The general believe when it comes to entertainment and romance is simply entertaining and compelling if the two characters who have a thing for each other dance the "will they/won't they?" dance. Get them together (or even starting the show with a regular couple) and the series is on a one way ticket to dullsville.
So the point of this thread is to ultimately prove or disprove said belief. I myself tend to be in the camp that it's the poor handling of the relationships if anything and because some writers lack the ambition to exit the comfort zone.
That said, here are the series which to me disprove the belief:
Disney's Aladdin- Aladdin and Jasmine were already together at the end of the first movie, thus there is no tease throughout the series. Despite that, the show made it up to 80 episodes (which while it's not impossible, is still an impressive feat for cartoons).
Friends- Okay I'm cheating with this one here. Yes, Ross and Rachael were for all intents and purposes the main couple of the series, but Chandler and Monica became a significant focus in the later seasons. The show wasn't headed for cancelation when they made their relationship official, and still had three more seasons after the marriage episode.
I count it as a valid example since it means that the show could no longer do stories where Chandler is having trouble finding the right girl/Monica is having trouble finding the right guy. Which tends to be the reason why writers like to prolong an unofficial couple from getting together.
Boy Meets World- Cory and Topanga get together at the beginning of the 3rd Season, and well the show was still doing well enough to merit 4 more seasons. And at the same time this show in my mind is the perfect example of to incorporate romance into a show which isn't a pure romance series, and how not to.
While Season 6-7 made the mistake of changing the premise of the show (From being about two boys who learn about the ups and downs of the world to the show about Cory and Topanga), Season 3-5 handled it right. Their relationship in those 3 seasons got a good amount of C/T centric episodes while episodes not centering around their relationship kept their relationship as background material (a hand hold there, a kiss here).
That's my examples. How about yours?
So the point of this thread is to ultimately prove or disprove said belief. I myself tend to be in the camp that it's the poor handling of the relationships if anything and because some writers lack the ambition to exit the comfort zone.
That said, here are the series which to me disprove the belief:
Disney's Aladdin- Aladdin and Jasmine were already together at the end of the first movie, thus there is no tease throughout the series. Despite that, the show made it up to 80 episodes (which while it's not impossible, is still an impressive feat for cartoons).
Friends- Okay I'm cheating with this one here. Yes, Ross and Rachael were for all intents and purposes the main couple of the series, but Chandler and Monica became a significant focus in the later seasons. The show wasn't headed for cancelation when they made their relationship official, and still had three more seasons after the marriage episode.
I count it as a valid example since it means that the show could no longer do stories where Chandler is having trouble finding the right girl/Monica is having trouble finding the right guy. Which tends to be the reason why writers like to prolong an unofficial couple from getting together.
Boy Meets World- Cory and Topanga get together at the beginning of the 3rd Season, and well the show was still doing well enough to merit 4 more seasons. And at the same time this show in my mind is the perfect example of to incorporate romance into a show which isn't a pure romance series, and how not to.
While Season 6-7 made the mistake of changing the premise of the show (From being about two boys who learn about the ups and downs of the world to the show about Cory and Topanga), Season 3-5 handled it right. Their relationship in those 3 seasons got a good amount of C/T centric episodes while episodes not centering around their relationship kept their relationship as background material (a hand hold there, a kiss here).
That's my examples. How about yours?