New York Post

ABC, NBC shake up their primetime lineups for the upcoming season TAKING THE FALL

- By MICHAEL STARR

It’s looking like the fall TV season won’t see its traditiona­l September launch due to the industry shutdown in place since mid-March.

The broadcast networks are, however, moving ahead with their 2020-21 schedules, even though episodes of new and returning shows have yet to be filmed.

CBS and Fox have mostly kept their fall schedules intact, with CBS adding the Chuck Lorre sitcom “B Positive ”anda reboot of “The Equalizer” starring Queen Latifah.

Fox, meanwhile, has added the family drama “Filthy Rich” (starring Kim Cattrall), “Next,” a sci-fi drama starring John Slattery (“Mad Men”) and Season 1 of crime drama “LA’s Finest” (Gabrielle Union, Jessica Alba) which originally aired on Spectrum.

But this past week, both ABC and NBC went a long way toward firming up their prime-time slates with a frenzy of cancellati­ons, renewals and additions.

Here’s at look at all their moves and how they affect both networks lineups.

ABC:

Cancelled: “The Baker and the Beauty.” The short-lived sitcom starring Nathalie Kelley and Victor Rasuk, based on an Israeli format, won’t return — though Kelley says it’s being shopped elsewhere and seems confident it will find another home.

Renewed: “ForLife .” The drama series starring Nicholas Pinnock as an inmate-turned-jailhouse lawyer, fighting not only for his fellow inmates but to overturn his own wrongful conviction, will return for its second season.

Moved: The seventh season of “Black-ish,” which ABC slated to return in midseason, has been moved to the fall — swapping places with the new sitcom

“Call Your Mother,” starring Kyra Sedgwick as an empty-nest mom who moves cross-country to be closer to her kids. “The Conners” will be slotted for Wednesday night at 9 p.m. to replace “Modern

Family,” and “The Bacheloret­te” moves from its traditiona­l summer perch to Tuesdays at 8 p.m.

Added: The revival of “Supermarke­t Sweep,” hosted by Leslie Jones, will air Sundays at 8 p.m., while the drama “Big Sky” — a detective drama starring Natalie Alan Lynd, Katheryn Winnick and Ryan Phillippe — will air Tuesdays.

NBC:

Cancelled: “Indebted,”the midseason sitcom starring Fran Drescher and “Bluff

City Law,” starring Jimmy Smits and Caitlin McGee as a Memphis-based father/daughter civil rights legal team. The axe also swung on “Sunnyside,” the sitcom starring Kal Penn as a (fictional) exQueens Councilman helping local immigrants searching for the American Dream.

Renewed: “Manifest” — about a flight that disappeare­d then landed five years later with its passengers intact — will live to see a third season with stars Melissa Roxburgh, Josh Dallas, Athena Karkanis and Jack Messina.

Added: Chris Meloni returns to the “Law

&Order ” fold in “Law & Order: Organized Crime,” reprising his “SVU” character, Elliott Stabler, who returns to New York City a decade after retiring to run a task force. It will air Thursdays at 10 p.m. following “SVU,” which continues to go great guns as it enters its 22nd season with stars Mariska Hargitay and Ice-T.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top right: “Indebted” (with Fran Drescher and Steven Weber) was cancelled, while “All Rise” (starring Nicholas Pinnock) and “Manifest” were renewed.
Clockwise from top right: “Indebted” (with Fran Drescher and Steven Weber) was cancelled, while “All Rise” (starring Nicholas Pinnock) and “Manifest” were renewed.
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