
5 Devastating TV Episodes From Our Childhood That Still Haunt Us Today
By Erin Whitten
Growing up, we assumed our favorite shows would always be safe spaces. Cartoons were goofy. Sitcoms were warm and fuzzy. Everything ended in 22 minutes, tied up with a bow, a hug, and a punchline.
Well, every once in a while, one of those shows would jerk the rug out from under us. And the worst part? They came from the places we least expected. From Sunday morning cartoons, to after-school sitcoms with theme songs we could sing (or rap) in our sleep, here are five TV episodes from our childhood that made us cry then and will make us cry again now.
1. Full House – “Papouli” (Season 7, Episode 17: “The Last Dance”)
When it aired, this one hit audiences much harder than anyone could have imagined for such a light show. Up to this point, Full House had established a brand of airing life lessons and ending with hugs. “The Last Dance” was different. Papouli, Jesse’s Greek grandfather, visits the Tanner family. He’s charismatic (especially to Michelle), he teaches her a traditional Greek dance, and then promises to go with her to the school dance, and then boom… that morning after the girls walk off to school, the adults realize Papouli died in his sleep the night before.
Michelle comes home later that day, full of energy from her Honeybee meeting, excited to show him the school project she made, but when she sees everyone’s faces, she knows something is wrong. Danny gently explains, Papouli’s heart just gave out. Michelle completely loses it, smashes the gift she made, runs upstairs, and sobs. Jesse feels responsible for not spending more time with Papouli before he left, and the show never rushes to patch anyone over. It just lets them grieve. Even the subplot about D.J. and Kimmy and fighting over sunglasses gets re-centered around Papouli and what really matters in life. For so many children watching, this was the first time TV showed what it really looks like to lose someone and how sometimes there are no perfect words to make it better.
2. Futurama – “Jurassic Bark” (Season 5, Episode 2)
This episode quite frankly should have come with a trigger warning or a payment to my therapist. What starts as a completely typical Futurama set up, Fry finding the fossil of his old dog Seymour leads to one of the most gut-wrenching animated episodes we’ve ever seen. Fry learns that Seymour lived 12 years after Fry was cryogenically frozen. He just assumed his dog found someone else, so he didn’t clone Seymour. In the final scene, the truth is revealed. We watch a montage of Seymour waiting outside Fry’s old pizza joint. Every. Single. Day. Rain, shine, years passing by… Seymour waits. He waits until the day he dies.
Set to “I Will Wait for You,” the scene, quite frankly, destroyed everyone who watched it. Writer Eric Kaplan later revealed that Fry wasn’t being noble or noble, he just assumed Seymour forgot about him because that was easier than facing the truth. Critics and fans still consider it one of the saddest endings in television history, and even die-hard Futurama fans admit they skip this one on re-watches (including myself).
3. Rugrats – “Mother’s Day” (Season 4, Episode 2)
You sit down to watch, assuming you’ll get typical Rugrats antics, babies making strange gifts and running around wreaking havoc. What you get instead is one of the most gut-wrenching storylines Nickelodeon ever aired. Everyone’s making presents for their moms… except Chuckie. Creators originally wanted to write that she died way prior to this episode, but Nickelodeon wouldn’t let them for years.
When they finally allowed it in this episode, they went big. Chuckie’s dad sits him down, pulls out a box of memories, and explains that his mom, Melinda, died of a terminal illness shortly after he was born. Then he reads her poem. And if you’re not already tearing up, the flashbacks to baby Chuckie and his mom will finish you off. The episode ended up being so impactful, it got nominated for an Emmy and a Humanitas Award and won a CableACE Award. Critics praised it for treating grief in a way that kids could actually understand, without condescending to them. to this day, folks still cite how gentle, but powerful the writing was.
4. Boy Meets World – “We’ll Have a Good Time Then” (Season 6, Episode 13)
This one? Brutal in a way most teen shows didn’t even attempt to be. Shawn’s dad, Chet, reappears out of nowhere and tells Shawn he’s finally decided to be a father and step up. At first, Shawn’s rightfully dismissive because Chet’s entire schtick is bailing. Shawn lets his guard down and starts to believe it, and he thinks maybe this time, things will be different. During a family dinner, Chet gets called out about potentially taking a job opportunity in Vegas, leaving them again. Before the conversation can even go two exchanges, he collapses from a heart attack. At the hospital, there’s a forced reconciliation attempt, as he hands him a family picture of them…but it’s too little, too late. Chet dies, and Shawn spirals.
The most devastating part? The episode doesn’t turn Chet into some misunderstood hero. He means well, sure, but he doesn’t change… and that’s what makes this so hard to watch. The gut-punch moment? Shawn tells his friends that he’s destined to be just like his father, unreliable and broken and you 100 percent believe he believes it.
5. The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air – “Papa’s Got a Brand New Excuse” (Season 4, Episode 24)
This is a story all about how….this show broke down barriers in the 90s, with one of the most soul crushing moments. Will reunites with his father, Lou, who has been absent from his life since he was five years old. It’s awkward at first , you can see the defensiveness in Will from a mile away. The more time he and his father spend together, the more Will opens up. They make plans. They laugh. They start to connect. And then, in the eleventh hour, Lou flakes. Again.
Will tries to play it cool, as if he’s seen this coming all along, breaking down slowly starting with him saying “I didn’t need him then and I don’t need him now.” Yet as he says this, the wall in his heart starts to shatter. The line “How come he don’t want me, man?” is one of the most indelible in TV history, not for its theatricality, but for its truth. Will Smith improvised it, drawing from his own experiences, and it shows. The hug that ensues between Will and Uncle Phil is so affecting, because it is. Even on television at the time, it was the first time we saw a young Black man publicly express his heartbreak, unashamed, and at that time – it mattered a lot.