See, on paper I'd say I enjoyed the conspiracy episodes more than MOTW episodes in the X-Files. "On paper" because when it was only vague hints and jumping at shadows, it hooked me in and I wanted to know more about it. Unfortunately it all fell apart when they began to reveal the conspiracy, because they obviously hadn't planned very far in advance and so it became more about shock twists-and-turns than patiently revealing an actual story arc.carpathic said:X-Files: Creature of the week: AWESOME! Odd conspiracy theories...meh
Accursed ninja :-(Fappy said:I think it has a lot to do with how planned out the story is. In many instances where "it gets better later" applies the story's been planned out from start to finish. Many of the stories you mentioned are installment-based (multiple seasons of television show for example) in which a lot of what happens later in the story wasn't thought out before it was created. As a story gets dragged out due to popular demand the writers run out of steam and start pulling stuff out of their ass. In the case of Dexter for example, I think it's just a case of a premise lasting longer than it logically should.
But yeah, pretty much this. To return to the Buffy example I used earlier in the thread, they had a perfect ending with the close of season five, they'd planned everything up until then and tied a neat little bow on it all. Then the network wanted another series, so the show (and Buffy) had to be dragged out of a grave and awkwardly returned to life. Ergo much of season six sucked, being rudderless and adrift, before recovering (YMMV) in season seven, only for it to end again.
Then we got season eight, which kinda went the opposite way. Started out really well, then when it got to the meat of the myth arc it just went completely off the rails. You win some, you lose some I suppose.