Posted on 09/12/2008 11:16:56 AM PDT by Borges
20. BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25TH CENTURY (1979-1981) Astronaut Buck Rogers, frozen in 1987, returns to a postapocalyptic Earth 504 years later. But dig it: The show, which debuted in disco-tastic 1979, is actually about a totally swinging cat bagging hot future-chicks. The fun is in watching hacky Gil Gerard, a.k.a. ''Lucky Buck,'' smirk his way from cleavage-baring space pilots to midriff-revealing aliens to distressed damsels in every corner of the galaxy. Sadly, with every sweet innuendo and outlandish guest star (Jamie Lee Curtis as a penal-colony prisoner? Gary Coleman as a thawed-out genius? Groovy!) in Buck Rogers in the 25th Century comes a plodding sci-fi plot. Neil Drumming
19. THE SIX-MILLION DOLLAR MAN (1974-1978) ''Steve Austin, astronaut. A man barely alive. Gentlemen, we can rebuild him. We have the technology. We have the capability to build the world's first bionic man. Steve Austin will be that man. Better than he was before. Better, stronger, faster.'' C'mon, after hearing that opening narration, which kicked straight into one of the best themes in TV history, didn't you either want to be a bionic scientist or an astronaut? That's the power of sci-fi, baby. Not only does science fiction change lives, it changes your perception of what life could be. Plus, it allows you to fight Bigfoot. Marc Bernardin
18. THE JETSONS (1962-1963) Say what you will about this animated sitcom yes, it's a dimwitted look at a schlub's life in a ''world of tomorrow'' that's essentially the flipside of The Flintstones it defined the future for a generation of children. Jet packs, briefcase cars, moving sidewalks, a robot in every home; tell me, wouldn't you still love to live there? Marc Bernardin
17. MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 (1989-1999) They may have spent most of their time in silhouette, but the MST3K crew's legacy can now be fully revealed: By drowning out B- (or C-, or D-) movies with their chatter, Joel, Mike, Tom Servo, and Crow T. Robot directly inspired not only DVD commentary tracks but a large portion of today's blog culture. After all, where's the fun in keeping snark to yourself?
16. ALIEN NATION (1989-1990) So, what if refugees from what seems like another world came to live among us? What if they learned our language, aped our customs, took many of our jobs? How would we treat them? And what would that say about us? That fact that those questions feel like they could be played out in any border town in America speaks to the prescient nature of Alien Nation, which found Earth serving as the new home to an extra-terrestrial race, who are just trying to fit in. While it could be a little too on-the-nose with its social allegories, Nation can still strike a chord, almost 20 years after its premiere. Marc Bernardin
15. THE PRISONER (1967) A handsome secret agent tears into his London headquarters, confronts his superior, and angrily resigns. Content in his decision, he repairs back to his flat to pack for a vacation. Without warning, an ominous gas is pumped in through his keyhole, rendering him unconscious. He awakens in a strange resort-like village, the life he knew, gone. And this all during the opening credits. Cocreated in Britain by star Patrick McGoohan, The Prisoner was unlike any other TV show before it: intensely cerebral, subversively allegorical, maddeningly mysterious (no wonder it lasted only 17 episodes). The only thing that you knew for sure was that the nefarious powers that be would stop at nothing to break the will of defiant Number 6 (McGoohan's character never revealed his name), who steadfastly refused to be ''pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered.'' Marc Bernardin
14. OUTER LIMITS (1963-1965) Prime-time TV's first anthology series devoted solely to sci-fi lasted barely two seasons, but it profoundly influenced genre fans, writers, and filmmakers. Creator Leslie Stevens and writer-producer Joseph Stefano favored sober, thought-provoking tales: Alien visitors were prone to admonishing us barbaric, suspicious earthlings; scientists frequently suffered terrible fates after tempting Mother Nature with ill-advised experiments. Although the show failed to live up to ABC's expectations, it went on to succeed in perpetual syndication.
13. BABYLON 5 (1993-1998) While I've never been an overwhelmingly huge fan of J. Michael Straczynski's interstellar sci-fi series set on the nexus-like space station of the title, I've always appreciated it. It's not every day or every decade that genre fans get a densely plotted, character-heavy series that doesn't pander to the lowest common and manages to run for exactly as long as its creator intended. If that was all Babylon 5 did, there'd be cause for celebration. But that it also managed to be good...heck, champagne all around. Marc Bernardin
12. V: THE MINISERIES (1983-1984) Monster story. UFO extravaganza. Modern-day allegory of the Holocaust. Such is the miniseries V (and its 1984 sequel, V: The Final Battle), which tracked the invasion and infiltration of alien visitors who only look human (hint: Their skin would make a really nice wallet) and who only appear friendly (hint: They don't just eat rodents). Although the spin-off weekly series degenerated into a shallow shoot-'em-up, the impact of the original's bold images endured: Twelve years later, Independence Day would freely borrow V's ominous spaceship-hovering-above-Earth's-major-cities scenes.
11. HEROES (2006-) A living, breathing comic book about a collection of people whose genetic evolution has led to extraordinary powers, Heroes takes the supernatural and both rationalizes and humanizes it. Thus does the office drudge (Masi Oka) bend time and space, the politician (Adrian Pasdar) learn to fly, and the cheerleader (Hayden Panettiere) become indestructible. As their stories intersect and an apocalypse looms, the blurry line between good and evil comes down to a battle for self-control. Can't say you don't identify with that. Whitney Pastorek
10. MAX HEADROOM (1987-1988) Set in a grim video-age dystopia where TV networks have become so all-powerful that it's illegal for viewers to turn off their sets, Matt Frewer plays both Edison Carter, intrepid investigative reporter for the top-rated Network 23, and Max, Carter's computer-generated, stuttering alter ego. Despite an intense media blitz, ABC unplugged Max Headroom after only 14 episodes. But over the years a cult following has grown Max even has his own web site on the Internet and today the show's proto-cyber atmospherics couldn't seem fresher. ''The show spawned a look, with its white light through the smoke and bleak Orwellian future,'' says Frewer. ''We laid the groundwork for things to come.'' Benjamin Svetkey
9. DOCTOR WHO (1963-) The BBC's timeless Doctor Who is a 45-year argument for proper sci-fi priorities: (1) an ecstatically tangled, infinitely renewable story line and (2) an understanding that all science fiction, however time- and space-spanning, is local. (Top-flight special effects? Not, as it turns out, crucial.) The Doctor, a Time Lord, powerful but dispossessed, hops worlds and epochs like subway stops, but in spirit he never really leaves London. With its playful yet sincere commitment to social allegory, Doctor Who has always been a post-empire fantasy unerringly progressive, but wary, dark, and full of doubts about human goodness. Scott Brown
8. QUANTUM LEAP (1989-1993) A stirring drama touching on issues such as race, feminism, and homophobia, Leap cloaked its social commentary in the guise of time-travelly goodness. The premise was uncomplicated: An experiment gone awry sends scientist Dr. Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) bouncing through time, inhabiting the lives, and bodies, of folks from the last 60 years. Only by saving the downtrodden, with the aid of holographic pal Al (Dean Stockwell), can the good doc leap into the next adventure and, maybe, leap home. Bakula was a wonder portraying everyone from an elderly African-American man to a pregnant teenage girl to Elvis Presley, but much credit goes to creator Don Bellisario, who reminded us with each nuanced episode that the human condition and the comic appeal of cross-dressing is timeless. Paul Katz
7. FIREFLY (2002) In 2002, Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator Joss Whedon attempted to reinvent the space opera with a rough-and- tumble vision of the future set in an Earth-colonized galaxy. Part Western, part sci-fi, wholly unique, Firefly starred Nathan Fillion as the captain of Serenity, one of those dumpy old ships that don't look like much but get the job done. The TV series tracked the misadventures of his morally ambiguous crew as they tried to make an occasionally honest living by hauling cargo, stealing stuff, and accidentally helping their fellow man. The show was smart, funny, and wonderfully human, and because this is Joss Whedon we're talking about, it also had a highkicking, superpowered wonder woman. Firefly was strange. Firefly shouldn't have worked. And it didn't. Firefly was canceled after 11 episodes. Stupid Fox. Jeff Jensen
6. LOST (2004-) A mysterious island that's home to a shape-shifting smoke monster, a weird science project tasked with saving the world, and a secret society of sinister ''Others'' who can't make babies yes, Lost certainly has its fair share of sci-fi stuff. And yet, like the best examples of the genre, this unfolding saga about plane-crash survivors trapped in a tropical twilight zone doesn't wallow in its genre elements, but uses them to embellish an exploration of identity, community, and reality itself. Coyly sublimating everything from Jules Verne and H.G. Wells to Star Trek and Star Wars, Lost aspires to be an important entertainment for a pop-soaked, soul-searching age. Now, at the risk of missing the point, how about some damn answers?! Jeff Jensen
5. STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION (1987-1994) Lightning is hard enough to bottle once, but twice? Just the same, Trek godfather Gene Roddenberry gave resurrecting Star Trek as a TV series a go, and in doing so allowed us to take TV sci-fi seriously again. And the masterstroke was casting Patrick Stewart. By signing on as Capt. Jean-Luc Picard, the Royal Shakespeare Company veteran gave The Next Generation a gravitas-laden foundation to build on. (Having Brent Spiner as Data and Jonathan Frakes as Commander Riker definitely helped.) As time went on, the writers and producers erected a sci-fi gold standard, tackling subjects as varied as homosexuality, euthanasia, and slavery all while flitting around the cosmos doing battle with Romulans, Klingons, and the Borg.
4. THE X-FILES (1993-2002) Once upon a time, the FBI sent no-nonsense special agent Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) to debunk the crackpot theories of special agent Fox ''Spooky'' Mulder (David Duchovny). What they got instead was a conspiracy-fighting team so powerful it threatened to bring down the shady men who'd infiltrated the highest levels of government with their dreams of alien/human hybrid technology. What did we get? One hell of a TV show even if we never quite got the truth. For the first time since The Twilight Zone, viewers could ponder the mysteries of the universe and get scared silly. From inbred mutants to satanic cults, Mulder and Scully's darting flashlights lit up some seriously freaky darkness.
3. BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (2003-) You remember the show, right? Lorne Greene in a shiny cape leading a band of well-coiffed thirtysomethings as they flee from extras in shiny suits? Glen A. Larson's original '70s Battlestar Galactica: not the worst by-product of the Star Wars juggernaut, but close. So one could view the unmitigated brilliance that is the reimagined Battlestar Galactica series two ways: (1) They had no place to go but up or (2) it's amazing they did so much with so little. The core of the Galactica plot the last human survivors of a catastrophic genocide are on the run from their attackers, the Cylons carried a new resonance in the wake of 9/11. And in keeping with science fiction's grandest tradition, BSG tapped into the power of allegory to enrich its outer-space dogfights and military pomp with the gravity of issues like abortion, terrorism, stem-cell research, racism, even the war in Iraq. Marc Bernardin
2. STAR TREK (1966-1969) ''A Wagon Train to the stars.'' That's how Gene Roddenberry pitched Star Trek to TV execs in 1964. But though his hero, Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner), was a classic space cowboy it was clear right away that Roddenberry had more on his mind than laser shoot-outs. Set in the 23rd century, Trek dared to imagine a future in which the human race had evolved in perfect harmony. Such optimism had obvious appeal in an era of anxiety and unrest. But Trek wasn't just about escapism it gave viewers a fresh perspective on their own world, with morality plays that were thinly veiled versions of 20th-century Earth problems. Echoes of Trek can be found in every corner of our culture: Witness NASA naming a space shuttle Enterprise. Star Trek didn't just show us the future it fashioned our future in its image.
1. TWILIGHT ZONE (1959-1964) Its very title has entered our lexicon as a metaphor for eerie ambiguity. Which is only fitting, given that its creator, Rod Serling, embodied myriad contradictions. Optimist, naysayer, folksy storyteller, urbane futurist all got play during the series' five-year run. Serling camouflaged his secular moralism in fantasy, all the better to hide its bite from nervous CBS execs. But whether dealing with racism, Armageddon, or loneliness, Serling's message got through sometimes with a nudge, sometimes with a sledgehammer. The show's most memorable episodes captured lightning in a bottle in a literate way other programs could only dream of. To television's flickering shadows, Zone added substance.
I watched Quantum Leap religiously. I do not recall Homophobia being a story line. I don’t know if it qualifies as Science Fiction, but I liked both versions of Dark Shadows.
FUTURAMA
Lost in Space belongs on this list.
Tales of Tomorrow?
Sliders?
Time Tunnel and Lost in Space were good too
ping
stargate?
I loved Space 1999. Escpecially the space craft. The Eagle was awesome!
I think Babylon 5 rates higher and that Buck Rogers should in no way be on this list. Starblazers and The Starlost really do need to be on this list too. And where the heck is Space 1999?
I loved it as a youngster. Try watching it now. It's dreck.
Babylon 5 should have been much higher on the list.
V looks dated now, but back then it was really impressive. I liked how they integrated our history into the plot line: i.e. how the aliens demonized the "scientists".
While only sketchily considered Sci-Fi, how about the NBC Evening news?
“The show’s most memorable episodes captured lightning in a bottle in a literate way other programs could only dream of. To television’s flickering shadows, Zone added substance.”
So did The Andy Griffith Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show and numerous other programs of that era. Plus, they were funny.
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And don't forget the theme song. That opening string crescendo still makes me think of "the future." I credit the advertising commercial at the very early beginnings of AOL that used that theme song for the explosion in subscriptions that ultimately led to AOL not being able to handle the customer base in the early days.
-PJ
i used to love space 1999 and land of the giants
And as for classics, how about Superman?
What about the longest-running sci-fi show... Stargate SG-1. I cannot believe it didn’t even make the top 20. And Lost.. come on it’s a great show, but how can you put it in the top 10 of the sci-fi genre?
I’d go so far as to put the new Battlestar Galactica in the number one spot.
It’s touched on a lot of issues that other sci-fi shows have always been afraid of.
And unlike many other sci-fi shows (*cough star trek cough*) the characters are real, not just one-dimensional stand-ins for a particular viewpoint.
Heroes and Firefly are pure hype.
Space: Above and Beyond should be on the list
No Trippin’ The Rift? Jeez
Firefly shouldn't have worked. And it didn't. Firefly was canceled after 11 episodes. Stupid Fox.
Great show, but what idiot would put a serial show in the wrong episode order on Fridays starting just before the playoffs so the show could be postponed most weeks?
I looked through the list and counted as having a significant part of 9 of the series, and a few more series I would have if they weren't so overpriced (Star Trek and Dr. Who are at the top of that list).
Lost in Space?
I am no sci-fi fan by any means, but I loved the purple-haired chicks on UFO.
I would consider ‘Lost’ to be tied with the Twilight Zone for first.
Glad they included MST3K, I wouldn’t have thought of it.
The Jetsons should not be on the list.
No science, just fiction.
What, no “My favorite Martian”??
It was, Sam leapt into an instructor’s body at West Point and had to stop a gay student from committing suicide.
No BLAKES SEVEN?
Mike
Agreed with others about Bab 5 being too low.
But here is a pick: how about making room for “The Avengers”?
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It wasn’t on for long, but those of us who are old enough to remember “Way Out” would rate it quuite high.
Flash back! That was a great show!
Too early to tell, but I thought this week’s premiere of “Fringe” has possibilities
Of all the Star Treks, Deep Space Nine was my favorite. It eventually got around to being about the clash of civilizations. One dedicated to freedom and peace and the other dedicated to domination, subjugation and death...Oh...and “God” (the Prophets, wormhole aliens, etc) was on the side of the good guys...:)
Sometimes when I try to remember the Jetsons theme song, it morphs into the Simpsons theme song. I hate that!

Kathy Coleman, my first crush. (Sorry, Eve Plumb)
Twilight Zone #1 ! Rightly so!
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