->''"And he runs and he runs and then dives and TOUCHDOWN PANTHERS WIN WOOOOO!!!!1111!!!! YES! I WANT TO GO BUY SOMETHING Creator/{{NBC}} ADVERTISES! WOOOOO!!!!"''
-->-- '''Drunken Bee''' (pimping for ''Series/FridayNightLights'''s renewal), ''Website/TelevisionWithoutPity''

Some shows are lucky to still be around -- or were, before the axe finally fell. Their ratings were [[JumpTheShark middling or poor or even awful]], but [[ReviewsAreTheGospel the critics liked it]], or it had been starting to show signs of a cult following, or it was ''supposed'' to be huge and they're reluctant to give up on it just yet, or the show is nearing an episode count needed for UsefulNotes/{{syndication}}, or everything else that premiered that year did even worse, or somebody at the network just ''liked'' the darn old thing; at any rate, it just barely got renewed by the skin of its teeth. In industry-speak, these shows are referred to as being "on the bubble," and if it's a show that seems to be on the bubble every single season, will sometimes garner the name "bubble series," taken from the fact that a soap bubble can pop at any second.

This generally means the network won't value the show too much, so expect the next season to have fewer episodes, budget cuts, conspicuously missing characters to save on salaries, or be shuffled around on the network's schedule.

Usually this marks the final season of a show -- even the final partial season. Better plan on [[Front13Back9 only running thirteen episodes]][[note]]or whatever the magic number for syndication is[[/note]] instead of the usual 22-26. In the best-case scenarios, it leads to a massive hit and a very good career move for the network execs responsible.

The opposite of ScrewedByTheNetwork: here, the network tries in vain to sustain a show that the audience just can't get into, instead of the other way around. Compare AdoredByTheNetwork, RenewedBeforePremiere.
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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* ''Isobe Isobee Monogatari'' remained in ''[[Magazine/ShonenJump Weekly Shonen Jump]]'' for several years despite it spending most of its time at or near the bottom of the popularity surveys. Whenever it came time to cancel a manga to clear up space for new series, it always managed to rise up just far enough for [[EliminationHoudini some other manga to get the axe in its place]]. Eventually, the editors at Shueisha must have gotten fed up with this always happening, so ''Isobe'' was given a permanent spot as the last manga in the magazine.
* Ever since ''Anime/DeliciousPartyPrettyCure'', Website/{{Crunchyroll}}'s simulcast of the ''Anime/PrettyCure'' series went through this:
** When it came time for ''Anime/DeliciousPartyPrettyCure'' to debut, [[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2022-02-05/crunchyroll-to-stream-delicious-party-precure-tv-anime/.182283 Crunchyroll announced their license of the season]] just ''hours'' ahead of its Japanese premiere.
** ''Anime/HirogaruSkyPrettyCure'' [[https://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2023/02/02-1/soaring-sky-pretty-cure-anime-joins-the-crunchyroll-simulcast-lineup was added to Crunchyroll's simulcast lineup]] just two days before its Japanese premiere.
** Similar to ''Delicious Party'', the adult-oriented spinoff ''Anime/PowerOfHopePrecureFullBloom'' was announced to be simulcasting the night before the first episode was released.
** ''Anime/WonderfulPrettyCure'' was announced to be simulcast on Crunchyroll [[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2024-02-02/crunchyroll-to-stream-wonderful-precure-anime/.207162 the day before its Japanese premiere]], though [[https://twitter.com/ToeiAnimation/status/1753132001522307096 Toei confirmed the series would be simulcast]] the day before Crunchyroll's announcement.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl''. The original run was barely renewed lots and lots of times, with these renewals getting it to 130 issues before dying. It has since had several continuations that have also gotten this treatment, each being cancelled before the cycle starts anew. [[ComicBook/OneMoreDay Ironically]], Creator/JoeQuesada has had a lot to do with Mayday Parker's continued existence.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/ArrestedDevelopment'', which was a critical smash but was watched by roughly nobody, only barely got a second season -- and then got a third season by an even slimmer margin -- then finally, to no one's surprise, was gone. Fans still debate whether Creator/{{Fox}} deserves respect for sticking with a failing show for so long, or criticism for [[ScrewedByTheNetwork not giving it much of a chance in the first place]]. The first season won the Emmy for best comedy just before the back nine was ordered. It was nominated for the Emmy for season 2 and 3. That may have been the reason it hung on. In an outtake on the season 2 DVD, David Cross goes on [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech a long rant about how Fox should learn how to market an Emmy winning comedy]].
* Both ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'' on Creator/{{CBS}} and ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'' on Creator/{{NBC}} only reluctantly got confirmed for third seasons at the last minute. Ditto ''Series/FridayNightLights'' for its second.
* ''Series/{{Scrubs}}''. Seasons five through seven were only barely renewed by NBC, and generally wound up airing as a mid-season replacement. Season seven (intended to be the final season) was shortened by the writer's strike and aired out of order. ABC (who actually owns the series) stepped in and aired the eighth season (considered by most to be an improvement over six and seven), which officially wrapped up JD's storyline. So five seasons "on the bubble" between two networks. The eighth season was still ScrewedByTheNetwork. They continually changed up timeslots, showed new episodes back to back, rarely did re-runs of the new episodes and when they did, they ''weren't'' back to back, or they were out of order. Season 9 was a PostScriptSeason.
* The first season of ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' was adored by the critics, but rated incredibly poorly (the first episode rated ''dead last'' in its timeslot). NBC stuck with it anyway, and following its surprise success at the Emmys, the ratings immediately picked up, and up and up.
* ''Series/{{Mash}}'' performed incredibly poorly in its first season (placing ''46th'') and was almost guaranteed to be cancelled. Fortunately, the network had enough faith in the series to give it one more season (a possibly apocryphal story claims that the wife of the head of CBS was a fan). A combination of summer reruns gaining traction, and being given a primo time slot for season two (following the hugely popular ''Series/AllInTheFamily'') catapulted the series into the top ten, where it would remain for all but one of it's remaining ten seasons.[[note]]The fourth season would slip to 14th place, being the first season after the departures of Creator/McLeanStevenson and Wayne Rogers[[/note]]
* ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'' initially went ahead despite resistance from most of NBC and Creator/LarryDavid himself. After the pilot aired, NBC was so ambivalent about the show that they only ordered four episodes for the first season (and that was because the executive in charge of NBC's specials who saw potential in the series had to do creative math to fund it and cut out a Creator/BobHope special for that year). It wasn't until season three that it showed any promise at all, and season four that it was legitimately successful.
* ''Series/{{Joey}}'' was a spinoff of ''Series/{{Friends}}'' and got renewed because it was the only NBC show in the 2004 fall season to pull in decent enough ratings to warrant a renewal (the pilot was watched by 18 million viewers), but on the other hand, NBC screwed the show in its second season by putting it up against ''Series/AmericanIdol'', causing its ratings to drop and then suddenly canceling it out of nowhere.
* ''Series/{{Angel}}'' was borderline as of the end of its fourth season. In an attempt to jumpstart the ratings, the producers changed the show's direction completely ''and'' brought over the popular character Spike from ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''. It wasn't enough, and the fifth season was the last. Creator/JossWhedon said in an interview that an attempt to avert this trope led to the show's cancellation. WB's refusal to renew the show until the last possible minute created problems for the cast and crew, as it left them no time to seek new work if the show weren't renewed. Joss requested a quicker decision for the staff's sake, and WB decided to cancel.
* ''Series/{{Gunsmoke}}'' was originally meant to be cancelled after the 1966-1967 season, after nearly 11 years on the air. However, the wife of Creator/{{CBS}} president William S. Paley, who was a devoted fan of the show, simply wouldn't hear of it. After persuasion from her and many other fans, Paley decided to renew the show, placing it in ''Series/GilligansIsland'''s timeslot, which ended up [[ScrewedBytheNetwork cancelling the beloved sitcom at the last minute]]. ''Gunsmoke'' would continue to air for another 8 seasons, a record-breaking run [[LongRunner totaling 20 years]] (and that's not even including [[Radio/{{Gunsmoke}} the 1952-1961 radio series]]).
* ''Series/NewsRadio'' was in this position ''every single year'' of its five seasons.
* It's completely possible that without the entire drama where ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' moved to Creator/{{UPN}}, ''Series/GilmoreGirls'' would have received a bare renewal for the second season as it was barely holding on in its original timeslot leading off Thursdays against ''Series/{{Survivor}}'' and ''Series/{{Friends}}''. Thankfully it became a shoo-in after that in their new Tuesday timeslot for the next six seasons, replacing ''Buffy'', which stuck in the same slot on UPN for two seasons.
* The last season of ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}''. Not only did they have to undo the ending of the previous season, which could have been a final ending, but budget restrictions meant not being able to have Leo in most of the episodes.
* Both the fourth and fifth seasons of ''Series/TheWire'' barely happened. The fifth possibly only because Creator/DavidSimon wrapped up the series and delivered a shorter season.
* The original ''Series/{{Star Trek|The Original Series}}'' got a third season only because of a massive letter-writing campaign (well, that and the fact that RCA owned NBC at the time, and RCA owned the patent for color TV. Since most people [[KillerApp bought color TVs specifically]] for ''Star Trek,'' they realized RCA made more money in color TV sales than NBC lost because of ''Star Trek''); but the third season is not considered that great by many fans. Forty years later, ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'' barely got a fourth season because the showrunners convinced the studio that they could do it cheaply; in fact, the eventual series finale was originally written to cap the third season. Fans tremendously approved the final season-- including many who feel it actually [[GrowingTheBeard grew its beard]] that season, too late to be saved.
* All evidence indicated ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'' wouldn't get a second season--poor ratings, lukewarm critical reception until halfway through the season, Fox's decision not to air the planned season finale (it was released on the DVD), [[TheFireflyEffect the fact that it was a Whedon/Minear production on Fox]], and so on. It got renewed anyway but the second season was the last. The second season may have been simply because the execs knew they'd get complaints if they canceled it after only one season.
* ''Series/{{Chuck}}'' season 3 was on the blade of a knife and wasn't announced with all of NBC's other properties. It was renewed (after SendingStuffToSaveTheShow) with a lower budget, shorter season, and a ProductPlacement deal, as a mid-season replacement, though it actually got more episodes ordered when much of NBC's new fall material failed. Season 4 was never really in doubt since S3's ratings were good by NBC standards, but it only initially got 13 episodes. Most of NBC's new shows again bombed, while Chuck was doing reasonably well, so it got 11 episodes for the spring. Throughout the spring, however, its ratings kept sinking lower and lower. It's been picked up for a 5th and final season but it'll only be 13 episodes, and the show's moving to Fridays from the 8pm Monday slot it had always held. Many speculate that Warner Bros., who produce it, cut NBC a deal too good to pass up in order to get the show enough episodes for syndication.
* The only reason the remake of ''Series/{{V|2009}}'' got a second season was because all of the other new dramas on ABC that year bombed. ABC later cut the order to just 10 episodes.
* ''Series/{{CSINY}}'' seems to have been this for season 8. It wasn't confirmed as renewed until the last possible moment and got 18 episodes for season 8. Season 9 was even closer - CBS said it was very close as to whether to renew it or ''Series/CSIMiami''. Ultimately, it came down to CSI: NY being cheaper to produce and wanting to use it to help with a night of New York-themed shows.
* ''Series/{{Nikita}}'' was the lowest-rated show on the CW for most of its second season, it got renewed regardless, it's rumoured to be because of international sales. The ratings dropped even lower in the 3rd season, but it still got renewed for a final 6-episode run.
* ''Series/{{Community}}'' got renewed for the fourth season despite lukewarm ratings from the third season. Catch is, it only got a half season's worth of episodes ordered, and was initially [[FridayNightDeathSlot set to air on Fridays]] but was moved to Thursday at the last minute. And then, ''after'' the Season 4 finale aired, it somehow got renewed for a fifth. After the fifth season, NBC flat-out cancelled the show -- [[http://ca.ign.com/articles/2014/06/30/community-lives-season-6-to-air-on-yahoo only to have]] Yahoo pick the show up for a sixth (and final) season on the last day before the contracts of the main cast members expired.
* ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'' had a relatively successful first season, but not enough to consider renewing. Creator/TheBBC eventually allowed a second season on the proviso that it would have a drastically reduced budget. The seasons from the second onwards are generally considered far superior to the first.
* ''Series/{{Hannibal}}'' was given the 9 o'clock Thursday slot, which is notorious at NBC for getting bad ratings, often resulting in the untimely death of the shows (for context, the show ''Series/{{Hannibal}}'' replaced in the time slot was ''Do No Harm'', which had the ''lowest premiere ratings in TV history''). Predictably, the show (while well-received by critics and audiences) never had great ratings, and there was much speculation that it would either be cancelled or moved to a different network before NBC eventually decided to renew it due to large DVR numbers and an incredibly passionate social media fanbase. Also a factor; European financing from France's Gaumont studio and Sony's AXN network, which meant that NBC could easily stomach the ratings issues because the international distributors paid most of the costs and NBC only paid a spare licensing fee and could keep most of the ad revenue, along with Amazon paying NBC to having exclusive rights to stream it in-season and long after.
* The teen GameShow ''Series/PeerPressure'' ran for three seasons, but the second and third season were just repackaged reruns of the first season with increasingly obtrusive editing; the "second" season applied PopUpTrivia and ClumsyCopyrightCensorship, while the "third" season changed the name of the show to ''Pressure 2'' (editing references to the word "Peer" in the title to try and RetCon it) to go along with its new InNameOnly SpinOff ''Series/Pressure1'' (which was produced as a stopgap to replace '' Series/{{Click}}'', a Merv Griffin-produced children's game show from the same distributor that was usually paired with ''Peer Pressure'', but had been cancelled after two seasons).
* Thirteen weeks into its run in 1963, NBC was about to axe ''Series/MatchGame''. Seeing nothing left to lose, writer Dick [=DeBartolo=] decided to juice up some of the fill-in-the-blanks as [[GettingCrapPastTheRadar comical and lightly suggestive statements]]. Viewers picked up on it, and the show ran to September 1969. Four years later, CBS revived ''Match Game'' in a retooled format that became even more successful.
* The merger of Creator/TheWB and Creator/{{UPN}} into Creator/TheCW led to several cases of this, as executives decided it would be better for the network to find its legs with proven properties instead of rolling the dice with new series.
** The executives at The WB were long gesticulating about the fate of ''Series/SeventhHeaven'', whether to renew the show or stop it at Season 10. A year before the launch of the new network, the show was canceled, but in May the next year it was unexpectedly revived for a final season at The CW. The last-minute decision caused Season 11 to have its budget lessened, actors departing or missing for episodes, and a reschedule from Monday to Sunday.
** The network intended to cancel ''Series/{{Reba}}'' after its fifth season as it decided to laser in on the young, trendy, urban audience. However, they realized that the show had already been renewed for a fifth '''and''' sixth season the year before, and the "kill fee" they'd have to pay producers for breaking this contract would have cost more than actually making a sixth season. It got renewed for a 13-episode sixth season, ignored as much as possible, and disappeared soon after.
** The first two seasons of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' went through this. Season 1 aired on the WB during its last year before it was reformatted into the CW and the decision to keep it wasn't made until long after the finale had aired. Likewise, its ratings for the second season were pretty low even for the CW's early standards, and the decision to renew it hadn't been made until long after Season 2 wrapped up.
* ''Series/BeautyAndTheBeast2012'' got terrible ratings in its second season, was the CW's lowest-rated series in 2014, and was yanked off the schedule to air the rest of its episodes in the summer. Somehow it still got renewed for a third season.
* Due to poor viewing figures, ''Series/OnlyFoolsAndHorses'' was almost cancelled after two series. However, it was repeated in a low-key time slot and achieved respectable ratings, which convinced BBC producers to commission another series. The show went from strength to strength thereafter and ironically was continually revived during the 1990s and 2000s owing to its status as a ratings winner.
* ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' had relatively low ratings for much of its initial run, in some cases airing as a mid-season replacement, leaving its standing a precarious one. It got renewed anyway due in large part to the failure of many of NBC's other then-new shows. As a result, almost all of the season finales can function as a SeriesFauxnale. Additionally, according to WordOfGod, this led to many of the relationship subplots being resolved much more quickly because the writers weren't certain if ''Parks'' would run long enough to resolve them later.
* ''Series/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphia'': The first season did not make a splash (even when FX attempted to air an edited-for-content cut on Fox proper), and the network straight-up told the showrunners that they would be canceled unless they could shake things up by getting a big name to join the cast. Ultimately Creator/DannyDeVito signed on (reportedly because his kids already ''loved'' the show), and the show quickly became one of FX's biggest shows. Ultimately one of the rare examples where ExecutiveMeddling ended up working ''far'' better than even the executives themselves may have thought.
* ''Series/SeaquestDSV'': Nicknamed as "Voyage to the Bottom of the Ratings", the submarine focused show's fate seemed certain. Declining ratings due to deteriorating writing and sports pre-emptions led to season 2 almost being last, with the season finale blatantly supposed to end the series - the embodiment of "going out with a bang". Behind the scenes, the planned replacement series (described as being "just awful") fell through, leading to a last-minute renewal and an overall sense of "let's get past this as quickly as possible" in the truncated season 3. Even with the renewal and improving critical praise, the planned full 3rd season was cut in half and the show sank to a watery grave.
* ''Series/{{Westworld}}'': While the first season was received well, the second season's viewer ratings and reception started to fluctuate. Though there were reports that the show was planned to have five seasons, the third season continuously suffered low viewer ratings and it's only before the last two episodes were aired that the show got renewed for a fourth season. Unfortunately, the fourth season met with terrible marketing and poor ratings which led to the show's cancellation.
* While the first season of ''Series/TheOfficeUS'' only had six episodes, it struggled, with weak ratings and critics regarding it as an unfocused, watered-down imitation of [[Series/TheOfficeUK the original]]. The main reason it made it to a second season was Kevin Reilly, NBC Entertainment president at the time, had loved the second episode, "Diversity Day", and felt the series had enough potential to warrant another go. It helped that the few viewers that did watch the first season were largely high earning individuals, which gave the network the ability to attract advertisers despite the low viewership.
* Everyone expected ''Series/FreshOffTheBoat'' to be cancelled at the end of its fifth season - it had been moved to the FridayNightDeathSlot and its ratings predictably tanked because of that, online buzz for the show had dissipated, much of the supporting cast had already left or had taken roles on other shows, and showrunner Nahnatchka Khan announced her intention to step down [[note]]she would go on to direct ''Film/AlwaysBeMyMaybe'', starring FOTB star Creator/RandallPark and former FOTB writer Creator/AliWong[[/note]]. But at the very last minute, it got a surprise renewal, infamously to the chagrin of cast member Creator/ConstanceWu, who was eager to move on to other projects. The show would be cancelled midway through the sixth season.
* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' had two near-death experiences in TheEighties. The first was after Season 6 (1980-81), when Jean Doumanian took over for Creator/LorneMichaels as producer, only to have the show turn into a critical and ratings fiasco, leading to her dismissal after twelve episodes. Dick Ebersol, the Creator/{{NBC}} executive who helped launch the show in 1975, stepped in as producer and basically saved the show. Then after Season 10 (1984-85), Ebersol was let go and the show was officially canceled, but NBC programming chief Brandon Tartikoff decided to try one last ditch gambit and reached out to Michaels, who agreed to return as producer, so the show got UnCanceled for good.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' was nearly cancelled in 1985 by [=BBC1=] controller Michael Grade, who openly disliked the series for its unimpressive production values and rapidly escalating amounts of violence. Following protests from the show's production staff, he begrudgingly turned the cancellation into an 18-month-long hiatus, after which the show's budget was slashed and its episode count was limited to 14 25-minute installments (divided among four serials) per season. Additionally, between Seasons 23 and 24, Grade moved the show's timeslot to Monday evenings to compete with ''Series/CoronationStreet'', which analysts described as a deliberate attempt to tank ''Doctor Who''[='s=] ratings. Sure enough, while the show managed to truck on for a few more years, it eventually got cancelled by Grade's successor and fellow ''Who'' detractor Jonathan Powell after the conclusion of Season 26 in 1989, not returning to regular airing until 2005.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* Music/BobDylan's [[Music/BobDylanAlbum debut album]] sold around 5,000 copies in its original release, and he only really got a chance to do another album because John Hammond, who'd signed him, had a lot of clout at Creator/ColumbiaRecords and insisted he get another shot. The follow-up album, Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan, was much more successful and received a platinum certification (shipment of a million units).
* Similar to Dylan, Music/BruceSpringsteen's first two albums had been [[AcclaimedFlop Acclaimed Flops]], and Creator/ColumbiaRecords only agreed to let him do a third album on the understanding that it needed to be a genuine hit. After almost two years of work, he ended up delivering on that expectation with ''Music/BornToRun''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' had been suffering from increasingly poor sales for years, with a particular low point being the disastrous reception of the Dreams of the First Age boxset. After a while, the release schedule was cut down dramatically, with one book even containing what was likely a note implying the official discontinuation of the line. Many of the freelance writers went into extreme damage control, releasing reams of free setting and mechanics info in a desperate attempt to keep interest in the line from flagging long enough for them to get a last few books out. The books proved to be ''tremendous'' successes (with the last jumping to the top of sales listing within days), allowing the line to be secured for the issuing of a third edition.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''[[VideoGame/TonyHawkProSkater Tony Hawk's Shred]]''. Its predecessor ''Ride'' sold very badly because of its insistence on a skateboard peripheral that didn't work properly. People didn't think Activision would bother with a sequel after this debacle, especially because competition from EA's Skate series was making the series look tired. Somehow, the series did get renewed for ''Ride'''s sequel, ''Shred'', which ignored fan demand not to use the skateboard peripheral. Finally, ''Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 5'' finally acquiesced to not use the skateboard peripheral anymore after it too barely got renewed, but it was an ObviousBeta full of {{Game Breaking Bug}}s.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' and ''Justice League Unlimited'' were the patron saints of this trope. Season 1 sparked some fears that the show was weaker than what the shows spun off of, largely because they ignored the canon of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' and ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' (which are part of [[Franchise/DCAnimatedUniverse the same universe]] as ''Justice League''). At the end, they re-worked the show to reflect that canon better and felt that this was their swan song, so wrapped up with a big three-part season finale where they blew everything up. Then they got the call that they were renewed for another season and retooled the show into ''Justice League Unlimited''. The producers thought that this would be their last great story and wrapped up dangling threads from ''Superman: The Animated Series'' as well as some in the previous ''Justice League'', capping it off with a FullyAbsorbedFinale with ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond''. Then they got the call that the series was so good that they got one more season, and the final finale was strong enough that fans think it deserved more. This makes it a case of what was supposed to be the GrandFinale actually saving the show both times it happened.
%%* Creator/AdultSwim's truly [[DadaComics bizarre]] ''WesternAnimation/XavierRenegadeAngel'' somehow has a second season.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Chowder}}'''s third and final season was renewed for 20 episodes, but later shortened to only 9. Fellow Creator/CartoonNetwork series ''WesternAnimation/TheMarvelousMisadventuresOfFlapjack'' got an even shorter third season of only six episodes and, unlike ''Chowder'', didn't even [[TheResolutionWillNotBeIdentified get its final episode advertised]].
* ''WesternAnimation/BlackDynamite'': After the first season saw low ratings and mixed critical reception, it was renewed, but the budget was cut, new episodes were moved to [[FridayNightDeathSlot Saturdays]], and they were given very little promotion.
* WordOfGod states the second season of ''WesternAnimation/WabbitALooneyTunesProduction'' ([[NewSeasonNewName renamed]] ''New Looney Tunes'') was produced as a direct result of the executives at Warner Bros. loving the pitch for the first season's final episode "Porky's Duck-livery Service", despite the show having seen middling success.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse'' was renewed for a third season [[RenewedBeforePremiere before the second season had started airing]], but despite the show getting high praise from both critics and the audience, it was confirmed that it would be its final season and only consist of three 44-minute specials rather than a full ~20 episode season like the first two, because the show's excessively dark and demonic nature [[ExecutiveMeddling "did not fit the Disney brand".]]
* The original run of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' was handled in a messy mix of this and ScrewedByTheNetwork. While the show launched with impressive early legs (its pilot debuting with 19 million viewers) and remained a critical darling with a cult fanbase, {{Creator/Fox}} quickly became known for its inexplicable indifference to the series, giving it diminishing amounts of advertisement and poor time slots, placing season 4 premieres after sport events, making it increasingly hard to catch. Creator/MattGroening went on record claiming that he and the production crew ended up approaching each season after their first like it was their last, as after completing the current order, they'd be left in increasingly long periods of silence before Fox would suddenly give them a renewal notice, up until the completion with season 4 where Fox responded with ''nothing'', not even a proper cancellation notice. Groening has often implied that Fox executives who had problems with his other show, ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' (which was untouchable, since it made so much money for the studio) took out all their frustrations on ''Futurama'' instead, leading to its shabby treatment by the network. It took successful syndication on Creator/AdultSwim, a series of DirectToVideo movies, and a full ChannelHop to Creator/ComedyCentral for ''Futurama'' to get any further television seasons.
[[/folder]]
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