10 Cringe Netflix Shows I Wish I’d Never Watched
10. Gypsy
This was a psychological thriller series that was based on the life of Jean Holloway, who was a successful therapist living in Manhattan, NY, but interfered with the lives of her patients’ friends and families. This was a mystery and drama series, but it was too slow-paced for the storyline.
9. Chelsea
The idea behind the show was good, but the problem was that the people behind the show had no idea what they were doing or the purpose of the show. The idea was that the show was the way to change the current format of the late-night talk shows, but it ended up being an imitation of the late-night network shows, but without the experience to back it up.
8. Real Rob
Rob Schneider is an actor who rose to fame when he was chosen to be a cast member on the popular show Saturday Night Live, which was way back in the 1990s, but managed to keep himself relevant by always working on films. The actor plays himself, but an exaggerated version of himself, who is “brutally honest,” as well as doing stand-up comedy and relating some of the stories about his life and career.
7. S_/Life
S_/Life, the drama series on Netflix, explores the subject of marital discontent and the idea of monogamy. It was supposed to be a series that would ask the big questions, but ultimately only succeeds in showing the difficulty of making glossy melodrama work well. Based on the book "44 Chapters About 4 Men" by BB Easton, the series was created by Stacy Rukeyser and follows the diary of Billie Connelly, a wife and mother from suburbia, played by Sarah Shahi.
6. Iron Fist
Marvel’s series based on the character of Iron Fist started off slowly, but what was more worrying was that the series never really found its defining moment. There were issues with the pace of the series and the fact that it was all very familiar. While Jones was becoming more popular, especially when embracing his role as kung fu master, nothing was really that special about the whole experience.
5. Insatiable
Insatiable is trite, over-the-top, and unfunny, and to make things worse, the series is a bloated slog to watch, coming in at more than 40 minutes per episode. It turns out that the series is not only as bad as you think it is but also worse than that, but not in the way that you would expect.
4. Fuller House
The series is predictable because it is unoriginal, and the dialogue is painful to read. With so many self-satisfied references to the cast’s off-screen lives and what has happened to them over the years, the series sometimes feels like a parody of itself, like something from Saturday Night Live rather than the actual thing.
3. Girlboss
But despite all the bluster, the problem is that the show is not that Sophia is unlikeable; it is that she is boring. She is not really fleshed out beyond the vague idea of a free-spirited rebel who does not hesitate to steal a deceased woman’s clothing to get vintage items, and she is a weak foundation on a show that already has problems. It is only good in small doses, and watching more than that in a row can be exhausting.
2. Sexy Beasts
The problem is that they are all young, attractive, and boring. Comedian Rob Delaney, who narrates the show in a slightly tongue-in-cheek way, is the only interesting person in the show, and he wisely does not appear on camera. Sexy Beasts ends up being just another sleazy reality show, and instead of daring and wild, it is a clumsy attempt at the dating world.
1. The I-Land
The speech that the principal gives in the movie Billy Madison that the only way to learn is to get dumber should have been given to the writers of this science fiction mystery drama that takes the worst parts of the latter seasons of Lost and makes them even worse than they were there. The final twist is that the character of Chase, played by Natalie Martinez, is actually an elderly woman, and is completely irrelevant to anyone who has watched the show up to that point.



