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Date Posted: 11:17:24 04/19/07 Thu
Author: Islandgirl
Subject: USA Today names best show finales

Got this off the USA Today website. Comment from me at the end:

*********

By Robert Bianco, USA TODAY
Television isn't always clumsy about closings. USA TODAY spotlights six particularly fond farewells:

The Surprise Ending People Didn't Know They Wanted
Newhart
CBS, May 21,1990

Though popular at the time, Newhart is best known now for a finale that may just be the best of all time. In this follow-up to his classic Bob Newhart Show, the star played an author running a Vermont inn with his wife (Mary Frann). Or at least he did until that famous final scene, when he woke up in bed with his Bob Newhart Show wife, Emily (Suzanne Pleshette). It was all a dream, and Bob was back with Emily — making us realize that's where he belonged all along.

MORE: Why can't some shows say good-bye?

The Ending People Wanted
Sex and the City
HBO, Feb. 22, 2004
FIND MORE STORIES IN: HBO | Sex and the City | Sarah Jessica Parker | Buffy the Vampire Slayer | Bob Newhart | Newhart

Sometimes, the best thing a show can do is bow to the inevitable. For six seasons, this sex-charged HBO romantic comedy followed Sarah Jessica Parker's Carrie Bradshaw as she yearned for Mr. Big (Chris Noth) while chasing after a series of unacceptable substitutes — including an artist (Mikhail Baryshnikov) in Paris. Fans, however, wanted Carrie back in New York with Mr. Big, and that's the ending they got. Plus, they finally learned Big's first name: John.

The Open-Ended Ending
NYPD Blue
ABC, March 1, 2005

The lovely, perfectly appropriate final episode of this groundbreaking cop show is a great example of the art of finishing without concluding. Another day winds down, and the detectives file out of the squad room, stopping to say goodnight to their new boss, Dennis Franz's Andy Sipowicz. The message here is that life goes on, even if we're not there to watch it.

The Big Finish
M*A*S*H
CBS, Feb. 28, 1983

"Big" is an understatement — the finale ran 2½ hours and is the highest-rated American series episode of all time: More than 60% of all TV households tuned in. Yet as befits this classic anti-war comedy, it's not exactly a happy ending. Peace comes to Korea, but not before the war can claim a few more lives — including, most memorably, a baby on a bus. The final image is iconic: Hawkeye in a helicopter, looking at a "goodbye" spelled out in rocks.

The Hopeful Sendoff
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
UPN, May 20, 2003

This rousing hour accomplished most everything you could ask for in an adventure finale, bringing the story to a satisfying conclusion without closing off future options for the characters. Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) saves the world again, this time by empowering a world full of potential slayers. Her journey is complete, but the slayers' stories go on.

The Gentle Goodbye

The Mary Tyler Moore Show March 19, 1977

Unlike so many shows that overstay their welcomes, MTM chose to end its run after its seventh season, while it was still at its creative height. The show's gift for heartfelt humor shines in the justifiably well-loved finale, as the newsroom staff is fired and Mary is forced to move on to a new stage in her life. She left us, though, with one of TV's most joyous memories — a beautiful, hilarious, sideways shuffle as the gang heads for a tissue box, unwilling to break out of a group hug.

*********

I don't disagree with any of those, although a couple of them were shows I never watched. I would also add to the list two shows produced by Donald Bellisario: "Quantum Leap" in the 1990s and "JAG" which just wrapped up in May of 2005.
The ending to "QL" was a little sad, a little mysterious. . .but very "right" for a series that incorporated both those elements. "JAG" ended with Mac and Harm having decided to get married and flipping a coin to decide which one of them would resign their commission so that they wouldn't be in violatio of Navy policy. It was a sweet reward for the show's long-suffering shippers.

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