Sheldon Cooper – The Big Bang Theory
Played by Jim Parsons
The brilliant scientist who doesn’t understand social cues. If only it was just that. Sheldon was also mean and totally insensitive, yet somehow his friends stuck by him. With his ego as high as his IQ, Sheldon was simply unrelatable.
With all of that, it was hard to look past the geeky quirkiness. Nothing about him was endearing.
Kate - Lost
Played by Evangeline Lilly
Jack was certainly up there on the list, but he's had his fair share of redeemable moments. When it comes to Kate, however, well, not so much, it's a real shame, seeing as her storyline had some decent potential. The longer series continued, the worse she got, and we're discounting that tedious love triangle she was involved in.
Often times Kate was just in the way of things and made the narrative unnecessarily complicated. There was also that dreaded stare that was too much to handle.
Susan Mayer-Delfino - Desperate Housewives
Played by Teri Hatcher
Susan spent much of the show's eight seasons ambling through Wysteria Lane with zero self-awareness. At least the other characters were fully comfortable with their moral depravity.
Lying naked the shrubbery while death lurked in the corners of suburbia pretty much sums up Susan for us.
Andrea - The Walking Dead
Played by Laurie Holden
Andrea's inconsistent personality and ever-changing motivations could really wear us down after a while. There's only so much you can take, technically three seasons of it.
Her annoying monologues had a habit of draining all the enjoyment of the show. Oh, and her taste in men was pretty awful.
Angelica Pickles - The Rugrats
Voiced by Cheryl Chase
Possibly the biggest brat in the entire network of Nickelodeon. Angela Pickles was a little mini terror. She constantly ratted everyone out; she was mean to her cousin and all of the other babies.
According to a 1998 article in The New Yorker, co-creator Arlene Klasky even admitted that Angelica was a little too mean and that it almost ruined the show.