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Rolling Stones 100 Best TV Sitcoms Of All Time
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:21 am
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:21 am
LINK
List dropped today.
Thoughts?
List dropped today.
quote:
10. 'The Larry Sanders Show' (HBO, 1992-1998)
quote:
9. 'Parks and Recreation' (NBC, 2009-2015)
quote:
8. 'The Honeymooners' (CBS, 1955-1956)
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7. 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show' (CBS, 1970-1977)
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6. 'M*A*S*H*' (CBS, 1972-1983)
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5. 'All in the Family' (CBS, 1971-1979)
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4. 'I Love Lucy' (CBS, 1951-1957)
quote:
3. 'Seinfeld' (NBC, 1989-1998)Yada yada. Master of your domain. Spongeworthy. Double-dipping. No soup for you! The catchphrases of Seinfeld have so wormed their way into everyday use, they’ve all but consumed the legacy of the rest of the series. Perhaps this is because one of those phrases, “a show about nothing” — from the Season Four arc where Jerry and George pitch a familiar-sounding show-within-the-show to NBC execs — undersells exactly what Seinfeld did so brilliantly. Yes, co-creators Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David obsessed over ephemera, but they did it with the kind of comic precision the medium had never seen before. In particular, David’s masterstroke was figuring out how to make each episode’s plots collide with one another at the end (like Kramer’s golf game inadvertently helping George play marine biologist) — now among the show’s most-copied (if rarely as well) elements. Seinfeld is the gift that keeps on re-gifting. A.S.
quote:
2. 'Cheers' (NBC, 1982-1993)A girl walks into a bar. Her fiancé strands her there, and she’s condemned to spend her days enduring insults from the other waitress and shameless come-ons from the guy who runs the place. From that simple set-up sprang the best live-action sitcom ever. In its early years, Cheers was an alternately witty and raucous romantic comedy about the unresolved sexual tension between pretentious grad-student-turned-waitress Diane (Shelley Long) and smarmy ex-jock bartender Sam (Ted Danson). The formula was so successful, its will-they-or-won’t-they DNA has been baked into half the shows made since. When Long left to pursue a movie career, and Kirstie Alley arrived as hot mess Rebecca, Cheers nimbly pivoted into an ensemble comedy, understanding that with a cast including Kelsey Grammer, Woody Harrelson, Rhea Perlman, George Wendt, John Ratzenberger, and Bebe Neuwirth, it could make up in volume of punchlines what had been lost in that priceless Long-Danson chemistry. Decades later, sometimes you still want to go where everybody knows your name — and you’ll always be glad you came. A.S.
quote:
1. 'The Simpsons' (Fox, 1989-Present)What else could it be? Some Comic Book Guy types would hold the animated comedy’s second, third, and now fourth (!) decades against it, but we’re not having that. There’s more good material in those later seasons than you’d think (Comic Book Guy himself recently starred in a clever and poignant Wes Anderson homage). Plus, those first 10 years cover so much ground in subject, style, and sheer density of humor, everything after could just be Frank Grimes listing his grievances against Homer, and it still wouldn’t drag the series’ batting average down. What began as a slice-of-life animated family comedy — really, as shorts on The Tracey Ullman Show — soon expanded into a broad social satire that saw Homer (Dan Castellaneta), Marge (Julie Kavner), Bart (Nancy Cartwright), Lisa (Yeardley Smith), and Maggie (Elizabeth Taylor!) traveling the globe, and occasionally orbiting it, mixing it up with ex-presidents, Hollywood celebrities, and homicidal kids’ show sidekicks. The sweep of the series has become so wide, and its jokes have cut so deep, that there is a Simpsons meme for nearly every topic imaginable (Homer backing into the bushes; “Old Man Yells at Cloud”), and not just because the show has been accidentally prescient about so many things, like the Trump presidency. In its early days, The Simpsons was condemned by conservatives as the show that was going to destroy Western civilization. Instead, no show will be a better artifact of what that civilization was like on either side of the millennial divide. A.S.
Thoughts?
This post was edited on 5/4/21 at 10:23 am
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:24 am to atrain5
quote:
. 'Parks and Recreation' (NBC, 2009-2015)
I like Parks, but this is way too high
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:24 am to atrain5
100 Worst Sources of Click Bait Top 100 Lists:
1. Rolling Stone.
...
The rest.
1. Rolling Stone.
...
The rest.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:25 am to RLDSC FAN
I love that Parks is finally getting that kind of acknowledgement.
The Office should obviously be higher than Parks, but I do love Parks getting recognition.
The Office should obviously be higher than Parks, but I do love Parks getting recognition.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:26 am to atrain5
Parks is way too high.
One of the best sitcoms of the 2010s, but at this point, it is overrated.
One of the best sitcoms of the 2010s, but at this point, it is overrated.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:31 am to UndercoverBryologist
The fact they have The Office outside of the top 20 and Parks inside the top 10 is absurd.
Without The Office, Parks doesn't get the recognition it has received. The Office showed goofy business environment shows can be great
Without The Office, Parks doesn't get the recognition it has received. The Office showed goofy business environment shows can be great
This post was edited on 5/4/21 at 10:32 am
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:33 am to GeauxAggie972
quote:
The fact they have The Office outside of the top 20 and Parks inside the top 10 is absurd.
Without The Office, Parks doesn't get the recognition it has received. The Office showed goofy business environment shows can be great
Well, I personally think The Larry Sanders Show is the gold standard for single camera workplace sitcoms...and they have Parks ranked higher than Larry Sanders.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:37 am to atrain5
The simpsons is not a sitcom...
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:38 am to UndercoverBryologist
quote:
Parks is way too high.
One of the best sitcoms of the 2010s, but at this point, it is overrated.
So the only reason you don't like it is because a lot of other people like it?
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:38 am to UndercoverBryologist
Also, having Bojack Horseman in the top 20 over shows like The Office, South Park, Community, It's Always Sunny, Bob's Burgers, etc. is insane
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:38 am to atrain5
No Frasier in the top 10 says frick these clowns.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:39 am to GeauxAggie972
I guess Family Guy must of pissed them off. There's like 10 animated shows in there, some i've never even heard of, but Family Guy is not on the list.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:40 am to Displaced
quote:
The simpsons is not a sitcom...
quote:
sitcom
noun
a television series that involves a continuing cast of characters in a succession of comedic circumstances
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:41 am to Displaced
quote:
So the only reason you don't like it is because a lot of other people like it?
I literally said “one of the best sitcoms of the 2010s.”
My problem is it being ranked higher than Larry Sanders, Arrested Development, or either the UK or US versions of The Office.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:41 am to Fun Bunch
quote:
I love that Parks is finally getting that kind of acknowledgement.
The Office should obviously be higher than Parks, but I do love Parks getting recognition.
this. Parks is a very charming show and i wish it got more credit, but it shouldn't sniff top 10. especially over the office.
i think Millenials Gen Z really wantsto punish everybody else for liking something so non PC. same for south park.
This post was edited on 5/4/21 at 10:44 am
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:43 am to atrain5
quote:Way too low.
9. 'Parks and Recreation' (NBC, 2009-2015)
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:43 am to GeauxAggie972
Definitions change all the time.
Animated shows are not sitcoms. Is bobs burgers a sitcom? Animaniacs? Phineas and ferb?
Animated shows are not sitcoms. Is bobs burgers a sitcom? Animaniacs? Phineas and ferb?
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:46 am to GeauxAggie972
quote:
Without The Office, Parks doesn't get the recognition it has received. The Office showed goofy business environment shows can be great
Just because it was first doesn't mean it was better.
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:47 am to Displaced
quote:
Animated shows are not sitcoms.
Why not?
Posted on 5/4/21 at 10:48 am to GeauxAggie972
quote:
Also, having Bojack Horseman in the top 20 over shows like The Office, South Park, Community, It's Always Sunny, Bob's Burgers, etc. is insane
I mean, Bojack is really good and dissects the sitcom better than any sitcom I’ve seen barring It’s Always Sunny.
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