A blog about television by TIME’s TV critic James Poniewozik.

The Making of Many Top 100 TV Lists Hath No End: Now It's TV Guide's Turn

No sooner did time.com post my All-TIME 100 TV Shows than a package showed up at my office with a brand-new book: I Heart TV: Your Ultimate Companion to 100 Essential Shows, from the editors of TV Guide. Spooky! Well, not so much, since the book was messengered over by TV Guide's publicist, but still, what are the odds?

So how do our lists compare? TV Guide's list was put together by its staff of 43 [!] TV editors and writers, which probably by definition made it less shall-we-say idiosyncratic than the list by TIME's TV staff of one. (As far as I can tell, TV Guide hasn't posted the full list anywhere online, but I'll link to it when and if they do. Update: They finally did.) TVG focuses more exclusively on dramas and sitcoms, with a few exceptions (Oprah, Monday Night Football), and focuses mostly on commercial hits. My detractors will be glad to know that The Andy Griffith Show and Law & Order made the list; on the other hand, you lose Freaks and Geeks and The Wire, to name just a couple. (And sorry, still no Fawlty Towers.) On the one hand, they picked fewer cult hits than I did; on the other hand, they picked (surprisingly) fewer shows from the early days of TV.

Having read the introduction and skimmed the book, I'm not sure if "essential" exactly means "best"--if so, good on you, Ty Pennington, because Extreme Makeover: Home Edition made the cut--or "most significant," although it's probably some combination of the two. But the list was open to newer shows, including Ugly Betty, Grey's Anatomy, Heroes and--this one's for you, chaddogg--Veronica Mars. Each gets a personal essay from a passionate TVG scribe. "What unifies these eclectic choices," writes senior critic Matt Roush in the introduction, "is that there's something in each of these shows that strikes a powerfully personal chord."

Anyway, obviously no two (or 43) critics will agree on all the same shows, but having just recently put up my own glass house, I'm not going to snipe at TVG's. Actually, I was surprised at the amount of overlap, even on a few polarizing choices like Battlestar Galactica, SpongeBob and The Real World. And there were at least a couple out-of-the-box choices that made me second-guess my own. (The Amazing Race and Degrassi: The Franchise, for instance.) Ultimately, our having picked different shows has more than anything to do with the fact that there are more than 100 great shows in TV history.

That said, of course, TVG included some shows that I wouldn't have put on my list with a ten-foot listmaker (and I'm sure the feeling's mutual). I won't say which, but here, for your perusal, is the subset of TVG's Top 100 shows that weren't among my top 100:

Ally McBeal, The Amazing Race, American Bandstand, The Andy Griffith Show, Batman, Beverly Hills 90210, Bewitched, The Brady Bunch, CSI, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Degrassi, Desperate Housewives, ER, Everybody Loves Raymond, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, Family Ties, Frasier, The Fugitive, Gilligan's Island, The Golden Girls, Grey's Anatomy, Happy Days, Heroes, House, Jeopardy!, L.A. Law, The Late Show with David Letterman (I picked Late Night, but tomato, tomahto), Law & Order, Maverick, Melrose Place, Miami Vice, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, Monday Night Football, NYPD Blue, The Rockford Files, Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Scrubs, thirtysomething, Today, Ugly Betty, Veronica Mars, Will & Grace, The Wonder Years

And here are the shows I picked that TVG didn't:

The Abbott and Costello Show, ABC's Wide World of Sports, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, An American Family, The Beavis and Butt-Head Show, Brideshead Revisited, Buffalo Bill, The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, A Charlie Brown Christmas, The Day After, Dragnet, The Ernie Kovacs Show, Felicity, Freaks and Geeks, The French Chef, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, I, Claudius, King of the Hill, Late Night with David Letterman, Leave It to Beaver, Married... With Children, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, The Monkees, MTV 1981-1992, Mystery Science Theater 3000, Pee Wee's Playhouse, Playhouse 90, The Price Is Right, Prime Suspect, The Prisoner, Rocky and His Friends, Roots, Sanford and Son, Second City Television, See It Now, The Singing Detective, Soap, The Super Bowl (and the Ads), What's My Line?, WKRP in Cincinnati, The Wire, Wiseguy

It looks like a lot, but statistically, we are about 60% in agreement. Oh, also, they considered The U.S. and British versions of The Office, and the Star Trek franchise, to be one entry, which is so totally cheating. But at least they won't have Capt. Picard all cheesed off at them.

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  • 1

    Hee hee. The only thing that they got right that you didn't was Veronica Mars! Anyway, great lists, both of which gave me some series to add to my must-see list.

  • 2

    WOW, James can do the work of 43 people all by himself! My boss would like to talk to you. My 42 coworkers and I would prefer that you not. Out of curiousity, what is Robo-James capable of when he is firing on all eight cylinders?

  • 3

    At some point, Keith, Robo-James and I will have a John-Henry-and-the-steam-drill-style TV criticism showdown. I will outcriticize him, smoke flying from my frantically flipping TiVo remote, and then my poor heart will burst. There lies a TV-watchin' man, Lord, Lord...

  • 4

    Firefly was the only show that I wanted to see on some list that was sadly absent from both your list and the TV guide list, from what I could see :( Both lists were enjoyable, that omission notwithstanding.

  • 5

    Any critic who is wise enough to include the Prisoner and Rocky and Bullwinkle in a list like this and who may not? be even 50 years of age either needs to get a life (because of all the old TV he had to watch to do this), or had great parents who have taken advantage of the DVD and video era (or spent lots on cable TV) or he is just downright brilliant and astute as a TV and cultural historian.
    Joe (56-yes saw original Abbott and Costello episodes.)

  • 6

    Have only read the first few on the TV list, but noted that whoever wrote it thinks that Meathead was Archie's nephew. Nope. Son-in-law.

  • 7

    @ MJ: Oh, Good Lord. Sometimes I type faster than I think. Thanks--we'll fix. Keep reading; I'm certain there are even more embarrassing screw-ups in there.

    @Joseph: 39 years old; watched Rocky in reruns as a kid and Prisoner on VHS as an adult, and yes, I do need to get a life. As for "brilliant," ahem, see MJ's post.

  • 8

    I am so glad that unlike James TV Guide recognized the brilliance of L.A. Law and NYPD Blue.

  • 9

    Wow, Grey's Anatomy and 90210 over The Wire. I'm sorry, but that alone makes you the winner

  • 10

    Unlike the Time Magazine article, TV Guide's book never claims that the shows chosen are TV's greatest...it claims that the shows are 100 "essential" shows that everyone should take time to watch... for a variety of reasons.

    Yes... hence the fact that I wrote, "Having read the introduction and skimmed the book, I'm not sure if 'essential' exactly means 'best'--if so, good on you, Ty Pennington, because Extreme Makeover: Home Edition made the cut--or 'most significant,' although it's probably some combination of the two." -- JP

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