Certainly dated to some extent, and it loses points for that. However, product of its time or not, this was groundbreaking television, and remains funny today. It brought open discussions of racism, homosexuality, sexism, and other topics once considered taboo into prime time, and still managed to be entertaining, not uncomfortable. Archie Bunker is no hero, but he is one of televisions great male roles.
9. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
You might not expect to find a show thats a mix of teen angst and vampire fantasy here, but this show was far different than the current Twilight obsession. Joss Whedons creation knew when to poke fun at itself (frequently, but with the memorable musical episode in particular), but also gave us powerful television. The scripts were intricate and well-written, and the characters drew us in, from Buffy and Angel to those in smaller roles. It gave us laughs, chills, and even tears (if your eyes didnt well up at times, youre made of stone). What more could a viewer ask?
8. The Simpsons
Few shows in television history have more staying power, with Homer and the rest still going strong after more than two decades. Just a check of the list of guest voices points to the shows place in American pop culture: Tony Bennett, James Earl Jones, Dustin Hoffman, Michael Jackson, Leonard Nimoy, Bono, Stephen Hawking, and many, many others. If you were not skewered in Springfield, you were likely not that memorable.
7. The Dick Van Dyke Show
Perhaps not as familiar to younger viewers (Oh, the horror of watching black and white!), but just as watchable today as in its own time. Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore have to be on any list of the most talented leading pairs in the history of television or movies. Their chemistry is magical. Either was more than capable of carrying a show alone. The two together gave us one for the ages.
6. Lost
Too soon to tell for this one? Not at all. Ask the ever-growing legions of fans who watch, rewatch, and dissect every episode. It combines sci-fi and soap opera seamlessly, managing to appeal to a wide swath of viewers, and boasts writing to match any show ever produced. The planned six-year run also allows viewers to catch up and provides a clear beginning and end rarely seen on television. Here too, the characters have become part of our lives: who could watch without taking Jacks side or Sawyers in the fight for Kate? What show has provided such intellectual depth as well as pure guilty pleasure? What show has provided better cliffhangers and unexpected twists? Hardly an episode passes without an audible gasp (if not a scream) from those watching with me. If you arent watching, you should be.
5. Saturday Night Live
The only show in the top ten without a plot, and the only one to surpass The Simpsons for staying power. Generation after generation stays up late for SNL, and even as one great cast after another comes and goes, the show keeps going strong. Its alumni reads like a whos who of comedy in the last 35 years: Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray, John Belushi, Eddie Murphy, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Phil Hartman, Mike Myers, Dana Carvery, Chris Rock, Tina Fey, Will Ferrell, and many more. The show has given us social conscience, memorable music, and most of all, laughter.
4. Cheers
A blueprint for sexual tension in comedy, with Sam Malone (Ted Danson) paired with first Diane Chambers (Shelley Long) and then Rebecca Howe (Kirstie Alley), but also much more. The constant banter of Norm and Cliff, the pompous but lovable Frasier, the trashy but also lovable Carla, and of course Coach and Woody, all became part of our culture and our lives.
3. M.A.S.H.
A comedy about surgeons in the midst of war? It sounds far-fetched, but it worked. No show has mixed comedy with drama so successfully. We laughed and cried, and loved every moment. Its hard not to tear up even as I write this, remembering Radar delivering the news of Henrys death, or Hawkeyes suffering on the final episode. However, its equally difficult not to laugh remembering B.J. greeting Frank for the first time with Whats up, ferret face? and countless other moments. Some shows seem to be sent off an assembly line, but it seems safe to say that there will never be another quite like M.A.S.H.
2. The West Wing
A political show, yes, but if one can set politics aside, its greatness shines to both sides of the aisle. Nearly every time I walk into a voting booth, I wish a man like Josiah Bartlet was on the ballot. This produced more chills than anything Ive ever seen on television. There are far too many to list, but two that stand out are Bartlets using Bible verses to dismantle religious leaders objecting to his policies, and the moment when he risks political capital by sending American soldiers to a third world African country, with no oil to defend, just humanity. His explanation: Theyve got mothers standing in front of tanks. Were going to go get their backs. He can be my President any time. Agree or not, it is well worth watching. The scripts, particularly in the Aaron Sorkin years, are also incredibly witty and funny, from the pilots opening scene, when Sam Seaborn (Rob Lowe) wakes up to find he accidentally (yes, really) slept with a hooker. Just watch. You wont be disappointed.
1. Seinfeld
No other show, not even SNL, so completely seeped into American culture. No topic was taboo. What other show could base its most memorable episodes on masturbation and shrinkage and yet not be offensive? Regifting, double-dipping, close talker, and so many other phrases are now part of our lexicon. No other show is as quotable, and as with M.A.S.H., Cheers, and (coming soon) Lost, the final episode was an event to be planned for and shared with friends. The relative failure of the cast members separately only shows that the whole in this case was far greater than the sum of its parts, and very simply the best show in the history of television.
Fawlty Towers and of course Monty Python before it top almost anything mentioned so far on this thread.
* Cheers had an old-time radio grandfather---co-creator James Burrows is the son of Abe Burrows, eventually a Broadway writing legend but once the co-creator (with star Ed Gardner) and original co-writer (with Gardner) of Duffy's Tavern, perhaps the first situation comedy (of sorts) centered around a downtown bar, albeit one that made Cheers resemble the pub in the Waldorf-Astoria, and a show that blueprinted just about any fabled television bar, whether recurring sketches (Jackie Gleason's famous Joe the Bartender sketches were practically Duffy's Tavern derivatives, right down to Frank Fontaine's Crazy Guggenheim being an explicit cop of Duffy's deceptive nitwit Finnegan) or full shows (including All in the Family's offspring, Archie Bunker's Place).
* M*A*S*H also could be called a Duffy's offspring---M*A*S*H mastermind Larry Gelbart got his comedy start writing for Duffy's Tavern . . . as a precocious teenager.
Best shows on now:
Dexter
Breaking Bad
The IT Crowd
Weeds
Californication
Nurse Jackie
Graham Norton
None on the major networks, how sad is that?
“Your show of shows” We all tuned in on Saturday night.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0SG4YhiuYU&feature=related
You bet your life.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQee1i2ZW0A&feature=related
Far too many great but forgotten shows. Most of you probably didn’t live during the early days of TV. Can any of you remember 10 top radio shows? Rhet.
Some of my picks would be:
The Carol Burnett Show (funniest show I’ve ever seen)
Rockford Files
The Blackadder
Breaking Bad
The Ed Sullivan Show
I Love Lucy
Mystery Science Theater 3000
Second City TV
Star Trek
Taxi
The Odd Couple
Frasier
Everybody Loves Raymond
The King of Queens
I agree with others that Twilight Zone and Star Trek deserve mention. Also, if SNL is on the list, the Tonight Show of the Johnny Carson years should be there.
I can’t stop at ten, but I have to stop some where, because so many were good. Friends is teh most recent. Everything else I have to go back aways
Voyage to teh Bottom of the Sea
Gunsmoke
Sea Hunt
I Love Lucy
Happy Days (first couple of seasons)
The Honeymooners
Star Trek
Gilligans Island
Ed Sullivan Show
Friends
Dick Van Dyke Show
Wonderful World of Disney
Cheers
Leave it to Beaver
Get Smart
The Odd Couple
Sanford and Son
The Fugetive
The Invaders
Rat Patrol
The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson
my faves are Frasier, NYPD Blue, Homicide: Life on the Streets... my current favorite is Criminal Minds... i did like Star Trek: The Next Generation...
1. M*A*S*H
2. Barney Miller
3. Perry Mason
4. Andy Griffith
5. The Tonight Show w/Johnny Carson
6. Cheers
7. Mary Tyler Moore
8. Leave it to Beaver
9. 3rd Rock from the Sun
10. That 70s Show
The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet
Leave It To Beaver
The Brady Bunch
Bewitched
The Addams Family
Green Acres
The Jack Benny Show
The Andy Griffith Show
The Danny Thomas Show (aka Make Room For Daddy)
The Odd Couple
Becker still funny in old reruns
Maverick
Frasier almost all the dialog was funny
NCIS :O) Gibbs and for the guys Abby.
Sanford and Son (dummy)
The Lone Ranger (for us old timers)
MASH was good in its day, but watching it now, its lib 90% of the time...
Gunsmoke (The Marshall and miss kitty were the best)
Columbo (baggy coat and cigar)
You missed “The Wire”.
ridiculous....no Lucy??....no Ed Sullivan?...No Jackie Gleason?.....no “Moonlighters?....