I don't generally care for shows with canned laughter, or filmed in front of a studio audience for the similar effect. Only Seinfeld made it work because (filmed in front of a live audience) the laughter was in reasonable places, and you don't get those weird little chuckles when an actor drops a little line. Hell, Seinfeld is probably the only show where they had to edit out some of the laughter because it was lasting too long.
Plus, canned laughter tends to lend itself to stale old sitcoms; you know: setup then punchline, *laugh*, setup then punchline, *laugh*, repeat ad nauseum.
Plus, canned laughter tends to lend itself to stale old sitcoms; you know: setup then punchline, *laugh*, setup then punchline, *laugh*, repeat ad nauseum.