The classic sitcom was birthed in 1978 on ABC, where it lasted for four seasons. The network pulled the plug earlier this year, but Yahoo! picked it up and will air new episodes next year.
‘Community’ĭespite consistently chilling beside the chopping block, “Community” kept kicking for five seasons at NBC. The new network kept the show in its roster for nine seasons in total. CBS swooped in and picked it up after it was canceled in 1996. The military legal drama “JAG” was given just season at NBC before getting the boot.
The network brought the show back earlier this year for another go, albeit as a limited series with a subtitle, “Live Another Day.” ‘JAG’ Kiefer Sutherland’s action-packed hit lasted a healthy eight seasons on Fox, wrapping things up in 2010. Now, the show calls Netflix its home - the fourth season dropped there in August. The network later decided to revive it, then canceled it again after the third season. After burning out with viewers and critics, it was canceled after two seasons.
“The Killing” was slaughtered by its network, FX, not once, but twice. The show found a new home on ABC, where it continued for two more years. The hospital comedy starring Zach Braff was a big hit on NBC, but after seven seasons, the network cut it loose. Its sixth and final season will air next year. Once it finally was, TBS picked up the show. The Courteney Cox-led laugher had a tumultuous three seasons on ABC, where it always seemed breaths away from being canceled. It then landed at DirecTV, where it completed two more seasons. After three seasons, the cable network let it go. ‘Damages’Įven Glenn Close’s Emmy recognition couldn’t convince FX to keep the legal thriller alive. Netflix rewarded the fan base’s enthusiasm with a fourth season in 2013. The cult hit thrived online after it was canceled by Fox upon its third season’s conclusion. Here are 13 other shows that were brought back from the dead. Nine years after it left the air, the show returns to HBO Sunday at 10 p.m.īut “The Comeback” isn’t the first show to be resurrected from the depths of cancellations past. Now it’s “The Comeback” that’s returning. How Tiger Woods hit rock-bottom - and rose from the ashesĬomebacks have never come quite as meta as “The Comeback.” The one-and-done season of the 2005 comedy series starred Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish, a former sitcom star attempting a comeback by way of a reality series. Real estate broker Robert Futterman says he won't sit idly by after firing Tanya Tucker unfiltered: Country's rebel queen is 'ticked' at the Grammys But perhaps there are still parts of the government around doing testing on people who turn into one of the undead.Adele drops soaring 'Easy on Me' comeback single after 6 long years It's a little strange that people in a helicopter would want walkers or people turning into them. When Anne found Rick at the episode's end, she surprisingly declared Rick was a "B" and not an "A." If an "A" denoted a leader, Rick would have been the ultimate definition of an "A." But now that we know he's a "B," we know the classification isn't that simple. Originally, Anne told Gabriel she thought he was a "B," but then when he was going to tell Rick what she was doing she decided he was an "A." At first, it seemed like she was impressed with him and found him to be more of a leader, but then we saw she was going to have a walker turn him into one of the undead. When Anne was messaging the helicopter gang it seemed as if anyone marked an "A" was a leader-type and "B" was someone who was more of a follower.īut it may very well be that "A" and "B" means "After" or "Before" you're turned into one of the dead. It looked like she was originally going to make Rick an "A" during season eight, episode seven (seen above).