It’s hard to say goodbye to loved ones. We’re talking, of course, about our favorite TV shows that were canceled before their time. We want to blame greedy advertisers and short-sighted networks and fickle viewers because we don’t want to admit that all the generosity, commitment and patience in the world couldn’t have saved them. Often, what makes TV great — top-quality talent, jaw-dropping settings, a story that seems to speak solely to you — also makes it hilariously unprofitable in the long term.
For example, “Let’s be honest here: Firefly was too expensive for network television,” Redditor Animeking1108 recently pointed out to r/Television. “At the time, streaming didn’t exist, and Fox didn’t have an HBO-level cable network. So, the only way they could bring it back was in movie form with Serenity.”
They then asked, “What show cancellation actually has a reasonable explanation that fans aren’t willing to admit?” and Reddit grappled with the ironic limitations of prestige television.