People Are Sharing Famous Sitcoms They Didn't Find Funny, And I'm Offended — Like, All Of My Faves Are On Here

Recently, Reddit user u/Green-Cress-2882 asked: "What successful famous sitcoms [did you not] find funny at all?"

A woman with a remote in her hand laying on the couch
Prostock-studio / Getty Images

Here's what people said.

1. "Friends."

—u/pleaseshowmemmmkay

2. "2 Broke Girls. It was like fingernails on a chalkboard to me!!!"

—u/coffeebeanwitch

"I never figured out how that show got past the pilot or at least the first season: cardboard acting, horrible writing with contrived joke setup with every line of the show. And there wasn't a single likable character. Except maybe the horse. But then, I think of what that apartment must've SMELLED like."—u/the_silent_one1984

3. "Two and a Half Men."

"To this day, I never understood the hype. 99% of jokes are about how everyone is a sex-crazed narcissist who hates everyone, including their family. The remaining 1% is funny but not enough to warrant watching the entire show."

—u/Derc_on_Reddit

"I don't think I've ever seen a show about such miserable and spiteful people so heavily idolized. And I've seen Roseanne."

—u/Saberleaf

Screenshot from "Two and a Half Men"
Cbs Photo Archive / CBS via Getty Images

4. "Baby Daddy."

—u/BoosterRead78

"I saw a few episodes of that show and couldn't believe how fucking horrible it was."

—u/insane__knight

5. "Roseanne. Could never find her funny."

—u/ApartNefariousness95

6. "The Big Bang Theory."

—u/Regnaruk123

7. "Full fucking House. I get it’s meant to be family-friendly content, but the popularity always baffled me."

—u/Rockitrulz

Screenshot from "Full House"
Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

8. "Mike & Molly. The crass things the characters say make Two and a Half Men look like a religious documentary."

—u/Fine-Idea-3242

9. "How I Met Your Mother."

—u/Odd-Sink-9098

10. "Everybody Loves Raymond. Every episode I've seen is a grown-ass man letting his family come into his home to annoy and bully the shit out of his wife, to her obvious distress, while he refuses to set boundaries and stick up for her like a proper adult."

"(My own in-laws find this show hilarious. I don't think it's a coincidence. LOL and sigh.)"

—u/rotatingruhnama

11. "iCarly. But like the literal iCarly web show within the sitcom, where they would do silly stuff on camera. I always found that part kind of cringe. The rest of the show was great, though."

—u/Several-Cake1954

The cast of "iCarly"
Paul Morigi / Getty Images for Nickelodeon

12. "Home Improvement."

—u/SpunkySkullSmoosher

13. "Seinfeld."

—u/KaterinaKiaha

14. "Schitt's Creek. I tried it three times and just couldn't do it."

—u/david13z

Closeup of Eugene Levy
Roy Rochlin / FilmMagic

15. "Anything on CBS where a fat guy has a wife that’s way too attractive for him."

—u/727secondstoheaven

"It all started with The Honeymooners 70 years ago. Then The Flintstones. Then every other sitcom with a bumbling fat guy and the smarter, hotter wife who puts up with his shenanigans because he's got a good heart and needs her guidance."

—u/Blinky_

16. "George Lopez. The show tried to have serious moments, leaving you hoping for some element of realism, but then the mother, Benny, would come out of nowhere and say something stupid. You couldn't tell if it was a comedy or a drama. It just felt like an awkward watch, like the show didn't know what it wanted to be."

—u/Picture-Ordinary

17. "Sex and the City. Rude, mean women who shit on other women and body-shame people aren't appealing. I think the writers took 'less likable characters' too literally."

—u/Mysterious_Park_7937

18. "Will & Grace. It was banal."

—u/slickhedstrong

19. "The Cosby Show. He was so pretentious and arrogant toward all his kids' issues."

—u/Dunkman83

20. "Mrs. Brown's Boys."

—u/PhilosopherClear1319

"Absolute dogshit."

—u/CedmundoCeds

21. "The Office. I've tried. I've tried to watch it many times. Everyone says it's hilarious. I know the memes just from internet osmosis, but…it's just not funny to me. I know people who rewatch and love it repeatedly, and I don't find it funny."

—u/pikaboo27

Closeup of Michael Scott
Nbc / NBCUniversal via Getty Images

22. "I didn't like Community, which is odd because my favorite comedies include Arrested Development and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, which aren't too dissimilar to Community. To each their own, I guess."

—u/tennoskoom_

What are your thoughts on these? Have any that you'd like to add? Tell me in the comments below!

Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.