The Sked: Tuesday

The Sked: Tuesday

Published: May 14, 2011 @ 1:32 pm
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By Mitch Metcalf

We expect NBC to be very aggressive on Tuesdays. As on Monday, they should have their new hit THE VOICE to start off the night. We think they'll follow it with the show that seems to be their  No. 1 priority for Fall, SMASH. This is the story of the making of a Broadway musical, with Debra Messing as the composer of the show-within-the-show. It will feature original songs by the real composer, HAIRSPRAY's Marc Shaiman; the pilot has also reportedly received the hands-on attention of executive producer Steven Spielberg. With all that, and despite the huge success of GLEE, this is a risky project, and we're dubious that a musical without the relatable setting of high school can find the same wide audience. At 10 p.m., the American version of the classic British cop show PRIME SUSPECT (with Maria Bello in Helen Mirren's iconic role) could work for part of the SMASH audience, but will have a hard time against THE GOOD WIFE. Overall, we see the night as a mixed bag for the network--but all that will change if SMASH lives up to its title.

ABC starts out strongly on Tuesdays with the DANCING WITH THE STARS RESULTS, but hasn't been able to hold that audience. We think they'll use that platform to launch their most prominent new sitcom, the TIM ALLEN PROJECT. Reports are that it's catnip for his fans, and 9PM is his old HOME IMPROVEMENT timeslot. The network will follow it with one of their other buzzed-about comedies, SMOTHERED, which has an ensemble of good older actors (Marcia Gay Harden, Adam Arkin, Julie White, John C McGinley) as grandparents trying to get along. That comfortable, older demo could flow to the new drama PAN AM at 10 p.m., which is set in the 1960s and will try to tap the appeal of MAD MEN in a more populist way. That may or may not work, but as long as Allen delivers the goods earlier in the evening, the network should have a nice uptick for the night.

FOX did OK with RAISING HOPE in the post-GLEE slot this year, but it didn't set the schedule on fire, and the shows that ran after itt (RUNNING WILDE and TRAFFIC LIGHTS) both flopped. We think they'll hold HOPE for later in the season and try to use GLEE to launch their two hottest new comedies. First is THE NEW GIRL, featuring the series debut of indie-goddess Zooey Deschanel as a woman sharing an apartment with the usual assortment of mismatched roommates. Following that: the eye-catchingly titled I HATE MY TEENAGE DAUGHTER, starring Jaime Pressley as a mom horrified to realize that her own daughter is just like the mean girls who used to terrorize her in school These two have a real shot of elevating the network's Tuesday performance.

The CW is returning ONE TREE HILL to the air, which does a comfortable if unexciting number for them.

Tags: Networks, Television, Upfronts
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Mitch Metcalf was named Executive Vice President, Program Planning & Scheduling, NBC Entertainment, in September 2005. He was responsible for overseeing long-range program planning and scheduling for the NBC Television Network. In addition, his duties include coordinating closely on the network's cross-platform opportunities throughout NBC Universal. Mitch joined NBC following a nine-year career at ABC, where he most recently served as Senior Vice President, Research, ABC Television Network. While at ABC, he was responsible for providing senior management with attitudinal research analysis of new series pilots, current series, newsmagazines and longform programming. 

This blog was created in conjunction with ShowBuzzDaily.

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