CBS' The Big Bang Theory almost had two more seasons, but would it have been better for the show overall? The answer is complicated. Premiering in 2007, the premier sitcom ran for 12 seasons until it wrapped up in 2019. But considering how popular it still was during its final year, it could've continued for a couple more years as the network was willing to renew it despite the cast's massive pay packets, with each core actor supposedly earning $1 million per episode.
Just several weeks before the shocking news that The Big Bang Theory season 12 would be its last, CBS came out and publicly revealed that they were considering ordering another year of the show. But despite the lucrative salary, not to mention the series' continued success, the decision to end it boiled down to Jim Parson's choice to exit The Big Bang Theoryafter playing Sheldon Cooper for more than a decade. The actor subsequently explained that he felt that they'd explored everything in terms of his character and there was nothing else left to do but to move on. Although the rest of his co-stars were all on board to continue the sitcom, they opted to wrap things up altogether instead of continuing with an incomplete cast.
Related: Young Sheldon Created A New Big Bang Theory Plot Hole (Then Solved It)
Before Parsons' decision spelled the cancellation of The Big Bang Theory, CBS was supposedly looking to greenlight at least two more seasons of the show, locking its run until the 2021 TV season. Fans of the show would've loved this, but would it have been beneficial to the show in general? The answer is more complicated than one might think. Despite its storytelling issues, not to mention an uneven final season, The Big Bang Theory delivered an emotionally
Read more on screenrant.com