- Banned
- #1
I just finished watching the last episode of Ringer. It's not a great show, but it's watchable. The last episode ended with a girl posing as her twin confessing to her husband that she's not really his wife. Even though they love each other, he leaves her after hearing the confession.
If there were a season two, they'd get back together. And, some loose plot ends would be addressed. But, there won't be a season 2. No, it hasn't been cancelled yet, but duh.
This brings me to one of my big (not biggest) annoyances with Hollywood. They'll leave the show without an ending. They could throw together one more episode to tie everything up, but they won't. A proper finale would even bring in good ratings, but it still won't happen. They could give this, and other one-season shows a proper ending and repackage them as mini-series (edit out some fluff, etc.), and make some money, but it still won't happen.
Hollywood does this over and over, create shows, only to have them end in mid-plot. It really discourages me from getting started with new shows (less money for Hollywood, but they'll still leave viewers hanging). I think in the future, I'll wait until a show runs a couple of seasons before I start watching. I can catch up on back episodes.
If there were a season two, they'd get back together. And, some loose plot ends would be addressed. But, there won't be a season 2. No, it hasn't been cancelled yet, but duh.
This brings me to one of my big (not biggest) annoyances with Hollywood. They'll leave the show without an ending. They could throw together one more episode to tie everything up, but they won't. A proper finale would even bring in good ratings, but it still won't happen. They could give this, and other one-season shows a proper ending and repackage them as mini-series (edit out some fluff, etc.), and make some money, but it still won't happen.
Hollywood does this over and over, create shows, only to have them end in mid-plot. It really discourages me from getting started with new shows (less money for Hollywood, but they'll still leave viewers hanging). I think in the future, I'll wait until a show runs a couple of seasons before I start watching. I can catch up on back episodes.