Friday May 16, 1:07 PM
Fox schedules sci-fi and reality for new season
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Sci-fi action dramas and
hourlong reality shows populate Fox's schedule for next season,
which includes new shows from top producers J.J. Abrams
("Lost") and Joss Whedon ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer").
Fox's lineup, unveiled Thursday during its "upfront"
presentation to advertisers, includes three new dramas, two
comedies and an unscripted series. The network plans once again
to launch its fall season earlier than most competitors. During
the week of August 25, Fox will air special two-hour premiere
episodes of several series.
Absent from the schedule is "Back to You," which Fox
cancelled last week. Fox Entertainment president Kevin Reilly
defended keeping the lower-rated sitcom "Til Death" over the
Kelsey Grammer comedy, admitting that cast salaries were a
factor.
"The show did not really strike a chord," he said.
"Creatively, it was a mixed bag. We're looking to find that
next generation of comedy hits and it just did not feel like it
would fit into that mix."
The network's upfront announcement contains more new shows
for next season than any other broadcaster, though CBS has the
most freshman shows set to launch in the fall.
Fox will start its fall season with a two-hour "Prison
Break" on August 25. "Break" will then shift to 9 p.m. with the
return of "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" as its
lead-in.
The Abrams thriller "Fringe," about a trio who explore
paranormal mysteries, will have a two-hour premiere on Tuesday,
August 26. The show will then settle into its regular time
period at 9 p.m. after "House." "We have high expectations for
this," Reilly said. "We'll have huge campaign for it."
Although the season contains three dramas with sci-fi
tones, Reilly said he's confident they can find broad
audiences. "I don't think any of these are hard genre shows,"
he said.
A new workplace comedy starring Jerry O'Connell,
tentatively titled "Do Not Disturb," will be paired with "'Til
Death" on Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. "Bones" will air at 8 p.m.
On Thursdays, "Moment of Truth" will air at 8 p.m., going
up against CBS' top-rated reality show "Survivor." The game
show will be followed by the return of "Kitchen Nightmares."
Reality utility players "Are You Smarter Than a 5th
Grader?" and "Don't Forget the Lyrics" will shift to Fridays.
The two-hour "24" prequel movie also will air in the fall.
Fox Entertainment chairman Peter Liguori described the
stand-alone movie as "an E-ticket ride" that will help cue up
the return of the series in January.
For next year's long-awaited return of "24," producers have
crafted an entire season's storyline in advance. Last season
critics complained that the show's usual practice of writing
the story's elaborate plot as the season progressed was
becoming all too obvious.
"None of us at '24' took for granted the significance of
this upcoming season," star Kiefer Sutherland said. "The
writers actually took the time to create a map of the entire
season before we started shooting, we never had the time to do
it before. Season 7, I know for a fact, will be the best season
of '24.' "
Along with "24," the return of "American Idol" in January
is typically when Fox's ratings fireworks kick in. In 2009, Fox
will pair "24" along with the Whedon series "Dollhouse" on
Tuesday nights. "Dollhouse" stars "Buffy" alumna Eliza Dushku
as a member of a government group imprinted with various
personalities to carry out secret missions.
On the schedule, Wednesday night's "Idol" results show is
listed as a half-hour instead of an hour next year. Fox listed
the show as a half-hour for the current season, then expanded
the program to an hour. This time, however, Fox is inclined to
stick with a shorter version.
"The half-hour results show is debated on a daily basis,"
Liguori said. I would say we're leaning more toward half hour
next year."
Liguori said he's satisfied with the "Idol" creative
quality this season, but not its ratings -- which have recently
hit a string of five-year lows.
"Every season we're able to reset the table and I can
assure you the network and the producers really want to take a
look at the show for next year and inject it with new levels of
energy and more unpredictable twist and turns," Liguori said.
On Thursdays next year, Fox will seek to make permanent the
move of former summer series "Hell's Kitchen" to spring.
"Kitchen" will be paired with the debut of new reality series
"Secret Millionaire," where wealthy people go undercover into
impoverished neighborhoods.
Although the Sunday night animated comedy lineup will
remain unchanged in the fall, the network will try out two new
shows next year. "Sit Down, Shut Up," from Mitch Hurwitz
("Arrested Development") is about a group of unconventional
high school teachers. The show will air at 8:30 p.m. after "The
Simpsons."
The network also will launch the "Family Guy" spin off "The
Cleveland Show" a 9:30 p.m.
"Animation is the most repeatable form of comedy," said
Liguori, who emphasized that adding more animated hits is a top
Fox priority. "We've been running repeats of 'Family Guy 'that
are running neck-and-neck with 'Desperate Housewives' in adults
18-34."
With its strong reality lineup in a year beset by a writers
strike, Fox is set to win the broadcast season for the fourth
year in a row among adults 18-49, the demographic coveted by
advertisers. The network expects to win with its largest margin
of victory yet over its closest competitor, CBS (about 40%).
Fox is also leading season to date among total viewers for the
first time.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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