Site icon The Thrilling Detective Web Site

Brilliant But Cancelled

14 Private Eye Shows That Coulda Been Contenders

I don’t know how many of you remember the Trio Network on American television sometime around 2005 or so. It was this culty, pop-culturey grab bag of arty-farty pretensions and good ol’ TV; a kinda of very hip, occasionally snarky PBS.

But anyway, they ran this show for a while called Brilliant But Cancelled, where they’d run episodes of old TV shows that, in their mind at least, coulda/shoulda been contenders. And later on they spun it off into a series of streaming videos and DVDs.

A great idea, and it always made for a good, if not always great, watch. The problem was that very few of the crime shows they chose, at least according to the episodes that were aired, were actually all that brilliant. Although, yes, they all had potential, and not one of them really lasted more than one season. Some of them didn’t even get to air all the episodes that were filmed.

I mean, really. Delvecchio? Gideon Oliver? Staccato? Okay, at least the last one had its style to keep it warm, but the others were, well, less than brilliant.

So I figured hey, why don’t we cobble together our own list of Brilliant But Cancelled Private Eye Shows? I posted the question to our mailing list, our Twitter feed and a few other places, and this is what we came up with…
Now, keep in mind that brilliance is in the eye of the beholder, but most of these shows, if not exactly brilliant, came awful damn close and all of them deserved better than they got.

    

Here are the results, listed chronologically…

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

Exit mobile version