USA TODAY US Edition

Fox, CBS take leaps of faith

‘Last Man’ returns; Praise for ‘God Friended Me’.

- Bill Keveney USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES – Mike and Vanessa Baxter are engaged in dining table banter in a scene from Fox’s revived “Last Man Standing” (Fridays, 8 EDT/ PDT), but between takes, the actors continue the comedy.

Tim Allen, who plays Mike, cracks jokes and chats with crew about his Detroit Lions. Nancy Travis, who plays Mike’s wife, Vanessa, goes faux putupon at one point, saying, “I can’t work like this.”

Allen jumps at the opening. “Dig deep. Go back to NYU,” where Travis studied theater, he says. “Breathe in the subway smells.”

The playful barbs sound like a conversati­on a real married couple might have. But the relaxed vibe belies the topsy-turvy events that got them back 18 months later, to their original soundstage, which features the Baxters’ Denver home and the Outdoor Man sporting-goods store where Mike is an exec.

“Man,” which centers on Mike, wife Vanessa, their three daughters, in-laws and friends, was canceled by ABC and benched for a season until Fox, which owns the series, picked it up for this fall.

“It’s awe-inspiring to walk out (on set),” Allen says during a break. “All of us have come back with a renewed motivation. Everything’s sharper, crisper, cleaner.”

The cancellati­on was “jarring,” executive producer Kevin Abbott says, but the year away “almost was a benefit because everybody came back feeling fresher, invigorate­d, like it was a new start.”

Travis credits fans for the Fox revival. “We were canceled with over 8 million viewers. They really came out. They never gave up even when we gave up. Petition after petition, letter after letter.”

The sitcom acknowledg­es its change of address in Friday’s opening scene, as befuddled son-in-law Kyle (Christoph Sanders) can’t find his favorite TV show. “Why would they cancel a popular show that everybody loves?” he asks.

“Maybe they’re a bunch of idiots. Just try another channel,” Mike replies.

The year off means more than just a different network: “Man” required casting changes after some actors found other jobs. Molly McCook replaces Molly Ephraim as a very different-looking middle Baxter sister Mandy, while Kaitlyn Dever, who plays youngest daughter Eve, will make fewer appearance­s, ex- plained by the fact Eve attends the Air Force Academy.

Mike’s grandson Boyd has been recast with an actor (Jet Jurgensmey­er) about five years older.

“The concept of the pilot was Mike gets a grandson that he gets to teach to be a man,” Abbott says. With a 12-yearold, “we have a lot more stories.”

Allen says he doesn’t harbor a grudge against ABC, where he enjoyed great success with “Home Improvemen­t”; he also made several films with parent Disney. “It’s my family over there,” he says.

And he doesn’t put much stock in conspiracy theories that say “Man” was canceled due to the conservati­ve politics of Allen and his character – at least that ABC would confess. They “would have to be dimmer than a burned-out light bulb to admit it.”

Allen and Abbott say Mike’s political viewpoint, countered by his more liberal family, has made “Man” distinctiv­e.

“We tend to think of our show as being about a family first, but what makes it unique is Mike Baxter because you really don’t see a conservati­ve character on the air who isn’t an idiot or a villain who is the center of the show,” Abbott says. (“Roseanne” briefly joined that club last spring.)

Mike’s business partner Ed (Hector Elizondo) and neighbor Chuck (Jonathan Adams) will return, but “Man” says goodbye to a recurring character with the death of Mike’s father, Bud, in the Oct. 5 episode, which leads to son-in-law Ryan taking over Bud’s marijuana shop.

A culture clash emerges this season when the Baxters take in a 16-year-old foreign exchange student from Hong Kong. But it’s not because Mike, a University of Michigan graduate who has traveled the world, is ignorant.

“He’s formed his opinions through experience,” Abbott says. “If he disagrees, he’ll have an informed disagreeme­nt.”

“Man” delves into businessma­n Mike’s fiscal conservati­sm but also references highly charged topics such as the travel ban, guns, drugs and health care, as it has in past seasons. But it will generally be a glancing blow, not full immersion, as was the case with the exchange student’s arrival.

Mike says that “with the travel ban and the wall, you’d think people would just want to stay the hell out,” Allen says. “It was just a quick joke. I like the fact you’re never sure what he believed in that. … Mike Baxter will always surprise you.”

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Tim Allen stands on the Outdoor Man store set of “Last Man Standing,” which is open for business on Fox a year after ABC canceled it.
ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Tim Allen stands on the Outdoor Man store set of “Last Man Standing,” which is open for business on Fox a year after ABC canceled it.
 ??  ?? Mike (Allen) deals with the death of his father Bud (Robert Forster) on Oct. 5. FOX
Mike (Allen) deals with the death of his father Bud (Robert Forster) on Oct. 5. FOX

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