Every year, prospective new shows are designed and tested for the small screen, but some of the greatest concepts never leave the pilot stage. Whether filming costs were deemed too expensive, scheduling conflicts arose, or the network simply didn’t resonate with the central story, countless pilots are passed on each network TV cycle. Even wildly popular franchise pilots have failed.
Nevertheless, many pilots have been unearthed over the years and proven that a good idea isn’t all it takes to find success. From iconic TV spinoffs to compelling original plots, there are plenty of lost, unaired, or failed pilots that retain ardent fandoms decades later. Admittedly, perfect pilot episodes are rare, but certain missed opportunities stand out as truly heartbreaking.
10
Mockingbird Lane
The Fantasy/Horror Series Would Have Re-Imagined A Classic
Jeff Daniel Phillips in The Munsters
For as long as there’s been television, there’s been material to subvert and satirize. In the 1960s, the commonplace family sitcom inspired two macabre counterparts: The Munsters and The Addams Family. Both titles are beloved trailblazers in their genre, but The Munsters’ TV shows and movies never fully reached their full potential, unlike The Addams Family Musical or smash-hit Wednesday.
In 2012, NBC produced a modern retelling of The Munsters to air as a Halloween special and test pilot, following the monstrous family living on the titular Mockingbird Lane. The premise remained close to the classic, with a Frankenstein’s monster patriarch, vampire matriarch, werewolf son, and a “normal” live-in relative. Sadly, NBC declined to offer a full season order.
9
How I Met Your Dad
Greta Gerwig’s Sequel Would Have Taken A Very Different Approach
Greta Gerwig smiling at the 77th Cannes Film Festival.
DDP via Instar images
Greta Gerwig is a familiar name for millions, but most recognize her for her work behind the camera. Before she directed critically acclaimed films like Lady Bird, Little Women (2019), and Barbie, however, Gerwig was meant to star in How I Met Your Dad, a 2014 spinoff of How I Met Your Mother.
Intended to air following the divisive How I Met Your Mother series finale, Gerwig’s iteration would have started by revealing the father, avoiding the original’s controversial love plots without the eponymous parent. The pilot was unfortunately shelved, but Hulu later adapted the idea into the short-lived How I Met Your Father, with Hilary Duff replacing Gerwig.
8
Heat Vision and Jack
A Star-Studded Cast With An Absurd Premise
Jack Black points at a chalkboard in School of Rock.
Most unsuccessful TV pilots will be sadly lost to history, but Heat Vision and Jack was a once-in-a-lifetime idea that gained a cult following despite its failure to launch. Starring Jack Black, Owen Wilson, and Ron Silver, Heat Vision and Jack would have followed a genius former astronaut, his talking motorcycle, and the evil NASA engineer set on destroying them.
Almost a decade after the 1999 pilot failed, director Ben Stiller referenced Heat Vision and Jack in his 2008 mockumentary Tropic Thunder: Rain of Madness.
It’s possible the sci-fi comedy would have garnered an even larger audience had Fox ordered the series, but part of Heat Vision and Jack’s charm is how liminal it feels. Nonetheless, its popularity did not go unnoticed by writer Rob Schrab. In 2007, Schrab claimed a feature-film script was in development, but the would-be dynamic duo never made it to screen.
7
Sue Sue in the City
The Middle’s Best Character Deserved Her Solo Story
Seven years after its series finale, The Middle remains one of the best family sitcoms of the 2010s thanks to its unyielding focus on mediocrity— the family is middle-class, the parents are middle-aged, and the entire family lives in the American Midwest. Out of the quirky cast, however, none stood out as much as Eden Sher’s Sue Heck.
Chronically optimistic and endearingly awkward, Sue was the perpetual underdog of The Middle, which made rumors of a Sue-centered follow-up all the more exciting. The Middle’s Sue spinoff— Sue Sue in the City— would have followed the character to Chicago as she chased her own, independent dreams. The pilot was promising, but ABC sadly denied Sue her shining star moment.
6
Fox Force Five
Mia Wallace’s Fifteen Minutes Of Fame Could Have Been A Franchise Hit
Uma Thurman as Mia Wallace holding a cigarette in Pulp Fiction
Out of Pulp Fiction’s illustrious cast, Uma Thurman undoubtedly had one of the most successful careers following the 1994 classic. Thurman’s character in the film, however, had her own failed TV pilot called Fox Force Five. As Mia Wallace describes in Pulp Fiction, the title is self-explanatory: five “foxy chicks” form a secret agent coalition.
Many speculate Fox Force Five was secretly the inspiration behind Thurman’s most iconic project: the Kill Bill franchise, notably directed by Pulp Fiction creator Quentin Tarantino. Regardless of whether The Bride was derived from Mia Wallace’s self-proclaimed “fifteen minutes” of fame, Fox Force Five would have made an incredible spinoff and further extended Pulp Fiction’s legacy.
5
Mulholland Drive
David Lynch Had Bigger Plans For The Surreal Plot
Most know Mulholland Drive as the 2001 neo-noir film created by David Lynch. The surrealist masterpiece is incredibly divisive for its open ending and many unanswered questions, but the winding plot was originally developed as a television mystery for ABC. After shooting its 1999 pilot, however, the network passed on Lynch’s dreamlike ode to Los Angeles.
Had Mulholland Drive been created as a television series, there may have been more concrete explanations for the shifting narrative— or, more intriguingly, there may have been less. Aside from sharing a talented director, Mulholland Drive is connected to Twin Peaks, a cult classic that is infamous for its hard-to-follow plot twists.
4
Babylon Fields
CBS Could Have Paved The Way For The Zombie Craze
Before zombie TV shows were ten a penny thanks to The Walking Dead, CBS had the opportunity to lead the undead charge with 2007’s Babylon Fields (which followed an entire neighborhood risen from the dead). With well-known names like Kathy Baker attached, many assumed Babylon Fields would be a shoo-in for the network’s primetime schedule. Shockingly, it was shelved instead.
After the pilot was leaked and received an overwhelmingly positive response, a second pilot was shot in 2014. Once again, sadly, Babylon Fields unexpectedly failed to secure a series order. Though the pedestrian premise may not be groundbreaking in retrospect, Babylon Fields could have put CBS ahead of the curve during the 2010s surge of apocalyptic plots.
3
Nobody’s Watching
A Genre-Bending Treat That Was Brimming With Potential
Taran Killam as Ludo Radovic holding a baby in “High Potential.”
In the modern day, most credit Abbott Elementary for the return of mockumentary TV shows. Long before the ABC comedy premiered, however, Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence attempted to go a step further, creating a mock sitcom within a mock reality show. The convoluted premise of Nobody’s Watching resulted in The WB Network turning it down, but the internet reacted differently.
The characters of Derrick and Will have appeared in the background of actual NBC series, including Scrubs and Days of Our Lives.
The pilot episode of Nobody’s Watching leaked on YouTube in 2006, gaining enough traction for the series to be reconsidered by NBC. The second network ultimately decided to produce a short webseries starring Taran Killam (Derrick) and Paul Campell (Will), but many fans continued clamoring for Nobody’s Watching to be turned into a full-length series— to no avail, unfortunately.
2
17th Precinct
A Delightfully Subversive Supernatural Police Procedural
Tricia Helfer as Angela Lange Staring in Powers
Very few procedurals have redefined their genres and stood the test of time, but 17th Precinct, a supernatural crime procedural, would have been a breath of fresh air. Alongside traditional detectives, the mystical 17th Precinct had Tricia Helfer’s Morgana, a public necromancer. The biggest threat, hilariously, was a group of scientists who created a terrifyingly unfamiliar weapon: a bullet.
The magical realism of 17th Precinct, paired with its tongue-and-cheek battle between science and myth, made the innovative pilot an instant classic when it leaked in 2011. Sadly, NBC decided to pass on the fantasy procedural and develop Grimm in its place, a decision many netizens continue to resent.
1
Lookwell
The Would-Be Satire Has More Devoted Fans Than Many On-Air Titles
Conan O’Brien posing and looking to the left zoning with a teal background
Before Conan O’Brien joined the ranks of beloved Late Night hosts, he was the talented writer attached to Lookwell, a 1991 pilot which has gained greater popularity than plenty of fully-produced series. Lookwell followed Adam West as the title character, a former TV actor who delusionally becomes convinced he can solve crime.
Ahead of its time in every way, Lookwell would have been a single-camera comedy infused with O’Brien’s clever writing and Robert Smigel’s creative direction. Both fans of the pilot and Adam West himself have campaigned for the satire to be resurrected, but no network has taken the chance to adapt Lookwell’s ingenious premise yet.
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