add a link

The 50 Greatest Sitcoms of All Time

1 comment
Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called The 50 Greatest Sitcoms of All Time
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Originally native to radio, the situation comedy has been a staple of television programming since the 1940s. Thousands of sitcoms have come and go since then, but which ones stood above them all?
Based on the reaction to our 100 Sexiest Women on Television and The 50 Funniest Women of All Time lists, we have expanded the panel of voters in the interest of broadening the knowledge base of the decision makers. Here now, according to a roundtable of 8 panelists, are the 50 Greatest American Sitcoms of All Time.
was not a comedy- so when some of the creators of the underrated MTV show
 unbelievable cast propelled a dangerously tired mockumentary concept and made it one-of-a-kind. Often forgotten as one of the greatest situation comedies of the last 30 years, our panel voted it the 50th best sitcom of all time.
This HBO sitcom was a satirical behind-the-scenes look at the late night talk show world, with Gary Shandling playing the Johnny Carson-inspired lead character.
The show took subtle swipes at how Hollywood and network television functioned and was carried by hilarious writing and a great supporting cast, including Rip Torn, Jeffrey Tambor (“Hey now!”), Jeremy Piven and Janeane Garofalo.
only aired for one season, but that season is one of the most hilarious television seasons of all time. The show featured Leslie Nielsen in his prime as they skewered the police procedural show format. Highly quotable and still funny to this day.
went off the rails with certain trope-busting features as the end credits (manual) freeze frame and its featured guest stars dying in the opening scene. If you’re a fan of the
This show about competing Nantucket Airlines ran eight seasons on NBC (from 90-97) and made Tim Daly, Steven Weber and Tony Shaloub bonafide television stars. Created by the same team that brought us
, with characters like Norm, Cliff, Frasier, Lilith and Rebecca visiting Tom Nevers Field via Sand Piper Air.
A strong supporting cast that included Thomas Hayden Church as Lowell the dimwitted mechanic and David Shramm as Roy Biggins, the cantankerous owner of the rival airline helped keep the show highly rated for the majority of its run.
Throughout the history of television there have been a number of sitcoms centered around a group of 20 or 30-something friends. Behind
from the others is the high concept the show was built on, and its ability to navigate 9 mostly-triumphant seasons while maintaining focus on the end game.
With a cast that included Dave Foley (
) you know you’re getting something funny. The ridiculous exploits of a struggling NPR-type radio station, the cast also featured Joe Rogen, Andy Dick, and Maura Tierney.
addressed issues that America faced in the 1970s from a 21
century perspective and did so using a number of methods such as dream sequences and split screens. It introduced us to the Stupid Helmet, which I’m sure is something that countless other groups of friends duplicated soon after.
, and popular response led to them scoring their own spin off sitcom. The Cunningham’s fellow Wisconsinites were Milwaukee roommates and coworkers at Shotz Brewery.
The show was set in 1959-1967, but ran from 1976 to 1983, so for many children of the 80s, it was a bit before their time or on its last legs as we matured into seasoned sitcom consumers. Nevertheless, even as a youngster I recognized a great show what little of it I saw. One of the best opening sequences in television history.
What can you say about a show that won 13 Emmys? It must be good. The best part of the show had to be Ray’s dad Frank (played by Peter Boyle). He stole every scene he was in. While most shows fade toward the end of their runs, Raymond remained a top 10 show.
told the adventures of a bumbling staff of a Rock and Roll radio station in Cincinnati.
Straightman Andy Travis tried to keep his sanity around Dr Johnny Fever, Venus Flytrap, Herb Tarlek, Les Nessman, and the “big guy” Mr. Carlson each week. And who can forget the babes? Bailey vs Jennifer is a debate worthy of Ginger vs Mary-Anne stature!
Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)
Raymond ranked way too low…very funny show over its entire run.
It was good, and I was surprised at its final rank. I have always wondered why many hesitate to put it up there with the handful of classic shows that it should keep company with.
LOL, no…. I’m a huge fan of How I met btw… But it is far from the best sitcom ever.
Frasier is the best comedy sitcom ever written – how it is not in this list is beyond me
This list must be written by someone of the Jewish faith. 7 of the top 10 belong under the top 20
No Frasier and HIMYM in top 20 or even in the list somewhere??? I mean, it is a joke!!!!
best sitcom of all time and you didn’t put Everybody Hates Chris ?
Did he also leave out the Dick Van Dyke show? The first ensemble cast that paved the way for all of ’em…
Howie Decker @HowardTheDeck January 22, 2015 at 8:57 pm
There’s no “he” that left out any show. Read the intro. 8 person panel. Also explained why there are not many shows from pre-1970 on the list.
The best and it’s not even close sitcom of all time is Andy Griffith. This is the biggest joke of a list I’ve ever seen. Just saying.
I agree pretty much except bosom buddies should be on and the 70s show should be higher and where is kings of queens?
Previous post: Top 5 Wrestlers Who Should Be Inducted in the WWE Hall of Fame
Next post: 10 of the Lamest Video Game Titles Ever
read more
save

1 comment

user photo
angry
jlhfan624 said:
Wings!!! NewsRadio!!!

...

Wait...Frasier is #34?! *writes letter to Congressman*
posted sa loob ng isang taon na ang nakalipas.
 
idagdag ang iyong komento

Sign In or join Fanpop to add your comment