Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

- Photos and text from wire services

Broadcast networks go for milkand-cookies comfort

NEW YORK » If provocativ­e, psychejang­ling shows like “The Handmaid’s Tale” are your taste, head directly to streaming or cable. But if you’re feeling the urge for milk-and-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. While networks have tried before to compete with the daring fare of the likes of HBO, FX, Hulu or Netflix, the 2018-19 season won’t see much of that.

It’s “good news for broadcast” that households gather to watch its shows, ABC Entertainm­ent President Channing Dungey said this week. Amen, said CBS Corp. CEO Leslie Moonves, who lauded broadcasti­ng as the “big tent” that brings America together.

Here are details on some upcoming series and the trends behind them.

Room for politics? Yes and no

Roseanne Barr’s support for 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,” another show with an openly partisan star in Tim Allen, 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’ “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.”

 ?? ADAM ROSE — ABC VIA AP ?? This image released by ABC shows Roseanne Barr, left, and John Goodman in a scene from the comedy series “Roseanne.”
ADAM ROSE — ABC VIA AP This image released by ABC shows Roseanne Barr, left, and John Goodman in a scene from the comedy series “Roseanne.”

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