17 Bad Plotlines TV Shows Pretended Never Happened

17 Bad Plotlines TV Shows Pretended Never Happened


17 Bad Plotlines TV Shows Pretended Never HappenedSkip To Content



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17 Stupid, Weird, Or Borderline Offensive TV Plots That The Writers Decided To Just Pretend Never Happened

Thank god they dropped that whole Landry-killing-someone storyline on Friday Night Lights.
Hannah Marderby Hannah Marder Staff
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Recently, we wrote about TV and movie storylines that were so bad, the writers pretended they never happened — and y'all had some great contributions in the comments! Here are 17 TV plots that vanished into thin air.

1. When Rufus and Lily's son on Gossip Girl was completely erased and never mentioned again...likely because his existence made the Dan-Serena relationship feel a little incestuous:


Scott to Rufus: The CW "I’m not sure if he disappeared because people hated it, but he definitely never showed up again. ... I will add that I hated it. I mean, it didn’t make Dan and Serena related by any means, but when you share a sibling it’s more than a bit fucked up."
—nicy2

2. And when there was an entire convoluted storyline about Chuck trying to figure out who his mother was that ended with him wondering if his Uncle Jack was his father... Then it was never mentioned again:


Chuck (looking at photo of his mom pregnant with him): The CW "The whole storyline about Jack Bass being Chuck's real father... Still not sure who his mother is supposed to be."—jo97

3. When the reboot of Will and Grace decided the events of the last season — aka Will and Grace both having kids — were just a dream:


Karen said she had
Karen said she had NBC Suggested by eringibbins

4. The whole Lily plotline on Once Upon a Time:


Maleficent:
Maleficent: ABC "Once Upon a Time dropped many plotlines. They dropped the 'dark Savior' storyline with Lily and Maleficent, which they'd spent all season building up to."—matdyjames

5. When the unpopular character Seven was introduced on Married With Children, then disappeared as if he'd never existed...except for a quick shot of him listed as missing on the back of a milk carton:


milk carton with photo of Seven labeling him missing
milk carton with photo of Seven labeling him missing Fox "My fave was Married With Children. They had a new addition to the house. He was 10, and his name was Seven. Ten episodes later, he was gone and never mentioned again (except that one time his face appeared on a milk carton)."—cousinittpresidentelect

6. When Dwight was meant to inherit his aunt's farm on The Office in a spinoff idea that never happened after NBC rejected it:


Dwight's aunt tells Dwight, Fannie, and Jeb that if they move home, she'll leave them her farm
Dwight's aunt tells Dwight, Fannie, and Jeb that if they move home, she'll leave them her farm NBC "At the end of The Office, Dwight inherits his aunt's farm. Rumor has it they were going to make a spinoff show about Dwight, but it never happened."—christig2

7. When the Futurama movie Bender's Big Score reversed the events of episode "Jurassic Bark," which was — while loved — often cited as one of the most depressing episodes of the series.


Seymour dying of old age in front of the pizza place in Futurama
Seymour dying of old age in front of the pizza place in Futurama Fox / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment "It wasn't because the original was bad or hated, but I believe Futurama did this with Seymour the dog. The series showed him waiting and dying of old age, waiting for Fry every day. When the series was rebooted into movies, they showed Seymour being with a time-traveling Fry. ... I think they just wanted to soften it a bit with the movie."—zemt

8. When Landry killed someone on Friday Night Lights and then the storyline was completely dropped after it was received poorly:


Landry realizes he killed the guy
Landry realizes he killed the guy NBC "When Landry kills that guy and then his police officer father helps cover it up. I get that they called it 'self-defense,' but the writers really wrote themselves into a corner with that one. My favorite was Landry just getting a new car, and no mention why he needed a new one."—pink424

9. The entire Dean/Amelia relationship on Supernatural:


Amelia tells dean
Amelia tells dean The CW "Supernatural Season 8 had a storyline going in the flashbacks about what Sam was doing when Dean was in Purgatory, where he accidentally ran over a dog and started a relationship with a woman called Amelia. Fans hated this storyline so much that when the season returned from the winter hiatus, it was never revisited or resolved. Even Jared Padalecki hated what it meant for Sam. It didn’t help that it was a very lazy rehash of Dean’s storyline between seasons 5 and 6, as Dean’s yearning for a normal life as well as the relationship with Lisa and her son Ben were already well established, and the increasing difficulty in handling the family man and Hunter lifestyles was shown in Season 6 to a tragic logical conclusion."—jbmasta

10. Patrick Gordon's storyline on Downton Abbey:


Gordon with his face bandaged
Gordon with his face bandaged PBS "There was a storyline on Downton Abbey where a soldier with a badly burned face claims to be the real heir to the estate who had supposedly died aboard the Titanic in the first episode, and Edith starts falling in love with him. It was a terrible storyline, and I can’t remember how it resolved, but the character was quickly dispatched and never mentioned again."—savana221

11. When unpopular character Mark Brendanawicz got another job in Pawnee on Parks and Recreation, but was never seen again:


Mark in promotional shot for the show
Mark in promotional shot for the show Mitchell Haaseth / NBC / Courtesy Everett Collection "He leaves the parks department for another job that is still in Pawnee, but is never heard from again. They are constantly having fairs and town meetings, and he never even shows up to say hi. I’m not even mad about it though; I thought his character sucked, and they tried to make him like Jim from The Office, but it didn’t land. The show got way better when they added Chris and Ben and got rid of Mark."—dust_it_off

12. When a woman claiming to be Anne Frank arrived at the asylum in American Horror Story: Asylum, and her storyline (of how she knew Arden) was never resolved:


Sister Judy next to Charlotte/Anne and her husband
Sister Judy next to Charlotte/Anne and her husband Byron Cohen/FX Networks / courtesy Everett Collection "AHS is notorious for starting a storyline with no clue as to where it's going and then dropping it halfway or rushing it through with a clumsy resolve. What sticks out to me is Season 2 (Asylum) and the Anne Frank storyline."—kmrp

13. When Jackson became selectman on Gilmore Girls in a rather underwhelming plotline, and then the next season Taylor was back to being selectman as if the election had never happened:


Jackson is named the new town selectman
Jackson is named the new town selectman The WB "When Jackson becomes town selectman and they follow it up for a while, and then one day Taylor is back to having that role, and they never explain what happened with Jackson or mention it again."—sillysword75

14. And when Jason and Lorelai broke up because he was suing Lorelai's father...which was then never mentioned again:


Jason:
Jason: The WB "They break up, but you never hear the results or repercussions of the lawsuit."—sillysword75

15. When new characters Marley, Kitty, Jake, and Ryder were introduced on Glee and took over the main cast, and then all got demoted or disappeared in the final season:


Ryder, Marley, Kitty, and Jake on Glee
Ryder, Marley, Kitty, and Jake on Glee Mike Yarish / Fox / Courtesy: Everett Collection "It's so hated amongst Glee fans that they acted like they didn’t exist the next season, and then the next time they were ever seen was in the finale."—rachelmay

16. When Phoebe discovered her mom's friend was her birth mom on Friends, and then the character disappeared:


the older Phoebe tells main character phoebe that she's her mother to which she replies
the older Phoebe tells main character phoebe that she's her mother to which she replies NBC "One of my biggest pet peeves is in Friends. Although it’s my favorite show and I watch it every day, when they introduced Phoebe’s ‘birth mom’ I cringed and still cringe to this day. That storyline was absolutely pointless. We meet her like, three times at the end of Season 3 and beginning of 4, and [then] she’s never mentioned again after the birth of the triplets. It winds me up every single time because it’s just so ridiculous."—itsamyxo

17. And finally, when Samantha slept with Charlotte's brother on Sex and the City, leading to some problematic slut-shaming...then the brother literally disappeared from existence:


Charlotte says to samantha
Charlotte says to samantha HBO "Charlotte had a brother for one episode of SATC. Samantha slept with him and then he was never heard from again."—nadiaz4da7dd1c0

Now for another question — what bad or stupid TV plotline do you *wish* was erased? Let us know in the comments!

Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.
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