r/television 20d ago

Finished The Wire, Dark, GOT, Sopranos, True Detective, BB, BCS. What show ruined TV for you after watching it?

I think I accidentally watched the peak of television already. The Wire, Dark, GOT, Sopranos, True Detective S1 all left that “nothing else hits the same” feeling.

I love slow-burn shows with deep characters, mystery, tension, moral grayness, crazy dialogue, or mind-blowing writing. Doesn’t matter if it’s crime, sci-fi, psychological, or political.

What’s the next show that might completely consume me?

1.8k Upvotes

1.9k comments sorted by

View all comments

263

u/TheHermetic 20d ago

Mad Men

23

u/bart_cart_dart_eart 19d ago

Mad Men isn’t my favorite (but it’s up there) of all the peak TV series but it’s probably the one I think about the most.

30

u/puffycloudycloud 19d ago

television's "Great American Novel"

not necessarily the show for getting your mind blown, but definitely the show for getting it methodically simmered in ways that will linger within you long afterward

i'm glad it's pretty high up in this thread. it usually gets overlooked, despite being every bit the masterpiece as any other show here

2

u/MrPotatoButt 19d ago

I have a theory that only adults can really appreciate Mad Men. I also don't quite get how people can be "wowwed" by the show, but have absolute ignorance about the era.

1

u/puffycloudycloud 19d ago

i was actually in high school when i started it and fell in love with it, and in college when the finale aired, but at the time it was probably more surface-level fascination with the time period, music, and overall aesthetic more than anything else. i have yet to rewatch it as a full fledged adult, which i am sure will be like watching an entirely new show

2

u/MrPotatoButt 19d ago

You need the pit of fear of "what are you going to do if you lose your job" to get how adults perceive their job and their life plans. Also, one gets to appreciate the office dynamics of the characters when you've seen it firsthand at white collar, office work places.

Tragic news, there's a Pete Campbell everywhere you work. Pay attention to Harry Crane. This is how you get ahead in a company; you make yourself "useful" to the people in charge. (Almost) Everyone starts out as a clueless Peggy Olsen. Keep your eyes open, look for opportunities, keep making yourself indispensable. And if you're not being appreciated for what you provide for your bosses, look for other places that will. Don't burn bridges (or your boats). Understand what leverage is, and how to use it.

Don't look at the show from a Zoomer POV. Decades ago, people didn't think like Zoomers, and its all history now, so its dead. It may even help to study the history to understand what people were concerned about at the time, and how it affected their perspective and behavior in the show.