Solo, a canceled story: 19 TV spin-offs for breakout characters that no one wanted

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Solo, a canceled story: 19 TV spin-offs for breakout characters that no one wanted

For all its reputation as the crassly opportunistic refuge of the creatively bankrupt, the spin-off actually holds an esteemed place in TV history. Many shows now considered classics in their own right—The Simpsons, Laverne & Shirley, Frasier, The Colbert Report, etc.—began life on other shows, until producers recognized that a breakout character was popular enough to sustain their own series, then set about creating one that was… well, crassly opportunistic, but also pretty good.

In fact, the failed spin-off is somewhat rarer than you’d expect: Even the Barney Miller satellite Fish—so often used as a punchline in discussions like these—might have run for several seasons had Abe Vigoda not demanded more money, while the Alice spin-off, Flo (where Polly Holliday’s sassy waitress took over a roadhouse), was actually a Top 20 hit in the less-discerning ’80s. But the below shows are the exceptions. All of them took beloved characters who’d already endeared themselves on their parent series, then shuttled them off into their own stories that, whoops, it turns out no one was interested in. Let us remember some of these misbegotten orphans.

previous arrow19. Joey (2004) next arrow

When massively popular TV shows end their runs, it makes sense that their producers want to keep the money coming with a spin-off. It’s unusual, then, that Friends co-creators Marta Kauffman and David Crane opted out having anything to do with Joey, which took hunky dimwit Joey Tribbiani (Matt Leblanc) from NYC to L.A. to live with his sister, Gina (Drea De Matteo) and her son, with only Friends co-creator Kevin Bright shepherding the move. Joey smartly debuted a mere five months after the Friends finale and attracted , but tellingly, it drew a then-disappointing 18.5 million for its series premiere. Ratings remained middling for its time—although, Joey’s lowest ebb is about what the top-rated Big Bang Theory —so NBC moved it to Tuesdays for a season two suicide mission: going up against American Idol. Unsurprisingly, Joey continued to falter; after a brief hiatus, NBC canceled it in May 2006. Adding to the indignity, the network never even aired the six remaining episodes it had in the can. The experience put Leblanc off acting for years, but , “I made a fucking shitload of money, so call it a failure all you want.” [Kyle Ryan]

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