Tag Archives: Upfronts

2010 Upfronts: CBS

Alright folks, the last of the networks has revealed their lineup for 2010-2011, and it happens to be CBS.

Monday

CBS starts their primetime schedule with their best comedy, How I Met Your Mother and (in this writer’s opinion), it all goes downhill from there. David Spade will continue to annoy America on Rules of Engagement at 8:30, and they’ll be followed up by the same jokes over and over again on Two and Half Men. At 9:30 is a new show from Chuck Lorre, Mike & Molly, which I kid you not is about two overweight people that fall in love at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting. Good job CBS, make fun of fat people. Hawaii Five-O rounds out the night, and the cast that includes Alex O’Loughlin, Scott Caan, Daniel Dae Kim, and Grace Park seems good enough for me to at least give it a shot. It, of course, has potential to be like other classic show reboots, Dragnet, Knight Rider, and The Bionic Woman, just to name a few.

Tuesday

The night stays the same with NCIS bleeding into NCIS: Los Angeles and The Good Wife rounds out the night.

Wednesday

Survivor moves to 8:00 (still?) where it will be followed by Criminal Minds at 9 and a new show, The Defenders at 10. The Defenders Jim Belushi and Jerry O’Connell as two lawyers, but don’t worry everyone, CBS president Nina Tassler assures us it’s not another stock legal drama, saying, “We like to say it’s more of a bromance than a conventional legal drama.” Breathe easy knowing Jim Belushi isn’t doing drama.

Thursday

In an evil move, CBS moves The Big Bang Theory to 8 on Thursdays where it will assuredly crush the far superior Community in the ratings (sorry TBBT fans, I think your show is based on one joke: nerds, right?!). It will be followed by $#*! My Dad Says, the first TV show based off of a Twitter feed. It will apparently be called “Bleep My Dad Says,” since CBS can’t say “shit” on the air. The positive: William Shatner is the star. CSI and The Mentalist round out the night in their normal slots.

Friday

The Forgotten Night kicks off with Medium (wow, still?) and will be followed by CSI: New York and Blue Bloods, a new show about a family of New York cops, that stars Tom Selleck, Donnie Wahlberg, Len Cariou and Will Estes. Who will you pick: Tom Selleck or Jimmy Smits on NBC?!

Sunday

Pretty similar to what it’s always been, with 60 Minutes, The Amazing Race, Undercover Boss, and the moved CSI: Miami in what’s sure to be a (takes off sunglasses) killer night of television.

Other New Shows

Not many, but a Forrest Whitaker spin-off of Criminal Minds.

Other Notes

I’m sorry for being so tongue and cheek through all of that, but CBS really frustrates me as a TV fan. They have fairly bland programming which is designed to grab ratings from an older demographic and get their shows into syndication. There’s no originality in their programming, and the shows that are original (HIMYM) get stuck behind the same old stuff they always put on. Feel free to disagree with me in the comments, but I just think that part of the reason for the rise in acclaim for cable shows is that those networks dare to do something more original than the stock shows CBS puts on the air. Think I’m wrong? Tell me why in the comments!

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2010 Upfronts: ABC

Upfront week continues with the Post-Lost American Broadcasting Company:

Monday

Mondays will remain exactly the same with a two-hour block of Dancing With the Stars at 8, followed by Castle at 10.

Tuesday

With Lost gone, Tuesdays see the biggest change in the ABC schedule. The night kicks off at 8 with a new show, No Ordinary Family featuring Michael Chiklis as the patriarch of a family that gets super powers. This has big potential to be really really awesome, due to the super hero premise (see: Season 1 of Heroes, The Middleman) and Chiklis, who will undoubtedly do what he does best: be a bad ass. The Dancing With the Stars Results Show will follow at 9, with another new show, Detroit 1-8-7, which has a documentary film crew following cop Michael Scott Imperioli while he does his thing. It’s an interesting take on the crime procedural, and it has potential to either be pretty cool or pretty bland.

Wednesday

The Middle moves to 8 to start off ABC’s comedy night, as network hopes its decent ratings will help the night do better than when Hank led it off. At 8:30 is a new show, Better Together, with Jennifer Finnigan and Josh Cooke as a couple that has been together but unmarried for years that reexamine things when her sister gets engaged to a guy she just started dating. It sounds like a better romantic comedy than a sitcom, and I’m using the word “better” loosely. Modern Family and Cougar Town will again fill up the 9:00 hour before a new legal drama, The Whole Truth at 10. The show has an interesting premise, where each episode focuses on both the defense and prosecution. As with Detroit 1-8-7, it will have to avoid being too generic with it’s creative premise if it wants to compete with NBC’s Law and Order: Los Angeles.

Thursday

Thursdays keep sad doctor shows Grey’s Anatomy and Private Practice at 9 and 10, but preceding them at 8 will be a new show, My Generation, another faux-documentary that covers a group of people when they graduate from high school in 2000 and then revisits them as adults in present time. Another interesting premise, but I think it (and Detroit 1-8-7) might be testing the limits the faux-doc introduced with The Office, but it’s worth a shot seeing how it works in a drama and with a plot that would seem contrived without the documentary element.

Friday

20/20 starts off Friday and is followed by a revival of the 2008 FOX show Secret Millionaire, which appears to be ABC’s attempt at jumping on the Undercover Boss bandwagon. At 10 will be Body of Proof, which has Dana Delaney as a surgeon who becomes a medical investigator after a car accident ends her career. As with NBC’s Outlaw, I have a feeling this show probably isn’t very good if its being premiered so late on a Friday night, the least watched night of original shows, but I could be wrong.

Sundays

Sundays stay exactly the same with America’s Funniest Home Videos (Still? Even in the age of YouTube?), Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, Desperate Housewives, and Brothers & Sisters.

Other Shows

V will return in the the spring, so expect a countdown clock in the bottom corner of all your favorite shows until then. Matthew Perry returns to TV in midseason with Mr. Sunshine, which has him as a guy that turns 40 and realizes that he’s 40. The good news: Allison Janney and Better Off Ted‘s Andrea Anders co-star. Another new comedy for midseason is Happy Endings, with Elisha Cuthbert and Zachary Knighton as a recently broken up couple that is trying to decide what to do about all their shared friends. The last midseason show ABC picked up is Shonda Rimes’ Off the Map, about an understaffed medical clinic in Africa. It’d sound a lot better if I didn’t know it’d be more about the doctors personal lives and who’s sleeping with who than it will be about the challenges of working in an understaffed medical clinic in Africa.

Other Notes

ABC is sticking pretty closely with the status quo, mostly padding their established blocks of programming, instead of revamping like NBC or simply filling time slots like FOX. No Ordinary Family sounds the most interesting, though Detroit 1-8-7 could also be pretty good. What’s encouraging is that ABC isn’t trying to introduce another Lost knockoff like FlashForward, but rather looking for new avenues to pursue. All in all, not a bad lineup.

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2010 Upfronts: Fox

Upfront week continues with our second of the day, Fox.

Monday

The network’s biggest drama, House, kicks off the week for the network at 8 on Monday nights. It will be followed by two new dramas, the first being Lonestar from “Party of Five” creators Chris Keyser and Amy Lippman, their first new show in 10 years. The show is more or less a prime time soap opera set in the Texas oil business. It will be replaced in the spring by the new show from The Sheild creator Shawn Ryan called Ride-Along, a Chicago based cop drama starring Jason Clarke (Brotherhood), Jennifer Beals and Delroy Lindo.

Tuesday

We’ll finally see just what Glee is made of, as it kicks off the comedy night without a lead-in from So You Think You Can Dance or American Idol. Instead, Fox is banking on it being a good lead in for a few new comedies. First is Raising Hope, the new comedy from My Name is Earl creator Greg Garcia, in which a slacker not only discovers he has a child he didn’t know about, but he has to raise it when the mother gets sent to jail. Next is the most anticipated new comedy of the season, Running Wilde, which features an Arrested Development reunion of Will Arnett, creator Mitch Hurowitz, and AD producer Jim Valley. The show is about an immature, rich, jerky guy (Arnett) who decides to woo the much more put together and nicer Kerri Russel, who was his childhood sweetheart. In the spring when American Idol returns, it will go on for 90 minutes starting at 8, followed by either Running Wilde or another new show Mixed Signals, a show about three guys in all sorts of wacky romantic adventures. Sounds original!

Wednesday

In the fall, the surprisingly renewed Lie to Me will kick things off at 8 and will be followed by Hell’s Kitchen at 9. In the Spring, the Idol results show and Raising Hope will serve as the lead in to Glee at 9.

Thursday

Nothing will change with the Thursday night lineup, with Bones and Fringe leading the charge.

Friday

The Human Target landed itself on virtual Death Row for Fox at 8 on Friday (see: Terminator, Dollhouse), and it will be followed up by the bland buddy cop summer series The Good Guys, which will continue through the fall. Kitchen Nightmares will take over 9pm slot in the spring.

Sunday

The Sunday Animation Bloc will return as normal in the Fall, with football coverage preceding The Simpsons, Family Guy, American Dad, and The Cleveland Show. In the Spring, a new show, Bob’s Burgers, will join them.

Other Notes

The Speilberg produced Terra Nova, which is about a family that time travels to prehistoric times to save humanity, did not get scheduled, which doesn’t bode well for the show. The rumor is that Fox wanted several 24 writers to take over the show, including Brannon Braga, who was widely unpopular when he was in charge of the Star Trek series.

Other than that, it’s hard to say what we’ll get from Fox. Their shows tend to either be successful and widely popular, or they die quickly or painfully. Running Wilde has the most promise given how awesome Will Arnett and Keri Russell are. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see…

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