The Show Hole Hall of Disappointment
Not every show earns a glowing review. Some shows confuse us. Some disappoint us. Some make us question whether streaming platforms are okay. And some inexplicably become cult classics.
This guide collects every show that scored a 4.0 or lower from either His Score, Her Score, or the Critics score. Consider it a warning label, a curiosity cabinet, or your next guilty pleasure watchlist.
Sometimes they’re baffling.
And sometimes they’re bad in a way that makes you want to text someone immediately.
Why Make a Bad Shows Guide?
Because sometimes you don’t want the best show. Sometimes you want the chaos. You want the questionable choices, the strange pacing, the awkward dialogue, the baffling plot turns, and the review where we slowly lose patience in real time. A bad show can be annoying, confusing, weirdly fascinating, or so misguided that reading the review becomes more entertaining than watching the actual thing.
The Hall of Disappointment is our home for the shows that landed with a thud, at least for one of the three score perspectives we track. If the Critics Score, Her Score, or His Score hits 4.0 or lower, the show earns a spot here. That doesn’t always mean it is unwatchable for everyone, but it does mean there is something worth talking about, even if that something is mostly regret.
We still use the same first-three-episodes rule as the rest of The Show Hole. We are not judging a show by a trailer, a premise, or internet noise. We actually sit through the opening stretch and ask the important questions: does it hook us, does it make sense, does it know what it is, and would we willingly keep watching after episode three?
This page is for people who like a warning label, a guilty-pleasure hunt, or a little streaming rubbernecking. Maybe you want to avoid the worst options. Maybe you want to see what made us cranky. Maybe you are the kind of person who hears “this is terrible” and immediately presses play. No judgment. Well, some judgment. That is literally the page.
If the Critics Score, His Score, or Her Score is 4.0 or less, the show earns a spot here.
Congratulations? Condolences? Honestly, depends on the show.
Why Do We Watch Bad Shows?
Because bad TV has range. There is boring bad, chaotic bad, “who approved this?” bad, and the rare, precious kind of bad that becomes entertaining for reasons nobody intended. Sometimes the problem is pacing. Sometimes the dialogue sounds like it was assembled during a fire drill. Sometimes the show has a strong idea and then immediately trips over its own tone.
The funny thing is that low-scoring shows can still be useful. A bad review can save you a night. A divisive show can tell you a lot about your own taste. And a truly strange miss can become the kind of thing people talk about because they need someone else to confirm they saw what they saw.
This list is for anyone who enjoys reading a brutal review, comparing wildly different reactions, or intentionally sampling the shows that made us question our life choices. Use it as a skip list, a curiosity list, or a map of the streaming potholes we hit on your behalf.
If a show gets a 4.0 or lower, something went wrong.
The fun is finding out exactly what.
Types of Bad Shows
Not all disappointing shows fail the same way. Some are dull from the jump, some are overstuffed, and some are almost good enough to make their bad choices even more irritating. That is why this page does not just collect low scores. It gives you a way to understand what kind of disappointment you are dealing with.
Boring bad is the toughest kind because there is not much to grab onto. The premise may sound fine, the cast may be capable, and the platform may have spent real money, but the first three episodes still feel like homework.
Chaotic bad is messier and often more entertaining. These are the shows with wild choices, uneven tones, confusing twists, or scenes that make you pause and ask, “Wait, are we supposed to take this seriously?”
Almost-good bad may be the most frustrating category. These shows have a decent idea, a strong actor, or a promising setup, but the execution keeps getting in the way. You can see the version that might have worked, which somehow makes the actual version more annoying.
So-bad-it’s-interesting is the rarest and most dangerous category. It may not be good, but it gives you enough weirdness, confidence, or accidental comedy that you might keep watching just to see how far it goes.
Some shows should be skipped.
Some should be studied.
Some should only be watched with snacks and emotional support.
Search the Wreckage
Filter the lowest-rated shows by service, genre, or level of regret.