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'Lost,' 'Law & Order,' '24': finales and the legacy of big-drama TV

The 'Lost' finale Sunday night, followed by the '24' finale and the end of 'Law & Order' after 20 years on Monday have critics assessing the impact of each series.

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Fox/ABC/NBC/AP
Scenes from (l. to r.) the 24 finale, the Lost finale, and an episode of Law & Order. The three shows, ending this week, represent some of the most impactful of the last two decades.

As two of TV鈥檚 most iconic shows, 鈥24鈥 and 鈥淟aw & Order,鈥 wrap for good Monday night, on the heels of Sunday's 鈥Lost鈥 finale, critics are assessing the legacies of three shows that represent some of the most impactful dramatic television of the past two decades.

The Fox thriller starring Kiefer Sutherland set a ticking clock under its characters 鈥 and injected the rest of the TV landscape with a shot of adrenalin. The venerable NBC mothership (yet another spinoff of which, 鈥淟aw & Order: Los Angeles,鈥 rolls out this fall) has filled more hours of airtime than any other single show in TV history. And the stranded souls on a magical island proved once and for all that audiences will sit still for plots of byzantine weirdness as long as they are good.

IN PICTURES: Most-watched TV series finales

鈥淲hen 鈥24鈥 debuted just two months after 9/11,鈥 says Fordham University鈥檚 Paul Levinson, 鈥渋t was clearly something that already was tackling this new horrendously dangerous age of terrorism.鈥 The writers actually made changes in the storyline, executing Jack Bauer鈥檚 wife at the end of the first season, he points out, making the show more severe and uncompromising in a way that spoke to audiences. 鈥淭he killing of Teri has been the best expression on television of this aspect of life in the 21st century,鈥 he says, adding that the series has been controversial due to what some have seen as a glorification of torture, but it has been a complex show with conspiracies all the way up to the White House.

When producers first brought the strict "24" format to critics, nobody thought the show could last beyond a single season. 鈥淭hat 24-hour format was a genuine innovation in TV history and gives the show a unique place.鈥 No other show has equaled 鈥24鈥 in its intensity, he says, adding that he would put it 鈥渋n the top five TV shows of all time.鈥

鈥淟aw & Order,鈥 on the other hand, a show that has now tied with 鈥淕unsmoke鈥 for the longest-running drama on the air, represents 鈥渢he triumph of traditional television,鈥 says media expert Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for the Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University.

The rigid structure, divided by the musical beats, embracing the basic storytelling arc 鈥 beginning, middle, end 鈥 has proved more potent than shows that toyed with viewers' expectations either in format or content. The great contribution of the Dick Wolf-helmed franchise has been its consistent ability to tell high-quality, well-written dramatic tales about relevant stories everyone can relate to, says Mr. Thompson. Along the way, he adds, the show, with its rotating cast, 鈥渉as inadvertently stumbled into the value of keeping fresh faces before audiences to maintain audience interest."

This dependability has educated decades of audiences about the nuts and bolts of legal procedures, says Elizabeth Kelley, a criminal defense lawyer based in Cleveland, not to mention helped a young attorney learn the basic ropes. 鈥淥n a very rudimentary level, it shows newer attorneys basic lawyering skills,鈥 she says, adding that while the writers took a certain license, the show illustrated the importance of a strong courtroom presence and creativity in legal argument. It also showed how basic court procedures such as an arraignment played out. 鈥淚 learned how to do an arraignment by watching 'Law & Order,' 鈥 Ms. Kelley recalls with a laugh, remembering that "I was scheduled to do an arraignment and I watched it and it got me through the procedure the very next morning.鈥

While the ABC serial about a planeful of crash victims on a remote island set a new bar for sheer complexity of storylines, perhaps the biggest legacy of "Lost" in the media landscape is the the writers and producers cultivated from the start. 鈥淭his was not merely a fan page,鈥 notes Mr. Levinson, but a rich community that extended the storytelling world of the show and set a new standard for this kind of creativity across the Internet.

IN PICTURES: Most-watched TV series finales

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