Do you want to know what's worse than a boy texting you for days and then all of a sudden decides to not text you back one day, out of blue, with no explanation?
You guessed it! Canceled TV series.
Have you ever talked to a boy after knowing that it wasn't going to end the way you expected it? Well, then you've probably watched a TV series on Netflix knowing it was canceled after the first or second season.
They say only the good die young, and that applies more than likely to canceled TV Series. I swear I'm not the only person who has watched great shows such as "Apartment 23" and "The Messengers." Finding out that someone decided the shows weren't good enough and canceled them is very disappointing.
I understand that a show needs ratings and viewers to stay alive, but sometimes, shows aren't promoted in the most efficient ways. Why should people who actually love these shows have to suffer because whoever put the show on air doesn't have faith in the show?
Imagine watching a kid play with his dad for three years and then all of sudden, the dad never comes back. That is literally me after spending months dedicating my life to a show that I've grown to love, then bam, it's gone off the air with no explanation. Can you say trust issues?
Ending a show for good with a cliffhanger isn't right. It'll never be right. There's a special place in this life for people who let canceled shows end with cliffhangers. The least the creators or producers or whoever could do is publish an article telling us what would've happened. I don't care if they make up a story out of thin air; I just want answers.
Here's a list of a few TV series that won't be making it back to your living rooms unless it's a rerun:
"Castle," "Finding Carter," "Switched at Birth," "Rizzoli and Isles," "Beauty and the Beast," and "Royal Pains."
As of a few weeks ago, God blessed us all when CMT bought the TV series "Nashville" and turned the canceled plans around, and now we will not be left with a cliffhanger.