Bob1370 said:Sometimes the best finale, is a finale that isn't a finale in the usual sense at all. Cheers ended just the right way--after Sam decides NOT to leave Boston and go off with Diane, he returns to the bar, chills out at closing time with the other regulars, bids them good night, closes down for the evening, and tidies up the place for the next day's opening. Life will clearly go on as usual there, we just won't see it on TV any more. (Ending a show that way not only puts a capper on things, it preserves the future watchability of reruns in syndication.)
Other shows close with a big question mark. Take Cheers spinoff Frasier. At the end of the show, Frasier goes off to Chicago in search of his sudden love interest. But does he connect with her? Does she reciprocate his love? Does he find a new job at WLS or WGN that matches the one he left in Seattle? We never found out how it all worked out. Left room for a reunion special (maybe a TV movie) to tie up the loose ends, but it's anyone's guess if that film will ever be made.
To me, while 'Night Court' was an example of the wrong way to leave things hanging, 'Frasier' did it perfectly; the rest of the cast had a satisying degree of 'closure', and as for Frasier, if it didn't work out in Chicago, it would probaby work out somewhere else.
'Cheers' actually mystified me when I first saw it, because the very last scene had someone knocking on the door and Sam saying 'We're closed!' I'd read a lot of the speculation that Sam was going to close the bar in the last episode, and so I thought that was how they were playing the scene.
Later on, of course, the writers of 'Frasier', many of whom had written for 'Cheers', made it clear in the spinoff that the bar was alive and well...although this contradicted the intended meaning-or at least the very strong implication- of the 'Cheers' finale that the bar had shut down for good.
(Actually, Sam's final line was a reprise of a scene from the very first episode, so it was a case of 'coming full circle'. However, when I saw the final episode, I'd never seen the premiere, so the context of that scene was lost on me.