Submitted by monkeyskin t3_zv8gje in television
It seems to be determined by what your expectations of what TV is meant to do. The traditional model provides half a years worth of weekly episodes each with a start, middle and end to a story with characters you enjoy. The evolution that started on cable and into streaming takes one story and tells it over fewer episodes.
So for me, episodic TV designed to stand on its own only offers good episodes and bad episodes. Filler is what you get when you take a 3 hour story and stretch it over 6 hours.
I’d also argue that TV’s evolution is basically mimicking books and films. The Wire is praised for its novelistic structure, and many if not all of the recent Netflix biographical dramas would have been movies not that long ago. Whereas the shows that endure most with audiences are reruns of The Office and Friends, shows that largely stuck to the 24 a season model that you can dip in and out of. (Disclaimer, I love The Wire.)
Which brings me back to what we all expect a TV show to do. Should a show be one tightly told story (that’s still longer than the movie version would have been), or the latest riff on a theme from artists you enjoy (and like musicians, not every new episode / song is going to be their best yet).
IAmTheClayman t1_j1nreg8 wrote
If it’s serialized, the answer is easy: any episode that doesn’t meaningfully move the plot or character relationships forward. That’s not an indicator of quality mind you - the episode “Ember Island Players” from Avatar: The Last Airbenders is total filler, but it also happens to be one of the funniest episodes in the series and a fan favorite.
Now if you’re talking episodic TV the answer is harder. If there isn’t an overarching plot, wouldn’t every episode technically be “filler?” I think in that case people do actually use the term as an indicator of quality, with bad episodes labeled as filler so that future watchers can know whether those episodes are skippable