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The worst things that happened on TV in 2019

- Kelly Lawler USA TODAY

In 2019, there was more TV than ever before, from scripted dramas and reality series to sports, news and sketch comedy. And in that vast crop, there was some really fantastic TV. But for every superb “Dead to Me” or great ● Oscar acceptance speech or triumphant underdog team clinching the World Series in Game 7, there were embarrassi­ng new series, excruciati­ngly dull awards shows and finales practicall­y begging for angry Twitter reactions. ● As the year draws to a close, we rounded up the worst offenders on TV this year, in the hope that, as TV becomes even bigger in 2020, it just might get a little better.

The terrible ‘Game of Thrones’ finale

The few months away from Westeros hasn’t lessened the sting of HBO’s “Game of Thrones” series finale, “The Iron Throne.” Overall, the final season was a letdown, with a rushed plot and no emotional resonance. The finale itself was poorly directed and dull, even before the controvers­ial decision to have Jon Snow (Kit Harington) kill Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) and anoint Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright) as king. Over eight seasons there were plenty of fantastic moments, but the writers’ inability to stick the landing tarnished the series’ legacy and made its inevitable Emmy wins seem like a fluke at best and pandering at worse.

The reality TV tinge of ‘The Great British Baking Show’

What happened to the sweet, homey show about grandmas who bake simple cakes? The 10th season of the British treasure threw out the most beloved tropes of the series in favor of something flashier, and far worse. Producers chose a young and attractive cast of bakers that was considerab­ly less talented than in previous years; episodes showed more footage of interperso­nal drama and tears onscreen; the judges asked contestant­s to prepare ludicrous dishes and then eliminated contestant­s almost randomly to drum up drama. These choices made “Baking” (which streams on Netflix in the U.S.) seem more akin to shallow, aggressive American reality TV. We are far more disappoint­ed in what we watched than judge Paul Hollywood could ever be in a bake.

The overly weird ‘Dickinson’ (and the disappoint­ment of Apple TV Plus)

Tech giant Apple jumped into the original programmin­g sphere last month with Apple TV Plus, a streaming service that debuted with just nine original series. One of them was “Dickinson,” a half-hour comedy starring Hailee Steinfeld about Emily Dickinson’s teen years tinged with modern music and slang. The year’s biggest love-it-orhate-it series, it illustrate­s the overall disappoint­ment with Apple’s big TV bet, which (so far) has failed to produce any truly great shows, even if “For All Mankind” and “Servant” are halfway decent.

New shows with all the wrong ideas: ‘Dollface’ and ‘Almost Family’

Every year networks and streaming services debut new series, hoping to find the next “This Is Us,” but this year there were some true flops, Hulu’s “Dollface“and Fox’s “Almost Family.” The former turned twenty-something women into a gross stereotype that wasn’t funny (not ideal for a comedy) and the latter tried to turn an egregious crime into a heartwarmi­ng family story.

‘Big Little Lies’ wasting a second season (and so many Oscar winners)

If the second, and disappoint­ing, season of HBO’s “Big Little Lies” has any moral, it’s that Hollywood needs to learn to let stories end. When it debuted in 2017, it was intended as a seven-episode series. Creator David E. Kelley and producer/stars Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoo­n should have stopped there. The decision to bring back the series without a compelling story was a huge mistake, and the wonderful cast (including Meryl Streep) couldn’t save it.

‘Arrested Developmen­t’ ends with a whimper

Remember when fans used to clamor for more “Arrested Developmen­t”? You won’t see hashtags to save it anytime soon. The so-so final eight episodes of the cult sitcom, which began on Fox in 2003, arrived on Netflix last March with little fanfare and a reminder of the sexual misconduct allegation­s against star Jeffrey Tambor. It was a sad end to a once-brilliant sitcom that raises the question: should it have been rescued from cancellati­on at all?

Awards shows without a host

Take note, 2020 awards shows: You need a host. The 2019 Oscars, plagued by pre-show controvers­y, barely scraped through without a host, but when the Emmys tried the tactic in September, the broadcast was a slog. As, more often than not, ratings fall for these gilded, self-congratula­tory Hollywood affairs across the board, taking away a major element designed to entertain the audience at home is a grave error.

Not-so-live musicals

Live musicals are sometimes ratings bonanzas not because of the nostalgia for the title, but rather the live aspect of the event, the sense that anything can (and probably will) go wrong. But the two we got this year were anything but, from Fox’s version of “Rent,” which aired a pre-recorded dress rehearsal after a cast member’s injury, and ABC’s “The Little Mermaid,” which was mostly the 1989 animated movie with live songs sprinkled in.

The mind-boggling ‘Dancing With the Stars’ eliminatio­ns

The long-running reality competitio­n series disappoint­ed in its 28th season as a slightly tweaked voting formula led to some of the most emotional eliminatio­ns for all the wrong reasons. The judges had to pick who would stay and go among the two couples who received the fewest audience votes, and often they had to choose between two of the best-dancing couples of the night. The judges were irritated, the couples were heartbroke­n and bad dancers (including former White House press secretary Sean Spicer) stayed in the competitio­n far too long. The problem was summed up, sadly, by James Van Der Beek’s eliminatio­n. Despite his solid performanc­e in the Nov. 18 episode, he wound up in the bottom two, and the judges chose to send the former “Dawson’s Creek” star home right after he revealed his wife’s miscarriag­e and danced while sobbing. The decision seemed so antithetic­al to everything the usually uplifting series is about. Even his competitor, Ally Brooke, thought it was wrong: She asked if he could take her spot and stay in the competitio­n.

‘Survivor’ and ‘Big Brother’ mishandled racism and sexual harassment

Twice this year, CBS reality show participan­ts stepped over the line: On “Big Brother,” houseguest Jack Matthews was accused of racism by fellow contestant Kemi Fakunle, and on “Survivor,” contestant Dan Spilo touched multiple women against their express wishes. In both cases, the networks prioritize­d keeping the drama onscreen over punishing bad behavior and protecting victims. Matthews and Spilo should have been sent home, but they were left on their series, risking potential repeats of their offenses (and Spilo did). TV networks and producers need to learn how to promote safe and inclusive environmen­ts, or rethink the entire genre.

Netflix’s cancellati­on spree

Every network and streaming service has to cancel multiple series every year; it’s just a fact of the industry. But in 2019 Netflix wielded its axe at a far higher rate than the streamer had before, cancelling such a wide swath of its series that, from an outside view, it seemed to speak more to the company’s overall strategy rather than viewership for any one series, which it (mostly) won’t reveal. As more shows (good and bad) are announced as a “third and final” or “fourth and final” season (including greats like “Dear White People” and “GLOW”), it becomes clear that Netflix isn’t out to get 200 episodes of a sitcom or even 100 episodes of a twisty drama, the outmoded formula for syndicatio­n. While certainly not every show needs to last 10 seasons, some have the potential to evolve and grow for years. Especially on a platform that pioneered the idea of binge-watching a series over a week or two, it’s sad that Netflix originals might never keep us occupied for very long. As streaming becomes more dominant in the industry, it’s a safe bet to say we’ll be far less likely get a series that runs as long as “Friends” or “Grey’s Anatomy” again.

 ?? HELEN SLOAN/HBO; PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY RACHEL VAN BLANKENSHI­P/USA TODAY NETWORK; AND GETTY IMAGES ?? Danerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke), left, and Jon Snow (Kit Harington) have their final embrace in a scene from the eighth and final season of HBO’s “Game of Thrones.”
HELEN SLOAN/HBO; PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY RACHEL VAN BLANKENSHI­P/USA TODAY NETWORK; AND GETTY IMAGES Danerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke), left, and Jon Snow (Kit Harington) have their final embrace in a scene from the eighth and final season of HBO’s “Game of Thrones.”
 ?? NETFLIX ?? Jessica Walter and Jeffrey Tambor in a scene from “Arrested Developmen­t.”
NETFLIX Jessica Walter and Jeffrey Tambor in a scene from “Arrested Developmen­t.”
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 ?? ERIC MCCANDLESS/ABC ?? James Van Der Beek hugs his partner Emma Slater on “Dancing With the Stars.” The couple’s eliminatio­n was widely criticized.
ERIC MCCANDLESS/ABC James Van Der Beek hugs his partner Emma Slater on “Dancing With the Stars.” The couple’s eliminatio­n was widely criticized.

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