What actual play sins sapped your enjoyment of a show to the point of dropping it?
Prefacing this with asking people to self-reflect and not knee-jerk being weird about marginalized individuals. I was just thinking on this today while at work. There are plenty of reasons to try out the first episode of a show and bounce off of it. Audio quality is a huge one for me personally, but I want to hear about the slow decline and eventual drop-off. It doesn't need to be a huge production, we've all heard XYZ about our dear brothers and Critical Role. Did you burn out on Dimension 20? End up punching a clown due to Legend of Avantris? It doesn't need to be a messy break-up, but what was the point where you cut things off? Heck, it doesn't even need to be about D&D!
My example is Pod By Night, a VtM production with very solid production values that I burned through at a rapid pace (I tend to really dig in when wanting to pick up the quirks of a system.) Unfortunately, during the show's second season the creators opened up a tier of patron that granted membership to a background sub-game on their discord. Basically play-by-post RP that would dictate background elements of their current city (which vampire gangs ruled supreme, people making OCs for it). I did not participate in it, paid only a little attention to it, but there was a lot of lead-up in the show proper of the players meeting with these gangs at a house party they were setting up.
Unfortunately, the only way to actually see that happen was through browsing their discord's chat logs because that ENTIRE PARTY was off-screened where the people who paid for the right to do this (it was something like 15-20 bucks a month to participate in the RP) got to play with the cast's face-vamp for the night. It was subsequently recapped in the actual show. That was just sorta when I had to call it, the show already had a rough time with hard-dropping plot points whenever the players didn't....bite, and that irks me a lot as a listener to be sure, but I was forgiving as long as the parasocial stuff didn't slide into the actual show.
There was also the player who played the vampirized version of renowned serial killer Ed Kemper, based on the version seen in Mindhunter. Not a pastiche, but the actual guy who got abducted out of prison and replaced by a dupe, with vampirism used to quell his murder-urges, his murdurges if you will. It was still hella weird, however. Nothing against the player who did that, I have a feeling he probably just saw the show and really liked the actor's presence, but it's like if someone showed up with Zac Efron's version of Ted Bundy as a werewolf.
Anyhow, I just wanna prod your brains a bit, see if anyone else has some fun insights they wanna share!