The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Broadcast television’s reduced role made clear in fall presentati­ons

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There were constant reminders of the diminished influence of broadcast television networks this past week, when entertainm­ent companies Paramount, Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, NBC Universal and Fox hawked their upcoming wares to advertiser­s in flashy New York presentati­ons.

Broadcaste­rs once owned the week, revealing their fall schedules to much fanfare. They’re now almost afterthoug­hts in bloated presentati­ons where the action is now in streaming, and in the coming shakeout over how advertisin­g will invade that format.

Yet with their plans, ABC, CBS and NBC — Fox didn’t even bother to release a fall schedule — show they clearly know their new place in the entertainm­ent world.

Twenty years ago, the networks were coming off a season where three scripted programs — “Friends,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigat­ion” and “ER” — all averaged more than 22 million viewers per episode. This season, “NCIS” and “FBI” are, barely, the only such shows to exceed 10 million, the Nielsen company said.

In April, a broadcast television network was being watched less than 25% of the time that an American household had a TV on, Nielsen said. The rest of the time was spent on cable networks, streaming, gaming, DVR use or videos.

With premium cable in its salad days and streaming still a dream, the network programmer­s in 2002 spent freely and took chances. ABC, CBS and NBC introduced 19 new scripted programs, eight of them comedies, on their fall schedules that year.

This year, they plan just seven new scripted shows for the fall. NBC’s star vehicle for George Lopez and his daughter, “Lopez vs. Lopez,” is the only comedy.

“We have officially turned the page now. Everyone sees that we are not going back to the network era,” said Aaron Barnhart, a veteran critic and author of the book “Primetimer Guide to Streaming TV.” “In some ways, it’s just the culminatio­n of a culture shift that happened when everybody first start hooking up to cable TV.”

Network TV is primarily becoming the home of franchises and reboots, unscripted and live events and sports.

NBC has its three Dick Wolf-produced “Chicago” dramas filling its Wednesday nights and CBS does the same for its “FBI” shows on Tuesday, also produced by Wolf. NBC’s trio of “Law & Order” shows (yes, Wolf again) will fill Thursday nights, CBS has its “NCIS” franchise, Fox has two “911” shows and ABC is trying to create its own franchise with a spinoff of “The Rookie” in the fall.

Even CBS’ funnyman Stephen Colbert couldn’t resist poking fun at his network’s formula at the Paramount program, saying it specialize­s in “sexy people solving the murders of sexy corpses.”

NBC succumbed to the tried-and-true idea of resurrecti­ng old shows with the drama “Quantum Leap” and, in midseason, the comedy “Night Court.”

“That isn’t a fall schedule,” said ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel, whose mocking monologues are a ritual at the yearly schedule presentati­ons. “Those are the tapes you find in your dead uncle’s VCR.”

At ABC, “we’ve really leaned into live events” like “American Idol,” Erwich said in an interview. The network is also introducin­g a celebrity version of “Jeopardy!,” recognizin­g the syndicated game show routinely draws more viewers than any prime-time show. For the first time this fall, CBS is scheduling an all-unscripted evening of programs.

Both ABC and NBC will have more unscripted than scripted hours on its prime-time schedule this fall. In total, 34 of 66 prime-time hours on the three top networks will be scripted. That compares to 42 and a half 20 years ago, not including nine hours of scheduled movies.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Starring in new fall shows on the broadcast TV networks are, from left, Marcia Gay Harden, left, and Skylar Astin in a scene from the new CBS series “So Help Me Todd”; Niecy Nash-Betts, in the new ABC spinoff series “The Rookie: Feds,” and Brice Gonzalez with George Lopez in the new NBC series “Lopez vs. Lopez.”
Associated Press Starring in new fall shows on the broadcast TV networks are, from left, Marcia Gay Harden, left, and Skylar Astin in a scene from the new CBS series “So Help Me Todd”; Niecy Nash-Betts, in the new ABC spinoff series “The Rookie: Feds,” and Brice Gonzalez with George Lopez in the new NBC series “Lopez vs. Lopez.”

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