Arab Times

Can new fall TV be called ‘new’?

Comfort television is the rule

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NEW YORK, Aug 30, (AP): Once upon a time, the fall rollout from the Big Three broadcast networks was as eagerly awaited as those shiny new models from the Big Three automakers, unveiled with great fanfare in dealer showrooms.

The TV “season” today is a seamless year-round cycle with dozens of providers adding scads of new prime-time shows to the hundreds already swamping the audience on cable and streaming as well as broadcast. To acknowledg­e this vestige of a bygone media age — the fall TV season — is to dwell on fewer than two dozen new series arriving on the five legacy networks.

Some will likely find favor with viewers, and, despite years of doomsday forecasts, the broadcast networks launching them will continue to hang tough. (In part, that’s because they are expanding their reach beyond their age-old linear presence — in NBC’s case, 14 platforms now distribute its content).

But however warmly these rookie shows are received, this freshman slate resonates with a clear message: Creatively, the networks are fed up trying to compete for new-and-different with their cable and streaming rivals, and have thrown in the towel. Surprise is off the table for the Big Five, which have succumbed to formulas and spinoffs. Comfort TV is the rule.

It’s as if they’ve said: We can’t compete with the more liberated outlets’ risky, edgy fare. Not when we’re answerable to the FCC and community standards (unlike cable and streaming, broadcast is beholden to the public airwaves), and to skittish advertiser­s (unlike sponsor-immune premium cable and some streaming channels). The fall slate seems to echo a programmin­g strategy applied with great success decades ago: Least Objectiona­ble Programmin­g. That is, placate rather than entertain.

Revival

Consider arguably the most-talkedabou­t “new” show of the fall: NBC’s revival of “Will & Grace.” A groundbrea­king sitcom when it aired for eight seasons until 2006, this old TV friend, back with its original cast, is likely to be funny. But thanks to social enlightenm­ent it helped promote way back then, it will now feel comfortabl­e, not outrageous, as before.

Meanwhile, the CW is updating the 1980s soap “Dynasty.” CBS’ sitcom “Kevin Can Wait” is reuniting star Kevin James with Leah Remini, his leading lady years ago on “King of Queens,” for a retooled second season of what seems to be morphing into “King of Long Island.” “Young Sheldon” is a CBS spinoff from TV’s biggest sitcom, “The Big Bang Theory.” Likable, maybe, but no surprises there.

And CBS’ “9JKL” will feel comfortabl­y rote before you’ve seen a single episode. Its stars are familiar, all right: Mark Feuerstein, Linda Lavin and Elliott

Gould. More to the point is its done-todeath premise: Offspring moving back home with the parents.

Granted, Memory Lane extends beyond broadcast. Netflix is making hay one more time for “One Day at a Time” and “Fuller House.”

But it’s broadcast that seems to have been swallowed by a TV wormhole. An original-cast revival of “Roseanne” is in the cards for midseason at ABC, while discussion­s are reportedly under way for resuscitat­ing such laid-to-rest favorites as “The West Wing,” “King of the Hill,” “24,” “The Munsters,” ‘’Starsky & Hutch” and “The Jetsons” (reconceive­d as a live-action sitcom).

Yet another echo from the past: CBS’ fall entry “S.W.A.T.,” which was a 2003 film and a short-lived 1970s series.

“S.W.A.T.” is one among a bumper crop of Elite-Team Action Sagas.

Besides “S.W.A.T.” (which, starring Shemar Moore, is billed as a Los An-

geles-based “specialize­d tactical unit”), there’s NBC’s “The Brave” (globe-trotting “elite undercover military heroes” overseen by Anne Heche), CBS’ “SEAL Team” (with David Boreanaz part of “the most elite unit of Navy SEALs”), and the CW’s “Valor” (focused on “an elite unit of US Army helicopter pilots”).

The locations and faces vary from one show to the next. But wherever you land, expect lots of gunfire, lurching camera work, a pounding musical score and at least one hearty hero who’s haunted by regrets.

TV’s cluttered comic-book rack is jammed with even more titles from the Marvel portfolio: “Marvel’s Inhumans” is a new ABC series about a race of superhuman­s with diverse amazing powers while, on Fox, “The Gifted” (from 20th Century Fox Television in associatio­n with Marvel Television) tells of an ordinary suburban couple whose children possess mutant powers.

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