Some TV shows are immediate masterpieces after the first 10 minutes, while others take years to grow into what they eventually become. And then there are the rare cases where everything hinges on the very end, those last 10 minutes that change how the entire story is remembered.
The most iconic TV final scenes with so little time. It might sharpen a character’s path, pull together themes that have simmered for years, or land on a single image that stays burned in the audience’s mind. The best of these endings don’t necessarily need to solve every answer. They work because they hit the emotions viewers carried all along.
From acclaimed dramas to sitcoms that found unexpected depth, these are the shows whose closing minutes lifted them into something larger. In the span of one scene, they moved from favorites to fixtures in TV history.
The Leftovers (2014–2017)
For three seasons, The Leftovers pushed into some of the hardest questions television has ever asked. What do we do with loss that never explains itself? How do people live with the weight of absence? The show always drew critical praise, but the final minutes are what made it a modern classic.
Everything turns on Nora’s long confession to Kevin. She describes crossing into another world, one where her family continued on without her, and choosing to return. Whether the story is literal or a fragile invention doesn’t matter. What matters is that Kevin accepts it. hat choice reframes the entire series, making love and belief more important than proof.
The ambiguity is what gives The Leftovers ending its weight. For one final time, the show refuses to solve its central mystery, but in doing so, The Leftovers solidifies that the story was never about solving the unexplainable, but about connection, trust, and the grace of staying.
The Good Place (2016–2020)
By the time The Good Place reached its finale, the show had already surprised audiences by balancing sitcom humor with moral philosophy. But the last 10 minutes are what defined it. That stretch reframed the series from a clever afterlife comedy into something profound.
Eleanor’s decision to leave, and Michael’s reward of a simple human life, gave weight to every joke and twist that came before. The ending insisted that what makes life meaningful isn’t perfection or eternity, it’s knowing that moments are finite. Those final minutes changed how the entire show is remembered.
The Good Place’s ending strips away philosophy lectures and any need for theatrics. What’s left is the truth that gives the series its legacy: meaning isn’t found in eternity, but in knowing that every moment, even the last, counts.
Schitt’s Creek (2015–2020)
The cast of Schitt’s Creek at David and Patrick’s wedding in the series finale.
When Schitt’s Creek ended in April 2020, the timing gave it an extra layer of meaning. The final 10 minutes centered on David and Patrick’s wedding, a celebration that landed just as much of the world was shutting down. What could have been a simple sitcom send-off instead felt like a lifeline.
Those closing beats are filled with small moments that carry the weight of six seasons. Alexis, dressed in white and shaky with nerves, walks David down the aisle. He tells her, “I am continuously impressed by you,” a quiet acknowledgment of how far they’ve come together.
Moira presides in full papal regalia, absurd as ever, but her theatrics are grounded in real love for her son. And Johnny doesn’t need big speeches; his pride shows in glances and pauses, understated but unmistakable.
Viewed in isolation, it’s a touching finale. Though seen in the context of spring 2020, it became a perfect show from start to finish. With audiences stuck at home, Schitt’s Creek offered a dose of warmth and optimism when it was hardest to find.
Succession (2018–2023)
©HBO / Courtesy Everett Collection
For four seasons, Succession circled the same question: which Roy child would come out on top? The last 10 minutes of the Succession ending gave an answer no one expected, and in the process, changed how the series would be remembered.
Shiv breaks from Kendall in the boardroom, tipping the vote to Tom. It’s not out of triumph, but exhaustion, the recognition that Kendall cannot lead. What follows plays like a slow collapse: Kendall staring blankly at the water, Roman muttering that maybe this is “fine,” and Shiv slipping her hand into Tom’s, her face unreadable.
Those moments carry the weight of every Succession season that came before. The Roys didn’t lose to outsiders; they destroyed each other. That final stretch made clear that the show’s real story was about the cost of even wanting it.
The Office (2004–2013)
By the time it reached its later seasons, The Office became a different show. Some energy had shifted and some of its magic had worn thin, but the finale’s last 10 minutes changed that perception. In those final beats, the series reminded fans of what it always did best: finding heart in the smallest details.
The documentary finally airs, giving the employees of Dunder Mifflin the chance to reflect on their time together. Dwight and Angela’s wedding provides one last moment of joy, Pam pauses to take in the mural of their shared history, and Michael Scott returns with just a few lines, enough to leave the audience smiling.
That Office ending reshaped how people remember the show. Instead of closing on its uneven later years, the show left behind a final image of friendship, community, and the strange comfort of work families. It’s why the finale still resonates, long after the last confetti fell.
The Righteous Gemstones (2019–2025)
Every The Righteous Gemstones season thrived on excess, from the gaudy displays of wealth, the family’s backstabbing, and the sudden bursts of violence that gave the show its edge. Yet the final 10 minutes brought all of that to a halt. The change in tempo made the Gemstones ending feel more powerful than another twist ever could.
Season
RT Critic Score
RT Audience Score
1
76%
89%
2
89%
89%
3
100%
88%
4
100%
74%
The last image is Eli Gemstone, finally alone, sailing out on the water. For a character who spent his life holding everything together, the silence is striking. It reframes the series, showing that the story was never simply about greed or ambition. It was about the burden Eli carried, and what it meant for him to finally let it go.
Six Feet Under (2001–2005)
Across all five seasons Six Feet Under, the show explored death with an honesty that few ever attempted. The last 10 minutes pushed that vision further, delivering a finale that still sets the standard for television endings.
The closing sequence flashes forward to reveal how each major character eventually dies. Scored to Sia’s “Breathe Me,” it unfolds as a series of intimate snapshots, of births, marriages, tragic and peaceful deaths, all leading to their final breaths. Suddenly, the series wasn’t just about running a funeral home. It was about the whole shape of a life.
That Six Feet Under ending gave the show a legacy far beyond its cult following. The final 10 minutes are remembered as one of the most devastating, beautiful farewells in TV history—even Game of Thrones’ George R.R. Martin adored it—and they continue to define how audiences talk about what a finale can achieve.
Mad Men (2007–2015)
All seven seasons of Mad Men traced Don Draper’s endless attempts to reinvent himself, always leaving the question of whether he could ever change. And the last 10 minutes gave the clearest answer the show ever offered.
At a California retreat, Don joins a meditation circle. His eyes close, his face relaxes, and the hint of a smile forms. The screen cuts to Coca-Cola’s famous “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke” ad. The suggestion is that Don didn’t transcend his old life at all. He turned his moment of crisis into another pitch.
That Mad Men ending reframed the entire series. Don wasn’t a man breaking free from advertising, but the ultimate expression of it, someone who could take his own pain and sell it back to the world. In 10 minutes, Mad Men became less about one man’s collapse and more about the culture that rewards it.
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994)
After seven seasons of starship battles, moral puzzles, and journeys across space, Star Trek: The Next Generation closed on something strikingly quiet. The last 10 minutes of “All Good Things…” bring Picard into the senior crew’s poker game, a table he had always observed from the outside.
As he sits down and the cards are dealt, the camera slowly pulls back; no speeches, no grand farewell. Just the captain finally choosing to be part of his crew as an equal. That choice changes the way the whole series is remembered. For all the exploration and high-stakes conflict, the real Star Trek: TNG ending is about belonging.
Breaking Bad (2008–2013)
Bryan Cranston as Walter White in the finale of Breaking Bad
At the time, no modern show carried as much pressure to end well as Breaking Bad. Over five seasons, Walter White’s fall from teacher to drug lord had been as compelling as it was brutal. Miraculously, the final 10 minutes of “Felina” locked its place as one of TV’s best dramas of all time.
Walt frees Jesse, takes out Jack’s crew with the hidden M60, and then makes his way into the lab one last time. Surrounded by the gleaming equipment that defined his empire, he collapses as Badfinger’s “Baby Blue” plays. The image is direct and final: Walter White dies, not as a victim, but as the architect of his own empire.
Those last minutes gave the show an ending that felt inevitable, even if fans admittedly wanted Walt to survive. Where many prestige dramas left room for doubt, Breaking Bad ended on its own terms, as uncompromising as the man at its center.