Have you ever watched a show and suddenly thought, “Wait, what happened to that character?” Sure, television characters die or are otherwise written out of a series all the time, but once in a while, they stop appearing with any explanation or acknowledgment whatsoever. Here are 23 TV shows with characters who inexplicably disappeared.
Occasionally, a TV show will change its premise, but not always because it is long in the tooth. Sometimes, these changes happen due to casting shakeups or an original premise not landing. Speaking of premises that didn’t land, let’s start there with this list.
In her new audio memoir, But First, God, CBS star Julie Chen Moonves delves into her falling-out with Leah Remini during the first season of The Talk. Chen Moonves and Remini joined Sharon Osbourne, Sara Gilbert, and Holly Robinson Peete on the talk show for that first season, but by Season 2, Remini and Peete had left the show.
Leah Remini and Kevin James are looking back fondly on their hit CBS sitcom, The King of Queens, which marked its 25th anniversary on September 21. The series, which ran for nine seasons between 1998 and 2007, starred James and Remini as Doug and Carrie Heffernan, a working-class couple living in Rego Park, Queens, New York City.
Television shows don’t have to be set in New York City to be good, but it certainly helps. Here are the best of the best set in the iconic town.
These fascinating figures have much to reveal about how American society and culture view masculinity and how they expect men to behave, particularly when it comes to their relationships with their wives, children, and the rest of their families.
People Puzzler is heading into the syndication broadcast fold this fall as Debmar-Mercury clears the Game Show Network series hosted by Leah Remini in more than 90 percent of the U.S.
"Scientology’s final objective of silencing me has not been achieved," actress writes in statement
Add Laura Prepon to the list of celebrities who have left Scientology in the past. "I'm no longer practicing Scientology," the That '70s Show and Orange Is the New Black star told People in an exclusive new interview.
Summer flings can actually mean something, apparently.
Since there were such a large number of characters, we chose to focus on ones who appeared in at least a handful of episodes. With that, here is the “Saved by the Bell” version of “where are they now?”
On July 5, 1989, comedians Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David introduced the world to “Seinfeld.” This NBC comedy defied the traditional sitcom model by basically being about nothing, provided breakout roles for the main cast and yada, yada, yada.
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