Television has always had a rare power to pull people together, strangers and families alike, toward the same screen at the same moment. But across decades of broadcasting, only a handful of episodes have managed something truly extraordinary: they stopped the country in its tracks.
The numbers behind the five entries on this list are staggering by any era’s standard. We’re talking about single nights when tens of millions of households collectively decided they would not miss what was about to happen. What follows is a look at those episodes, the circumstances that made them unmissable, and what their viewership records actually tell us about the eras they defined.
1. M*A*S*H – “Goodbye, Farewell and Amen” (1983): The Untouchable Record
The most watched series finale in television history remains the 1983 finale of the CBS war and medical dramedy M*A*S*H, titled “Goodbye, Farewell and Amen.” Viewed by roughly 106 million viewers and drawing a remarkable 77% of those watching televisions at the time, the finale held the record for the most watched telecast of all time for decades. That 77% share is the part of the statistic people sometimes gloss over. It means that out of every TV set switched on that night, more than three in four were tuned to one channel.
The highest-rated broadcast of all time is the final episode of M*A*S*H in 1983, with 60.2% of all households with television sets in the United States at that time watching the episode. The show had run for eleven seasons, nearly five times longer than the actual Korean War it depicted. Its finale became a genuine national event, one that bars reportedly closed early for, and one that strained city sewage systems during commercial breaks as millions of Americans took bathroom breaks at the same time. A record like that doesn’t just reflect popularity. It reflects a shared emotional moment that the country genuinely wasn’t ready to let go of.
2. Dallas – “Who Done It?” (1980): The Cliffhanger That Consumed a Summer
J.R. Ewing getting shot at the end of Season 3 of Dallas remains to this day the most famous cliffhanger in TV history. Episode 1 of Season 4 reflected just what a huge deal it was when 61% of TVs in the country tuned in to find out who did it, which translated to 38 million people at the time. The show dragged it out, and the ratings peaked for Episode 4 of that season when audiences finally learned who actually pulled the trigger.
An astounding 76% of all the TVs in America were tuned to CBS for the episode “Who Done It,” with 53 million viewers watching. The one big question on everyone’s mind had been: who shot JR? In November 1980, between 83 and 90 million fans watched the outcome of this gripping storyline. The variance in those estimates reflects different methodologies used at the time, but even the most conservative figure would make it one of the most-watched non-sporting television moments in history. The phrase “Who shot J.R.?” had become a genuine cultural obsession across an entire summer, making the reveal feel less like a TV episode and more like a national verdict.
3. Cheers – “One for the Road” (1993): A Bar Tab 11 Seasons in the Making
The second-most-watched series finale in U.S. television history is the 1993 finale of the NBC comedy Cheers, titled “One for the Road.” It was watched by between 80 and 93 million viewers depending on the estimate, while drawing 64% of TVs turned on at the time. The range in those numbers is worth noting: different research methodologies produced different tallies, but the scale remains enormous regardless of which figure you use.
On May 20, 1993, Cheers aired “One for the Road,” a triple-length, 90-minute series finale. While initial reviews were mixed, the finale has been seen in a more positive light in recent years. For 11 seasons, audiences had watched and laughed at the adventures of Sam Malone and the gang at Cheers, and when given one last opportunity to see them, 42.36 million households took advantage. Part of what made it so compelling was a question the show had been quietly building for years: would Sam and Diane, reunited one last time, finally get their moment? The answer kept viewers riveted to a fictional Boston bar long past last call.
4. Seinfeld – “The Finale” (1998): The Show About Nothing That Became Everything
Seinfeld’s controversial 1998 episode “The Finale” was watched by 76.3 million people, drawing 67% of all televisions turned on at the time. That made it the highest-rated non-sports primetime broadcast of its era by a wide margin. Aside from Super Bowls, the most recent broadcast to receive a rating above 40 was the Seinfeld finale in 1998, with a 41.3 rating. Those are numbers that have not been touched by a scripted series since.
The show came to an end on May 14, 1998 with both “The Chronicle,” a clip show, and the finale simply titled “The Finale.” While the episode would polarize fans, it proved a monumental ratings success, scoring 76.3 million American viewers. It was also the first time in TV history that a prime time show charged over $1 million for a 30-second commercial. The finale itself drew criticism almost immediately for its tonal choices, yet the controversy only deepened its cultural footprint. People who disliked it talked about it just as loudly as those who loved it, which is arguably its own kind of unmissability.
5. Roots – Part VIII (1977): The Night an Entire Nation Bore Witness
The Roots miniseries was watched by an estimated 130 to 140 million viewers in total, more than half of the U.S. 1977 population of 221 million, making it the largest viewership ever attracted by any type of television series in U.S. history as tallied by Nielsen Media Research. That’s not just an impressive number. It’s a figure that describes a society pausing collectively to watch something it had largely never confronted on screen before.
The final episode was watched by 100 million viewers, and an average of 80 million viewers watched each of the last seven episodes. Eighty-five percent of all television homes saw all or part of the miniseries. All episodes rank within the top-100-rated TV shows of all time. Roots aired on ABC for eight episodes throughout January 1977. The miniseries was based on Alex Haley’s novel, which details the life of Kunta Kinte and his centuries-spanning line of descendants. It was, in the truest sense, appointment television built on something far more serious than entertainment. It asked audiences to sit with history. The fact that so many did remains one of the most striking viewership stories television has ever produced.
