to make some rather questionable decisions with certain plot lines, so which one was the worst? 70s show watcher 12-12-2017, 05:17 AM how about the whole jim/sam plotline on ghost whisperer that was just plain idiotic Edward216 12-12-2017, 10:36 PM When they brought back Bobby from the dead on Dallas and decided that a whole season was just a "dream". Ed. Fontaine 12-14-2017, 10:21 PM Daphne marries Niles on "Frasier" and suddenly turns into a nagging shrew. Retro4Life 12-15-2017, 12:07 AM When they brought back Bobby from the dead on Dallas and decided that a whole season was just a "dream". Ed. First thought that came to mind; you beat me to it! Babalu 12-16-2017, 09:04 AM Zy911IEggR8 From IMDB: Fire Captain Buddy Krebs' 16-year-old daughter Jennie Lee begins getting show-business offers because of her singing talents in the country/pop genre. This scares Buddy because he does not want his daughter to grow up too fast. Adding to his troubles, are (1) his wife runs off with a bellhop, (2) his 17-year-old son has muscle instead of brains in his head, (3) his crew down at the firehouse are "strange": Feldmand tells his mother he is a doctor instead of a fireman, Rosetti has only sex on the brain and Max, a Hispanic, speaks fractured English. Finally, his daughter signs with a manager named Moose; the name fits the description of the woman. Cancelled in two months. Should have been two minutes. bmasters9 12-16-2017, 11:24 AM Zy911IEggR8 From IMDB: Fire Captain Buddy Krebs' 16-year-old daughter Jennie Lee begins getting show-business offers because of her singing talents in the country/pop genre. This scares Buddy because he does not want his daughter to grow up too fast. Adding to his troubles, are (1) his wife runs off with a bellhop, (2) his 17-year-old son has muscle instead of brains in his head, (3) his crew down at the firehouse are "strange": Feldmand tells his mother he is a doctor instead of a fireman, Rosetti has only sex on the brain and Max, a Hispanic, speaks fractured English. Finally, his daughter signs with a manager named Moose; the name fits the description of the woman. Cancelled in two months. Should have been two minutes. One thing I learned a long time ago about this short-lived '82 ABC comedy: it was from Paramount Television (which, if it is ever rerun or on DVD, would have it under CBS Television Distribution). |