On May 19, 10:02 am, Steve Timko <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sitcom mainstay Grammer leads “Hank,” playing a corporate titan who’s been
> laid off.
So he's going to be a snooty bitter wine drinking guy who suffers the
"regular folk" he has to live with now.
Sounds original.
> Heaton, who co-starred with Grammer in a short-lived Fox comedy after her
> best-known role on “Everybody Loves Raymond” finished, plays the wife and
> mother of an Indiana family trying to survive tough times.
We guarantee it will not be called "Roseanne", like when this show was
on the first time.
> Former “Friends” star Cox is on the prowl in “Cougar Town,” playing a newly
> single woman learning the new rules of dating in a youth-obsessed culture.
Because when you're 40 and single and you look like Courteney Cox, you
have so much trouble getting a date.
> Christina Applegate’s “Samantha Who?” is the highest-profile existing series
> to be canceled. For the second time in two incarnations,
> “Cupid” didn’t make it to a second season on ABC.
> O’Neill, best known as the harried dad in Fox’s “Married... With Children,”
> takes on another TV family in “Modern Family.” In the style
> of “The Office,” this looks at a family from the perspective of an unseen
> documentarian.
Yeah, good thing Kate's incessant bitching at John hasn't caused that
genre to get a bit played out.
> Ubiquitous producer Mark Burnett will make his first series for ABC, “Shark
> Tank,” where budding entrepreneurs try to convince five millionaires to seed
> their business ideas.
Was this the Mark Cuban show the first time around?
> The new dramas include “Eastwick,” an adaptation of the movie “The
> Witches of Eastwick”; “The Deep End,” which follows four young lawyers
> joining a cutthroat firm;
>“Flash Forward,” a sci-fi series where people black out and get a glimpse of
>their future;
Because we cancelled "Life on Mars"
> “The Forgotten,” a Jerry Bruckheimer procedural on trying to piece together
> the stories of missing persons;
Also known as "Cold Case"
>“Happy Town,” about a Minnesota town that was plagued by kidnappings; and “V,”
>a remake of a 1980s era miniseries about aliens confronting humans.
> McPherson said NBC’s decision to run Jay Leno each weeknight at 10 p.m. gives
> his network and CBS an opportunity to make inroads with
> dramas.“Scrubs” will return for a second season at ABC after departing NBC,
> although star Zach Braff’s full involvement is unclear. McPherson also
> said ABC would be very interested in picking up CBS’ “The New Adventures of
> Old Christine” if CBS doesn’t go forward with it.
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