I think there is a certain amount of nostalgia at work here. While there is a lot of rubbish in terms of sitcoms these days, I think there were a lot of shows that came and went during the 90s that were just as bad or worse. I think both eras have had some outstanding shows that stand out, with a collection of very watchable ones.
Looking at some of the current shows first...I actually hold
The Big Bang Theory in fairly high esteem, right up there with the rest of my all-time favourites. The characters are likeable and sympathetic, it has some really good lines and I like the way it embraces the geek culture. Yes, there are jokes at the expense of that culture, but it's done with affection rather than being smug and mean-spirited. It's accessible without being too shallow.
Same goes for
How I Met Your Mother. The framing device is clever and quite well-used, also acting as something of a safeguard against continuity errors that often occur over time with long running series with story arcs. Again, very good lines, some very funny moments, and characters that are very likeable. I like the up-beatness of the show and the relatable nostalgia of memories of fun times with close friends, though they show has had its darker moments in the last couple of seasons and handled them very well. I think it's a really good evolution of sitcoms centred around a group of friends. It's not always deep, but it's a really good show in my book and it's become one of my all-time favourites.
As far as
Two and a Half Men,
Mike and Molly and
Two Broke Girls are concerned...I'm not actually a fan, but I don't think they're irredeemable. Well, in some ways, at any rate.
Two and a Half Men has some pretty good innuendo and one-liners and the first couple of seasons weren't terrible. They certainly weren't great, but they were good enough for a lazy channel surfing night in front of the TV. Had it stopped there it would've been an OK vehicle for Charlie Sheen that probably ran just long enough. As it is, it's dragged on too long with characters that are really unsympathetic and a concept that didn't have a long enough shelf life for more than a few seasons. I'd place the latter two shows in the same category, though
Two Broke Girls actually has some potential. It's not one I'd seek out to watch, but something I find watchable when vegging out and flipping around in ad breaks.
Conversely, I'm not a fan of shows like
30 Rock,
The Office,
Parks and Recreation or
Modern Family, but I do actually think they're really good shows, from what I've seen anyway. I'm just not a big fan of that style of show so I can't really get into them, but I do find them enjoyable on the occasions that I do catch an episode (or part thereof)...more so
The Office and
Modern Family. However, I think we're going to see more and more of these work com and mockumentary style of comedies over the next few years, leading to the genre being overdone and stale in short order.
Looking back at some older series...I am going to disagree with you a bit here, though definitely not on all points.
I still do think
Friends is a classic and it does hold up, though certain aspects of it haven't aged well. It feel victim to a common problem of long runners as the characters drifted a little too far away from what made them entertaining and likeable in the first place;
Flanderization, for the Tropers in the audience. The early seasons featured some very sharp writing, more interesting and relatable characters, good story arcs...in the beginning, they handled the Ross and Rachel stuff just right, keeping them apart long enough for the humour, emotion and story to all work. Even the break up, the "we were on a break" stuff, was pretty good and made the audience take sides in what I find to be an interesting way.
They muddled it up in later years though, milked it a bit too much and all the characters became a little too one dimensional. They found certain jokes worked and like a lot of shows, eventually the characters became too much about those jokes. The later seasons still produced good episodes and some funny moments and I did like the finale, but it certainly did make some mistakes along the way. I also think that
How I Met Your Mother has since found a way to do certain things better with that style and concept, but I still like
Friends. I definitely get why you've soured on it of course, but I still rate it.
Here's my potentially controversial comment early on in the discussion...I feel that
Seinfeld is a bit overrated. Not overrated in the sense of it not being a classic and one of the best sitcoms of all-time, because it absolutely is. I feel it's a bit overrated in the way I see a fair amount of people use it as the yardstick for the way all comedies should be. Even assuming that
Seinfeld was perfect - it wasn't, as great as it was - it's still just one style, one way of doing things that really worked because it was a signature style of Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. It was great and it is still one of my favourites, but it's not perfect and gets a free pass on a lot of things other sitcoms don't.
Married... With Children is a show that I think is very underrated, because it was kind of groundbreaking in establishing the dysfunctional family formula and was just damn funny and entertaining. It wasn't always particularly clever, though usually managed to be reasonably witty and arguably got better the more cartoonish and over the top it became. It also handled its characters very well. I tend to prefer shows with likeable and sympathetic characters and that doesn't really describe the Bundys, however the way the universe was out to get them, making them the ultimate underdogs, combined with some really funny one liners, actually made them characters you could cheer for.
M*A*S*H is one of my absolute favourites, one of the few series I don't think ever did a terrible episode. They had some ordinary and forgettable ones, but I don't think any of their 251 episodes were downright awful. They also capped it off with a fantastic finale. It gets maligned for its politics and preachy nature, but I feel that's often exaggerated and it was at least handled by people who had enough smarts to explore those issues in a comedy series. They also had some innovative episodes, like the "Interview" episodes, "Dreams" and "Point of View" to name just a few.
Frasier is another one I'd put in the "never had an awful episode" category...at least, not that I can remember. Just a fantastic show and probably the best and most successful spinoff in history, unless you consider
The Simpsons to be a spinoff of
The Tracey Ullman Show or its own shorts. I haven't watched
Cheers nearly as much but I do like it too. I think
Frasier ended up being the better show but perhaps I just haven't seen enough of
Cheers.
Two shows that I disagree with you on are
Home Improvement and
Becker...not completely, but I actually don't rate them that far apart.
Becker I thought was mediocre at worst, it maybe ran a couple of seasons longer than it should have but it had its moments. It didn't do a bad job of doing what I was talking about earlier with
Married...with Children, keeping a pretty unlikeable character tolerable by having the world out to get them. It was formulaic though but I feel the same could be said about
Home Improvement. I didn't watch or like it all that much growing up and catching a few episodes on Foxtel recently, I'd say my opinion hasn't changed much. I prefer Tim Allen's stand-up, to be honest. But both are decent enough in my book.
I'm kind of with you on
The Nanny, though I don't think I like or dislike it much more than I did when it first aired. It was alright, kinda funny, kinda forgettable at the same time. A few episodes or moments from key episodes stand out in my memory but it certainly doesn't crack my top ten or anything, probably not even my top 25. I like Kevin James' stand-up and
King of Queens is pretty enjoyable, though seeing it again in recent years reminded me that Carrie is kind of unlikeable.
Speaking of which...
Everybody Loves Raymond. It does hold up, it is funny, but I wouldn't call it a favourite. That may be because it has one of the least sympathetic casts of any show that has intended to portray its characters sympathetically. Ironically, the character who I think we're supposed to sympathise with most - Debra - can be one of the shrillest and unlikeable characters on the whole show.
Will & Grace is kind of the same for me. Funny dialogue including some great innuendo and one liners, but a cast that's hard to cheer for. Watchable, fairly good shows, but I certainly don't love them.
Dharma and Greg is one of the few shows that I feel
Family Guy was completely justified in ripping on and actually did a decent job of taking shots at, though in all fairness in the last few seasons they've probably produced much worse episodes.
I have to agree with you when it comes to
Roseanne. I wasn't a huge fan when it originally aired but having caught a few episodes on Foxtel in the past year or so, it's actually better than I remembered. I wouldn't rush out and buy the DVDs or anything, but it's an enjoyable show to catch in repeats. Similar story for
Newsradio and
Spin City, I didn't watch them religiously during their initial run but I do remember enjoying them. Good shows, all three.
A few others...There'll be British ones here, too. Have to agree with you on
As Time Goes By and
The IT Crowd as well, the first I remember watching a lot of with my folks growing up and the second being a really good recent show.
The Drew Carey Show...I'm biased here because Drew Carey is one of my favourite comedians, but I think it's terribly underrated. It was funny and entertaining in the conventional sense like a lot of other hits of that era, but it was also fairly innovative with its "What's wrong with this episode?" series and the live episodes which crossed over with
Whose Line Is It Anyway?, along with some other specials that broke the fourth wall or got creative. Some really good musical numbers, great lines, memorable characters that were likeable, at times very dark and cynical humour...really good show. I hope they find a way to release more seasons on DVD.
Blackadder. An absolute classic. Rowan Atkinson is a comic legend so it kind of goes without saying but pretty much everyone involved with the show is worthy of that title as well. Once again, a fundamentally unlikeable and sympathetic character is made entertaining and oddly heroic because they're that damn funny and the universe always seems to work against them. Having each series focus on a different generation of Blackadder was also a very good idea, allowing the character to be tweaked and put into different situations to get the most out of historical jokes. A masterpiece...British brevity is probably the worst you can say about it, though the first series was probably the weakest.
Another all-time favourite of mine is
Red Dwarf, which actually saw a three part special a couple of years ago and a new series is coming out next year. Fantastic news as it was and still is a great show. The low budget sets and effects of the early days actually add to the charm, as it was always about the jokes and the characters, which have always been strong. A lot of fans dislike the later seasons but I'm hard pressed to find any episodes that I outright dislike. The American pilot was supposedly pretty bad and the clips I've seen of it on the DVDs back that up, but the show that was actually made is awesome.
Scrubs cops a bit of flak but I rate it up there. Once again, it fell victim to Flanderization with some character regression in the later episodes, too many lessons quickly forgotten by the characters and at times it seemed like the writers forgot what made certain characters entertaining. I haven't watched much of it in a while, I've given it a bit of a break but it's still one of my favourites, in my opinion one of the better comedies in the last decade with its imagination sequences and memorable recurring supporting characters. We didn't need that postscript season, though.
That 70s Show is one I got into late but ended up really liking. Its earlier seasons are definitely the strongest, though it remained (in my opinion) a very good show up until the eighth season where they had to replace Topher Grace and thus wrote Eric out. Like Scrubs, they didn't need to do that postscript season. In some ways it was kind of a run of the mill sitcom, but it had some creative ideas like "The Circle" (great for some rapid fire jokes as well as advancing the plot) and they made good use of split screen conversations, usually contrasting conversations on the same topic between the guys and the girls. Perhaps a little underappreciated, I certainly like it any rate.
Running down a list of some classic Britcoms...
One Foot in the Grave,
Keeping Up Appearances and
Are You Being Served? are all memorable for me. British humour at its finest. Some might find them corny but they're all pretty good with the rapid fire jokes and character quirks. On the surface a lot of those British shows may seem to be strictly formula but they made it work time and time again. Even though you knew what was coming a lot of the time and the set up was usually the same in the form of familiar situations and catchphrases, the timing was outstanding and there were enough twists and turns to keep it fresh.