TMC
05-27-2026, 05:05 PM
UVIp7PPVb5U
1988 was the worst year in modern TV history. A 153-day writers' strike, Fox's rise, and cable's explosion left the Big Three networks scrambling — and the result was some of the most spectacular failures ever broadcast.
From a $40 million syndicated disaster that became the costliest flop in TV history, to a Christopher Lloyd sitcom that was cancelled before it ever aired and has never been seen by anyone, to the show that the U.S. Navy itself helped kill — these are the 10 biggest TV flops of 1988.
In this video, we count down:
🔹 The Aaron Spelling medical drama that made history but got crushed by L.A. Law
🔹 A war series shot in Yugoslavia where the cast had to ad-lib after the writers' strike
🔹 Benjamin Bratt's first series, scheduled opposite The Cosby Show
🔹 The unscripted CBS show so bad it may have died after one night
🔹 Matt LeBlanc's TV debut, killed by an abortion storyline controversy
🔹 The Diane Keaton movie adaptation that NBC put on "hiatus" after six weeks
🔹 An NBC dramedy that flopped, got rebooted as a sitcom, and flopped even harder
🔹 A Christopher Lloyd sitcom no one has ever seen — literally lost media
🔹 The Top Gun knockoff that lost U.S. Navy support four days after premiering
🔹 A $40 million syndicated show where 156 stations signed up without seeing a pilot
PLUS honorable mentions including Mary Tyler Moore's third failed comeback (featuring a teenage Adrien Brody), the show a critic said made him question why TV exists, and Aaron Spelling's nurse drama that triggered a national boycott.
──────────────────
📺 Watch our companion video:
10 Biggest TV Flops of 1987 — When Networks Got Desperate ➤ [LINK]
──────────────────
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 — Why 1988 Was Uniquely Cursed
1:00 — The Writers' Strike, Fox, and Cable's Rise
2:45 — #10: Heartbeat (ABC)
4:12 — #9: Dirty Dozen: The Series (Fox)
5:14 — #8: Knightwatch (ABC)
6:16 — #7: High Risk (CBS)
7:23 — #6: TV 101 (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125202/http://www.jumptheshark.com/t/tv101.htm) (CBS)
8:36 — #5: Baby Boom (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125231/http://www.jumptheshark.com/b/babyboom.htm) (NBC)
10:02 — #4: Tattingers / Nick & Hillary (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125202/http://www.jumptheshark.com/t/tattingers.htm) (NBC)
11:35 — #3: The Dictator (CBS)
13:09 — #2: Supercarrier (ABC)
14:44 — #1: USA Today: The Television Show
16:56 — Honorable Mentions
18:08 — What It All Means: The End of Big Three Dominance
1988 was the worst year in modern TV history. A 153-day writers' strike, Fox's rise, and cable's explosion left the Big Three networks scrambling — and the result was some of the most spectacular failures ever broadcast.
From a $40 million syndicated disaster that became the costliest flop in TV history, to a Christopher Lloyd sitcom that was cancelled before it ever aired and has never been seen by anyone, to the show that the U.S. Navy itself helped kill — these are the 10 biggest TV flops of 1988.
In this video, we count down:
🔹 The Aaron Spelling medical drama that made history but got crushed by L.A. Law
🔹 A war series shot in Yugoslavia where the cast had to ad-lib after the writers' strike
🔹 Benjamin Bratt's first series, scheduled opposite The Cosby Show
🔹 The unscripted CBS show so bad it may have died after one night
🔹 Matt LeBlanc's TV debut, killed by an abortion storyline controversy
🔹 The Diane Keaton movie adaptation that NBC put on "hiatus" after six weeks
🔹 An NBC dramedy that flopped, got rebooted as a sitcom, and flopped even harder
🔹 A Christopher Lloyd sitcom no one has ever seen — literally lost media
🔹 The Top Gun knockoff that lost U.S. Navy support four days after premiering
🔹 A $40 million syndicated show where 156 stations signed up without seeing a pilot
PLUS honorable mentions including Mary Tyler Moore's third failed comeback (featuring a teenage Adrien Brody), the show a critic said made him question why TV exists, and Aaron Spelling's nurse drama that triggered a national boycott.
──────────────────
📺 Watch our companion video:
10 Biggest TV Flops of 1987 — When Networks Got Desperate ➤ [LINK]
──────────────────
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 — Why 1988 Was Uniquely Cursed
1:00 — The Writers' Strike, Fox, and Cable's Rise
2:45 — #10: Heartbeat (ABC)
4:12 — #9: Dirty Dozen: The Series (Fox)
5:14 — #8: Knightwatch (ABC)
6:16 — #7: High Risk (CBS)
7:23 — #6: TV 101 (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125202/http://www.jumptheshark.com/t/tv101.htm) (CBS)
8:36 — #5: Baby Boom (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125231/http://www.jumptheshark.com/b/babyboom.htm) (NBC)
10:02 — #4: Tattingers / Nick & Hillary (https://web.archive.org/web/20061031125202/http://www.jumptheshark.com/t/tattingers.htm) (NBC)
11:35 — #3: The Dictator (CBS)
13:09 — #2: Supercarrier (ABC)
14:44 — #1: USA Today: The Television Show
16:56 — Honorable Mentions
18:08 — What It All Means: The End of Big Three Dominance