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I am definitely guilty of bingeing shows that I get into. Even the aforementioned DS9, I watched the 180 episodes or so over the span of probably 6 months. It was great. Though building off the previous comment that you made, DS9 is serialized rather than episodic. The show came out before streaming, but I didn't watch it until after streaming because of how unapproachable serialized shows are on standard scheduled TV.
That said, I can still appreciate episodic shows. Comedies (including sitcoms) do really well with this format. And interestingly, I would even put sports into this category. There is continuity across a season via record and standings, but each game itself is largely self-contained. You can miss a game, or even a bunch of games, and just jump back into watching whenever. Regarding baseball's long season of 162 games, I've seen someone refer to it as a friend who is always there for you.
I hadn't thought about sports in that way before. That's interesting. And you're right that serialised shows didn't work so well in broadcast, which is probably partially why I'm so prejudiced against them - they slightly remind me of the daytime soaps I suffered through when I was home sick as a kid. I'll cop to that.
But as an adult, the reason I still go to bat so hard for episodic as a format is because it imposes a creative constraint on the writer that makes it immediately clear whether the script has succeeded in telling a compelling story. And if it's a short episode, say ten minutes like with Adventure Time, and it still manages to tell an emotionally compelling episodic story in that time, that's amazingly impressive.
I liken serialisation to gravity. It sets in eventually no matter how hard you try. But for me, it's more fun to watch the plane actually fly than to watch it taxi around on the runway. Just a series of events. When everyone's clapping for that, I'm the one sitting with my arms crossed muttering "no, fuck this pilot, spill the passengers' drinks! Do a back flip in the sky!"
Another malformed rant. Thank you for being so tolerant.