minor muppetz
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- Jun 19, 2005
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I wonder when the show got to that point where it was such an institution. As I previously said, the sixth season - the first one to have such a major, radical change from previous years - was so bad that it was almost canceled (according to TV Tropes, seasons 11 and 20 were the only other seasons to be so bad that they were almost canceled, but at least those seasons aren't considered "old shames"). If they had just replaced it with a new show (giving it a different title) it probably wouldn't have been given another chance, but it was called Saturday Night Live so they gave it another chance.If something's on long enough, it's an institution that can't be done away with without a HUGE uprising. SNL manages to pack people in on election years, so that may be a factor.
They very well could have ended it after the fifth season. Five years for a show is good, it's enough for syndication, most of the cast and crew left. I keep wondering why they kept it on the air afterwards. And if the sixth season was actually a new show, I wonder if anybody would even be aware of that show (well, if anybody in the cast became a big enough star.... If the show had been canceled, would Eddie Murphy have made it to stardom? I guess Gilbert Godfried would have still become a success either way).