Pasatiempo

CoViD-19 builds suspense for fall TV lineup

For the fall TV lineup

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Somewhere in a desert, a group of young, swimsuit-clad singles have spent their summer trying to find love in the time of CoViD — or at least score some cash and a little fame. They are the latest contestant­s on CBS’s Love Island, an American take on the saucy British reality TV show of the same name — a name that hardly implies social distancing. They’re also a long way from any islands. Season One was filmed in the tropical oasis of Fiji, but because of the virus, this latest group has instead found itself under strict quarantine in a hotel on the Las Vegas strip. The show must go on.

The lengths to which ViacomCBS has gone to safely deliver new seasons of both Love Island and Big Brother to stir-crazy viewers highlight the challenges facing TV networks this year. Love Island premiered last week, while Big Brother returned to air in early August. Big Brother host Julie Chen Moonves, in a recent interview with a CBS station, described f lying that show’s 16 contestant­s to Los Angeles so they could each i solate for weeks before entering the so- called Big Brother House. Some tested positive for CoVID and were sent packing.

On the spectrum of difficulty of filming during a pandemic, reality TV shows such as these — along with animated series — have perhaps the fewest hurdles. After all, the contestant­s are usually sequestere­d anyway. “We were the original quarantine,” as Chen Moonves put it. But scripted series often require a larger, rotating cast and crew to travel and be on the set without the ability to remain in constant quarantine. This is partly why studios are struggling to get back up and running as the virus continues its spread. Sports leagues are facing similar setbacks, with the Big Ten and Pac-12 college athletic conference­s postponing fall sports, including football. Indeed, it would appear that the fall television season is destined to go the way of everything else in 2020.

September traditiona­lly marks the start of the most important TV season as children head back to school and families cozy up indoors in the evenings with a good show. Because so much of the industry focus up to this point this year has been on new streaming video apps, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that traditiona­l live TV remains the lifeblood of companies such as Comcast’s NBC, Fox, Walt Disney, and ViacomCBS. The implicatio­ns of a light or delayed programmin­g season will be far-reaching for the industry, which is already grappling with an exodus of cable TV subscriber­s, the evaporatio­n of advertiser demand, a closed box office, a content drought for new streaming video services, and a legal quagmire created by the cacophony of safety issues surroundin­g TV and film production­s.

Each year, the industry showcases its fall lineup during the spring “upfront” presentati­ons to marketers, which then reserve their advertisin­g slots. But the uncertaint­y of 2020 has kept many on the sidelines waiting to see what networks come up with this summer as filming slowly begins to resume. The

November U.S. presidenti­al election at least ensures revenue from political advertisem­ents; however, live sports broadcasts can’t promise to be the traditiona­l big payday.

Networks are having to get creative — both in how they film and where they find content to fill any primetime holes. The season may also have to start a bit later than usual, with new programs carefully spaced out.

At Fox, the company scrapped Season 17 of So You Think You Can Dance and made the unusual move to pad its September schedule with L.A.’s Finest, a detective drama that originally aired on Spectrum, a cable service owned by Charter Communicat­ions. Fox also has two series that were finished before the pandemic. Filthy Rich, a satirical drama starring Kim Cattrall as a conservati­ve Oprah-like figure, was supposed to arrive last fall and premieres Sept. 21. And NeXt, a psychologi­cal thriller about artificial intelligen­ce gone rogue, headlined by John Slattery, arrives Oct. 6.

Even as Fox cameras begin rolling, CEO Lachlan Murdoch recently told nonproduct ion employees t hat t hey’ll keep working from home for the rest of the year. Murdoch also said on an Aug. 4 earnings call that he’s confident the National Football League will come back in the fall. Then again, he thought the same thing about college football. (The NFL and its players’ associatio­n agreed on a series of protective protocol in advance of the season, according to The New York Times.)

The explosive hit This Is Us is on NBC’s fall schedule and is slated to premiere on Nov. 10. Actress Mandy Moore told The Today Show that they would normally begin filming right after July 4. In a virtual roundtable held by California Governor Gavin Newsom and members of the entertainm­ent industry in May, Moore’s This Is Us cast mate Jon Huertas described the hypervigil­ance that would be needed on the set as “daunting.”

“Emotionall­y, of course, we all want to get back to work,” he said. “But also the actor is going to be the least protected person on- set. We can’t film with PPE [personal protective equipment] on.” As far as NBC’s other programs, the singing competitio­n The Voice reportedly won’t be ready in time, and its Monday slot is being filled by American Ninja Warrior, according to Deadline. Murdoch said earlier this month he “remained hopeful” that Fox’s Masked Singer would still air in the fall.

A disappoint­ing fall lineup and continuing recession will drive more consumers to ditch cable packages in favor of cheaper streaming substitute­s. Still, they won’t find much consolatio­n because those services are just as affected by the programmin­g shortage. Netflix’s relatively full library has made it a notable exception because the company’s long production lead time has secured a bigger backlog. Companies such as AT&T’s WarnerMedi­a and Comcast’s NBC have responded by shaking up their leadership ranks and cutting staff as they redirect resources to streaming initiative­s. Disney also lost its top streaming executive to TikTok.

Reduce, reuse, recycle is now the theme of the content wars. Mulan, which was set to be one of Disney’s biggest box-office hits of the year, is instead going to debut on the Disney+ app on Friday, Sept. 4, at the same time it arrives in theaters, or at least any that have reopened by then. Disney+ subscriber­s, who already pay $7 a month, will have to cough up an additional $30 to stream the movie. Savings bundles reminiscen­t of the cable TV era are also making a comeback, with Apple introducin­g one for Apple TV+ and Viacom’s CBS All Access and Showtime services.

For media giants, this fall TV season is about making lemonade from lemons. The takeaway for consumers: Slow down or there won’t be much left on your watchlist other than low-grade reality dating shows and cop dramas. Then again, the election promises to deliver plenty of gripping material on the nightly news.

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Filthy Rich
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This Is Us
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