View Full Version : A Perfect Way for "The Jeffersons"'s Cancellation to Have Been Avoided


James28
11-11-2021, 12:36 AM
Once Alice had finished its nine-season run in March of 1985, why couldn't CBS have moved The Jeffersons to Wednesdays at 8 for the last 7 episodes of its Season 11? I don't know if Jeffersons's ratings had recovered if that happened (The ratings for Jeffersons and Alice were at the bottom of the weekly ratings charts on the Tuesday-at-8 hour). Under that scenario, Double Dare (a mystery drama series completely unrelated to either of the Alex Trebek or Nickelodeon game shows that was slotted on the Wednesday-at-8 hour during April and May of '85) would've aired on Tuesdays against The A-Team instead. If CBS had renewed The Jeffersons for a 12th year instead of cancelling, it would likely have stayed on that Wednesday slot, with Charlie & Company following it at 8:30, and then CBS's comedy division in 1985-86 wouldn't have been as dismal as it was in real life with just two returning sitcoms from 1984-85 (Kate & Allie and Newhart).

TVFactFan
11-22-2021, 12:43 AM
It was time for the show to end and it was probably already decided before the last season started

SitcomsHeydayfan
11-26-2021, 02:40 AM
I can't believe Lionel was supposed to come back & live at home for Season 12 at age 35 or whatever!

hch
01-12-2026, 03:05 AM
Your strategy addresses several key failures CBS faced during that transition. Moving The Jeffersons to Wednesdays at 8 PM might have provided the stability that CBS’s sitcom lineup desperately needed in 1985.

Here is how your scenario likely would have played out:

Escaping the "A-Team" Trap: In real life, The Jeffersons saw a massive ratings plunge—dropping from #19 in Season 10 to #59 in Season 11—specifically because it was moved to Tuesday nights against NBC's top-10 powerhouse, The A-Team. Shifting to Wednesdays would have removed them from that "death slot".

A Stronger Lead-In for New Comedies: CBS struggled to find a successor to its aging hits. As you noted, Charlie & Company was a disaster, largely because it was thrown into the Wednesday night lineup without a strong lead-in and got "clobbered" by ABC’s Dynasty. Having a legendary, established hit like The Jeffersons at 8:00 PM could have anchored that night and given new shows a fighting chance.

Avoiding the "Dismal" 1985-86 Season: You’re right that CBS’s comedy division was in trouble. By 1985, NBC was dominating with The Cosby Show and Family Ties. CBS aggressively moved away from sitcoms to hour-long dramas like The Twilight Zone and Murder, She Wrote, leaving only Kate & Allie and Newhart as returning sitcom survivors. A 12th season of The Jeffersons would have provided much-needed continuity.

The Problem with "Double Dare": Your idea to swap Double Dare (the 1985 drama) to Tuesdays is logically sound for a network looking to "sacrifice" a new, unproven show against The A-Team while protecting a long-running asset like George and Louise.

Ultimately, CBS executives at the time felt the show had reached its narrative end and "unceremoniously canceled" it without even notifying the cast, a move still considered one of the most disrespectful in TV history.

TVFactFan
01-12-2026, 04:15 AM
The writers should have come up with a way to lead up to a ending like ALICE and ONE DAY AT A TIME. How long did they think they would stay on the air?


I always said the Hawaii episodes should have been the finale