Funny that you mention that. I live in Spain, where the simpsons were kind of a big deal when one main TV channel started airing its episodes between 14:00 and 15:00 hours (lunchtime, basically), where the show is still frequently leading the TV share for most of the week. However, about the eleventh season the voice actor for Homer Simpson died, and was replaced for a way worse (in my opinion) colleague. Thanks to that sad coincidence, it's really easy for me to pick the good episodes from the bad ones just by listening to Homer. What I want to say is, you probably wouldn't like an actor change, and that's probably why the show would die the moment a voice actor retires.GeorgW said:It'd be nice to see it go on for 100 years with different actors and writers.
But it'll probably end as soon as one of the actors retire.
When asked in 2007 how the series' longevity is sustained, Scully joked, "Lower your quality standards. Once you've done that you can go on forever."
RJ Dalton said:The show is dead now and all that remains is a corpse animated by the radioactive power of green papers with the faces of US presidents on them.
What about Doctor Who?Ldude893 said:The show died on Season 19. All it is now is a zombie.
No show has ever lived for 21 years, and it's long enough time for a show to run completely out of ideas. The technological advancements in making the episodes made the show lost its cartoony flexibility and freedom, it's too real now.
Matt Groening, FOX, put the show to rest. It's gone through enough.
no need to be a jerk about it.emeraldrafael said:Hehe, its funny how people like to think that their personal feelings matter.
Too bad its all about the green (or whatever colour a country's money is. The Simpsons are marketable. Either:
1)Shut the hell up about it and get used it to it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
2)Shut the hell up about it and stop watching it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
I suppose you are talking about things that are still being done right now, because otherwise there is a whole lot of things I liked 20 years ago that I still enjoy now. In any case, it's really hard to even find any show that's been running for that long, except maybe for Dr. Who as ivansnick pointed out, which has quite tightly closed episodes and not a lot of continuity along the years.Merkavar said:maybe its just that you are growing up and your tastes are changing. like you said most people under 20 propably grew up watching the simpsons. name another activity or show that you liked when you were 5 or 10 and still like now?
Thats being a realist. Looking at it from the economic value and how tv works.Brad Shepard said:no need to be a jerk about it.emeraldrafael said:Hehe, its funny how people like to think that their personal feelings matter.
Too bad its all about the green (or whatever colour a country's money is. The Simpsons are marketable. Either:
1)Shut the hell up about it and get used it to it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
2)Shut the hell up about it and stop watching it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
Yes, lets never call out bad things and just succumb to it and be its *****. That will show them!emeraldrafael said:Hehe, its funny how people like to think that their personal feelings matter.
Too bad its all about the green (or whatever colour a country's money is. The Simpsons are marketable. Either:
1)Shut the hell up about it and get used it to it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
2)Shut the hell up about it and stop watching it, cause no one wants to hear you have a pity party.
Except that show has not run continuously, and has little continuity between the incarnations. Unlike the simpsons which has 21 seasons with the same characters, no breaks, and twice as many episodes a season.ivansnick said:What about Doctor Who?Ldude893 said:The show died on Season 19. All it is now is a zombie.
No show has ever lived for 21 years, and it's long enough time for a show to run completely out of ideas. The technological advancements in making the episodes made the show lost its cartoony flexibility and freedom, it's too real now.
Matt Groening, FOX, put the show to rest. It's gone through enough.
It has being run for a fair bit longer than 21 years.
And it most certainly not run out of ideas.