Family sitcoms safe and sound in television's future

Although several popular shows will be coming to an end, family-friendly sitcoms are not disappearing from the TV airwaves. The reimagining of the Norman Lear classic One Day at a Time on Netflix, starring Rita Moreno, is an example of shows with universal appeal that will allow them to continue to thrive.
Although several popular shows will be coming to an end, family-friendly sitcoms are not disappearing from the TV airwaves. The reimagining of the Norman Lear classic One Day at a Time on Netflix, starring Rita Moreno, is an example of shows with universal appeal that will allow them to continue to thrive.

As the saying goes, family is forever.

The future is bright for family sitcoms -- despite some of the genre's biggest shows nearing their conclusions.

Modern Family became the latest long-running comedy series to announce the end is coming, as ABC shared last week that it renewed the show for an 11th and final season.

Before that, Fuller House said its fifth season will be its last.

Although these fast-approaching finales represent an end of an era for television, pop culture experts are confident that family-friendly sitcoms aren't going anywhere.

"I don't think sitcoms about families are going away," says Robert Thompson, the director of Syracuse University's Bleier Center for Television & Popular Culture. "I always said sitcoms are like cockroaches: When everything else is dead, there will be nothing left on planet Earth besides cockroaches watching sitcoms."

There are multiple reasons for the potential of prolonged success, Thompson explains. For one, sitcoms are often a simple form of entertainment that people can turn on and enjoy while they do chores, rather than having to intently focus on a storyline that stretches across multiple episodes.

Plus, family shows are highly relatable.

"Family sitcoms can be really funny because there's so much stuff you can deal with," Thompson said. "Kids can get in trouble. Kids can do stupid things. Parents can get in trouble and do stupid things. And it also appeals to an awful lot of Americans (because they) have had the experience of being in families. ... It's a pretty universal experience. I think comedy writers are always going to be going back to that well. It's just harder to do now without looking so square and so old-fashioned. Modern Family managed that very nicely."

Thompson names Black-ish and Fresh Off the Boat as examples of sitcoms that continue to do well on network television, and points to the success of the Netflix series One Day at a Time as proof that sitcoms are viable in the era of streaming services as well.

What has changed, however, is the way people consume these family comedies. Mostly gone are the days of parents and kids gathering around the TV and all watching the same show.

That shift began decades ago when families started to buy more than one TV for their homes, and has progressed during an era where content is easily accessible at any given time on individual smart devices, Thompson said.

What also helps the sitcom genre's future, though, is society's desire to see old shows brought back to life, explains David Schmid, an English professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo who teaches a course on TV history.

"At the same time that Modern Family and Fuller House and The Big Bang Theory are being canceled, there seems to be an increasing appetite (for) nostalgic reboots," Schmid told The News.

Roseanne, Full House, One Day at a Time and Arrested Development are among the shows that have been reprised in recent years, and rumors often circulate about the returns of other popular shows.

It also helps that Netflix -- which aired each of those reboots except Roseanne, which later became The Connors -- and other streaming services have gotten involved in the sitcom game.

"As Netflix goes, so the industry goes, and so the family sitcom goes," Schmid explains. "So the fact that they brought back Arrested Development, the fact that One Day at a Time is coming back (for another season), the fact that they're doing more of their own original sitcom programming as well, that's the other reason I think family sitcoms have a bright future. If Netflix is behind them, that's pretty much all you need to say."

The reality that shows are mostly being consumed by single viewers rather than whole families has also introduced a wider variety of subject matter on these series, as networks are able to appeal to more niche audiences instead of attempting to satisfy everyone with every show.

But Schmid believes the universal appeal of family sitcoms is what allows them to continue to thrive, even as series come and go.

"I think the core attribute (of the genre) is that it never loses is relatability. The relatability of the characters, of the situations," Schmid said. "So you know, the gender, the sexuality, the race, the ethnicity of the characters may change over time ... and that's going to continue to vary, but the family sitcom always remains the same."

Style on 02/19/2019

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