Don’t forget Titus
Yeah… that wasn’t bad but not on the genius level of family guy and Andy. There are some others but I am to brain dead to remember…
And the late lamented Firefly, another victim of pre-emptions, not to mention under-promotion, episodes being run out of order, and so forth.
I also liked Greg the Bunny.
Because networks don’t make most television shows, production companies do. Typically the network only orders eight or a dozen episodes after seeing the pilot, and they buy more if the show gets ratings. Unfortunately, the studio is at the mercy of the timeslot gods. Fox has a special talent for moving a show erratically, pre-empting it with football, then moving it again, until the fans are alienated, its ratings plummet, and the network buys no new episodes.
That said, I’m not sad to see Wanda go. I found it to be yet another instance of the Loud Black Woman Yelling genre. I can see that on the street corner every day, commercial free. 
. . . But wouldn’t it be in the network’s best interest to have a hit rather than a dog? If a show is promising–as Wanda was on Weds.–why would they deliberately kill the goose that promises to lay golden eggs? Fox seems to have some sort of death wish.
The days of a network giving a show time t find an audience are largely gone. A show either performs immediately out of the gate or it’s gone. Critical accliam can sometimes buy a show a few more weeks or even a season (sort of like how the studios used to make “prestige pictures”) but generally speaking it’s draw or die. It used to be FOX was the struggling maverick network which would buck the rule and give a show a shot, but FOX has now had enough success with some of its programming that it won’t do that any more. The WB and UPN are now the plucky underdogs so they’re where you’ll see the “underperforming” shows given the second chances.
It always kills me when I read about shows getting cancelled because “only” 10 million people watched it.