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All 96 TV Shows Canceled Or Ending In 2022 (So Far)
Let the games begin! Every year TV shows we love get canceled or come to an end, either after long and successful runs or before they had a chance to catch on with a wider audience. Then again, there are also shows that just aren’t very good or managed to escape being noticed at all because of the crowded streaming landscape.
Whatever the case, 2022 is no different. Already, we’ve seen so many shows get the ax, pointing to what will likely be a very busy year on the cutting room floor. After all, there are more streaming services than ever, and they’re all trying their hand at original programming. So even some of the most hyped shows aren’t making it beyond their initial seasons. Who can forget that both Cowboy Bebop and Y: The Last Man were canceled fairly quickly after their respective premieres?
Are your favorite shows safe? What’s been canceled so far? And, honestly, is any TV show safe? Those are the questions we’re trying to answer. Take a look below at every single TV show that’s been canceled so far in 2022. And while we’re at it, make sure to check out the surprising number of shows that got canned in 2021.
1. I Know What You Did Last Summer (Prime Video)
Premiered on: October 15, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
2. The Lost Symbol (Peacock)
Premiered on: September 16, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
3. Gentefied (Netflix)
Premiered on: February 21, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
4. Cooking with Paris (Netflix)
Premiered on: August 4, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
5. Bull (CBS)
Premiered on: September 20, 2016
Canceled after 6 seasons.
6. American Rust (Showtime)
Premiered on: November 7, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
7. Black Monday (Showtime)
Premiered on: January 20, 2019
Canceled after 3 seasons.
8. Work in Progress (Showtime)
Premiered on: December 8, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
9. Small Fortune (NBC)
Premiered on: May 31, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
10. Pooch Perfect (ABC)
Premiered on: February 27, 2020
Canceled after 1 season.
11. Bringing Up Bates (UPtv)
Premiered on: January 1, 2015
Canceled after 10 seasons.
12. The Hills: New Beginnings (MTV)
Premiered on: June 24, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
13. Ellen’s Game of Games (NBC)
Premiered on: December 18, 2017
Canceled after 4 seasons.
14. Love, Victor (Hulu)
Premiered on: July 17, 2020
Canceled after 3 seasons.
15. The Prince (HBO Max)
Premiered on: July 29, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
16. Atlanta (FX)
Premiered on: September 6, 2016
Ending after 4 seasons.
17. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
Premiered on: March 17, 2017Ending after 5 seasons.
*Season 5 will premiere later at a later date.
18. Stranger Things (Netflix)
Premiered on: July 15, 2016
Ending after 5 seasons.
*Season 5 will premiere later at a later date.
19. Ordinary Joe (NBC)
Premiered on: September 20, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
20. The Big Leap (Fox)
Premiered on: September 20, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
21. Never Have I Ever (Netflix)
Premiered on: April 27, 2020
Canceled after 5 seasons.
*Season 4 will premiere later at a later date.
22. The Wendy Williams Show (Syndicated)
Premiered on: July 14, 2008
Canceled after 13 seasons.
23. Judge Jerry (Syndicated)
Premiered on: September 9, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
24. New Amsterdam (NBC)
Premiered on: September 25, 2018
Ended after 5 seasons.
25. The Baby-Sitters Club (Netflix)
Premiered on: July 3, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
26. Archive 81 (Netflix)
Premiered on: January 14, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
27. Locke & Key (Netflix)
Premiered on: February 7, 2020
Canceled after 3 seasons.
*Season 3 will premiere later at a later date.
28. On the Verge (Netflix)
Premiered on: September 7, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
29. Snowfall (FX)
Premiered on: July 5, 2017
Canceled after 6 seasons.
*Season 6 will premiere later at a later date
30. Raising Dion (Netflix)
Premiered on: October 4, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
31. The Last OG (TBS)
Premiered on: March 31, 2018
Canceled after 4 seasons.
32. Batwoman (The CW)
Premiered on: October 6, 2019
Canceled after 3 seasons.
33. Space Force (Netflix)
Premiered on: May 29, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
34. Legends of Tomorrow (The CW)
Premiered on: January 21, 2016
Canceled after 7 seasons.
35. Saved By the Bell (Peacock)
Premiered on: November 25, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
36. 4400 (The CW)
Premiered on: October 25, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
37. B Positive
Premiered on: November 5, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
38. Charmed (The CW)
Premiered on: October 14, 2018
Canceled after 4 seasons.
39. Dynasty (The CW)
Premiered on: October 11, 2017
Canceled after 5 seasons.
40. Good Sam (CBS)
Premiered on: January 5, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
41. How We Roll (CBS)
Premiered on: March 31, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
42. In The Dark (CBS)
Premiered on: April 4, 2019
Canceled after 3 seasons.
43. Kenan (NBC)
Premiered on: February 16, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
44. Legacies (The CW)
Premiered on: October 25, 2018
Canceled after 4 seasons.
45. Magnum PI (CBS)
Premiered on: September 24, 2018
Canceled after 4 seasons.
46. MODOK (Hulu)
Premiered on: May 21, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
47. Mr. Mayor (NBC)
Premiered on: January 7, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
48. Naomi (The CW)
Premiered on: January 11, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
49. Promised Land (ABC)
Premiered on: January 24, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
50. Queens (ABC)
Premiered on: October 19, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
51. Roswell, New Mexico (The CW)
Premiered on: January 15, 2019
Canceled after 4 seasons.
*Season 4 will premiere later this year
52. The Endgame (NBC)
Premiered on: February 21, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
53. United States of Al (CBS)
Premiered on: April 1, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
54. Dollface (Hulu)
Premiered on: November 15, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
55. Riverdale (The CW)
Premiered on: January 26, 2017
Ending after 7 seasons.
*Season 7 will premiere in 2023.
56. The Midnight Gospel (Netflix)
Premiered on: April 20, 2020
Canceled after 1 season.
57. Long Slow Exhale (Spectrum)
Premiered on: April 4, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
58. Raised By Wolves (HBO Max)
Premiered on: September 3, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
59. Made For Love (HBO Max)
Premiered on: April 1, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
60. Snowpiercer (TNT)
Premiered on: May 17, 2020
Canceled after 4 seasons.
61. Woke (Hulu)
Premiered on: September 9, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
62. Duncanville (Fox)
Premiered on: February 16, 2020
Canceled after 3 seasons.
63. Gentleman Jack (HBO)
Premiered on: April 22, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
64. Joe Pera Talks with You (Adult Swim)
Premiered on: May 20, 2018
Canceled after 3 seasons.
65. Night Sky (Prime Video)
Premiered on: May 20, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
66. See (Apple TV+)
Premiered on: November 1, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
67. Tom Swift (The CW)
Premiered on: May 31, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
68. The Time Traveler’s Wife (HBO)
Premiered on: May 15, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
69. Why Women Kill (Paramount+)
Premiered on: August 15, 2019
Canceled after 2 seasons.
70. Chad (TBS)
Premiered on: April 6, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
Season 2 will air at a later date on Roku.
71. Desus & Mero (Showtime)
Premiered on: February 21, 2019
Canceled after 4 seasons.
72. Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (TBS)
Premiered on: February 8, 2016
Canceled after 7 seasons.
73. The Flash (The CW)
Premiered on: October 7, 2014
Ending after 9 seasons.
*Season 9 will premiere in 2023.
74. The Umbrella Academy (Netflix)
Premiered on: February 15, 2019
Ending after 4 seasons.
*Season 4 will premiere at a later date.
75. Resident Evil (Netflix)
Premiered on: July 14, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
75 Flatbush Misdemeanors (Showtime)
Premiered on: May 23, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
77. Maggie (Hulu)
Premiered on: July 6, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
78. Pivoting (Fox)
Premiered on: January 29, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
79. Rutherford Falls (Peacock)
Premiered on: April 22, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
80. The Wilds (Prime Video)
Premiered on: December 11, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
81. Paper Girls (Prime Video)
Premiered on: July 29, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
82. Motherland: Fort Salem (Freeform)
Premiered on: March 18, 2020
Ended after 3 seasons.
83. Animal Kingdom (TNT)
Premiered on: June 14, 2016
Ended after 6 seasons.
84. Bridge and Tunnel (Epix)
Premiered on: January 24, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
85. Crossing Swords (Hulu)
Premiered on: June 12, 2020
Canceled after 2 seasons.
86. The Good Fight (Paramount+)
Premiered on: February 19, 2017
Ending after 6 seasons.
87. The Handmaid’s Tale (Hulu)
Premiered on: April 26, 2017
Ending after 6 seasons.
88. His Dark Materials (HBO)
Premiered on: November 3, 2019
Ended after 3 seasons.
89. Legends of the Hidden Temple (The CW)
Premiered on: October 10, 2021
Canceled after 1 season.
90. The Walking Dead (AMC)
Premiered on: October 31, 2010
Ending after 11 seasons.
91. As We See It (Prime Video)
Premiered on: January 21, 2022
Canceled after 1 season.
92. Nancy Drew (The CW)
Premiered on: October 9, 2019
Ending after 4 seasons.
Season 4 will premiere in 2023.
93. DC’s Stargirl (The CW)
Premiered on: May 18, 2020
Ending after 3 seasons.
94. Fate: The Winx Saga (Netflix)
Premiered on: January 22, 2021
Canceled after 2 seasons.
95. Tuca & Bertie (Adult Swim)
Premiered on: May 3, 2019
Canceled after 3 seasons.
This is the second time Tuca & Bertie has been canceled.
96. Westworld (HBO)
Premiered on: October 2, 2016
Canceled after 4 seasons.
Ted White dead at 96 – Tributes pour in for Jason Voorhees stuntman on ‘Friday the 13th’ who also worked with John Wayne
LEGENDARY stuntman Ted White has died at the age of 96, his son revealed today.
The actor, best known for his portrayal of Jason Voorhees in the 1984 film “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter,” died peacefully at his home in Southern California on Friday.
Tributes have since poured in for the star, who worked with the likes of John Wayne, Clark Gable and Richard Boone.
Confirming his dad’s death today, Ted’s son, also Ted, told Fox News Digital: “He was a tough guy. Honest and told the truth, whether you liked it or not.
“The last of the blood and guts guys.”
His wife, Jeri Bayouth added: “He was bigger than life, and he was tough as a boot.
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“A tender heart and a very generous heart. He took a lot of risks and a lot of adventures.”
She added: “He loved the picture business and the stunt guys, and there were lots of actors and actresses that I knew that were phenomenal,” Ted added.
“So he appreciated, you know, the time he spent at it, and he appreciated the business.”
White was also a former marine.
Prior to heading West, he attended the University of Oklahoma.
Most read in The Sun
The late star was also good friends with President Ronald Reagan, and would even get haircuts with him, Ted told Fox.
“We had people over for dinner that were pretty famous, but he didn’t care about all of that,” Ted said.
Ted also noted his father was fearless recalling times he would go to Daniel Boone’s set with him and he would be injured from stunts, but unfazed.
“One day he hit a corner of the pad doing a high fall, and the next thing you know, they were taking him away in an ambulance, and he was waving at me as he was going away,” said Ted.
Film Producer Sean Clark penned an emotional tribute to the late Ted on Facebook.
“He was my adopted grandpa and hands down the best storyteller you could have ever met,” he wrote.
“I am going to miss you immensely and those steak dinners we always had. Also teasing you about your red, white & blue banner that made you look like you were running for President.”
My heart goes out to his wife Jeri and his sons. It was an absolute honor my friend.
White chose not to be credited for “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter,” when it came out and declined to be involved in a sequel.
He later became involved in documentaries and conventions surrounding the horror industry.
More information will be updated as it becomes available.
Ted White, Jason Voorhees Actor, Passed Away at 96
Actor Ted White passed away on Friday at the age of 96, reports Bloody Disgusting. In horror circles, White is best known for playing slasher icon Jason Voorhees in 1984’s Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter.
Murder, She Wrote star Angela Lansbury dies at 96
All the countries The Queen visited during her 96 years – from Tonga to Uganda
FARMERS dyed their sheep red, white and blue in her honour in New Zealand.
In Australia, electricity poles kept crashing down from the weight of people clinging to them for a better view.
The Queen’s five-and-a-half-month tour of the Commonwealth in 1953[/caption]
And in Jamaica, a man threw his coat over a puddle so the Queen would not have to get her shoes wet, in the spirit of Sir Walter Raleigh — and was promptly arrested for lunacy.
The world had never seen anything like the Queen’s five-and-a-half-month tour of the Commonwealth that began in November 1953.
And it has never seen anything like it again.
It was the first time a reigning sovereign had ever visited many of the countries on the tour, including Australia and New Zealand.
READ MORE ON QUEEN’S DEATH
The epic tour was designed to harness the unprecedented popularity of the monarchy in the wake of the young Queen’s coronation just months earlier.
And it was absolutely exhausting — 43,000 miles by land, sea and air, being feted all the way.
It is estimated she shook 13,213 hands, received 6,770 curtsies and heard 503 renditions of God Save The Queen.
She and Prince Philip left Charles, five, and Anne, three, behind because of the gruelling schedule.
Most read in The Sun
They found it “ghastly” to say goodbye.
But it was also the start of an incredible adventure for the 27-year-old Queen and 32-year-old Philip.
He recalled later: “The level of adulation — you wouldn’t believe it.”
First stop on November 24 was a one-night stay in Bermuda, where fights broke out between American tourists and local schoolchildren over the best viewing spots.
Next day it was Jamaica, where lady-in-waiting Pamela Mountbatten complained: “The streets of Kingston had been festooned with so much royal bunting, it was impossible to see what anything really looked like.”
Then the couple boarded steamship SS Gothic, which had travelled to meet them carrying eight tonnes of luggage for the rest of the tour.
After passing through the Panama Canal, the ship arrived in Fiji on December 17.
Chieftains came aboard to welcome the royals with a dance, then the Queen sipped on a seashell full of the potent local drink kava, made with pounded roots mixed with spit.
She was thrilled, and said to Pamela Mountbatten at the end of it all: “Didn’t you love this!”
Tonga was next, where the Queen was introduced to the oldest resident — a 175-year-old tortoise presented to the country by Captain Cook in 1777.
In Tonga they were warmly welcomed by Queen Salote and later thousands of enthusiastic Tongans.
Queen Salote, who had won British hearts by cheerfully waving from an open carriage in the Coronation Day rain in London, did her best to impress the Head of the Commonwealth with a luncheon feast that included 2,000 pigs, chickens, lobsters and yams, washed down with coconut milk.
But it was the next stop, New Zealand, when things really went crazy.
A cameraman called her arrival on December 23 “like the Second Coming”.
Three quarters of the country’s population saw the Queen during her five-week stay, but she did not get to see enough of those she was most interested in — the Maori people.
Again and again, white dignitaries hogged the sovereign’s time and refused to allow traditional ceremonies to go ahead.
Lady Pamela revealed: “We were so disappointed.”
From Auckland, Her Majesty delivered her annual Christmas Speech by radio to the Commonwealth, saying of her tour: “I want to show that the Crown is not merely an abstract symbol of our unity, but a personal bond between you and me.”
After a few days’ rest at sea, the royals steamed into Sydney Harbour on the morning of February 3, 1954.
Half a million people out of a population of 1.8million turned out on the shores to watch them arrive.
Tens of thousands had slept outside to secure the best spots, and locals said the night had been lit up by the glow of campers’ cigarettes.
One Boer War veteran, who had waited five hours for a glimpse, told a newspaper: “God bless her, I fought for her great-great grandmother Queen Vicky.”
In all, as in New Zealand, three quarters of Australia’s population would see her during a two-month stay that saw her criss-cross the country by road, rail and air.
It was the height of summer, and a young Clive James recalled waiting in the heat to see the royals with his schoolmates “fainting left and right, as if their serried ranks were subject to sniper fire”.
But the Queen never even broke into a sweat. Lady Pamela explained that the Queen simply did not perspire, adding: “That means she can’t get relief, so she suffers twice as much from the heat.
“She says no perspiration makes it much worse.”
But the Queen only had thoughts for those who came to see her.
Lady Pamela explained: “She was very meticulous in the motorcades that the car should go slowly enough for people to get a proper view.
She used to say, ‘What’s the point in coming unless they can see me?’ ”
Often they were going so slowly that the Queen could overhear what people were saying, which was often that she looked fed up.
She told a staffer: “It’s awful. I’ve got the kind of face that if I’m not smiling, I look cross.
“But I’m not cross. If you try to smile for two hours continuously it gives you a nervous tic.”
However, the epic tour took its toll.
The Queen wanted to build a personal connection with Commonwealth nations[/caption]
A WORLD TOUR
At one point the Queen complained to Philip: “All these mayors are so boring, boring, boring. Why are they so boring?”
And during a few days’ rest in a chalet outside Melbourne, a camera crew waiting outside were startled when Philip burst out of the door with a pair of tennis shoes and a racquet flying after him.
The Queen then emerged, shouting at him to come back, and dragged him inside.
The entire scene was caught on film, but a courtier charged out “angrier than a wounded buffalo” and ordered the cameraman to hand over the footage.
Next out was the Queen, now all serene.
She said: “I’m sorry for that little interlude, but as you know it happens in every marriage.”
The royals finally steamed out from a harbour near Perth, bound across the Indian Ocean for a brief stop at the Cocos (Keeling) Islands.
Then it was on to Ceylon — now Sri Lanka — where the glass beads on the Queen’s dress got so hot in the sun they could not be touched.
A quick pause followed in Aden, now part of Yemen, then two nights in Uganda, where the Queen opened a new dam on Lake Victoria, sending water crashing down into the White Nile.
From there, they flew to Tobruk in Libya, where Prince Charles and Princess Anne were waiting.
The youngsters had travelled aboard the Britannia on her maiden voyage, and the new ship then took them all to Malta for a few days.
Then finally they all sailed home to London, where on May 15 a banner on Tower Bridge greeted them with the words: “Welcome Home”.
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Tens of thousands of people lined the banks of the Thames.
Their Queen was home, and her reign as British monarch and Head of the Commonwealth family of nations could begin in earnest.
The Queen was insistent the motorcade move slowly so people could get a proper view[/caption]