The Most Annoying Characters In Otherwise Great Shows

The Most Annoying Characters In Otherwise Great Shows


October 7, 2025 | Jack Hawkins

The Most Annoying Characters In Otherwise Great Shows


These Are The Most Annoying Characters From Some Of Your Favorite TV Shows

Every amazing show has at least one character who gets under your skin. You don’t exactly hate them… but you don’t cheer when they show up, either. Let’s revisit some TV legends and their most irritating passengers.

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Skyler White – Breaking Bad

Breaking Bad gave us one of TV’s greatest antiheroes, but many fans couldn’t stand Skyler. Yes, she had reason to be mad at Walt, but her constant scolding made viewers dread her scenes more than any cartel shootout.

Skyler WhiteAMC, Breaking Bad (2008-2013)

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Ted Mosby – How I Met Your Mother

Ted was supposed to be lovable, but his smugness and endless whining wore fans down. Instead of rooting for him to find “the one,” audiences found themselves hoping he’d just stop talking for a minute.

Screenshot from How I Met Your Mother (2005–2014)CBS, How I Met Your Mother (2005–2014)

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Lori Grimes – The Walking Dead

Zombies were terrifying, but Lori was somehow worse. She gave Rick grief, made baffling decisions, and seemed permanently annoyed. Her parenting? Questionable at best. Many viewers cheered louder for walkers than for her survival.

Screenshot from The Walking Dead (2010–2022)AMC, The Walking Dead (2010–2022)

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Janice Litman – Friends

“OH. MY. GAWD.” Janice’s nasal laugh was funny the first dozen times, but when she kept popping back in, it started to grate. Even Chandler looked like he needed earplugs every time she entered the room.

Screenshot from Friends (1994–2004)NBC, Friends (1994–2004)

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Dawn Summers – Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Buffy suddenly had a sister, and fans weren’t thrilled. Dawn’s constant whining and habit of making bad situations worse made her hard to love—especially in a show packed with such legendary characters and villains.

Screenshot from Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997–2003)The WB, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997–2003)

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Kimmy Gibbler – Full House

Meant to be quirky, Kimmy ended up more irritating than endearing. With her loud outfits, odd habits, and constant intrusions, she was that one neighbor everyone pretends to like while secretly hoping they move.

Screenshot from the sitcom television series Full House (1987-1995)ABC, Full House (1987-1995)

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Nikki & Paulo – Lost

Lost fans collectively rolled their eyes when Nikki and Paulo appeared. Dropped into the middle of the story, they never fit. By the time they were buried alive, most viewers were relieved more than shocked.

Screenshot from Lost (2004–2010)ABC, Lost (2004–2010)

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Cousin Oliver – The Brady Bunch

If you’ve ever heard “Cousin Oliver Syndrome,” this is where it comes from. Added late in the run to “freshen things up,” Oliver was precocious, awkward, and instantly unlikable. He didn’t save the show—he doomed it.

Screenshot Of The Brady Bunch (1969-1974)ABC, The Brady Bunch (1969-1974)

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Screech – Saved by the Bell

At first, Screech was goofy comic relief. But as time went on, his awkward antics and shrill delivery stopped being cute. He went from harmless nerd to cringe-worthy distraction in a matter of seasons.

Screenshot from Saved by the Bell (1989–1993)NBC, Saved by the Bell (1989–1993)

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Andrea – The Walking Dead

Another Walking Dead offender. Andrea started as a strong character but morphed into one of the show’s most frustrating. Bad choices, worse loyalties, and constant stubbornness made fans groan every time she walked into frame.

Screenshot from The Walking Dead (2010-2022)AMC, The Walking Dead (2010-2022)

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Mandy Hampton – The West Wing

Remember Mandy? No? Exactly. Introduced as a main character, she clashed with everyone, then vanished without explanation after one season. Nobody really missed her, proving not every West Wing arc was golden.

Screenshot from The West Wing (1999–2006)NBC, The West Wing (1999–2006)

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Kim Bauer – 24

Jack Bauer saved the country repeatedly, but his daughter Kim? Not so helpful. Between dating terrorists and that infamous cougar incident, her storylines were so bad that fans begged the writers to just focus on Jack.

Screenshot from 24 (2001–2010)Fox, 24 (2001–2010)

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Steve Urkel – Family Matters

“Did I do that?” Yes, Steve, and we wish you hadn’t. At first, he was cute. Then, his over-the-top nerdiness took over the entire show, turning a sweet family sitcom into the Urkel Show.

Screenshot from Warner Bros., Family Matters (1989–1997)Warner Bros., Family Matters (1989–1997)

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Piper Chapman – Orange Is the New Black

OITNB had a rich cast of incredible women, yet Piper was the focus. Entitled, selfish, and endlessly making bad choices, she was the least interesting person in prison, which says a lot given the company.

Screenshot from the television series Orange Is the New Black (2013-2019)Netflix, Orange Is the New Black (2013-2019)

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Hannah Horvath – Girls

Hannah was messy, selfish, and often unbearable… which, to be fair, was kind of the point. But her constant self-sabotage was exhausting, and viewers sometimes wished she’d let someone else have the spotlight.

Screenshot from Girls (2012–2017)HBO, Girls (2012–2017)

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Joffrey Baratheon – Game of Thrones

Annoying doesn’t even cover it. Joffrey was cruel, smug, and downright evil. Fans despised him so much that his eventual death wasn’t just satisfying—it felt like a collective victory for everyone watching.

Screenshot from the American fantasy drama television series Game of Thrones (2011-2019).HBO, Game of Thrones (2011-2019)

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Dana Brody – Homeland

Homeland thrived on international intrigue and spy drama, then cut away to Dana’s teenage angst. Her storylines felt like an entirely different (and far less interesting) show, leaving fans groaning every time the plot shifted.

Screenshot from Homeland (2011–2020)Showtime Networks, Homeland (2011–2020)

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Rachel Berry – Glee

Rachel had the voice of an angel but the ego of a diva on steroids. Her constant need to be center stage—even at the expense of friends—made her unbearable, no matter how well she sang.

Screenshot of the TV Show GleeFox, Glee (2009–2015)

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Ted Buckland – Scrubs

Scrubs was packed with colorful, beloved characters. Then there was Ted, the perpetually miserable lawyer. His whining and awkward presence weren’t funny enough to justify the screen time, leaving many viewers eager to skip his scenes.

Screenshot from Scrubs (2001–2010)ABC Studios, Scrubs (2001–2010)

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Emily Gilmore – Gilmore Girls

Emily was controlling, judgmental, and the queen of passive-aggressive comments. While she added drama, her constant meddling made her a love-to-hate figure—except some fans dropped the “love” part entirely. Lorelai deserved a break.

Screenshot from Gilmore Girls (2000–2007)Warner Bros. Television, Gilmore Girls (2000–2007)

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Kim Kelly – Freaks and Geeks

Kim was abrasive, mean, and rarely gave anyone a chance. While the show tried to show her hidden layers, her constant hostility made her tough to root for in an otherwise heartfelt teen dramedy.

Screenshot from Freaks and Geeks (1999–2000)NBC, Freaks and Geeks (1999–2000)

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Wesley Crusher – Star Trek: The Next Generation

Supposed to be a brilliant prodigy, Wesley instead came off as smug and unbelievable. Fans bristled every time he saved the day, and despite Wil Wheaton’s later redemption arc, Wesley became a poster child for TV irritation.

Screenshot from Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994)Paramount Domestic Television, Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994)

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Paige Jennings – The Americans

Paige was essential to the story, but her constant whining and rebellion made her grating. In a tense Cold War spy drama, her teen angst felt like a frustrating pause button on the action.

Screenshot from The Americans (2013–2018)FX Networks, The Americans (2013–2018)

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Serena van der Woodsen – Gossip Girl

Blair was sharp and deliciously evil, but Serena? Reckless, indecisive, and endlessly messy. For someone meant to be Gossip Girl’s golden girl, she never really grew up—and fans noticed, big time.

Screenshot of the TV Show Gossip GirlWarner Bros. Television, Gossip Girl (2007–2012)

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Karen Filippelli – The Office

Karen wasn’t awful, but she stood in the way of Jim and Pam—the couple fans were all in on. Fair or not, that made her public enemy number one in the Dunder Mifflin fandom.

Screenshot from The Office (2005–2013)The CW, The Office (2005–2013)

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Connor Roy – Succession

While his siblings schemed for power, Connor floated in la-la land. His presidential run was laughable, his detachment cringey, and his vanity projects ridiculous. In a family of sharks, Connor was a clueless guppy.

Screenshot from Succession (2018–2023)HBO, Succession (2018–2023)

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Randy Pearson – That ‘70s Show

When Eric left, the writers brought in Randy. Problem was, fans never cared. His jokes fell flat, his presence felt forced, and instead of saving the show, he just reminded viewers what they’d lost.

Screenshot from That ’70s Show (1998–2006)Fox, That ’70s Show (1998–2006)

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Joey Tribbiani – Joey

Friends was iconic. Joey? Not so much. Stripped of his ensemble, his lovable-dope shtick wore thin fast. What was charming in small doses turned irritating when stretched across an entire spin-off.

Screenshot from Friends (1994–2004)NBC, Friends (1994–2004)

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Who Is Your Most Annoying Character From A Great Show?

Even the best shows have a weak link. Sometimes they’re whiny, sometimes they’re smug, sometimes they just don’t fit. But annoying or not, these characters spark debates—and maybe that’s why we still remember them.

Screenshot from Succession (2018–2023)HBO, Succession (2018–2023)

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Sources: 1, 2, 3


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