USA TODAY International Edition

Peacock ruffles only a few feathers

Changes are minimal at NBC with two comedies, one drama on tap

- Gary Levin

NBC is making few changes to its fall schedule, adding just two comedies and a lone drama as it banks on “Sunday Night Football,” “The Voice” and a trio of “Chicago” dramas. The conservati­ve lineup – fueled by NBC’s top-rated status among its target young-adult audience – relocates just one comedy, “The Good Place,” to an anchor position at 9 EDT/PDT on Thursdays, and returns Tuesday’s “The Voice” episode to 9.

But fans of “Manifest,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” “Will and Grace,” “Good Girls” and “Blindspot” will have to wait for their returns: The five series won’t be back until midseason (”Brooklyn” for just 13 episodes), along with five other new shows.

New for fall: Jimmy Smits (“L.A. Law,” “How to Get Away With Murder”) stars in “Bluff City Law,” a family legal drama set in Memphis, Tennessee, in which a widowed father and his daughter reunite to fight social injustice.

Onetime NBC star Bradley Whitford (“The West Wing”) returns in comedy “Perfect Harmony” as a for

mer Princeton music professor who takes over a small-town church choir. And Kal Penn co-created and stars in “Sunnyside,” about a disgraced New York City councilman who becomes an advocate for a group of immigrants dreaming of American citizenshi­p.

As expected, the network renewed its top-rated series “This Is Us” for fourth, fifth and sixth seasons, which creator Dan Fogelman expects will mark the end of its run. (NBC won’t commit to an end date). The fifth season of “Blindspot” will be its last. The network won’t confirm the fate of “The Village” and “The Enemy Within” while both shows continue to air new episodes, but “AP Bio,” “Abby’s,” “I Feel Bad” and “Midnight, Texas” are not expected to return. Among reality series, “World of Dance” and “America’s Got Talent: The Champions” will be back, along with a new edition of “Little Big Shots,” hosted by Melissa McCarthy, and “Ellen’s Game of Games.”

For midseason, also look for “The Kenan Show,” a family comedy starring Kenan Thompson, who will keep his night job on “Saturday Night Live”; “Indebted,” starring Adam Pally as a married man whose broke parents (his mother is played by Fran Drescher) move in; “Zoey’s Extraordin­ary Playlist,” starring Jane Levy (“Suburgator­y”) as a San Francisco computer coder; “Council of Dads,” about a man who seeks parenting backup from four pals after a health scare; and “Lincoln,” a drama starring Russell Hornsby inspired by the best-selling novel “The Bone Collector.”

NBC has been reliant on procedural dramas including the “Chicago” trio, “Law & Order: SVU” (which has just surpassed the original “Law & Order” as the longest-running series in the franchise) and “The Blacklist.” Its comedies “Brooklyn,” “Good Place” and “Superstore” are less popular but have larger digital audiences and give the network a creative sheen thanks to loyal fans and friendly critics.

NBC’s average TV audience is 7.3 million viewers this season, down 19% from last year and ranking second behind CBS, according to Nielsen figures. Among adults ages 18 to 49, NBC leads with 2.1 million but is down 26%. Still, TV networks are increasing­ly reliant on digital ratings, which aren’t included in these totals.

 ??  ?? Bradley Whitford stars as a Princeton music professor who unexpected­ly takes charge of a small-town church choir in “Perfect Harmony.” NBC
Bradley Whitford stars as a Princeton music professor who unexpected­ly takes charge of a small-town church choir in “Perfect Harmony.” NBC
 ??  ?? In “Sunnyside,” Kal Penn, center, is Garrett Modi, a disgraced New York City councilman who hopes to find redemption by helping immigrants try to become American citizens. COLLEEN HAYES/NBC
In “Sunnyside,” Kal Penn, center, is Garrett Modi, a disgraced New York City councilman who hopes to find redemption by helping immigrants try to become American citizens. COLLEEN HAYES/NBC

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