Riverdale

Then came Season Seven—the final season. In a shocking move, the show killed off its entire timeline. Jughead revealed the cast had been time-jumped to 1955, where they were trapped in a wholesome, Technicolor version of the comics. For 19 episodes, the show abandoned serial killers and cults for a retrospective on the 1950s, dealing with homophobia (Kevin Keller’s arc), racism (Toni Topaz’s arc), and the censorship of comics.

What they got instead was a fever dream. Riverdale

So grab a milkshake at Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe. Watch out for the Black Hood. And remember: The town of Riverdale is always watching. Then came Season Seven—the final season

When Riverdale premiered on The CW in January 2017, the world thought it knew what to expect. Based on the long-running Archie comics, audiences anticipated a lighthearted, nostalgic throwback to wholesome Americana—think malt shops, drive-ins, and love triangles without stakes. For 19 episodes, the show abandoned serial killers

As TV moves toward shorter seasons and safer IP, Riverdale stands as the last great, sprawling network soap opera. It was a show where a high school principal faked his death, where a teenager beat a grown man in a bare-knuckle boxing match, and where the most dangerous place in the world was a small town with a diner.