The Cancelled List: 14 Shows From the 2024-2025 Season We Absolutely Saw Coming ๐Ÿ’ฅ๐Ÿ“บ

Alright, Cinesist Crew ๐ŸŽญ๐Ÿฟ, gather ’round. It’s that bittersweet (mostly bitter, let’s be real) time of year when the grim reaper of network and streaming television sharpens his scythe. We’ve just lived through another season of promising pilots, baffling renewals, and, inevitably, a whole lot of cancellations. And while some goodbyes sting (RIP shows we actually loved!), let’s be brutally honest: most of the time, we saw it coming a mile away.

This isn’t a eulogy, folks. This is an intervention. At Cinesist, we’re not here to mourn; we’re here to dissect the cadavers of this season’s dearly departed TV shows and ask the tough questions: “What were they thinking?” “Did anyone actually watch this?” And, most importantly, “Why did it take them so long to pull the plug?” From reboots that failed to recapture magic to concepts that felt DOA, grab your popcorn (and maybe a tissue, if you’re one of those ‘Wheel of Time’ fans), because we’re serving up our unfiltered, snarky take on 14 Cancelled Shows We Absolutely Saw Coming. Prepare for a lashing, because sometimes, cancellation is a mercy.


Show 1: Suits LA (NBC)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: NBC, Cancelled after 1 season (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Oh, honey. You can’t just slap a “Suits” label on a new cast in a new city and expect magic. The original Suits had lightning in a bottle: the dynamic duo of Harvey and Mike, the fast-talking banter, and the sheer charisma of the cast. Suits LA felt like a desperate attempt to milk a dry cow. Without the established chemistry or a compelling hook beyond “It’s like Suits, but… in LA,” it was destined for the legal graveyard faster than you can say “hostile takeover.” We didn’t just see it coming, we filed the pre-cancellation paperwork ourselves.

Show 2: Poppa’s House (CBS)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: CBS, Cancelled after 1 season (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Look, Damon Wayans and Damon Wayans Jr. are funny guys. Individually. Together, in a multi-cam sitcom called Poppa’s House? It felt like a concept cooked up in a 90s writers’ room that got lost in a time warp. Generic premise, dated format, and a reliance on familial recognition rather than fresh comedic hooks. In an era of clever, often single-cam comedies, this felt less like a new show and more like a mandatory family reunion no one really wanted to attend. The canned laughter died, and so did the show.

Show 3: The Summit (CBS)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: CBS, Cancelled after 1 season (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Another reality competition show in a landscape absolutely saturated with them. Remember when these felt fresh? Now, unless you have a truly insane hook (like “strangers fight for money in a giant Squid Game knock-off”), most new entries just feel like background noise for folding laundry. The Summit tried to inject some high-stakes trekking into the mix, but ultimately, it climbed the mountain and then immediately fell off the other side. Too many similar peaks, not enough unique views.

Show 4: Found (NBC)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: NBC, Cancelled after 2 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Found had a compelling premise โ€“ a crisis management team finding missing persons, with a twist โ€“ but in the world of network procedurals, you either have to be exceptionally good, exceptionally unique, or have a built-in fanbase. Found landed somewhere in the middle. It tried to be dark and twisty, but often just felt convoluted. Two seasons for a mid-tier network procedural is often a death knell in disguise; it means you didn’t quite find your footing or a breakout audience. A noble effort, but ultimately, it got lost in the shuffle.

Show 5: The Irrational (NBC)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: NBC, Cancelled after 2 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Another NBC procedural starring Jesse L. Martin (who we love, truly!). But The Irrational felt like it was trying to be “The Mentalist” meets “Lie to Me” meets “Every Other Procedural Ever.” The hook of behavioral science solving crimes sounds smart on paper, but often devolves into thinly veiled psychological tricks rather than genuine insight. It was just a little too… rational for our liking. In a sea of familiar faces and even more familiar plot structures, it just couldn’t make a compelling case for its long-term survival.

Show 6: Night Court (NBC)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: NBC, Cancelled after 3 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Oh, Night Court. We wanted to believe. We truly did. But recreating the magic of a quirky, character-driven 80s sitcom is like trying to catch lightning in a bottle twice, especially when you replace most of the original cast. While Melissa Rauch brought some charm, and John Larroquette was, well, John Larroquette, it never quite found its own rhythm or a new, robust audience beyond nostalgic goodwill. It felt less like a fresh take and more like a tribute band that played all the notes but none of the soul. Three seasons is a decent run for a reboot, but let’s be honest, the gavel had been tapping for a while.

Show 7: Lopez vs. Lopez (NBC)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: NBC, Cancelled after 3 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): George Lopez and his daughter, Mayan Lopez, are clearly a charismatic duo in real life. But translating that into a multi-cam sitcom called Lopez vs. Lopez often felt like watching a family therapy session disguised as prime-time comedy. The “vs.” in the title wasn’t just a gimmick; it sometimes felt like genuine friction that didn’t always translate into universally funny situations. While it had its moments, it struggled to break out beyond its core demographic and prove it had a compelling story to tell over multiple seasons. Some battles aren’t meant to be won on network TV.

Show 8: Acapulco (Apple TV+)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Apple TV+, Ending after 3 seasons (classified as ending, but effectively not picked up further for the 2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Acapulco was charming, visually bright, and offered a nice escape. But therein lies the rub for many Apple TV+ shows: they tend to be well-produced, niche, and expensive. With an ever-growing library of content and a need to justify high production costs against subscriber growth, a show that’s “nice” but not a “must-see, can’t-miss, tell-all-your-friends” hit often finds itself on the chopping block. It’s less a brutal cancellation and more a quiet, elegant fade-out, much like a beautiful sunset on a resort that eventually closes for the season.

Show 9: Bookie (Max)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Max, Cancelled after 2 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): From Chuck Lorre, the sitcom king, you’d expect a slam dunk. But Bookie felt like a specific bet that didn’t pay off. A show about sports betting, even with a seasoned comedic mind behind it, has a niche appeal. Now, we’ll admit, seeing Charlie Sheen pop up was an absolute delight โ€“ a little glimmer of that chaotic good energy we’ve missed. He was practically “winning!” every scene he was in, giving us a taste of what could have been. But even the sheer, unpredictable charisma of Mr. Sheen couldn’t quite prop up a premise that, at its core, wasn’t universally compelling enough for Max’s aggressive streaming wars. It wasn’t offensively bad, just… quietly unessential. And in the streaming wars, unessential is a death sentence.

Show 10: The Sex Lives of College Girls (Max)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Max, Cancelled after 3 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): This one might sting some fans, but let’s be real: shows about college life have an expiration date. Eventually, the “girls” graduate, the dorm room antics become less charming, and the target audience moves on. While Mindy Kaling has a knack for relatable (and often chaotic) female friendships, three seasons is a respectable run for a show centered on such a specific, time-limited phase of life. Itโ€™s less a brutal cancellation and more a natural progression, like finally finishing that incredibly long group project. Sometimes, itโ€™s better to end before everyone overstays their welcome.

Show 11: Frasier (Paramount+)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Paramount+, Cancelled after 2 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Oh, sweet Niles, what have they done? The Frasier reboot was another attempt to recapture past glory, and while Kelsey Grammer is Frasier, the magic simply wasn’t there. It lacked the witty ensemble, the razor-sharp writing, and the unique Seattle charm of the original. Reboots often succeed when they evolve or find a new identity; this one felt like it was constantly looking backward, trying to mimic a symphony without all the instruments. Two seasons is actually quite generous for a show that largely existed on nostalgia fumes. Let sleeping shrinks lie.

Show 12: Based on a True Story (Peacock)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Peacock, Cancelled after 2 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): What happens when you try to blend true crime obsession with dark comedy, but the tone never quite gels? You get Based on a True Story. It had a promising premise, a solid cast in Kaley Cuoco and Chris Messina, and a timely subject. However, the show struggled to find its unique voice, often feeling like it was trying to be too many things at once. It wasn’t quite satirical enough to be truly biting, nor thrilling enough to be genuinely suspenseful. Two seasons for a Peacock original suggests it found some audience, but not enough to justify keeping this particular true-crime-comedy experiment alive. Sometimes, the truth just isn’t compelling enough.

Show 13: The Wheel of Time (Prime Video)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Prime Video, Cancelled after 3 seasons (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Ah, the age-old tale: another fantasy epic with a massive budget and a dedicated fanbase, getting the axe. While The Wheel of Time certainly had its loyalists and impressive visual effects, it struggled to capture the broader cultural zeitgeist in the way its budget-busting peers (like House of the Dragon or The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, despite its own controversies) managed to. Adapting such a complex book series is a monumental task, and often, shows can get bogged down in lore at the expense of compelling character arcs for the casual viewer. When your per-episode cost could fund a small nation’s GDP, and you’re not pulling in Game of Thrones-level numbers, the Wheel of Time (and money) stops spinning. A grand effort, but maybe too much wheel, not enough fire.

Show 14: Clean Slate (Prime Video)

  • Platform/Year Cancelled: Prime Video, Cancelled after 1 season (2024-2025 season).
  • Why We Saw It Coming (Cinesist Analysis): Starring Laverne Cox and George Wallace, and notably a project from the legendary Norman Lear (posthumously), Clean Slate had all the ingredients for a heartwarming, groundbreaking comedy… on paper. However, for many, it felt less like organic storytelling and more like a direct attempt to check off boxes on the “DEI and woke agenda” checklist. While a show’s intention may be noble, if the execution feels preachy or forced, and prioritizes messaging over genuinely engaging comedy or character development for a broad audience, it struggles to find traction. A gentle, character-driven comedy in a streaming landscape dominated by high-concept thrillers and broad sitcoms can get lost very easily, especially when it alienates a segment of the audience. It felt like a show out of time, and not in a charming way; it simply didn’t generate the necessary buzz to keep its slate anything but wiped clean.

Before we wrap up this brutal (but necessary) dissection of Hollywood’s latest missteps, it’s worth remembering that not everything coming down the pipeline is destined for the chopping block. Sometimes, amidst the reboots and the tired concepts, there’s a sequel that actually has us cautiously optimistic. If you’re looking for a glimmer of hope for intelligent action, check out why we’re actually hyped for the possibility of ‘Nobody 2’.๐Ÿ‘‰ Read our full breakdown on Nobody 2 Hype

The Final Cut: No Surprises Here (Mostly) ๐ŸŽฌโœ‚๏ธ

And there you have it, Cinesist fam. Our comprehensive (and cathartic) rundown of the shows that bowed out of the 2024-2025 season. While the networks and streamers might blame declining viewership, increased production costs, or a sudden, mysterious alien invasion, we like to think we had a pretty good read on most of these from the get-go. Very few true shocks here, just a lot of “told ya so” moments.

The TV landscape is constantly shifting, but one thing remains constant: the battle for eyeballs and the ruthless pursuit of the next big hit. Sometimes, a show just isn’t it. Sometimes, it’s a valiant effort that just doesn’t connect. And sometimes, well, sometimes it’s a show that should have been put out of its misery seasons ago. Here’s to hoping the next batch of greenlit projects learns from the mistakes of the fallen.

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What shows did YOU see getting the axe? Let us know in the comments โ€“ we love a good shared “we knew it!” moment!

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Tired of the bland? Craving unfiltered movie & TV reviews, sharp takes, and fourth-wall-breaking commentary? Your inbox is about to get a serious upgrade. ๐Ÿ˜‰

We don't do spam. We do snark. Read our classified privacy brief for more intel. ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ

A high-contrast silhouette of a person emerging from deep shadow, looking into the camera with a subtle, mischievous grin, conveying a knowing and conspiratorial fourth-wall-breaking vibe.
We're always watching. Always judging. And trust us, we have thoughts. Lots of them. Don't worry, it's not creepy... unless it is. ๐Ÿ˜
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