Fox is premiering more shows than I expected, but as they're doing their usual split season schedule I suppose it means more new TV for us. Whether that's a good thing remains to be seen.
What's gone - The big news is that 24 is done, though there'd been talk about that going into the season. I'm sure the Tea Party folks will find a way to blame this on Obama, too. Also out are Til Death, Past Life, Brothers, Sons of Tucson, Dollhouse, Out Little Genius (which I'd not heard of until seeing it listed as a cancellation), Sit Down Shut Up and The Wanda Sykes Show.
Also gone is Simon Cowell, whose long-expected departure was finally confirmed. No word on who will replace him, though I'd vote for Toby Young from Top Chef. He doesn't know music, but he as the acerbic wit and British accent required for the job.
Day by Day -
Monday: House shares the night with two shows. The fall will bring us Lonestar, which is sadly not about the character from Spaceballs. Instead, it's a Dallas meets Big Love soap about a Texas oil tycoon who has two families - and two identities - in separate parts of the state. Can he bleed both dry before being caught? Will I even pretend to care?
The spring will bring Ride-Along, where we take a passenger seat view of crime fighting in Chicago. The overblown description of the show makes it sound like a pulp novel come to life, though I think they thought it would evoke shows like The Wire and EZ Streets. I'd be marginally interested if the press release synopsis didn't try so hard to make it sound gritty.
Tuesday: Glee starts the night in the fall, followed by two new sitcoms. Raising Hope sees a young man at the center of a dysfunctional family cope with his infant daughter, who he gets to care for when he discovers a past fling had the baby while in prison. That half hour of cheeriness is followed by Running Wilde, which is apparently what you'd get if you crossed Ed with Arrested Development. Will Arnett stars as the spoiled heir to an oil fortune (what's with all the oil money?) who is trying to get the one thing he could never buy - the love of Emmy, the daughter of the Wilde family maid, played by Keri Russell. The set-up seems ridiculous, but that wasn't a problem for Arrested Development, so why would it be here?
For the spring, Glee and Raising Hope moves to Wednesday to make room for American Idol, and we get another new sitcom, Mixed Signals, a male-centered relationship show about which I can only say it features Roy from The Office.
Wednesday: Lie to Me returns and is paired with Hell's Kitchen. I have no idea why, but I find this combination amusing. In the spring, we get Raising Hope, a 30 minute AI results show (at least until Raising Hope is put on permanent hiatus) and Glee.
Thursday: Bones and Fringe remain on Thursday for the entire season, showing that Fox can resist the impulse to mess with something that works.
Friday: Human Target got renewed and lands here, I assume to draw in all those young males who stay home to watch TV to start the weekend. This also costs me a hit on the Ted Marshall TV Dead Pool, which is not going to go well for me this year.
For the fall, it shares the night with The Good Guys (assuming it survives its summer debut). It features Bradley Whitford and Colin Hanks as cops, one "old school" and one "by the books." I'll let you decide who plays which stereotype. Once this show is over or canceled or whatever, it gets replaced with Kitchen Nightmares, which continues its sad approximation of the superior British version.
Saturday: Cops and America's Most Wanted, which we can pretty much pencil in here for eternity.
Sunday: The animation block of The Simpsons, Family Guy, The Cleveland Show and American Dad continues, and once football is over they'll be joined by Bob's Burgers, a show about a crappy burger joint and the man who runs it (along with his family). The press release goes into some detail into the neighborhood surrounding Bob's, which makes me think they realize the main premise about the annoying guy and his requisite quirky family - is a little thin. Good thing Fox canceled King of the Hill so they could show us this.
Not scheduled but mentioned as a mid-season replacement is Terra Nova, a family drama that's part Lost in Space and part Land of the Lost. Initially set in the mid-22nd century, the show follows the Shannon family as they are sent back to prehistoric times to join a settlement which aims to prevent some of the missteps that have irreversibly damaged the planet in their present. Compounding things is some sort of dark family secret that puts the Shannons at risk of getting sent back, as well as a potential conspiracy within the settlement.
There are some big names involved with the show - Spielberg most notably, but also veteran TV guys Brannon Braga and David Fury. This could be the most interesting show of the year for Fox, assuming it doesn't morph into Avatar: The Series.
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