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NETWORK TV Fall 2024

It's that time of year again! The networks are releasing their fall line ups


Fall Line up: FOX NBC CBS ABC The CW

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Fall TV Look 2023: What's New, What's Renewed, What's Ended?

Fall TV Look  2023 ABC CBS CW FOX NBC

Last Updated  November 9  2023 at 8:50 PM MT 


It's our annual list of network TV moves either shows being renewed or canceled /ending. Also what's new? For disclosure, we are going to count reboot or one of those shows that are returning after ending as new , just to keep this list consistent.

Also to be determined is our list for shows that haven't been officially given a status so, it's
       

ABC 

Renewed 

Abbott Elementary 
America's Funniest Home Videos 
American Idol 
The Bachelor 
Bachelor in Paradise
Celebrity Jeopardy
Celebrity Wheel of Fortune 
The Conners 
The Good Doctor 
Grey's Anatomy 
Not Dead Yet
The Rookie 
Shark Tank 
Station 19 
Will Trent 

Canceled 

Alaska Daily 
A Million Little Things 
Avalon 
Big Sky
Home Economics 
The Company You Keep 
The Goldbergs 
The Rookie: Feds


To Be Determined 






Reality/Summer shows (determined at their own times)

The Wonder Years 

New Series 

9-1-1 (moving from FOX) 




 CBS 


Renewed 

Blue Bloods
Bob Hearts Abishola 
CSI: Vegas
The Equalizer 
FBI 
FBI: International 
Fire Country 
Ghosts
NCIS 
NCIS: Hawai'i 
So Help Me Todd 
S.W.A.T  (for a final season) 
Young Sheldon 
The Neighborhood 

Canceled 

East New York 
NCIS:LA 
True Lies 





Reality/News/Summer shows (determined at their own times)

60 Minutes 
48 Hours 
The Amazing Race 

Survivor 
Tough as Nails


New Series 

Elsbeth
Matlock
Poppa's House 


CW


Also will note that the CW has new ownership who could decide their own ways and other factors could come in to play. 

Renewed 

All American 
All American: Homecoming 
Walker 

Canceled 

The Flash
Gotham Knights 
Kung Fu 
Nancy Drew
Riverdale
Stargirl 
Superman & Lois 
Walker: Independence 
The Winchesters 



To Be Determined 



Reality/Summer shows (determined at their own times)

New Series 



FOX 

Renewed 

9-1-1: Lone Star 
Accused 
Alert 
Animal Control 
Bob's Burgers (2 Seasons) 
The Cleaning Lady
The Great North 
Family Guy  (2 Seasons) 
Krapopolis (Renewed before first season premiered) 
The Simpsons  (2 seasons) 


Canceled 

9-1-1 (moving to ABC) 
Call me Kat
Fantasy Island 
Monarch
The Resident 
Welcome to Flatch 

To Be Determined 

Housebroken 





Reality/Summer shows (determined at their own times)

New Series 

Grimsburg 

NBC


Renewed 

Chicago Fire
Chicago Med
Chicago PD
La Brea
Lopez vs. Lopez
Law and Order
Law and Order: Organized Crime
Law and Order: SVU
Magnum PI  (second part of season 5 in mid season 2024) (ending after that) 
Night Court
Quantum Leap


Canceled 

American Auto 
The Blacklist
Grand Crew
New Amsterdam 
Young Rock 

To Be Determined 








Reality/Summer shows (determined at their own times)

American Ninja Warrior (2 seasons) 

New Series 

Found (moving to Fall 2023) 
St. Denis Medical 

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

2023: Oscars Nominations announced

Oscars 


            It's that season again. The 95th Academy Awards nominations have been announced.  "Everything Everywhere All at Once" led the nominations with 11, Angela Bassett,  Jamie Lee Curtis , Judd Hirsch, and Brendan Fraser are some of the many actors nominated.   The awards are set for March 12 on ABC it will be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel. No, I'm not mentioning last year. 

Here's the full list 

Best Actress In A Supporting Role

Angela Bassett (“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”)
Hong Chau (“The Whale”)
Kerry Condon (“The Banshees of Inisherin”)
Jamie Lee Curtis (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”)

Stephanie Hsu (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”)  


Best Original Screenplay
“The Banshees of Inisherin” (Martin McDonagh)
“Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert)
“The Fabelmans” (Steven Spielberg, Tony Kushner)
“Tár” (Todd Field)
“Triangle of Sadness” (Ruben Östlund)


Best Actor In A Supporting Role
Brendan Gleeson (“The Banshees of Inisherin”)
Brian Tyree Henry (“Causeway”)
Judd Hirsch (“The Fabelmans”)
Barry Keoghan (“The Banshees of Inisherin”)
Ke Huy Quan (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”)


Best Adapted Screenplay
“All Quiet on the Western Front” (Edward Berger, Lesley Paterson, Ian Stokell)
“Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” (Rian Johnson)
“Living” (Kazuo Ishiguro)
“Top Gun: Maverick” (Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer, Christopher McQuarrie, and Story by Peter Craig and Justin Marks)
“Women Talking” (Sarah Polley)

Best International Feature Film
“All Quiet on the Western Front” (Germany)
“Argentina, 1985” (Argentina)
“Close” (Belgium)
“EO” (Poland)
“The Quiet Girl” (Ireland)

Best Animated Short Film
“The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse” (Apple TV+)

“The Flying Sailor”

“Ice Merchants”

“My Year of Dicks”

“An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It”

Best Costume Design
“Babylon” (Paramount Pictures)

“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Marvel Studios)

“Elvis” (Warner Bros)

“Everything Everywhere All at Once” (A24)

“Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” (Focus Features)

Best Production Design
“All Quiet on the Western Front” (Netflix)

“Avatar: The Way of Water” (20th Century Studios)

“Babylon” (Paramount Pictures)

“Elvis” (Warner Bros)

“The Fabelmans” (Universal Pictures)

Best Visual Effects
“All Quiet on the Western Front” (Netflix)

“Avatar: The Way of Water” (20th Century Studios)

“The Batman” (Warner Bros.)

“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Marvel Studios)

“Top Gun: Maverick” (Paramount Pictures)

Best Live Action Short
“An Irish Goodbye” (Floodlight Pictures)

“Ivalu” (M&M Productions)

“Le Pupille” (Disney+)

“Night Ride”

“The Red Suitcase” (Cynefilms)

Best Animated Feature Film
“Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” (Netflix)

“Marcel the Shell With Shoes On” (A24)

“Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” (DreamWorks Animation)

“The Sea Beast” (Netflix)

“Turning Red” (Pixar)

More after the jump 

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

CNN Announces New Daytime Changes , and a CNN Tonight Update

CNN   Cable TV News  Cable TV 


           More changes are coming to CNN, this time, with a new daytime line up. The programming between 9am ET and 4pm ET weekdays will be broken up into 3 separate programs. 

           The 9am-Noon ET block will be anchored from New York, former New Day co-anchor , John Berman,  with current 11am ET anchor of "At This Hour", Kate Bolduan, and adding in Sara Sidner will be the three anchors of this block.  

            Inside Politics with John King will continue at Noon ET.  Then, the 1-4pm ET block will from Washington D.C.  former New Day co-anchor, Brianna Keilar, current CNN This Morning Weekend co-anchor , Boris Sanchez, and current 9-11am anchor, Jim Sciutto, will be the anchors for this block.    

      Most of the changes here finds spots for people who were shuffled out like Berman and Keilar, their New Day program was canceled last year and replaced with CNN This Morning.  Sciutto's former co-anchor, Polly Harlow moved to CNN This Morning .  Meanwhile, the Alisyn Camerota and Victor Blackwell block will be gone.  Blackwell will be moving back to weekends as co-anchor of CNN This Morning Weekend and the 10AM ET, Saturday hour of  Newsroom. 

           During the fall, Camerota was put on the 10pm-Midnight ET block of CNN Tonight when Don Lemon was moved to mornings.  Camerota will still be anchoring the 10pm ET , while co-host Laura Coates will be on at 11pm ET.   

             Besides, Blackwell moving back to weekends, another weekend change has been made. Jim Acosta will now anchor Saturdays 4pm- 8pm ET and Sundays 4-7pm ET.  Pamela Brown has been named Chief Investigative Correspondent and Anchor for CNN replacing Drew Griffin who passed away in December ,and she be leaving her CNN Newsroom hours on weekends.  

       The programming names, dates, and etc for daytime haven't been effective yet and will be announced later.  Also of note, CNN hasn't announced at 9PMET replacement yet.  


Press release after the jump

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

NewsNation to add Elizabeth Vargas

NewsNation    Cable TV News 


            



       Nexstar owned cable news network, NewsNation, continues to expand and change programming. Tuesday they announced that former ABC News anchor, Elizabeth Vargas, will be joining the network to host at 6pm ET show called "Elizabeth Vargas Reports"  The show is set to start on April 3. 

             Vargas will be anchoring from New York City, and not from their Chicago headquarters. Newsnation says the program will "...feature one-on-one interviews with headline makers across the country and on-the-ground reporting by Newsnation's team of seasoned journalists." 

             Currently, the network runs "NewsNation Rush Hour" from 5-7pm ET,  and it's assumed that Rush Hour will go back to being one hour. Reruns of off network drama, Blue Bloods runs from 12pmet-5pmet, at present. 

             

Press release after the jump 

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Rudolph's Shiny New Year

New Years   The Flashback 



          In some room somewhere they at Rankin Bass thought that their Rudolph special  needed a sequel and  for a different network than where that one was airing.  First airing on December 10, 1976 on ABC (whilst original Rudolph aired on NBC and later CBS) "Rudolph's Shiny New Year" takes the idea that Rudolph now has to save the New Year because we need to have new years or something. 

        New Year's as  a holiday isn't really a big marketed thing, I mean in the way Christmas is, plus mostly it's just a trend of time and it happens right after Christmas. It's not the most fun of holidays anyway. That's right I said it.   

           I've made the statement before that Rankin Bass seemed to like the idea of taking Christmas songs and going "Hey Let's make that a special" and then try to wrap a story around that. It's creative, but it's also creative to see what they do with they don't.  I think "Rudolph's Shiny New Year" is their most original Christmas special since they really had no source material to work from except Rudolph existing.  


     So how does a New Year's special with Rudolph work?  They do take a creative (again this is another Rankin-Bass special written by Romeo Muller) idea of the concept of baby new year.  Baby New Year is a classic personification of  the time.  A new fresh year, rebrith-- birth--- baby.  

     Santa starts off the special and this one apparently takes place just after the famous Rudolph story The Santa in this special looks like the same model they used for "The Year Without A Santa Claus" but uses Rankin Bass go to -Paul Frees- as his voice. The Rudolph model is different too, but again it was about 12 years after the first special.   The special is voiced by Red Skelton, the famous entertainer, he voices the character of Father time, which also fits well for our New Year special here. This is Red Skelton after networks were cutting back on classic stars from the radio and early days of television because they wanted newer younger viewers.  He does fit with Rankin Bass using classic well-known performers to their  thing, and he does it well.  
I don't control Daylight Saving time, you dummies made that/ Copyright Warner 



         The story starts where Santa gets a letter from Father Time because the Happy, the baby New Year is missing. Apparently, if the baby is missing we will live in a loop of December 31st forever. (That doesn't sound too bad)  To raise the stakes, there's an awful snowstorm still, so enter Rudolph. That's the stakes, Rudolph has 6 days to find the baby or else. (What happens if he finds the baby later, couldn't that still, and what?)   
What? I didn't run that traffic light? / Copyright Warner 



            I do find the concept very creative, the baby New Year being the quest for Rudolph to find him. Father Time's world is a neat thing too, he has a clock work set up and shows him taking care of time. (not Life magazine)  I do find it interesting he has a scythe, like a grim reaper.  There's General Ticker who is a clock work solider, there's a whale named Big Ben, and a clock on his tail. A clock based camel as well.  Much like the first special, Rudolph gets some fun characters to work off of with. 


        There's Eon , a vulture, who doesn't want the baby to be found and brought back to Father Time because he's gonna die. That's not a joke of mine, they outright say that Eon can live until he's one eon old and turn into ice and snow, so death. (I looked how much an Eon is and apparently he lived a billion years?)  I think it's kind of a justifiable reason to not having something happen where he dies. That's an interesting character motivation for a villain.  (Also kind of dark that Rudolph's goal means that death of Eon has to happen) 
Of any villain he has a good reason / Copyright Warner


          More concept stuff is that it explains what happens when the years switch, well through the year the baby New Year ages( I also love the song used when Father Time explains it) it then hands its crown to the next year.  The special explains later that old years go to their own islands and this is the special I learned the  term archipelago from as a kid. So there are islands where it's 1965 , for example, and it's always that year. (Don't go to 2001 or 2020 island) Through the special you'll meet some of the old New Years. I'll get to them in a minute.



           Why did Happy leave? Well unlike his name, he wasn't very happy, he has big ears. When people saw him they laughed because big ears are funny or something. He ran away. This special does take Rudolph's story where he was maligned for being a misfit and he understands Happy's problem. So, again he has to find Happy before Eon and before midnight December 31st.  
He's not very happy/ Copyright Warner 



More after the jump

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Christmas: 'Twas the Night Before Christmas (Rankin Bass)

Christmas 





       I do like to mention that Rankin-Bass specials seem to be taking songs and trying to make a story out of them. They have "Rudolph", "Frosty", "The Little Drummer Boy" etc. I have mentioned times they've used books as source material like "The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus" and "The Year without A Santa Claus" This time, they used a poem.

    The famous "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" no creature was stirring not even a mouse. But they in joke is in this special a mouse is stirring. (ha ha ha ha)

      From 1974, originally airing on December, 8, 1974 on CBS where it ran for a couple decades before being cable-ized. "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" is a Rankin-Bass special that's traditionally animated , instead of stop-motion, and a 30 minute (25 without ads ) special.

  
       The original poem was written in 1823 and uses the story from it, but that would be short, so they added a story around that poem to build up something. This special was written by Jerome Coopersmith whom also wrote scripts for "Hawaii Five-O" , "Streets of San Francisco" and more.



       The special starts with the famous words "'Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house not a creature was stirring not even a mouse..." it feels like a little animated version of the poem, but the guy who is playing the I is having a hard time sleeping, then it goes a mouse , who also laying in his bed, who is actually stirring and starts to tell us that's it 3 minutes until Christmas. So apparently, he's going to tell us this story in the span of 3 minutes. (Not for us)


       His name is Father Mouse, so that's helpful. He is voiced by George Goebel who was a radio entertainer in the 1930's through 50's. He and his business partner named David O'Malley were the guys who started a company called Gomalco which produced the hit series "Leave it To Beaver" He also will be singing a song for this special, we'll get to that.
             
I've always been called Father Mouse, even before I was married and had kids/Copyright Warner




       Father Mouse says that it all started when letters to Santa are returned to the people of Junctionville. We also meet the Trundle family, who live in the house where the mice also live. Santa has decided to remove the town from his route. That's right, we also set up the rest of the plot with Joshua Trundle, a clock maker and repairer, is going to make a special clock that plays a song that will play at midnight on Christmas Eve to entice Santa. The mayor character who is kind of fun just because he tries to use elaborate language to sound more how a kid thinks a politician speaks. 
                            
This clock is our new Santa! Copyright Warner




    Back to the reason why Santa decided to remove the town of Junctionville from his route, well, the reason is a newspaper editorial to the local paper. Which means Santa has too much time on his hands to read every town's newspaper or likes to search for himself and finds out what people are writing about him. Either way petty Santa is petty.

                               

    The letter is notable because the words are long and Father Mouse figures out his son, he has three kids, but the only one that matters his is eldest son named Albert, who is a nerdy mouse decided to write a letter signed "all of us" meaning his friends not the town (or the UPN sitcom). Which either way Petty Santa is petty.
  
                        
We are going to have to disown you / Copyright Warner





    I have 3 questions , 1) If the Santa thinks the whole town thinks he's a fraud then why would send him letters? Did he not think of that? 2) If Albert thinks Santa is not real, then where does he think the letters were from. 3) Why doesn't Albert believe in Santa, when everyone seemingly does and he says he's a science mouse, there's evidence Santa is real in this world?

            

    These Christmas stories where people say "Santa's not real" but then he is real meaning there's evidence are always weirdly conflicting if you think too hard about it. (Which is going on here)

More after the Jump

Monday, December 19, 2022

Christmas: The First Christmas: The Story of the First Christmas Snow

Christmas 


wait for it 





                       A post in memory of Angela Lansbury 1925-2022) 


        The First Christmas: The Story of the First Christmas Snow is Rankin Bass longest title name for a special, they really jammed in a lot of words.  This special first aired on December 19, 1975 on NBC.  This was written by Julian P. Gardner , who is also just Jules Bass under a different name.   I think the main thing to mention for this special is the narrator and a voice of one of the characters as well.  Angela Lansbury.  Rankin Bass was able to get her and she voices a nun named Sister Theresa, who also doubles as our narrator. Lansbury brings her charm to this special as you can believe the character is a caring and thoughtful person. 




             The special takes place in a small village. Sister Theresa is a nun who is in an abbey with a few other nuns and she is making Christmas cards which happen to have snow in the images, since she remembers snow from her childhood. This village is in an area where it's hard to snow because of the climate. Though I am concerned one of the other nuns  says that it snowed on the Christmas of the birth of Christ.  That is also why the special has that line "The First Christmas". 

        Then a shepherd boy- an orphaned shepherd boy- named Lucas is struck by lightning. He doesn't die, that'd be a different special. (A shorter special)   The sisters go out into the storm to see if he was and they confirm it. They take in Lucas who is blinded  by the shock.  His animals are safe in the abbey's barn. (Takes place in retro times, so farm for the nuns) There's Father Thomas who returns and really wants the shepherd boy to be sent to an orphanage.  

   Father Thomas isn't really being a bad guy and they make sure he's not being cruel towards the boy.  He just doesn't think an abbey is a place to stay for a kid.  Thomas is voiced by Cyril Ritchard. who was best known for playing Captain Hook in stage musical production of Peter Pan.  He died about 2 years after this special aired, his final role was with Rankin Bass and their work on the 1977 Hobbit movie.  He brings a nice little charm to the character. His song  "Save a Little Christmas" is  a little message about not having Christmas too early.  (kind of judging a little) 

        Lucas bond well with Sister Theresa as he recovers. He also doesn't want to go to an orphanage. You also see the Father softening and decides to let Lucas stay through Christmas.  Lucas still is worried about being sent to one. There's a nativity play, this is where Lucas meets the local children. This also brings a girl named Louisa who shows her kindness to Lucas. 

        I'm slightly humored that Lucas and Sister Theresa sing "White Christmas" when the song probably didn't exist in the time this special takes place, but we also get Angela Lansbury's beautiful singing voice to sing the song. so it's a good thing.  

         Louisa and a girl named Octavia  were talking about what they are getting Sister Theresa and Lucas realizes he doesn't have anything to give. (He didn't have time to go to Kohl's being poor, blind, and orphan and struck by lightning causing the blindness) He decides that he'll give her his dog and sheep.  I do have to mention some more voice casting notes.  Don Messick. Mr. Scooby Doo himself  voices the dog, Waggles. Since this is a mostly realistic world, he's mostly just barking and dog noises, but he does them well.  The second voice actress for Sally Brown in Peanuts specials between 1969 and 1973 does the voice of Octiva, that's Hillary Momberger.  

           Three boys decide to take the sheep to play a prank on Lucas because that's an idea. Now they wanted to play a little trick, but it goes south because of the sheep breaking out of the tool shed. They regret their actions and help him.  It's both the most urgent thing that happens in this special and easily resolved. This special isn't a big tension high stakes affair. 

        Lucas and the other kids are part of a nativity play. Lucas is one of the angels. Anyway. I think  the First Noel song they do is one of the most beautiful Rankin Bass songs. Guess what? It's snowing! That's right it's snow and Lucas can see now.  (Everything is tying up well.)  



        Later, Lucas gives his dog and sheep to the nun and she decides that he has to stay to watch them for her. The father decides to let him stay.  

             This is a low stakes, but charming special.   It's not Rankin-Bass hitting a good in-ball park home run, but it is  a good walk off and that's fine.  Lansbury brings her charming voice acting to the special and she plays the sweet nun very well. Lucas is an alright character, he's more a prop character for a  plot, but you are hoping the best for him.   It's a simple story, good for Christmastime, and it's a good watch. 

    That's it for now, tune in next time, when we watch Sister Theresa solve the various village's murders. 

Thursday, December 15, 2022

Christmas: A more modern Christmas tale: How Murray Saved Christmas

Christmas  The Flashback 

        


     Interestingly, there are modern Christmas specials that networks air, they kind of either make it as traditions or just end up not going anywhere.  The special I'm going to be talking about here is one that aired on NBC, but I found to see on AMC, the cable network, during their Christmas event  programming.  

             How Murray Saved Christmas was written by Mike Reiss , who has written a lot of things but  I think "The Simpsons" is the best example and will fit with the special we're talking about.  He co-wrote with Al Jean a few many classic episodes of the series.  Like "Moaning Lisa".  It was directed by Peter Avanzino.   The special went for the all star voice cast route with Jerry Stiller, who voices the main character,  Sean Hayes, Kevin Michael Richardson, Jason Alexander, John Ratzenberger, Dennis Haysbert, and some classic animation voice actors like Tom Kenny, Maurice LaMarchie, Tress MacNeille, and Billy Best, and more!  

     This special first aired on December 5, 2014 on NBC.  "How Murray Saved Christmas" is a musical special with the music done by Walter Murphy (whom you may know for the Disco version of 5th of Beethoven).  Dennis Haysbert provides the narrartion for this which will done in rhyme (unlike this post). You might know him from the All State ads. 

 Spoilers ahead. 

       It takes place in a village called Stinky Cigars.  The town has that name because it's apparently a way for them to make sure people just pass by and not come in. (A Keep Out Sign would be too much) The thing about this town is that its inhabitants are famous holiday characters. The first song is a Christmas classic.. uh wait.... it's the town anthem, there's even an Easter Rabbit rap line. (George Washington, Abe Lincoln, Christopher Columbus live in this town, so does that mean they ended up there when they died? Is everyone dead in this town?)  While, it's not a new concept, I do like how it's done here with the town being a place where holiday characters live together, but the town mostly looks like a normal place.  
Would move there/ Copyright Universal 


 
        The main character is Murray Weiner (pronounced Wine-er) who owns a diner. He's not as happy as rest of the town members and we don't why. (Besides Christmas special plot character development reasons)  The character that will become our deuteragonist is Edison Elf, an elf who likes to invent things. (get it Edison?)  He invented a boxing glove jack in the box. ( I wonder what will go wrong)  
This will be the knock out toy/ Copyright Universal 

            There's an elf song where apparently Santa in this universe has the elves work all the time. There is one where really see "The Simpsons" edge to it,  it keeps it in tune for a family audience but does have something adults would notice more than kids.  Back to the boxing glove, that starts our plot of having Santa getting ka-bonked by it and not being able to function for Christmas. (A classic Christmas story plot)  Nice touch in finding out by having a doctor sing the next song. 

 More after the jump