#10 — Roseanne
Official Nielsen Rank: #10By the 1994–95 season, Roseanne was no longer the insurgent force crashing the polished sitcom party. It had already changed the party. Finishing at #10 does not make it less important. If anything, it proves how thoroughly it had already done its job. The show’s real influence by 1995 was not just in its rating. It was in the fact that network television no longer looked, sounded, or felt the way it did before the Conners made working-class frustration, domestic mess, and sarcasm fully mainstream.
What made Roseanne so significant in this season is that it remained present while the TV world around it got even more crowded. Newer comedy models were rising. Seinfeld was redefining urban irony. Friends was bringing a younger social-energy ensemble into the top tier. Home Improvement was holding the broad family lane at scale. Yet Roseanne still sat there in the official top 10, which tells you the audience had not stopped valuing its rougher honesty. That matters. It shows the show was not merely a transitional bridge. It retained mainstream power even after its tonal revolution had already been absorbed by the culture.
And the key to that power was always voice. The Conners did not feel like TV people who had been dressed down to look “real.” They felt like people whose frustration, love, humor, and financial pressure all occupied the same house at once. That gave the show a density many sitcoms never achieve. By 1995, that density had become part of the mainstream grammar of the medium.
What keeps Roseanne relevant in 1995 is that it no longer needs to be the loudest show in the room to be one of the most important. By this point, its legacy is partially structural. The reason so many mid-90s comedies are allowed to look rougher, sound harsher, and treat domestic life as something stressful rather than sitcom-perfect is because Roseanne proved the audience would come with them. Even at #10, it still reads like a foundational text for the decade’s television attitude.