National Post (National Edition)

Maybe American Ninja Warrior is better when it's smaller, with no crowd, no hugs, no sharing of sweat.

HUNT FOR FALL TV BRINGS A LAST GASP OF NEW SHOWS AND PERHAPS A MUCH-NEEDED A SHIFT IN TONE

- HANK STUEVER

Afew weeks ago, NBC said season 5 of its hit series This Is Us will debut on Nov. 10, with a two-hour episode. How nice.

That the show had yet to begin filming — that few scripted dramas and comedies can produce anything right now because of coronaviru­s-prevention guidelines — is not the point. NBC is engaging in that same kind of fantasy planning with its fall TV schedule that many of us have engaged in ever since pandemic shutdowns started in March: Maybe we can have the outdoor party, if everyone brings their own utensils. Maybe the dorms will be safe enough to start the semester. Maybe we can see Mom at Thanksgivi­ng. Maybe we'll drive instead of fly.

The network version of this is similar: Maybe we can get by with game shows and competitio­ns. Maybe American Ninja Warrior is better when it's smaller, with no crowd, no hugs, no sharing of sweat. Maybe viewers won't notice that the “new” hospital drama (Transplant on NBC) is a Canadian rerun.

This is us, indeed — circling potential dates on the calendar and telling ourselves that somehow everything will go as planned.

At the outset of the stayat-home recommenda­tions, TV seemed like North American culture's sweet reprieve in a terrible time. And to a remarkable degree, it has been. Cineplexes closed, stages went dark, but, oh, boy, this TV critic had never been busier reviewing new shows, or felt as if his work mattered more to his readers.

While the industry reeled like any other (especially given Hollywood's gigbased economy for talent and crew), its front-facing attitude has remained upbeat, innovative and at times heroically committed to adding new content. Everything else may be closed, but TV shows keep coming.

The summer schedule was leaner than usual, but a spirit of togetherne­ss prevailed as viewers enthusiast­ically discovered imported shows, or finally got around to watching recent classics, or admired the inventive pluck of late-night hosts and others who transition­ed to the disconnect of at-home broadcasts.

Now, attempting to honour an old ritual known as the “fall TV season,” we've arrived at a slightly more desperate hour. Yet one can still be amazed at just how much television managed to reach the finish line — or, as with the case of HBO Max's darkly funny caper The Flight Attendant, got really close to completion.

During a virtual news conference with TV critics this summer (something we would typically do in person, in Beverly Hills, Calif.), I could sense how frustratin­g it was for the producers and cast of The Flight Attendant to know just how little of the show's final bits they had left to film, so that their series could still première later this fall — which I hope it does, because it's one of my favourite picks for the season.

I suppose I am complicit in the same crossed-fingers optimism the networks are displaying. Now multiply that hope and frustratio­n by several dozen shows.

While the broadcast networks wait (and wait) to put their scripted shows into full production, the premium cable networks and streaming services are dispensing what is probably the last of their big reserves.

Some networks made some wise switcheroo­s early on — HBO moved its Nicole Kidman/Hugh Grant drama The Undoing from a spring première date to Oct. 25. Fox kept the high-tech action miniseries Next from airing last season so that it can now première Oct. 6.

With eight of 11 episodes shot, FX put the brakes on April's première of season 4 of Fargo to figure out how best to finish making it. The series resumed shooting in Chicago in August, has wrapped, and will now return Sept. 27. FX chairman John Landgraf told TV critics in a virtual news conference on Sept. 9 the Fargo cast and crew, about 500 people, worked under strict conditions for a streamline­d 25-day shooting schedule to complete the episodes. CBS delayed a long-finished season of its Emmy-winning reality stalwart The Amazing Race, and can now reintroduc­e it to viewers on Oct. 14 like an old forgotten friend. (Hey, everyone — remember how fun it was to dash through all the world's airports?)

To be honest, life in TV land was already too dependent on predictabl­e ideas and scheduling decisions, and it showed, starting with the notion of having “seasons” in an era when people discover TV at their own pace. While understand­ing that billions of advertisin­g dollars are at stake, it's clear there is no longer a compelling reason to perform the ritual dances of the fall season — adhering to an outmoded timetable that lends itself to ho-hum programmin­g.

It's also good that the spigot has been turned off to a trickle, particular­ly at a moment of social and political upheaval. It gives the smartest people in the business an opportunit­y to stop and reconsider their choices, to rescind some offers while making new ones: What stories should be on TV that often aren't? What kind of characters are viewers hoping to see?

For too long, TV has been able to do things the way it always did them — habits that might make safe business sense but resist the potential for better, more inclusive storytelli­ng. Now that the pandemic has proved that the medium is a vital diversion when the rest of the world shuts down, the industry should take this opportunit­y to shed what's left of its old skin — not only in terms of content, but with traditiona­l scheduling, episode lengths and everything else.

Maybe this is the last fall TV preview I'll ever need to write. Wouldn't that be a nice start to a revolution?

 ?? RON BATZDORFF / NBC ?? While NBC says This Is Us, starring Milo Ventimigli­a, left, and Lonnie Chavis will return in November, filming has yet to begin.
RON BATZDORFF / NBC While NBC says This Is Us, starring Milo Ventimigli­a, left, and Lonnie Chavis will return in November, filming has yet to begin.
 ?? CTV ?? Hamza Haq, left, and John Hannah in Transplant — a Canadian drama rerun now finding a home on U.S. TV.
CTV Hamza Haq, left, and John Hannah in Transplant — a Canadian drama rerun now finding a home on U.S. TV.

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