“American Horror Story” has gone horribly wrong

Abbie Griffin, Entertainment Editor

Some people will say they do not like “American Horror Story” because it is to gruesome or gory. It personally is one of my favorite shows. Or was anyways.

The first few seasons of “American Horror Story” included stars like Evan Peters, Sarah Paulson, Jessica Lange and Kathy Bates, but as the seasons went on, these big name actors started to dwindle. Storylines in season one through three also had plots that were intriguing. Season one took place in the ‘murder house’ and had all the ghosts of the past people who lived there in the house. Season two included an insane asylum in the 1950s where all patients are there by force and without cause.

Once season six rolls around, there is a TV cast filming a show in a house on land where the old Roanoke colony once was. Before they started filming, a couple lived there and reported that the ghosts of the Roanoke tribe are haunting them. They had been chased and were almost killed and others that had been on the land were killed.

Now, to me this just would not make sense to go live in a house that you knew was on haunted colonial land. The season was not well thought out and the plot did not make sense.

The older seasons also usually took place in modern day time and had a flash backs into the past that tied into the problems taking place now. In the newer seasons, the flashbacks do not really tie into the what is going on in the present.

Overall, “American Horror Story” is still one of my favorite shows because it is not afraid to push the limits and talk about topics no one wants to talk about. It is different than any other show out there in that you don’t need to watch one season to know what is going on in the next season. Even with all these pros, “American Horror Story” has lost that detail and the quality of organization in the new seasons.