Gulf News

‘This Is Us’ faces pandemic delays

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Reality shows, re-runs and revivals make up most of the television menu this fall as America’s top four broadcaste­rs grapple to fill holes in their schedules caused by coronaviru­s production shutdowns.

Most scripted dramas, including popular shows like This Is Us and 9-1-1, will not be available until November or later, while the Star Trek: Discovery

series that has been behind a paywall for three years will get a run on free-to-view CBS , the networks announced this week.

Elsewhere, it will mostly be a diet of old and new game shows, including Ellen’s Game of Games, repeats of Celebrity Family Feud, and another revival of 1960s show ‘Supermarke­t Sweep’.

“This is hardly a traditiona­l fall season but we are prepared with a strong slate of original content while our regular scripted series begin production,” Kelly Kahl, president of entertainm­ent at CBS, said in a statement announcing the line-up.

The coronaviru­s pandemic shuttered production of television and films in Hollywood in midMarch and the industry has struggled to get back to work under new health guidelines.

Scripted TV dramas and comedies are usually shot in August and begin airing in September.

Comcast Corp’s NBC said hospital drama New Amsterdam and police comedy Brooklyn Nine-Nine

were among shows that will not be back until January, while a new season of family series This Is Us will not appear until November 10.

CBS said it will showcase the Latinx family comedy One Day at a Time, which has been running on various other platforms since 2017, and has bought in crime series Manhunt: Deadly Games

from Spectrum TV. —Reuters

 ??  ?? A still from ‘This Is Us’.
A still from ‘This Is Us’.

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