“The Fugitive” was one of the most famous and widely watched (a two parter) series finales but there were a couple before. “The Cara Williams Show” 1964-65 revolved around two divorced people working for the same company who got married despite a company ban that employees couldn’t be married to each other. So there were perpetually situations about how “Frank just happened to stop by my house at 9PM to borrow a cup of sugar”. The last episode had the company rescinding their policy.
The last episode of “Sgt Bilko” in 1959 had Colonel Hall finally catching Bilko running a scam, putting him and his gang behind bars where he could watch them on closed-circuit tv and say “as long as I am the sponsor, this show will never be cancelled”. Bilko added a “that’s all, folks”.
Alf, the lovable alien cat fancier, was captured by government officials that said they were going to torture him before they dissected him in the last epsisode before the show was cancelled. THE END
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Remember ALF? He came back. In TV movie form. And none of the original cast came back with him because making the original apparently traumatized them all so much.
At some point they built a resort on the island and spent their time running it. Then they got launched into space in the cartoon spinoff Gilligan’s Planet.
I agree with Pushing Daisies and I’ll add Joan of Arcadia to the list.
IIRC, for Law and Order, they were all hanging out at a bar when Anita got a phone call from her doctor. We don’t know what was said but she returned to the party tearfully happy.
And just to complete the trio ( same creators ), Wonderfalls. One abbreviated and charming season, but they at least knew the end was coming and managed to satisfyingly wrap up the season story line on the fly.
Or at least out of the scope of that show. I mean, it went from a very nervous post-apocalyptic show, to one where the town was re-integrated into modern society, more or less, and became less about the little town and its denizens vs. the world, and more about the wider struggle between corrupt corporatism and legitimate government.
Jericho season 3 would have had to have been something like a guerrilla war/cloak and dagger type show, but they’d already told Cosentino that they weren’t going to do that sort of thing.