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Moto Pete
05-15-2006, 12:45 PM
Monday, May 15, 2006


NBC PRIMETIME SCHEDULE FOR FALL 2006-07
*New programs in CAPS (with the exception of "ER")

MONDAY
8-9 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
9-10 p.m. "HEROES"
10-11 p.m. "Medium"
TUESDAY
8-9 p.m. "FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS"
9-10 p.m. "KIDNAPPED"
10-11 p.m. "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit"
WEDNESDAY
8-9 p.m. "The Biggest Loser"
9-9:30 p.m. "20 GOOD YEARS"
9:30-10 p.m. "30 ROCK"
10-11 p.m. "Law & Order"
THURSDAY
8-8:30 p.m. "My Name Is Earl" (new time)
8:30-9 p.m. "The Office" (new time)
9-10 p.m. "STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET STRIP"
10-11 p.m. "ER"/("THE BLACK DONNELLYS" in January 2007)
FRIDAY
8-9 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
9-10 p.m. "Las Vegas"
10-11 p.m. "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" (new day and time)
SATURDAY
8-9 p.m. "Dateline Saturday"
9-11 p.m. Drama Series Encores
SUNDAY
7-8 p.m. "FOOTBALL NIGHT IN AMERICA"
8-11 p.m. "SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL"


NIGHT-BY-NIGHT PRIMETIME STRATEGY

MONDAY
Monday should remain strong for NBC, especially with the huge new promotional platform of "Sunday Night Football." Opening at 8 p.m., "Deal or No Deal" wins the time period with broad appeal and should drive viewers into the night's new tent-pole series "Heroes," a stylish drama with strong breakout potential. The new show should prove to be highly compatible with the suspenseful series "Medium" at 10:00 p.m.

TUESDAY
NBC kicks off at 8 p.m. with "Friday Night Lights," a new drama that transcends sports and should be ideal for families to view together. NBC follows this with another new drama, "Kidnapped," a tense serial thriller that should team well with the 10:00 p.m. incumbent "Law & Order: SVU," which continues to dominate despite soft lead-ins this past season. Film star Connie Nielsen ("Gladiator") joins the "SVU" cast for six episodes early in the season while series star Mariska Hargitay is on maternity leave.

WEDNESDAY
"The Biggest Loser" proved to be a refreshing success story last year at 8 p.m., and it ended its second cycle with record numbers, boosting NBC to its biggest non-Olympics Tuesday in five years. It will be used to combine with the evergreen "Law & Order" at 10:00 p.m. to hammock two new comedies. At 9 p.m., Emmy winner John Lithgow and Jeffrey Tambor are set to win over audiences with their masterful chemistry in "20 Good Years." That leads into the 9:30 p.m. time period premiere of "30 Rock," starring Emmy winner Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan. Then Dick Wolf's "Law & Order" will return re-invigorated by exciting cast changes aimed at keeping the show fresh and competitive.

THURSDAY
NBC's traditional flagship night starts with two of television's most popular new series in "My Name Is Earl" and "The Office." Expect renewed vitality on the night with the arrival of the much-anticipated "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" in the vital 9 p.m. hour followed by "ER" -- the series that has defined Thursdays (10-11 p.m. ET) for a dozen years. However, the medical drama will have a decided edge this year with all original telecasts leading to a cliffhanger in December. Additionally, John Stamos joins the regular cast as he reprises his role as Tony Gates, a charming Gulf War vet working through medical school as a paramedic. In January, "The Black Donnellys," from Oscar winners Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco (both for "Crash"), will premiere in the time period. "ER" will complete its season in the time slot following the run of "The Black Donnellys."

FRIDAY
NBC will stick with stability with time-period champ "Deal or No Deal" at 8 p.m. followed by "Las Vegas" and its loyal audience at 9:00 p.m. Closing out Fridays at 10:00 p.m. will be "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," which re-locates from Sundays due to the NFL, after having performed solidly against intense competition on the night.

SATURDAY
"Dateline Saturday" will continue at 8 p.m. and encore telecasts of NBC dramas will run at 9 p.m. and 10 p.m.

SUNDAY
In addition to delivering a powerful night of television, "Sunday Night Football" will greatly increase NBC's promotional platforms leading into each Fall week. This four-hour package also allows NBC to reach an elusive young male demographic. When series programming returns in January, "America's Got Talent" with host Regis Philbin will take over the 8 p.m. hour. "The Apprentice" follows at 9:00 p.m., creating a strong unscripted block. At 10:00 p.m., "Raines" is a quirky police drama that stars the appealing Jeff Goldblum.

2006-07 NEW SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
New Dramas
"STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET STRIP" -- Emmy Award-winning executive producer-writer Aaron Sorkin ("The West Wing") and Emmy Award-winning executive producer-director Thomas Schlamme ("The West Wing") return to television with this crackling take on the drama behind the humor of producing a popular, late-night comedy sketch show, "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip." Sorkin lays bare the backstage politics, romances and delicate balance between creative talent, on-air personalities and network executives in an instant text-messaging world. Prominent are Jordan McDeere (Amanda Peet, "Syriana"), a savvy new network entertainment chief who inherits a massive public relations disaster on the series -- even before she starts her first day -- and Matt Albie (Matthew Perry, "Friends") and Danny Tripp (Bradley Whitford, "The West Wing"), a brilliant creative team that she wants to resurrect the program. Also playing crucial roles are the sketch comedy series stars Harriet Hayes (Sarah Paulson, "Down with Love"), Simon Stiles (D.L. Hughley, "The Hughleys") and Tom Jeter (Nathan Corddry, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart"), their normally cool-headed director, Cal Shanley (Timothy Busfield, "thirtysomething") as well as supreme network honcho Jack Rudolph (Steven Weber, "Wings"). Evan Handler ("Sex and the City") and Carlos Jacott ("Being John Malkovich") also star. The series is a production of Warner Bros. Television.

"FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS" - Expanding on the themes from the hit feature film "Friday Night Lights," this series centers on the small rural town of Dillon, Texas, where the vaunted 2006 state football championship rings are held in the highest regard. The town's promising high school team, its star quarterback, and newly appointed head coach Eric Taylor (Kyle Chandler, "Grey's Anatomy," "King Kong") feel the mounting pressure of the town's pride and honor riding on their shoulders as a new season kicks off. The fresh cast also includes: Scott Porter ("All My Children") as team captain and first-string quarterback Jason Street; Gaius Charles ("The Book of Daniel") as feared running back Brian "Smash" Williams; Taylor Kitsch ("Kyle XY") as running back Tim Riggins; Connie Britton ("The Brothers McMullen," "24") as Taylor's long-suffering wife, Tami; Zach Gilford ("The Last Winter") as third-string quarterback Matt Saracen, and Minka Kelly ("What I Like About You") as Lyla Garrity, Panther cheerleader and Street's girlfriend. Also starring are Aimee Teegarden ("Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide") as Julie Taylor and Adrienne Palicki ("South Beach") as Tyra Collette. The pilot is executive-produced by Brian Grazer ("Fun with Dick and Jane," "Cinderella Man," "A Beautiful Mind"), David Nevins ("Arrested Development"), Peter Berg (the film "Friday Night Lights," "The Run Down") -- who also wrote and the directed the pilot -- and Jason Katims ("Roswell"). "Friday Night Lights" is produced in association with Imagine Entertainment, NBC Universal Television Studio, and Film 44.

"HEROES" -- The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives of ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. As a total eclipse casts it shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics professor (Sendhil Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving") in India whose father's disappearance leads him to uncover a secret theory -- there are people with super powers living among us. A young dreamer (Milo Ventimiglia, "The Bedford Diaries") tries to convince his politician brother (Adrian Pasdar, "Judging Amy") that he can fly. A high school cheerleader (Hayden Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is totally indestructible. A Las Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"), struggling to make ends meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey, "My Wife & Kids"), uncovers that her mirror image has a secret. A prison inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds himself waking up outside of his cell. A gifted artist (Santiago Cabrera, "Empire"), whose drug addiction is destroying his life and the relationship with his girlfriend (Tawny Cypress, "Third Watch"), can paint the future. A down-on-his-luck beat cop (Greg Grunberg, "Alias") can hear people's thoughts, including the secrets of a captured terrorist. In Japan, a young man (Masi Oka, "Scrubs") develops a way to stop time through sheer will power. Their ultimate destiny is nothing less than saving the world. "Heroes" is executive produced by creator/writer Tim Kring ("Crossing Jordan), Dennis Hammer ("Crossing Jordan") and David Semel ("House"), who also directed the pilot. The drama is from NBC Universal Television Studio.

"KIDNAPPED" -- "Kidnapped" is a high-stakes, serialized thriller in which the teenaged son of a wealthy Upper East Side family is kidnapped and everyone is a suspect. The series focuses on the elaborate, triangulated game between the kidnappers, law enforcement, FBI, and the private negotiating team of the "perhaps" less-than-picture-perfect family. The ensemble cast includes Jeremy Sisto ("Six Feet Under"), Delroy Lindo ("The Core"), Emmy winner Dana Delany ("China Beach"), Timothy Hutton ("Kinsey"), Mykelti Williamson ("Boomtown"), Linus Roache ("Batman Begins"), Carmen Ejogo ("Lackawanna Blues"), Will Denton ("Palindromes") and Boris McGiver ("The Pink Panther"). "Kidnapped" is produced by Sony Pictures Television and 25C Productions. David Greenwalt ("Angel"), Jason Smilovic ("Karen Sisco"), Michael Dinner ("Invasion"), Sarah Timberman and Carl Beverly are executive producers; Dinner is the director and Smilovic is the writer.
Additional Dramas

"THE BLACK DONNELLYS" -- Academy Award winners Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco ("Crash") are the creators of "The Black Donnellys," a gritty new crime drama series loosely based on Moresco's background. The series follows the exploits of four young, working-class Irish brothers and their involvement in organized crime in New York City. Despite their rough surroundings, the Donnelly brothers basically remain "good kids" -- who will do anything to protect each other against all odds. The ensemble cast includes Jonathan Tucker ("Texas Chainsaw Massacre"), Billy Lush ("Huff"), Thomas Guiry ("Mystic River"), Michael Stahl-David ("Uncle Nino"), Keith Nobbs ("25th Hour"), Olivia Wilde ("The O.C.") and Kirk Acevedo ("Oz"). Haggis, who directed the pilot, and Moresco are the creators, executive producers and co-writers. The series is from NBC Universal Television Studio in association with Blackfriars Bridge Productions.

"RAINES" -- Emmy Award-winning writer-producer Graham Yost ("Band of Brothers," "Boomtown"), acclaimed director-writer-producer Frank Darabont ("The Shawshank Redemption," "Green Mile") and star Jeff Goldblum ("The Lost World: Jurassic Park") combine creative forces in this inventive police drama, which blends traditional noir storytelling with humor and intrigue. Eccentric LAPD detective Michael Raines' unique ability to have detailed conversations with deceased crime victims allows him to re-trace their lives leading up to their murder and helps him to solve their cases. Unfortunately, it also causes increasing friction with his boss, Captain Daniel Lewis (Matt Craven, "From the Earth to the Moon"), fellow officers Remy Boyer (Dov Davidoff, "Third Watch") and Sally Lance (Linda Park, "Star Trek: Enterprise"), as well as civilian employee Carolyn (Nicole Sullivan, "MADtv"). Aided by Charlie (Luis Guzman, "Boogie Nights"), his ex-LAPD partner and conscience, Raines struggles to accept his peculiar gift -- or burden -- as it often forces him at times to confront his own past and internal demons. "Raines" is from NBC Universal Television Studio.

New Comedies
"20 GOOD YEARS" -- This high-energy comedy follows two New Yorkers who have finally realized that life doesn't last forever. Mismatched buddies John Mason (Emmy Award winner John Lithgow, "3rd Rock from the Sun"), an impulsive, thrice-divorced surgeon who has been forced into retirement -- and Jeffrey Pyne (Jeffrey Tambor, "Arrested Development"), a widower judge who agonizes over every situation -- are polar opposites in every way. The one thing the duo can agree on is that they only have about 20 good years left and both men vow to live each day as if it were their last -- with no regrets. "20 Good Years" also stars Heather Burns ("Bewitched") as John's pregnant daughter Stella, and Jake Sandvig ("The Story of Us") as Hugh, Jeffrey's un-motivated son. The executive producers are Tom Werner ("Roseanne"), Eric Gold (the upcoming "Outsourced") Jimmy Miller ("Kicking & Screaming") and Marsh McCall ("Modern Men"). Marsh McCall and Michael Leeson ("The Cosby Show") are the writers; Terry Hughes ("Friends") directed the pilot. "20 Good Years" is produced by Warner Bros.Television.
"30 ROCK" -- Emmy Award winner Tina Fey (NBC's "Saturday Night Live," "Mean Girls") writes, executive-produces and stars in this workplace comedy that takes viewers behind the scenes of a frenetic television variety show. Single Liz Lemon (Fey) is living every comedy writer's dream. She's head writer on a demanding, live TV program in New York City whose life is jolted when a brash new network president (Alec Baldwin, "The Aviator," "The Cooler") interferes with her show and bullies Liz into convincing Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan, "Saturday Night Live," "The Longest Yard"), a wild and unpredictable movie star, to join the cast. Now Liz must manage the unmanageable so that the show -- and her dream -- can go on. Also starring are Rachel Dratch ("Saturday Night Live") as Jenne DeCarlo, Scott Adsit ("Kicking and Screaming") as Pete Hornberger and Jack MacBrayer ("Arrested Development") as Kenneth. "30 Rock" is executive-produced by Lorne Michaels, Fey, JoAnn Alfano, Marci Klein and David Miner, and is produced by Broadway Video Television and NBC Universal Television Studio.
Additional Comedies

"ANDY BARKER, P.I." -- Andy Richter ("Late Night with Conan O'Brien") re-teams with co-writer and executive producer Conan O'Brien in this comedy as he portrays Andy Barker, an earnest, hard-working CPA who has succeeded at everything -- that is until his new accounting business fails to take off. But when he's mistaken for Lew Staziak (Harve Presnell, "Fargo") -- the retired private detective who used to occupy his office -- Andy embraces the twist of fate and takes the case. Andy's incessantly supportive wife Jen (Amy Farrington, "The New Adventures of Old Christine") isn't sold on this risky new venture, that is, until she notices a sudden boost in Andy's self-confidence. Andy's neighboring merchants -- Simon (Tony Hale, "Arrested Development"), Wally (Marshall Manesh, "Will & Grace") and Jessica (Ion Overman, "The L Word") join him in the dicey investigation. Whether chiding thugs for "renting instead of buying" or being pursued by Sri Lankan gangsters, Andy will prove to be a consummate problem-solver. This comedy series is written by "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" host O'Brien and former head writer Jonathan Groff ("Ed"), who executive-produce the series with "Late Night" executive producer Jeff Ross and David Kissinger. "Andy Barker, P.I." is from NBC Universal Television Studio and Conaco. The pilot was directed by Jason Ensler ("The West Wing").

"THE SINGLES TABLE" - In this comedy, a group of witty and single strangers -- Ivan (John Cho, "Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle"), Eli (Conor Dubin, "Close to Home"), Adam (Jarrad Paul, "The Shaggy Dog") and Stephanie (Rhea Seehorn, "Modern Men") - meet at a wedding and suddenly realize they have one thing in common, they are each a party of one stuck at a remote singles table. Because of their solo status and tenuous relationships with the bride and groom, they are all destined for Table 18, a far corner of the wedding reception. But through the course of the party, each emotionally vulnerable person questions his or her life's issues and vows to make it better. For richer or poorer, these five kindred spirits will grow to become good friends -- and, in some cases, they may become more than that. Written by Bill Martin ("Grounded for Life," "3rd Rock from the Sun") and Mike Schiff ("Grounded for Life," "3rd Rock from the Sun"), "The Singles Table" is from 20th Century Fox Television. Adam Bernstein ("The Bedford Diaries," "Scrubs") is the director.

Primetime Sports Programming
SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL -- The National Football League returns to NBC in this spectacular primetime showcase as Al Michaels will call "NBC Sunday Night Football" games with John Madden, the most honored analyst in television history with 15 Emmy Awards. Coverage also includes sideline and feature reporter Andrea Kremer. NBC's 2006 NFL schedule kicks off on Thursday, September 7, with the Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers hosting the Miami Dolphins. NBC's inaugural Sunday "Football Night in America" game on September 10 features the first meeting of sibling quarterbacks as Eli Manning's New York Giants host Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts. This season, the league will also implement for the first time in history primetime "flexible scheduling" for NBC's primetime Sunday games in Weeks 10-15 and in Week 17. "FOOTBALL NIGHT IN AMERICA" -- Bob Costas, an 18-time Emmy Award winner, hosts NBC's studio show alongside co-host Cris Collinsworth, a six-time Emmy winner. They are joined by analyst Jerome Bettis, one of the most popular players in recent NFL history, and Sterling Sharpe, considered one of the most opinionated analysts with the NFL Network and ESPN. Peter King, who covers the NFL for Sports Illustrated and is considered one of the country's foremost NFL reporters, serves as a reporter for the studio show.

Moto Pete
05-15-2006, 12:54 PM
i'M REALLY LOOKING FOWARD TO "20 GOOD YEARS" AND "30ROCK", TOO BAD THERE UP AGIANST "LOST"

Lord Dalek
05-15-2006, 02:07 PM
Dalek's Run down...

Surface - CANCELLED!!!! :D
Law & Order - ON THE VERGE OF BEING CANCELLED!!! :anime: ("young trendy cast" + same old boring Law & Order = CSI: NY and Invasion are killing it)
Heroes - Too much of a Smallville Ripoff to be noticed.
20 Good Years + 30 Rock - Death Slot (LOST rules Wednesday with Criminal Minds usually winning when its in repeats.)
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip - Good News: Aaron Sorkin's off the magic dust. Bad news: West Wing is already cancelled. Better news: It's Sports Night redux. Worse news: It's running against CSI. Worser news: NBC will ship this to Sunday Night after football ends to save failing Wednesday Night Sitcoms. There it will die against Housewives.

Poor, poor NBC.

Temple Fugate
05-15-2006, 02:09 PM
Three new shows wth multiples of 10 in the title...not relevant by any means, but interesting.

Studio 60...dang it, I didn't want to pick up any new shows for the 06-07 season. I've got too much to do without having to watch these awesome shows. I finally get to drop West Wing, and now Sorkin comes back with a vengeance. :mad: I'm sure it will be a good show, probably taking more from Sports Night than West Wing. They certainly have a great cast. Plus, I've been starving for Sorkin's beautiful writing since he left Wing in 2003. Can't wait to check this out.

Burgundy Ranger
05-15-2006, 02:29 PM
I'm glad to see the scaling back of DOND to two nights. They don't want to risk over-exposure, which was ABC's mistake with "Millionaire." I just hope it doesn't become the default move when some of these new shows fail (some always do) and they need something to fill the time slot.

Earl/Office is NBC's best ammo against Survivor since Friends.

Usually, getting moved to Friday is a death knell for a show. But I don't get that sense with NBC's trio of Deal, Vegas and now CI.

The Penguin
05-15-2006, 07:21 PM
I added some formatting in the first post to make it easier to read.

I'll just take a look at this by the day. I don't think I'll pick any 'new to me' NBC shows that are already airing. Getting Sunday Night Football should help out NBC overall. Overall viewership should go up as a result. CBS getting the AFC was a big part of their comeback.

Monday
Heroes would be neat, but something has gotta be pretty awesome to get me to try and jam it in on my already packed Monday nights.

Tuesday
Friday Night Lights might be a good opportunity to see a good drama about football, I'll be waiting to see if the previews interest me.

Kidnapped could be a cool series, but I was burned twice this year (Reunion and Heist) by dramas playing out one event. I'm sure others feel the same.

Wednesday
John Lithgow and Jeffrey Tambor = money, so 20 Good Years could be worth checking out. Depending on what else shows up at that time (gotta watch Criminal Minds), I might tape it.

Experts predicted that NBC wouldn't pick up 30 Rock because it's a sitcom version of "Studio 60" but it looks like they did. I think I'll pass unless the promos make it look great.

Thursday
I'm displeased to see Earl move to 8/7 CT. I'm sure Survivor and Smallville will be holding in their spots and that's not gonna be good for me.

I've been looking forward to Studio 60 since I first heard about it. No timeslot could have kept me away from Sorkin-Whitford-Perry. I hope it's strong enough to manage against its prime time opponents.

Mid-Season
I could see myself checking out Raines, The Singles Table and Andy Barker, P.I. depending on promos and air time. I think I'll pass on the Donnellys for sure though.

Ended/Cancelled
Missing from the schedule for me is The West Wing which of course was expected. I already knew Heist was cancelled a few weeks back. E-Ring appears it may never return from hiatus and Teachers must be gone too.

Man, I watch too much TV. :o



Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip - Good News: Aaron Sorkin's off the magic dust. Bad news: West Wing is already cancelled. Better news: It's Sports Night redux. Worse news: It's running against CSI. Worser news: NBC will ship this to Sunday Night after football ends to save failing Wednesday Night Sitcoms. There it will die against Housewives.According to the NBC release (http://www.thefutoncritic.com/pr.aspx?id=20060515nbc01) Studio 60 is staying right where it is. "The Apprentice" will take on the women of Wisteria Lane sandwiched between "America's Got Talent" and Jeff Goldblum's "Raines".

TheMecca
05-15-2006, 07:29 PM
According to the NBC release (http://www.thefutoncritic.com/pr.aspx?id=20060515nbc01) Studio 60 is staying right where it is. "The Apprentice" will take on the women of Wisteria Lane sandwiched between "America's Got Talent" and Jeff Goldblum's "Raines".
So it's official then: NBC wants The Apprentice to die.

All in all a good schedule, my Thursday nights are much better with this new Sorkin show (hopefully I can get caught up in this one; West Wing didn't strike me as something I like). Tina Fey's show, on the other hand... I'll give it a shot.

Samhaine
05-15-2006, 09:11 PM
So, does this mean Scrubs is gone from NBC's schedule, or will they be doing what they did this year? Either way, there's going to be a Season 6 (ABC will pick it up if NBC doesn't), so I'll be happy. I'm just curious as to what station I'll have to watch.

Lord Dalek
05-15-2006, 10:41 PM
So it's official then: NBC wants The Apprentice to die.
Suddenly I recall ABC's treatment of WWTBAM.

William C. Maune
05-15-2006, 10:48 PM
So, does this mean Scrubs is gone from NBC's schedule, or will they be doing what they did this year? Either way, there's going to be a Season 6 (ABC will pick it up if NBC doesn't), so I'll be happy. I'm just curious as to what station I'll have to watch.

Scrubs has again been picked up for midseason.

I generally don't seem to have time to watch network television, but I'll have to make an exception for Studio 60. Sports Night is the greatest show ever made and hopefully this will be the second coming thereof.

RedNinja84
05-15-2006, 10:49 PM
So, does this mean Scrubs is gone from NBC's schedule, or will they be doing what they did this year? Either way, there's going to be a Season 6 (ABC will pick it up if NBC doesn't), so I'll be happy. I'm just curious as to what station I'll have to watch.

Scubs is coming back as a midseason replacement. It's just sad to see how NBC has bottomed out on comedies. The network had some of the greatest sitcoms ever: Cosby Show, Cheers, Seinfeld, Friends, Frasier and there has nothing to replace them.

MegaJ
05-15-2006, 10:52 PM
ER needs to be shot in the head. NO MORE. NO MORE.

Wing Zero
05-15-2006, 10:55 PM
Scrubs, My Name is Earl and The Office seem to be the replacements. Personally, I think Scrubs is one of the best comedy shows out there right now, it's sad that no one watches/knows about it. It's like a 5 year old small golden nugget in the NBC lineup.

Lord Dalek
05-15-2006, 11:03 PM
L&O needs to be shot in the head. NO MORE. NO MORE.FIXED.

Temple Fugate
05-15-2006, 11:15 PM
ER and L&O need to be shot in the head. NO MORE. NO MORE.SUPERFIXED.

William C. Maune
05-15-2006, 11:20 PM
At least we don't have ER:NY, ER:LA, ER: Bird Flu, and ER: When Doctor's Golf

Lord Dalek
05-15-2006, 11:29 PM
At least we don't have ER:NY, ER:LA, ER: Bird Flu, and ER: When Doctor's GolfOh we had all of those, they've just already left us.

EinBebop
05-16-2006, 12:12 AM
I'm glad to see the scaling back of DOND to two nights. They don't want to risk over-exposure, which was ABC's mistake with "Millionaire." I just hope it doesn't become the default move when some of these new shows fail (some always do) and they need something to fill the time slot.If they don't burn people out over summer...

HomeMoviesFan
05-16-2006, 01:49 AM
^^There are no new episodes in the summer. Howie Mandel is out touring doing stand-up (saw him last Saturday here in Vegas...he's hilarious), and that only means hiatus of episodes. My guess is that after a few weeks there will be repeats and DOND will be completely off the air by mid-July until in September..."The hit game show Deal or No Deal is BACK!!!" commercials will hit airwaves...

sag_2002
05-16-2006, 01:10 PM
Being a superhero fan, I'm kinda looking forward to "Heroes". And, of course, DOND. Let's hope they cut down on the cheesiness that's been plaguing the show the last few weeks.

WadeWilson
05-16-2006, 02:12 PM
I felt a tear run down my face when I didn't see scrubs, till I remember mid season replacement.:anime:

and why would they move earl and office to 8-9 slot? up against survivor those shows are gone, and im sure scrubs will be gone this year too...leaving me with a total of one tv show to watch; lost!

Condiment King
05-16-2006, 03:08 PM
I'm interested in the breath of fresh air that NBC will no doubt provide for the NFL sunday nights this Fall. They have a pregame show team that no doubt beats FOX's and CBS's (Costas, Collinsworth, Sharpe, and Bettis). They have the mediocre (yet legendary) team of Al Michaels and John Madden in the booth. All the effort seems to be there for NBC Sports to resurrect itself, but we shall see. I'm surprised "Football Night in America" is a full hour. I'm guessing it'll be more or less NFL Prime Time Redux then?

I'm kinda worried about The Office moving to 8:30, but it seems to have increased dramatically in ratings since moving from Tuesday to Thursday last January. If it was successful at the 9:30 slot behind Earl, I suppose it will keep that success up in 8:30. Is Survivor truly still all that popular? It seems like its had quite a few seasons under its belt now and just seems stale to me.

Frankly, I didn't think Scrubs's last season was good enough for me to worry about it continuing. The series has waned recently and is starting to justify its midseason status.

Deal or No Deal is the recent game show on primetime fad. It seems like an amalgamation of several others, perhaps the logic of Let's Make a Deal with the blind luck of Press Your Luck. Honestly, there's no strategy to it at all. Its just ridiculously cheesy. I'm surprised after a couple of "week long events", it hasn't already worn out its welcome.

Burgundy Ranger
05-16-2006, 03:09 PM
and why would they move earl and office to 8-9 slot? up against survivor those shows are gone, and im sure scrubs will be gone this year too...leaving me with a total of one tv show to watch; lost!
Survivor still does well, but it's not the behemoth it used to be.

NBC has fared quite nicely with sitcoms in the 8-9 hour on Thursday nights for close to 20 years -- all the way back to Cosby Show and Family Ties. Just needs to be the right ones, and Earl and Office are the strongest they have in a post-Will&Grace world.

The Clown Prince
05-16-2006, 03:49 PM
Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence had said that there was a 80/20 chance that Scrubs was returning. He said that if it didn't end up on NBC, that ABC which owns the show anyway, was ready to swoop in and pick it up.

So while it sucks it'll be a mid-season replacement, at least it received a full season order. Which means several weeks of one hour new episodes! :D Season 6, Bill Lawrence has also hinted may very well be indeed it's final season. Everyone involved really wants the show to go out on top and not push it beyond what it really needs to.

The Clown Prince

William C. Maune
05-16-2006, 03:51 PM
and why would they move earl and office to 8-9 slot? up against survivor those shows are gone, and im sure scrubs will be gone this year too...leaving me with a total of one tv show to watch; lost!

CSI, which Earl and Office aired against in the 9-10 slot pulls better ratings than Survivor. Plus, Earl and Office against either of those shows is pretty good counterprogramming.

Samhaine
05-16-2006, 09:43 PM
Personally, I think Scrubs is one of the best comedy shows out there right now, it's sad that no one watches/knows about it. It's like a 5 year old small golden nugget in the NBC lineup.
Quoted for its truthfullness. This season has been a bit wackier, but the second half of this season has been incredible, especially the Dr. Cox storyline over the last few weeks. Probably one of my favorie shows ever.

EscaflownePilot
05-17-2006, 12:32 PM
Outside of Lord Dalek's outburst, is there anything being specifically stated about Surface returning? Last I heard it was pretty much thought to be filming right now, yet it's not on the schedule. Is there any actual confirmation of it being cancelled or returning (maybe, mid-season)?

I hope it does return. It was next to 24, Lost, and Prison Break as my favorite dramas.

Burgundy Ranger
05-17-2006, 12:51 PM
Yeah, it's gone. From the AP story:

" "Scrubs" and "Crossing Jordan" received full-season orders, although they are not on the schedule. NBC is canceling the "Friends" spinoff "Joey," the sci-fi drama "Surface" and producer Dick Wolf's show about youthful prosecutors, "Conviction." "

Full story:

http://www.heraldnet.com/stories/06/05/17/100ae_e4nbc001.cfm

A.J
05-17-2006, 12:54 PM
Yeah, it's gone. From the AP story:

" "Scrubs" and "Crossing Jordan" received full-season orders, although they are not on the schedule. NBC is canceling the "Friends" spinoff "Joey," the sci-fi drama "Surface" and producer Dick Wolf's show about youthful prosecutors, "Conviction." "

Full story:

http://www.heraldnet.com/stories/06/05/17/100ae_e4nbc001.cfm

It was about freaking time they would cancel that fiasco called JOEY. Yuck! what a crappy supporting cast Joey got (except for his "sister"). I am happy bout Scrubs, the show is funny. However I am gonna miss W&G deeply :crying:

Samurai
05-19-2006, 01:58 AM
"HEROES" -- The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives of ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. As a total eclipse casts it shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics professor (Sendhil Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving") in India whose father's disappearance leads him to uncover a secret theory -- there are people with super powers living among us. A young dreamer (Milo Ventimiglia, "The Bedford Diaries") tries to convince his politician brother (Adrian Pasdar, "Judging Amy") that he can fly. A high school cheerleader (Hayden Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is totally indestructible. A Las Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"), struggling to make ends meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey, "My Wife & Kids"), uncovers that her mirror image has a secret. A prison inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds himself waking up outside of his cell. A gifted artist (Santiago Cabrera, "Empire"), whose drug addiction is destroying his life and the relationship with his girlfriend (Tawny Cypress, "Third Watch"), can paint the future. A down-on-his-luck beat cop (Greg Grunberg, "Alias") can hear people's thoughts, including the secrets of a captured terrorist. In Japan, a young man (Masi Oka, "Scrubs") develops a way to stop time through sheer will power. Their ultimate destiny is nothing less than saving the world. "Heroes" is executive produced by creator/writer Tim Kring ("Crossing Jordan), Dennis Hammer ("Crossing Jordan") and David Semel ("House"), who also directed the pilot. The drama is from NBC Universal Television Studio.

Hmmm... I might turn in, since the only show I watch on Mondays is Prison Break. Although if this sucks, I'll be tuning out. I bet though a show like this probably gets cancelled since it has no "name" value (I mean, if this were based off the X-Men universe with normal people discovering their mutant powers, then it might be interesting).

The Clown Prince
05-19-2006, 02:05 AM
NBC's Canceled Shows

The Apprentice: Martha Stewart
Book of Daniel
Conviction
E-Ring
Fear Factor
Four Kings
Heist
Inconceivable
Joey
Surface
Teachers
Three Wishes
The West Wing
Will & Grace

The Clown Prince

randomguy
05-19-2006, 02:43 AM
It would have been nice to have The Office, Scrubs and My Name Is Earl all on Thursday nights. That would have been one unstoppable comedy block.

Outside of that, nothing much terribly interesting. I'll give the new Aaron Sorkin a shot, and Heroes could be modestly enjoyable if the execution was done right... which it almost certainly won't be. I suspect audiences might be getting superheroed-out soon, and something like this would probably have more of a shot if it was licensed.

On a sidenote, I was in the Friday Night Lights pilot as an extra. It was fun, though I was part of the crowd in a football game so it's not like I'll actually be visible. Still a cool way to kill an afternoon though.

The Weed Of Cri
05-19-2006, 01:45 PM
NBC, like CBS, is allowing the reality show trend to wither and die, which proves there's hope for them yet. Their schedule is more varied than either CBS or ABC (which, despite multitudes of new shows, is trying too hard to make the Lost lightning strikes twice), and it would be a shame if they don't see a return on their investment.

Here's my over/under on thier new shows:

Studio 60 on Sunset Strip: Cancelled after 15-20 episodes. TV shows about TV shows rarely work; audiences just don't find the TV industry as endlessly fascinating as the industry itself does. And let's face, after losing The West Wing and Commander-In-Chief, Sorkin's on his way out. He's been replaced by J. J. Abrams and the Boy Wonder of Network TV.

Friday Night Lights: Survives its first season, could last longer. This one has sleeper potential; the quiet, moderate success that develops a loyal following, a la 7th Heaven or Veronica Mars.

Heroes: Cancelled after 10-15 episodes. As I write this, Justice League Unlimited has been off the air for six days, and I'm already jonesing. I'll be watching this show, and I'll want to like it. It has the potential to do something entertaining with the superhero genre. I'm thinking of J. Michael Straczynski's "Rising Stars" comic, or the shared-world anthology series "Wild Cards", both of which this show strongly resembles, and I'd like it to be as good as both. But realistically, I know that if it's too smart, it will go over the heads of the average network viewer, and if they dumb it down it'll become just another Smallville knockoff. Either way, I don't think it will succeed, although I'd really like it to.

Kidnapped: Survives first season, cancelled in the second season: This year's CSI-style police procedural, its success depends on whether the genre has peaked, and there is some indication that it has (witness the failure of "Bones").

The Black Donnellys: Cancelled after 10-15 episodes. An Irish Sopranos, neutered by broadcast network censors. Can you think a better formula for failure? I mean, c'mon, IRISH gangsters? Since when have they last been a problem on this side of the Atlantic, 1912?

Raines: Cancelled after 20-24 episodes. Could be this year's Monk, especially with Goldblum quirking it up. Trouble is, the "I See Dead People" trend, anemic to begin with, won't sustain, and that's the kiss of death for this show.

20 Good Years: 5 Good Years, followed by a few Jump The Shark seasons. The combination of Lithgow and Tambor is hard to beat; either of them could carry a series, together, they should be very funny. This one will last.

Andy Barker, P.I.: Cancelled after 10-15 episodes. Richter and O'Brien's frat-boy humor plays well to late-night audience, but not to people who don't stay up all night. And when a comedian produces a vehicle for one of his friends, the result is usually poison (witness any Adam Sandler-produced movie starring Rob Schneider).

The Singles' Table: Cancelled after 8-12 episodes. Generic sitcom fodder with nothing to distinguish it. No chance for survival.

The Penguin
05-19-2006, 10:09 PM
Studio 60 on Sunset Strip: Cancelled after 15-20 episodes. TV shows about TV shows rarely work; audiences just don't find the TV industry as endlessly fascinating as the industry itself does. And let's face, after losing The West Wing and Commander-In-Chief, Sorkin's on his way out. He's been replaced by J. J. Abrams and the Boy Wonder of Network TV.Sorkin had nothing to do with the ratings train wreck that has been Commander In Chief except he did the White House drama first and did it better (way better). NBC is showing a lot of faith by putting "Studio 60" on what they at least want to be their biggest night after their most well-regarded comedies and I expect Sorkin's smart writing to pay off. We West Wing fans need something to watch now. :p