Friday, September 12, 2014

Fall TV 2014

Welcome!  It's been a busy week and this preview is already late, , so in the interest of not reinventing the wheel, here is my introduction from last year's TV preview (slightly edited):

Welcome to my annual Fall TV preview.  

To those of you who are returning readers, you know the drill.  For those of you new to my write-up, here's the story.  By day (and some nights) I work on health care policy, but by night (and some days) I enjoy my pop culture, especially my TV.  So each year I share what I'm watching and my impressions of the new shows.

A couple of things to keep in mind - TV is changing - in fact to continue to call it "TV" is a bit of a misnomer.  People watch on their computers, their tablets and even their phones (kids today, I'm telling you, get off my lawn).  Also, while when I was growing up there were 3 networks to choose from, now there are over 300 channel options on most cable systems.  This year we can add original programming coming from Netflix and Amazon - shows that are never "broadcast" at all.  And of course, we can't forget all the premium cable channels.  It's exhausting just writing about it, so as much as I would like to, I can't cover it all (at least not while I still have this health care crisis to deal with).   So here are my parameters - I am not (yet) covering the non-broadcast shows (so no House of Cards and no Orange is the New Black).  I also have a large enough cable bill with my two DVRs, so no premium channels for me (which means no Homeland and no VEEP). (2014 Mitchell here, I finally broke down and got my Netflix subscription, so have now caught up on House of Cards (loved it) and halfway through Orange (the book ruined the show for me, loved the book but the show is very different and I can't seem to get past that.  OK, back to 2013 Mitchell now.)

OK, we're almost ready to start, my last warning is that I like what I like - I have a bias towards sci-fi shows and against Law & Order and reality TV.  For the new shows, I share what I've read about all of them but for existing shows I stick to what I watch.  As you read on remember, I won't judge your taste, please don't judge mine.


Below you will find a section looking at this Fall's new shows, a link to my personal fall schedule and a list of resources (including a link to a very useful premiere data calendar showing when all your favorites are returning).

Happy viewing!


NEW SHOWS

Below is an alphabetical list of (most) of the shows on broadcast and non-premium cable premiering this fall.  I've taken the TV guide summaries and added my comments above them.  The titles of the shows I'm watching are bolded and my comments are in italics, the standard print is copied from this page:  NEW FALL TV SHOWS (unlike certain consulting firms working for the State of Maine, I know not to plagiarize).  I also refer to the Television Critics Association survey results which can be found here: Television Critics of America survey of most promising shows.


A to Z, NBC, Premieres: Thursday, Oct. 2 at 9/8c

A TV Guide Editor's Pick and number three on the TCA list of most promising new comedies - Plus it stars the mother (miraculously back from her untimely death on HIMYM).  So I'm in. 

A student of the How I Met Your Mother school of television, A to Z is a romantic comedy that chronicles a relationship from beginning to end, à la 500 Days of Summer. Mad Men's Ben Feldman stars (with both of his nipples!) as Andrew, a true believer in destiny and romance, while HIMYM's ever-charming Cristin Milioti plays the object of his affection, Zelda. (A to Z, get it?) Lenora Crichlow, Henry Zebrowski, and Christina Kirk round out the cast.


Bad Judge, NBC, Premieres: Thursday, Oct. 2 at 9/8c

Some are betting this will be the first show cancelled. Yes Kate Walsh is talented, but the best we can hope is that this show dies a fast merciful death and she finds a place to use her talent.

This single-camera comedy stars Kate Walsh (Private Practice, Fargo) as Rebecca Wright, one of L.A.'s most respected criminal court judges. But here's the (overused and kind-of-boring) catch: While Rebecca totally and completely has it together in her work life, her personal life is the exact definition of a hot mess. She's flaky, she sleeps around without a care in the world, and she parties like she's still in college (so we're guessing she has the world's worst hangovers). She does drive a sweet van, though! John Ducey, Tone Bell, and Theodore Barnes also star.


Black-ish, ABC, Premieres: Wednesday, Sep. 24 at 9/8c

Also a TV Guide Editors' pick and number one on the TCA list of promising comedies.  Looks funny so it dubbed DVRworthy!

Created by and starring comedian Anthony Anderson, Black-ish explores one man's efforts to establish a cultural identity for his family after he discovers his children don't have one. Anderson stars as man-of-the-house Dre, and Tracee Ellis Ross plays his biracial wife Rainbow; they've got their hands full working and raising kids Zoey, Andre (who prefers to be called Andy and really, really wants a bar mitzvah despite the fact they're not Jewish), and twins Jack and Diane. Hannibal's Laurence Fishburne appears as Dre's father, Pops, and wears velour tracksuits because he's Laurence freaking Fishburne.


Constantine, NBC, Premieres: Friday, Oct. 24 at 10/9c

Not for everyone, what we in the biz (don't I wish) refer to as a genre show.  Based on a very dark comic.  Martha will not be watching this one with me.

One of many comic book adaptations this season, Constantine is based on the DC Comics series Hellblazer. Welsh actor Matt Ryan stars as the titular John Constantine, a seasoned demon hunter and master of the occult who abandoned his campaign against evil after failing to save a young girl's soul from hell. However, he's pulled back into the fight when the balance between good and evil somehow winds up on the line and an angel named Manny (Lost's Harold Perrineau) tells him to man up and get his act together. True Detective's Charles Halford also stars.


Cristela, ABC, Premieres: Friday, Oct. 10 at 8/7c

Sorry, I have no interest in this at all.  Maybe it will be funny and I'll miss out, but I don't think so...

Loosely based on comedienne Cristela Alonzo's life and stand-up routine, this family sitcom opens as the title character enters her sixth year of law school and takes on an unpaid internship at a law firm where she's frequently mistaken for the help. As she works to get her life and career started, she must also deal with her traditional Mexican-American family, who struggles to understand her ambitions. Carlos Ponce, Terri Hoyos, Andrew Leeds, Sam McMurray, and Jacob Guenther also star.


The Flash, CW, Premieres: Tuesday, Oct. 7 at 8/7c

This might be the show I'm most looking forward to.  For those who watch Arrow, no need for me to discuss this, for those who don't think a fun, funny show with some tension but the good guys end up winning.  While I'm mostly a Marvel guy (see my discussion of Gotham below) DC has me with their CW shows.  Also a TV Guide Editors' pick.

The CW's highly anticipated Arrow spin-off stars Grant Gustin as Barry Allen, who becomes the fastest man alive, aka The Flash, after an explosion at the S.T.A.R. Labs particle accelerator bestows him with superhuman speed. More lighthearted than its parent series, The Flash is set in Central City, where Barry works as a forensic investigator and uses his special power to help fight crime. He's aided in that endeavor by Det. Joe West (Law & Order's Jesse L. Martin), a cop who also serves as Barry's surrogate father; Barry's real father (TV's original Barry Allen, and Dawson Leery's dad, John Wesley Shipp) is in prison for allegedly murdering Barry's mother. Rounding out the cast are Candice Patton as Iris, Joe's daughter and Barry's BFF; Danielle Panabaker and Carlos Valdes as S.T.A.R. Labs scientists Caitlin Snow and Cisco Ramon; Rick Cosnett as Det. Eddie Thawne; and Tom Cavanagh as Dr. Harrison Wells.


Forever, ABC, Premieres: Monday, Sep. 22 at 10/9c (then moves to Tuesday's at 10 the following week)

I'm curious - think Elementary meets Vampire Diaries.  Not generating a lot of buzz but at least the premise is (a little) different.  Will give it a try to see if they can make it work.

Ioan Gruffudd stars as New York City medical examiner Henry Morgan, who harbors an unusual secret —he can't die. Working alongside his new partner, Det. Jo Martinez (Alana De La Garza), Morgan studies the dead in an effort to discover the mystery of his own immortality. Also, the ladies in the crowd might want to take note: When Morgan dies (and he dies semi-often for some reason), he always comes back naked. Judd Hirsch, Donnie Keshawarz, and Joel David Moore also star.


Gotham, Fox, Premieres: Monday, Sep. 22 at 8/7c

This is the show I'm most conflicted about, but as a TV Guide Editors' pick and getting the TCA pick for the top new show, how can I not give it a try.  As I said above, I'm more a Marcel (Iron Man Avengers, etc) guy than a DC (Batman, Superman, etc) guy.  And this show is clearly in the Christopher Nolan Batman tradition.  This time looking at the city of Gotham when Batman was just a boy and Commissioner Gordon was just a beat cop.  In addition to focusing on Gordon will also look at the origins of some of Batman's most famous enemies.  So I'll be watching, mostly because I think I should be...

Described as the origin story of future Gotham police commissioner Jim Gordon, Gotham is Fox's effort to get in on TV's comic-book craze. Southland and The O.C. alum Ben McKenzie stars as Gordon, a fresh-faced police detective whose life begins to change when he and his partner, the brash Harvey Bullock (Donal Logue), start investigating the murder of the parents of none other than a young Bruce Wayne (David Mazouz). However, the noir crime drama isn't just about Gordon's rise through the ranks of Gotham City's PD; it also promises to tell the origin stories of several DC Comics' villains, including Catwoman (Camren Bicondova), the Penguin (Robin Lord Taylor), and the Riddler (Cory Michael Smith).


Gracepoint, Fox, Premieres: Thursday, Oct. 2 at 9/8c

You know how I just said Gotham was the show I was most conflicted about?  We'll I lied.  This is really the show - I needed to toss a coin to see if it made the schedule. Here's my problem, I loved Broadchurch, the BBC show on which this is based.  Really, if you're at all intrigued, watch that one instead of this.  But having loved Broadchurch I'm curious to see what Fox does to it.  Plus, the Fox version stars David Tennant - who also starred in the original (and also happens to be the Tenth Doctor).

When a young boy is found dead on an idyllic beach, a major police investigation gets underway in the small California seaside town where the tragedy occurred. Soon deemed a homicide, the case sparks a media frenzy, which throws the boy’s family into further turmoil and upends the lives of all of the town’s residents. Based on the British series Broadchurch, the event series stars David Tennant and Anna Gunn as the pair of cops investigating the case. The cast also includes Nick Nolte, Michael Pena, Jacki Weaver and Kevin Rankin.


How to Get Away With Murder, ABC, Premieres: Thursday, Sep. 25 at 10/9c

Shonda Rihimes (creator of Grey's Anatamy (don't watch) and Scandal (obsessed with) adds a third show making Thursday nights on ABC all Shonda all the time.  Staring Viola Davis how could you not watch.  For those who don't watch either of Shonda's other shows, buckle up - they move fast and take hairpin turns without any warning! Also a TV Guide Editors' pick and TCA number 3 promising new drama.

Shonda Rhimes continues her push toward world domination with this legal thriller, which stars Viola Davis as a serious-as-the-death-penalty law school professor whose attractive students vie for her approval and a desk at her prestigious law firm. But their biggest lessons are learned outside the classroom, when they get caught up in a murder plot and, presumably, must figure out how to get away with it. Expect Scandal-sized twists and Grey's-like drama!


Jane The Virgin, CW, Premieres: Monday, Oct. 13 at 9/8c

This gets the award for the show you would be mostly likely to think is stupid.  Yet the buzz on the show and its star, Gina Rodriguez, is as good as for any other new show.  TV Guide Editors' pick, TCA number 2 most promising new show and Gina is number one pick to be the breakout star of the season.  Don't get bogged down in the summary.  Critics who've seen the pilot loved it, so put aside your skepticism and give it a try.

Come on, it's all right there in the title: Gina Rodriguez stars as a young woman named Jane, and Jane is a virgin! What more is there to know? Well, okay, there is the fact that she's pregnant because she was accidentally artificially inseminated by her gynecologist. Whoops! And to make matters even more complicated, Jane has to decide whether or not to keep the baby after discovering the sperm specimen belonged to cancer survivor Rafael (Justin Baldoni), who's not only a former crush of Jane's, but also her new boss.


Madam Secretary, CBS, Premieres: Sunday, Sep. 21 at 8/7c

We like Tea, the show looks like in spirit it is a successor to the West Wing (although I don't expect it to be on that level). In this day and age, who doesn't want to see a political fantasy where Washington gets things done... Also a TV Guide Editors' pick

Tea Leoni plays a former CIA agent whose former boss, now the president of the United States (Keith Carradine), asks her to take on the role of Secretary of State after an accident claims the life of the office's previous occupant. Using her no-nonsense, unconventional attitude toward politics, she shakes things up in Washington, D.C. while also juggling her home life as a wife and a mother. Tim Daly and Bebe Neuwirth also star.


Manhattan Love Story, ABC, Premieres: Tuesday, Sep. 30 at 8/7c

Move along, nothing to see here...

This new comedy uses the power of voiceover to broadcast the internal monologues of a New York City dude (Jake McDorman) and a Midwestern transplant chick (Analeigh Tipton) as they navigate an awkward first date and subsequent budding romance. What you'll learn early on from the voices in their heads is that guys like sex and women like purses; but as the series — and their relationship &mdash ;progresses, we expect things will get a bit more complicated than that.


Marry Me, NBC, Premieres: Tuesday, Oct. 14 at 9/8c

It's Penny, oh sorry, Casey Wilson - so I'm in.  (If you didn't like Happy Ending's don't watch, if you never watched Happy Ending's, shame on you, it's your fault it got cancelled!)

Happy Endings' David Caspe is the writer behind this rom-com about a couple (played by Ken Marino and Caspe's real-life wife Casey Wilson) who are well on their way to tying the knot. There's just one problem: They can't get the marriage proposal right! Is it a sign that they aren't supposed to be together? Or do they need to just stop screwing up their overly inventive attempts to get engaged? Sarah Wright and John Gemberling also star.


The McCarthys, CBS, Premieres: Thursday, Oct. 30 at 9/8c

Really?  Why?  No thank you.

A loud-mouthed, sports-crazy Boston family (aren't those things redundant?) is at the center of this multi-camera sitcom based on the life of series creator Brian Gallivan. But what happens when the patriarch asks the resident black sheep — a gay, sports-averse son — o be his assistant basketball coach? Madness! Will there be a "you throw like a girl" joke? Probably! Tyler Ritter, Laurie Metcalf, Jack McGee, Jimmy Dunn, and Joey McIntyre (yes, that Joey McIntyre, of New Kids on the Block) star.


Mulaney, Fox, Premieres: Sunday, Oct. 5 at 9/8c

Don't really think he's that funny, I won't be watching.

What's the deal with this show? Stand-up comic and former SNL writer John Mulaney does his best Jerry Seinfeld impression as a comedian who lives and works in New York City and whose pals (Nasim Pedrad and Seaton Smith) and wacky neighbor (Elliot Gould) like to butt into his life. But John will have a more regular gig than Jerry ever did: He writes jokes for a game-show host and comedian played by Martin Short. Yada, yada, yada...


The Mysteries of Laura, NBC, Premieres: Wednesday, Sep. 17 at 10/9c

As much as I love Debra Messing, Smash proved she can be in bad shows.  This one looks like another one that fits in that category - count me out.

Things at NBC are about to get Messing again! This lighthearted drama brings Will & Grace and Smash actress Debra Messing back to the small screen as Laura Diamond, an NYPD homicide detective who spends her days cleaning up the streets and the rest of her time cleaning up after her rambunctious twin sons and soon-to-be ex-husband (Josh Lucas) Laz Alonso also stars.


NCIS: New Orleans, CBS, Premieres: Tuesday, Sep. 23 at 9/8c

I can honestly say I've only watched one episode of NCIS in my life (and none of CSI), so I won't be watching this spinoff. 

Why should Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles have all the fun? The Big Easy gets its own iteration of TV's most-watched drama, with Scott Bakula, Lucas Black, Zoe McLellan, and C.C.H. Pounder solving crimes on Bourbon Street and beyond. We guess the Navy boys get into lots of trouble while they're on leave!


Red Band Society, Fox, Premieres: Wednesday, Sep. 17 at 9/8c

This one gets the award for the best show I won't be watching.  Getting good buzz but I'm just not that interested in watching sick children. Even as a TV Guide Editors' pick I'm not in.

Set in the children's ward of a Los Angeles hospital (and narrated by a kid who's in a coma), Red Band Society is a coming-of-age drama that follows a Breakfast Club -esque group of patients as they such face life-changing (and life-threatening) challenges as cancer and heart defects. Griffin Gluck, Zoe Levin, Charlie Rowe, Astro, Ciara Bravo, and Nolan Sotillo star as the young protagonists, while Dave Annable, Rebecca Rittenhouse, and Octavia Spencer take on the adult roles of the doctors and nurses who mentor them through the ups and downs of adolescence.


Scorpion, CBS, Premieres: Monday, Sep. 22 at 9/8c

Think Big Bang meets Elementary meets Covert Affairs.  Need I say more?  OK, how about Katharine McPhee as Penny, does that do it for you?

Based on the experiences of real-world genius Walter O'Brien, Scorpion is about a bunch of nerds who form a team to solve some of the world's most complex problems. (It's like if the Justice League of America traded their superpowers for supersmarts, computer wizardry and hacking skills.) And to give the show a Big Bang Theory-esque twist, Katharine McPhee plays the diner waitress who glues them all together. Elyes Gabel, Robert Patrick, and Eddie Kaye Thomas also star.


Selfie, ABC, Premieres: Tuesday, Sep. 30 at 8/7c

This one gets me because of the cast.  Amelia and Harold.  How could you not watch?
Karen Gillan (Doctor Who) drops her adorable Scottish accent to star in this modern spin on Pygmalion that takes place in today's social media-driven world. Gillan's Eliza Dooley is obsessed with becoming Internet famous, but her constant Instagramming and Facebooking has left her devoid of any real friends — not to mention the social skills required to make any. Desperate for a fix, Eliza hires marketer Henry Higenbottam (John Cho) to help her rebuild her image and put down her damn phone for once.


Stalker, CBS, Premieres: Wednesday, Oct. 1 at 10/9c

I watched Nikita all the way to the end.  Clearly I'm a fan of Maggie Q.  But even that devotion couldn't get me to watch this train wreck of a concept.  Every week a new stalker...  No thanks.
This violent and shocking thriller from The Following's Kevin Williamson has already drawn plenty of pre-air criticism, and with good reason. It follows a division of the LAPD that deals with stalkers, voyeurs, and love-obsessed weirdos who target mostly women, often with deadly results. Maggie Q and Dylan McDermott star as our law enforcement heroes who may be more complicated than they seem.

State of Affairs, NBC, Premieres: Monday, Nov. 17 at 10/9c

I never watched Grey's and I still resent Katherine Heigl for her behavior, and her lack of acting ability.  No thanks.

Former Grey's Anatomy star Katherine Heigl is making her grand return to television, whether you want her to or not. In this political drama, she plays a top CIA attache who's tasked with one heck of a job: put together a briefing for the president (Alfre Woodard) to assess the greatest threats to national security. And just in case that doesn't sound stressful enough, she spends what little free time she has hunting down the terrorists who killed her fiancé, who also happened to be the president's son.


Utopia, Fox, Premieres: Sunday, Sep. 7 at 8/7c

And talking about train wrecks - since I'm a little late with this preview, this show has already premiered.  It is supposed to be a key element of Fox's schedule this fall (airing twice a week)and is already tanking in the ratings. You can bet that as you're reading this several Fox executives are staying up nights trying to figure out how to fix it.  Good luck with that!

In this experimental reality series based on a Dutch format, 15 contestants — of varying backgrounds and temperaments, of course —are thrown into the wilderness to spend an entire year building their own society with their own rules. Think Kid Nation for grown-ups. Will they govern by democracy, or will a dictator rise to power? Will they practice a certain religion, or will atheism rule? Will they farm their own food or eat each other as things devolve into anarchy and cannibalism? It'll be paradise or chaos (or something in the middle), and it'll be filmed for your enjoyment!


Z Nation, Syfy, Premieres: Friday, Sep. 12 at 10/9c

OK, even I'm embarrassed I'm watching this one - but if I look at it as a comic version of Walking Dead maybe it will be OK...

Syfy goes after the Walking Dead crowd with this action-horror series about — what else? — a group of survivors trying to save humanity after a zombie apocalypse. But this show's ragtag group (including Lost's Harold Perrineau, Southland's Tom Everett Scott and Road Trip's DJ Qualls) aren't traipsing around the Southern countryside. Instead, they are trying to get the only person unaffected by the zombie plague from New York to California, where a viral lab hopes to turn his blood into a vaccine. What could possibly go wrong during their 3,000-mile journey?


MY FALL 2014 SCHEDULE

I used to include a JPEG of my spreadsheet, but no one could read it.  So click on this link to see a PDF stored in Google Docs:  Fall 2014 Schedule


RESOURCES:

Fall Preview (TV Guide)
Fall Stuff (EW.com)



HAPPY VIEWING!