Fourth
place network NBC seems to be hanging their future on comedies running
in shorter seasons for the upcoming fall TV season. With rumors swirling
that new series such as “Go On”, “Save Me”, “New Normal” and “Animal
Practice” could ramp up their debut seasons as soon as mid-August, NBC
just got serious about throwing everything at the proverbial wall to see
what sticks.
But
that glut of new comedies, along with “1600 Penn”, “Dane Cook-starring
“Next Caller” and “Guys With Kids”, doesn’t leave out any of their
current stable of Thursday night comedies. “Parks and Recreation”,
“Community”, “Up All Night” “Whitney” (which also aired on Wednesdays
this year) along with the final seasons of “30 Rock” and “The Office”
(not formally announced yet) are also back for the 2012-13 season. Throw
in the likely renewal of my least favorite comedy of the year,
“Whitney”, and that’s a crowded stable of comedies for the folks at NBC
to somehow schedule.
This
probably means two full nights of comedies as Comcast-owned NBC tries
to scratch their way ahead of ABC next year. I’m totally excited that
the core Thursday night comedies will be back for another year and it’s
about time the both “30 Rock” and “The Office” are shown the door. “30
Rock” at least still has their core cast but it’s obvious that the
pre-taped episodes are starting to run out of ideas -- the live episode
featuring the likes of Jon Hamm, Paul McCartney, Jimmy Fallon and Fred
Armisen was totally brilliant. That episode alone more than made up for
the show-within-a-show “Queen of Jordan” episodes of the past two
seasons. “The Office”, though, has obviously struggled after the
departure of Steve Carrell but there have been glimpses of brilliance
with Ed Helms as the Dunder Mifflin -- Scranton, PA manager. But even
the creative folks behind “The Office” know that the show’s time has
come.
That’s
where “The Farm” comes in. Rainn Wilson (Dwight Schrute on “The
Office”) is rumored to be starring in a sort of spinoff featuring the
inept and borderline mad bed and breakfast owner at Schrute Farms. The
show isn’t scheduled but is rumored to be somewhat of a replacement for
“The Office”. It sounds interesting and if done properly it should be a
perfectly fine comedy along the vein of the current quirky and smart
laughtrack-free Thursday night NBC lineup.
Back
to the new crop of comedies, though. “Go On” sounds like the cream of
the crop starring Matthew Perry of “Friends” fame as a guy whose life
seemingly revolves around a mandatory support group he attends. Also
sounding like a winner is “Animal Kingdom” featuring a doctor who like
Dr. House on the FOX drama hates most humans but fortunately the lead in
“Animal Kingdom” works as a veterinarian who loves animals.
1 comment:
Count me as a huge fan of "The Office" who would be just fine if next year weren't its last. I think it's improved over the last 2 years and I wish more shows would mix up the cast the way "The Office" has. So many characters have come and gone on the show and I think it's helped keep it fresh as well as help cement some of the past memories (Jan, Holly, Roy, etc.). Newer characters (Andy, Erin, Robert, etc.) have been great additions.
I know the end has to come, but I don't think it's limping to the end by any stretch.
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