Changes made by Hollingworth to rectify the soap's early problems led to a ratings increase, but it was claimed that this was not enough to justify its continued production, and incoming controller of BBC1,
Alan Yentob, cancelled the programme, which had been commissioned by his predecessor
Jonathan Powell. In the UK,
Eldorado is remembered as an embarrassing failure for the BBC, with
The Guardian billing it "the most famous soap flop of all time".
Eldorado is sometimes used as a byword for any unsuccessful, poorly received or over-hyped television programme. It is widely thought that the failure of the soap is the reason why the BBC has not attempted to launch a brand new fully-networked, prime-time soap opera from scratch since then, with the corporation opting instead to move established series
Casualty and
Holby City to year-round production. The series ended with one of its central characters, Marcus Tandy (
Jesse Birdsall), escaping an attempt on his life with his car being blown up, and sailing off into the distance on a boat with his girlfriend Pilar Moreno (Sandra Sandri). Some viewers noticed that the car that was blown up was not, in fact, the
Renault Alpine A610 driven by Marcus, but a thinly disguised much older model, the
Triumph TR7. The final line of dialogue, delivered by Tandy, was: "You can't trust anyone these days, can you?" ==Later years==