Fox has set January premiere dates for two more of its midseason series, the Dylan McDermott comedy “LA to Vegas” and the medical drama “The Resident.”
“LA to Vegas,” directed and executive produced by “Modern Family’s” Steve Levitan, stars McDermott, Kim Matula, Ed Weeks, Nathan Lee Graham, Olivia Macklin and Peter Stormare as an airline crew and their passengers on a roundtrip flight from Los Angeles to Las Vegas. The half-hour comedy will premiere Tuesday, Jan. 2 at 9/8c, followed by the midseason return of “The Mick.”
“The Resident,” starring Matt Czuchry, Emily Van Camp and Bruce Greenwood, will premiere on Sunday, Jan. 21 at 10/9c. The series will debut following the NFC championship game on Sunday before moving to its regular timeslot on Monday, Jan. 22 at 9/8c.
The two shows join the network’s previously announced January premieres, with the second season of “The X-Files” reboot and the Ryan Murphy first responder drama “9-1-1” both set to premiere on Wednesday, Jan. 3. Fox’s new singing competition show “The Four” will premiere on Thursday, Jan. 4.
See the full premiere schedule below:
Monday, Jan. 1:
8:00-9:00 PM LUCIFER
9:00-10:00 PM THE GIFTED
Tuesdays, beginning Jan. 2:
8:00-9:00 PM LETHAL WEAPON
9:00-9:30 PM LA TO VEGAS (Series Premiere)
9:30-10:00 PM THE MICK (Time Period Premiere)
Sunday, Jan. 7:
7:30-8:00 PM BOB’S BURGERS
8:00-8:30 PM THE SIMPSONS
8:30-9:00 PM GHOSTED
9:00-9:30 PM FAMILY GUY
9:30-10:00 PM THE LAST MAN ON EARTH
Monday, Jan. 15:
8:00-10:00 PM THE GIFTED (Two-Hour Season Finale)
Sunday, Jan. 21:
6:00 PM ET-CC NFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
10:00-11:00 PM ET THE RESIDENT (Special Premiere)
Mondays, beginning Jan. 22:
8:00-9:00 PM LUCIFER
9:00-10:00 PM THE RESIDENT (Time Period Premiere)
Cancellation Watch: 9 TV Shows That Likely Won't Last Beyond This Season (Photos)
Sure, it's a bit early in the fall broadcast TV season to declare a series dead -- unless that show is called "Ten Days in the Valley" or "Me, Myself & I" -- but the inquiring minds need to know what's in line to get the boot.
There are a number of factors that go into cancelling or renewing a series: costs, ratings, ownership, contracts, stars, I.P. -- the list still goes on from there.
Show: "The Toy Box" Net: ABC 18-49 rating: 0.4
The "Shark Tank"-for-kids show is one toy that ABC should have never unwrapped. (Ratings are from Nielsen's "most current" metric, which includes one week's worth of DVR viewing where available.)
Show: "Ten Days in the Valley" Net: ABC 18-49 rating: 0.7
OK, so "Ten Days" was set up as a limited series, but we all know by now that you can add "...unless it's a hit" to the end of that descriptor. This one definitely was not, and has already been banished to Saturdays.
Couple things: Fox owns "The Exorcist." Both the studio and network are run by the same pair of executives. But it's time to exorcise this Friday series, not resurrect it.
From its weird IMAX rollout to Medusa's awful CGI wig, this show was a disaster from the get-go. When asked by TheWrap for a phone interview tied to the show's fall finale, ABC said no one in the cast was available -- that's never a good sign.
Show: "Once Upon a Time" Net: ABC 18-49 rating: 1.0
Once Upon a Time, this show was a hit. Now it barely has any of the original cast members left, and even the creators are displeased with their rebooted fairy tale's recent reception.
Bobby Moynihan should have stuck with "Saturday Night Live." But he didn't, and the casting of a 6'4" John Larroquette to play the older version of a 5'8" Moynihan made absolutely no sense. CBS has already pulled this show from its schedule.
Show: "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" Net: Fox 18-49 rating: 1.2
Though it pains us to say, this very good sitcom is probably about to be released on parole. It's still very funny, but the Andy Samberg comedy isn't owned by Fox, which doesn't help its case. Plus, "Brooklyn's" "live" rating should be considered a felony.
We've got good news and bad news, "Great News": On the plus side, you're owned by NBC and have garnered generally favorable reviews; on the negative end of the spectrum... your ratings. IF the sitcom returns, that can be chalked up to two words: "Tina. Fey."
Consider yourself on notice (and on the bubble, at best), "Kevin (Probably) Saves the World," "Last Man on Earth" and "Wisdom of the Crowd." We'll see how the rest of the 2017-18 season shakes out.
Sure, it's a bit early in the fall broadcast TV season to declare a series dead -- unless that show is called "Ten Days in the Valley" or "Me, Myself & I" -- but the inquiring minds need to know what's in line to get the boot.
There are a number of factors that go into cancelling or renewing a series: costs, ratings, ownership, contracts, stars, I.P. -- the list still goes on from there.