MILK AND COOKIES FOR FALL
Networks go for comfort in upcoming TV season
If provocative, psychejangling shows like The Handmaid’s Tale and 13 Reasons Why are your taste, head directly to online streaming or cable. But if you’re feeling the urge for milkand-cookies comfort, broadcast television wants to help.
The upcoming TV season will bring more sitcom nostalgia in the Roseanne and Will & Grace mode. More heartwarming dramas taking a circle-of-life page from This is Us. More crime and medical dramas in which the good guys always win, and in just an hour (minus commercial time).
As once-mighty broadcast ratings continue to be shredded by media alternatives, the networks are going where viewers are pointing them.
That means family-friendly shows in the reality genre as well as scripted: Say “awwww” for Dancing With the Stars: Juniors, a kiddie version of the original.
Here are details on some upcoming series and the trends behind them. Canadian networks will announce which U.S. shows they’ve picked up in the next few weeks.
ROOM FOR POLITICS? YESANDNO
Roseanne Barr’s support for U.S. President Donald Trump was a conspicuous part of her character when Roseanne returned, but politics are a poor fit with broadcasting ’s wide-net approach.
To that end, ABC and NBC are tamping down anticipation that Roseanne or Last Man Standing (starring Tim Allen, another openly partisan star) will be soapboxes.
“Tim’s personal politics really aren’t a big feature of the show, and I think that if you were to talk to Tim and our (producers), they would say Mike Baxter is a centrist,” Gary Newman, chairman of Fox Television Group, said of Allen’s character. As for Roseanne, the show is headed “away from politics and more focused on family,” said Dungey.
There’s a likely dissenter: Murphy Brown, back on CBS with Candice Bergen in the lead role of a TV journalist. In promotions, CBS recalls how the original series took on thorny political and social issues, including abortion, suggesting it would again. Talking up the show to advertisers, Bergen cracked a Fox News Channel joke.
And don’t count out Barr’s show. “The press has misrepresented what ABC President said about our new season,” she tweeted.
ROOM FOR KUMBAYA? DEFINITELY.
The success of This is Us served as a reminder that there’s more to life than comic book heroes and crimebusters — there’s the real world, as in love, marriage, child-rearing and struggle. That’s prompted a deep emotional response from the TV industry: Trend!
CBS’s God Friended Me stars Brandon Micheal Hall as a radio host who espouses atheism. Then, just as the title says, he gets a social media friend request from God that turns him into an “agent of change,” as the network put it. Think Touched by an Angel with a dash of This is Us.
ABC’s A Million Little Things is about a group of friends who get a “wake-up call” to embrace life after one pal dies. Along the way, ABC said, “they discover that friends may be the one thing to save them from themselves.” Think The Big Chill with a hint of This is Us.
NBC, home of This is Us, won’t be left out. Newcomer The Village is “a heartwarming ensemble drama set in a Brooklyn apartment building where the residents have built a bonded family of friends and neighbours.” Think Friends, presumably minus the laughs, and This is Us.
LIGHTS, MULTI-CAMERA, ACTION
Everything old is new again, including sitcoms and how they’re produced. The multiple-camera (a.k.a. “multi-cam”) format that became popular in the 1950s with I Love Lucy has been steadily overtaken by comedies shot more like films and without a studio audience.
But sitcom revivals — complete with their original casts and original multi-cam approach — have given new life to the format, heartily reaffirming laugh tracks included.
Fox jumped on the bandwagon with newcomer The Cool Kids and Last Man Standing, which ABC dropped last year. They’ll be paired on Friday night in hopes of drawing viewers who watched Fox’s new Thursday NFL games, a Fox executive suggested.
It didn’t seem like the smart move to air “highly serialized comedies” that might keep new viewers from dipping in and out, said Dana Walden, CEO of Fox Television Group. Interpretation: multi-cam shows have more jokes and less character nuance than, say, Modern Family.
Even NBC, which entertainment chairman Robert Greenblatt labelled a “more single-cam” network, is launching multi-cam sitcom Abby’s. The new twist: It’s taped outside.