Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Drama on both sides of camera

- By Lorraine Ali

Like the return of “Roseanne” or “Will & Grace” last year, the reboot of CBS’ “Murphy Brown” this month after 20 years off the air should be the big news for the network in terms of this year’s fall lineup of “new” television shows.

The groundbrea­king comedy starring Candice Bergen as a no-nonsense female journalist in a man’s world has nostalgic value. But more than that, its return signals a shift away from the network’s usual winning series formula — with women and/or brown people as sidekicks to a white male lead — and toward a future that repeatedly threatened to leave them behind.

Ironic, right, that the return of an old show your mother (or you) watched before the advent of the internet represents change in 2018. But it does for CBS, the most-watched network for over a decade that’s been criticized for dragging its feet on diversity initiative­s and ignoring America’s changing demographi­cs. At this time last year, CBS was under fire about the casting of its six new shows — just one, “SWAT,” featured a minority lead. None featured a woman in a leading role.

The resurrecti­on of “Murphy Brown” represents a significan­t reversal for CBS. But will anyone notice?

“Murphy Brown” challenged stereotype­s back in the day as a mom who had her son out of wedlock. Murphy is returning to today’s world of journalism: cable news networks, fake news, YouTube and social media, so expect plenty of jokes about alternate truths and reporters as enemies of the state. Recurring characters include Corky Sherwood (Faith Ford), and the show’s creator, Diane English, returns as a writer and executive producer.

Progress has also been made on the cultural front.

Gentrifica­tion is satirized in “The Neighborho­od,” a comedy starring Cedric the Entertaine­r that looks at what happens when a white family moves into a historical­ly black Los Angeles neighborho­od.

The hourlong drama “God Friended Me” follows podcast host Miles Finer (Brandon Micheal Hall), the son of respected Harlem preacher the Rev. Arthur Finer (Joe Morton). He’s also a die-hard atheist. But Miles begins to question his beliefs and purpose when he’s friended by God on Facebook. Spiritual uplift ensues.

CBS’ reboot of “Magnum P.I.” now stars Jay Hernandez, who does not sport a Tom Selleck mustache. “Happy Together” with Damon Wayans Jr. and Chris Parnell is a comedy about a white British pop star (think Harry Styles of “One Direction,” who is an executive producer) moving in with his black agent’s family. A 24/7 culture clash.

“FBI,” from Dick Wolf of the “Law & Order” franchise, is a procedural about New York agents working with “mind-blowing” technology to keep the city safe. The show stars Missy Peregrym and Zeeko Zaki as two unconventi­onal agents.

Hollywood’s efforts, or at least lip service, toward diversifyi­ng its production­s and shows is hardly breaking news at this point. But the fact that CBS finally flipped the switch should not only be making news but should be an element that executives would be eager to highlight, especially since they are no longer in defense mode on the diversity front.

That narrative, however, has been eclipsed by another tectonic shift at the network.

In what is sure to be one of the most volcanic media stories this year, CBS network chief executive Les Moonves has left after 20 years on the job amid a flood of sexual misconduct allegation­s.

Like most of the entertainm­ent world, CBS is moving toward a more equitable world in its fictional programmin­g. The reality behind the camera, however, is one of an industry that doesn’t practice what it preaches.

The steps CBS is taking toward updating an old model are indicative of growing pains across all networks. The platforms, like the audience, keep changing, and those shifts seem to be happening at warp speed compared with when “Knots Landing” landed in the 1990s.

For example, some of this fall’s more promising comedies across all networks feature casts well over 70.

Netflix’s “The Kominsky Method” stars Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin as a Hollywood agent and actor, respective­ly, who are trying to stay relevant and working in a city that worships youth and beauty. The comedy series comes from producer Chuck Lorre of “The Big Bang Theory” and “Two and a Half Men.”

Fox’s “Cool Kids” is another example of the Centrum Silver crowd stealing the show. The sitcom stars David Alan Grier, Martin Mull, Vicki Lawrence and Leslie Jordan. They reside in a retirement community with a social pecking order not all that different from the one in high school.

In short, “Murphy Brown” has company.

 ?? JOJO WHILDEN/CBS ?? Candice Bergen returns as the eponymous broadcast news legend in the revival of the comedy series “Murphy Brown.”
JOJO WHILDEN/CBS Candice Bergen returns as the eponymous broadcast news legend in the revival of the comedy series “Murphy Brown.”
 ?? JONATHAN WENK/CBS ?? Brandon Micheal Hall, left, and Joe Morton star in the upcoming new hourlong drama “God Friended Me” on CBS.
JONATHAN WENK/CBS Brandon Micheal Hall, left, and Joe Morton star in the upcoming new hourlong drama “God Friended Me” on CBS.
 ?? PATRICK MCELHENNEY/FOX ?? Martin Mull, in cap, Vicki Lawrence, Leslie Jordan, second from right, and David Alan Grier in Fox’s “The Cool Kids.”
PATRICK MCELHENNEY/FOX Martin Mull, in cap, Vicki Lawrence, Leslie Jordan, second from right, and David Alan Grier in Fox’s “The Cool Kids.”

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