Los Angeles Times

Follow-up to ‘terrific season’

The young network adds three series in a bid to build on its momentum.

- By Meredith Blake meredith.blake@latimes.com Twitter: @MeredithBl­ake

The CW will expand its comic book and comedy offerings.

NEW YORK — Following one of the most critically and commercial­ly successful years in its history, the CW unveiled a prime-time lineup for the 2015-16 season Thursday that displayed newfound confidence from the young (and young-skewing) network.

“We had a terrific season,” said CW President Mark Pedowitz in a call with reporters Thursday morning ahead of the network’s upfront presentati­on in New York. High points included freshman comic book adaptation “The Flash,” the most watched show in the CW’s history, which propelled the network to its highest ratings in seven years and expanded its reach with male viewers.

The CW also earned critical acclaim for freshman comedy “Jane the Virgin,” whose breakout star, Gina Rodriguez, won a Golden Globe in January, the first major award win for the network.

The network has announced three new series for the season ahead, expanding its comic book and comedy offerings while venturing into the ever-popular disease outbreak genre.

The one-hour comedy “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” is the only series scheduled for the fall, when it’s scheduled for Mondays at 8 p.m. and will lead in to “Jane the Virgin.” This will give the previously drama-focused CW a twohour comedy block on a night when its broadcast rivals have turned away from the genre.

“Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” which stars Rachel Bloom as a lawyer who moves from New York to the SoCal suburbs, is a project the CW picked up from its corporate sister Showtime. The network may be distinguis­hing itself with one-hour comedies that, like the telenovela spoof “Jane the Virgin,” strike the balance between laughs and drama. “It is different,” Pedowitz said, “It is a blue sky with a very dark twist.”

The network is also making minor time slot adjustment­s, moving “The Originals” to 9 p.m. Thursday after its sister show “The Vampire Diaries,” while “Reign” will move from Thursdays to Fridays to get out of the way of ABC’s hit soap “Scandal.”

The CW is holding “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow,” with Victor Garber and Brandon Routh, for midseason. Plot details about the drama, which will be the third DC comic adaptation on the network after “Arrow” and “The Flash,” are scant so far, with the CW revealing only that the series will center on “a disparate group of both heroes and villains” who band together to fight evil.

Rounding out the new shows is the action drama “Containmen­t,” which follows the outbreak of a deadly epidemic in — where else? — Atlanta.

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Jim Fiscus The CW THE NEW CW action drama “Containmen­t” focuses on the outbreak of a deadly epidemic in Atlanta.

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