Skip to main content

Peacock Tidies Midseason Schedule: "Friday" Shifts, "Studio 60" to Stay Put

It was with a bit of relief as NBC finally released its mid-season schedule... about two weeks later than promised by topper Kevin Reilly.

No word on what led to the prolonged period between the intended announcement and, er, yesterday, but some rather unexpected results did manage to turn up. Let's take a look:

MONDAY: NBC has kept its entire Monday night lineup intact, including the struggling Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, which will remain at 10 pm. Many insiders had thought that the Peacock would try shifting the sinking Studio 60 in another slot, but it's staying tight for the moment, following a full season pick-up for the series, albeit at a reduced license fee. Look for a midseason drama (see below) to take over here in a few months' time.

TUESDAY: Newsmagazine Dateline NBC will take over the 8 pm timeslot vacated by struggling freshman drama Friday Night Lights. Hmmm, anyone seeing shades of Reilly's announcement a little while back about programming cheap reality shows only at 8 pm on most nights? Looks like NBC 2.0 is actually happening after all.

WEDNESDAY: Friday Night Lights still won't appear on Fridays, but will instead shift to Wednesdays at 8 pm, taking over for the comedy block formerly occupied by 30 Rock (now on Thursdays at 9:30 pm) and the cancelled Twenty Good Years. But didn't Reilly say that he wasn't doing drama at 8? Um, yeah. Nor do I see why moving Friday Night Lights from one 8 pm timeslot to another will help matters... especially once CBS's Jericho returns with new episodes. But then again, I'm not a programming exec!

THURSDAY: Will blissfully remain the same, with the single-cam comedy block of My Name is Earl, The Office, Scrubs, and 30 Rock. Ahhhhh.

FRIDAY: Will remain the same, though it's been indicated by several insiders that Raines will end up in the 9 pm timeslot come the spring, with Las Vegas wrapping its season a little early.

SATURDAY: No change whatsoever.

SUNDAY: Dateline will move to 7 pm on Sundays as of February 11th, followed at 8 pm by new reality series Grease: You're the One That I Want (sorry, but I refuse to make a title-related pun about its future). At 9 pm, it's the Los Angeles-based sixth edition of lost-its-edge reality series The Apprentice (which promises making the losing team sleep in a tent!) and the return of crime drama Crossing Jordan at 10 pm.

While no official word was given about where the Jeff Goldblum-led Raines or Paul Haggis' The Black Donnellys would end up, those who know claim that Raines will pop up on Fridays (see above) and The Black Donnellys will eventually take over Studio 60's Mondays at 10 pm slot in the spring. The second season of reality entry America's Got Talent has been pushed back to the summer.

No mention whatsoever was given to midseason comedies The Singles Table (which saw its order cut from 13 to 6 episodes a while back) or Andy Barker P.I. From what I am hearing, the latter's set is just a mess with constant chaos and a revolving door hiring-and-firing policy as they move to quickly churn out the 13-episode order.

Will Andy Barker ever make it on the air? That's anybody's guess.

One of those series is expected to pop up on the network's single-cam comedy lineup on Thursdays nights and my worry is that, unless 30 Rock starts to perform, The Singles Table or Andy Barker will wind up at 9:30 pm.

Fingers crossed that doesn't happen.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Survivor: Cook Islands (CBS); My Name is Earl/The Office (NBC); Smallville (CW); Ugly Betty (ABC); 'Til Death/'Til Death (FOX); Desire (MyNet)

9 pm: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CBS); Scrubs/30 Rock (NBC); Supernatural (CW); Grey's Anatomy (ABC); The O.C. (FOX); Fashion House (MyNet)

10 pm: Shark (CBS); ER (NBC); Men in Trees (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: My Name is Earl.

On tonight's episode of My Name is Earl ("Born a Gamblin' Man"), Earl is reunited with a former classmate while delivering sandwiches (must have something to do with that list of his) and is tempted to help make him more of a man by teaching him how to gamble. Not quite sure what that's got to do with anything, but tune in tonight to find out.

8:30 pm: The Office.

On tonight's episode ("The Convict"), chaos ensues when Michael discovers one of the new Dunder-Mifflin employees has a prison record, in this episode written by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, the creators of the original UK version of The Office!

9:00 pm: Scrubs.

Finally! Scrubs is back on NBC's schedule, where it belongs. And on tonight's episode, the sixth season premiere ("My Mirror Image"), J.D. tries to see himself as a father, while Dr. Cox comes to the astounding realization that his, er, anger management issues may have consequences in the future.

9:30 pm: 30 Rock.

On tonight's episode ("Jack Meets Dennis"), after Liz returns to the arms of her ex-boyfriend (guest star Dean Winters) simply because he asked her to, Jack decides to become her mentor and teach her a thing or two about life.

10 pm: Afterlife on BBC America.

It's the premiere of the supernatural thriller Afterlife, starring Leslie Sharp and Andrew Lincoln, on BBC America. On tonight's episode, psychology lecturer Robert (Lincoln), takes his students to meet psychic Alison Mundy (Sharp) and, while initially skeptical about Alison's, um, powers, Robert begins to believe after a very personal experience.

Comments

Vance said…
I actually liked The Singles Table pilot I saw (pre-Alicia Silverstone) so I hope it gets to air eventually, if only for John Cho's manic performance. Well, at least Friday Night Lights moves out of American Idols way, and hopefully gets to build the bigger audience it deserves.
Anonymous said…
Hmmm, anyone seeing shades of Reilly's announcement a little while back about programming cheap reality shows only at 8 pm on most nights?

Wasn't that Zucker's announcement, which Reilly quickly backed away from the next day?
Anonymous said…
Will you still love me if I tell you that I can't wait for that Grease show?
LOVING the new Thursday night comedy lineup!

Popular posts from this blog

Katie Lee Packs Her Knives: Breaking News from Bravo's "Top Chef"

The android has left the building. Or the test kitchen, anyway. Top Chef 's robotic host Katie Lee Joel, the veritable "Uptown Girl" herself (pictured at left), will NOT be sticking around for a second course of Bravo's hit culinary competition. According to a well-placed insider, Joel will "not be returning" to the show. No reason for her departure was cited. Unfortunately, the perfect replacement for Joel, Top Chef judge and professional chef Tom Colicchio, will not be taking over as the reality series' host (damn!). Instead, the show's producers are currently scouring to find a replacement for Joel. Top Chef 's second season was announced by Bravo last month, but no return date has been set for the series' ten-episode sophomore season. Stay tuned as this story develops. UPDATE (6/27): Bravo has now confirmed the above story .

BuzzFeed: Meet The TV Successor To "Serial"

HBO's stranger-than-fiction true crime documentary The Jinx   — about real estate heir Robert Durst — brings the chills and thrills missing since Serial   wrapped up its first season. Serial   obsessives: HBO's latest documentary series is exactly what you've been waiting for.   The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst , like Sarah Koenig's beloved podcast, sifts through old documents, finds new leads from fresh interviews, and seeks to determine just what happened on a fateful day in which the most foul murder was committed. And, also like  Serial  before it,  The Jinx may also hold no ultimate answer to innocence or guilt. But that seems almost beside the point; such investigations often remain murky and unclear, and guilt is not so easy a thing to be judged. Instead, this upcoming six-part tantalizing murder mystery, from director Andrew Jarecki ( Capturing the Friedmans ), is a gripping true crime story that unfolds with all of the speed of a page-turner; it

BuzzFeed: "The Good Wife Is The Best Show On Television Right Now"

The CBS legal drama, now in its sixth season, continually shakes up its narrative foundations and proves itself fearless in the process. Spoilers ahead, if you’re not up to date on the show. At BuzzFeed, you can read my latest feature, " The Good Wife Is The Best Show On Television Right Now," in which I praise CBS' The Good Wife and, well, hail it as the best show currently on television. (Yes, you read that right.) There is no need to be delicate here: If you’re not watching The Good Wife, you are missing out on the best show on television. I won’t qualify that statement in the least — I’m not talking about the best show currently airing on broadcast television or outside of cable or on premium or however you want to sandbox this remarkable show. No, the legal drama is the best thing currently airing on any channel on television. That The Good Wife is this perfect in its sixth season is reason to truly celebrate. Few shows embrace complexity and risk-taking in t