Tuesday, May 14, 2013

ABC rocks out a fall schedule & uses 'Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.' to take on 'NCIS'



ABC makes one bold move this fall, as Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. will take on the nation’s number 1 drama, CBS’s NCIS. It’s big, ballsy move by the alphabet network to try and wrestle the male skewing fans of the veteran procedural away to their male skewing series that begins so soon after the big screen adventure (and mega-hit) The Avengers. It’s be interesting to see if NCIS –which after ten seasons remains one of the most watched dramas week-in and week-out- can keep those same numbers once the Joss Whedon series debuts (and thus leaving the CW, NBC and FOX to pick-up any stragglers who won’t watch either of them).

Time, as they say, will tell.

In the meantime, Monday remains locked like last year, a 2-hour edition of Dancing with the Stars and the female driven Castle.

As noted, Tuesday begins with Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and is part of the night’s complete remake. Clark Gregg reprises his role of Agent Phil Coulson from Marvel’s feature films, as he assembles a small, highly select group of Agents to investigate the new, the strange and the unknown around the globe. Whedon helmed the pilot and will serve as Executive Producer.  Joining that show is two new comedies, The Goldbergs, a sitcom set in the 1980s that is about a geeky 11-year-old Adam (Sean Giambrone), a camera-wielding future director who’s crushing on an older woman. George Segal will play his grandfather. Trophy Wife stars Bradley Whitford (The West Wing) who marries his third wife (Malin Akerman) Kate, who now becomes the step-mother to his three children and two ex-wives, one played by Marcia Gay Harden. Lucky 7 fills out the night of new shows. Isiah Witlock, Jr (The Wire) plays the manager of gas station where the employees play the lottery every week in hopes of winning some money, because everyone within this station has more money woes than everyone else apparently. Luis Antonio Ramos and Matt Long also star.

Wednesday comedy block returns, and joining The Middle and Modern Family is Back in the Game and Super Fun Night. Maggie Lawson stars as a former All Star softball player who was headed for the big time until she got pregnant. She not only lost her scholarship, she gained a loser husband. She moves in with her estranged father and has kept her son away from competitive sports. That is until her son joins a Little League team of misfits and (only on TV) where a wealthy neighbor volunteers to finance a team for these bad news bears which Terry must reluctantly become coach for these kids. James Caan (Las Vegas) plays the grandfather. Super Fun Night stars the Australian comedian Rebel Wilson, who wrote the pilot and will executive produce the series, and is about junior attorney Kimmie Boubier (Wilson) and her two best friends, Helen-Alice (Liza Lapira) and Marika (Lauren Ash), who have had a standing date every Friday night for the last 13 years. But a promotion for Kimmie throws a wrench into their long-standing tradition and she tries to convince her friends that they should take their “super fun night” on the road to better parties and richer people. Nashville returns for a second season to close out the night.

Thursday has been a difficult night for ABC, and has not had a successful show begin the night in years. However, they seem to banking on the appeal of One Upon  A Time by airing a spin-off, Once Upon A Time In Wonderland. Set in Victorian England, we meet the young and beautiful Alice (Sophie Lowe) who tells a tale of a strange new land that exists on the other side of a rabbit hole. Surely this troubled girl must be insane, and her doctors aim to cure her with a treatment that will make her forget everything. Alice seems ready to put it all behind her, especially the painful memory of the genie she fell in love with and lost forever — the handsome and mysterious Cyrus (Peter Gadiot). But deep down Alice knows this world is real, and just in the nick of time the sardonic Knave of Hearts (Michael Socha) and the irrepressible White Rabbit (John Lithgow) arrive to save her from a doomed fate. Together the trio will take a tumble down the rabbit hole to this Wonderland where nothing is impossible. Grey’s Anatomy returns for a tenth season, while Scandal returns for a second and finishes out the night.

While Last Man Standing returns for a third season on Friday, it will now be paired with the returning The Neighbors, the sort-of updated take on 3rd Rock From the Sun. While the show had a shaky start creatively, as it progressed it became a solid, odd and weird comedy. The reality show Shark Tank and 20/20 fill out the night.

Sunday has the returning America’s Funniest Home Videos, Once Upon A Time and Revenge. The one new show will be Betrayal, which is about two people –a photographer Sara Hadley (Hannah Ware) and Attorney Jack McAllister (Stuart Townsend)- who begin an affair. The only problem (beyond cheating on their spouses, I guess)  is they both become involved in high-profile case that puts them in an impossible situation — on opposite sides of a murder investigation because Sarah’s husband is prosecuting the young man accused of the murder (Henry Thomas), who is Jack’s wife’s nephew. 

Unscheduled shows include the Tricia Helfer (Battlestar Galactica) drama Killer Women, the Steve Zahan and Christian Slater lead psychological thriller Mind Games and the supernatural themed Resurrection. On the comedy side, there is Mixology.

Gone are: Private Practice, Don't Trust the B– in Apt. 23, Zero Hour, 666 Park Avenue, Last Resort, How to Live with Your Parents, Red Widow, Body of Proof (though ABC is shopping this show elsewhere, so it make be back), Malibu Country, and Happy Endings (another cult show that maybe be resurrected on a cable channel, possibly USA Network).

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