Best Written TV Shows?
Tuesday, June 4, 2013 at 12:00PM
NATHANIEL R in Battlestar Galactica, Buffy, Dexter, List-Mania, Mad Men, Nurse Jackie, Roseanne, Twin Peaks, comedy, sci-fi fantasy horror

If you haven't read the 101 Best Written Television Series list (voted on by the Writers Guild of America), chances are you've been on a wee internet break for the past 24 hours. But I kinda have been (#sorryboutit) so I've included it here for discussion purposes and with a few notes...

1. The Sopranos
2. Seinfeld
3. The Twilight Zone
4. All in the Family
5. M*A*S*H
6. The Mary Tyler Moore Show
7. Mad Men 
8. Cheers
9. The Wire
10. The West Wing

Mad Men (for many years now the best show on television) has won 11 WGA nominations and 6 wins in its six year run... but what I find fascinating is when groups like the WGA vote for something they didn't originally get behind in a big way; The Wire, for example, makes their top ten all time list despite a measily 3 nominations and 1 win in its entire five year run.

91 more series after the jump

11. The Simpsons
12. I Love Lucy
13. Breaking Bad
14. The Dick Van Dyke Show
15. Hill Street Blues
16. Arrested Development
17. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
18. Six Feet Under
19. Taxi
20. The Larry Sanders Show
21. 30 Rock
22. Friday Night Lights
23. Frasier
24. Friends
25. Saturday Night Live

It strikes me as disingenuous to name Saturday Night Live as one of the best written shows ever. Doesn't consistent quality matter? Are they factoring in the MANY dud skits per episode or the great concept skits which start out super funny but then go on thrice as long as the joke can handle? Are the show's long running mystique and numerous classic moments and amusing then maddening catchphrases - all ideal for tribute reels -  the only thing that people remember when they think of it?

26. The X-Files
27. Lost
28. ER
29. The Cosby Show
30. Curb Your Enthusiasm
31. The Honeymooners
32. Deadwood
33. Star Trek
34. Modern Family
35. Twin Peaks
36. NYPD Blue
37. The Carol Burnett Show
38. Battlestar Galactica (2005)
39. Sex & The City
40. Game of Thrones
41. The Bob Newhart Show and Your Show of Shows (tie)
43. Downton Abbey, Law & Order and Thirtysomething (tie)
46. Homicide: Life on the Street and St. Elsewhere (tie)
48. Homeland
49. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
50. The Colbert ReportThe Good Wife and the UK Office (tie)

Obviously Buffy and Battlestar Galactica are too low -- and though I am loathe to diss the great Twin Peaks and quite happy to see it listed, isn't that more of a directorial achievement than a triumph of genre writing the way that Buffy & BSG are? It's worth noting that the WGA, just like the Emmys and the Oscars, resists quality work in the "B" genres of sci fi, fantasy and horror. Shows like these rarely get their due while they're running. Buffy & Twin Peaks received ZERO WGA recognition during their runs and BSG received only one nomination but all three made the top 50 list of all time.

53. Northern Exposure
54. The Wonder Years
55. L.A. Law
56. Sesame Street
57. Columbo
58. Fawlty Towers and The Rockford Files (tie)
60. Freaks and Geeks and Moonlighting (tie)
62. Roots
63. Everybody Loves Raymond and South Park (tie)
65. Playhouse 90
66. Dexter and the US Office (tie)
68. My So-Called Life
69. Golden Girls
70. The Andy Griffith Show
71. 24, Roseanne and The Shield (tie)
74. House and Murphy Brown (tie)

Tragedy! There is no way in hell that Roseanne isn't one of the ten best written sitcoms ever. How the hell is it so low? Didn't they read Vulture's Best Sitcom Tournament?


76. Barney Miller and I, Claudius (tie)
78. The Odd Couple
79. Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Star Trek: The Next Generation and Upstairs, Downstairs (tie)
83. Get Smart
84. The Defenders and Gunsmoke (tie)
86. Justified, Sgt. Bilko/The Phil Silvers Show (tie)
88. Band of Brothers
89. Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In
90. The Prisoner
91. Absolutely Fabulous and The Muppet Show (tie)
93. Boardwalk Empire
94. Will & Grace
95. Family Ties
96. Lonesome Dove and Soap (tie)
98. The FugitiveLate Night with David Letterman and Louie (tie)
101. Oz

Though it never makes all time lists and rarely comes up in conversation I refuse to believe that my beloved Once & Again doesn't deserve to be on every list like this one about the best that TV ever had to offer. I still miss it and wish Sela Ward and Billy Campbell's swoony blended-family-bumpy union could've lasted at least two more seasons (5 being the ideal length for most good series). Also if we can stick to currently running premium cable series there is no way that Dexter (the same episode over and over again with decreasing quality and increasing far-fetchedness - is 50% of the Miami population serial killers? If so, how is anyone still alive?) deserves to be here when Nurse Jackie which is an always evolving series, daring to change each season with its protagonist, and therefore a gorgeous example of television's greatest strength (long-form narrative arc), isn't?
Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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