Progress Report: Fall TV Preview and Selection for 2021-2022 Shows (2021)

This Progress Report…is later than usual. But this year…is unusual. With a pandemic affecting every major studio, network, and workspace in the USA and beyond, the dust is only now settling when it comes to what new shows will premiere this season.

To that end, Couch Potatoes Unite! delayed all of our annual Progress Reports to make sure we are understanding the TV landscape in such a way that we would be able to effectively communicate it to you, gentle reader and listener. We think we’re almost there. There is quite a lot still unsorted, but the main five networks are trying to resume their traditional rhythms, and some of the other content outlets are attempting to follow suit.

Thus, we now present Progress Report 3 of 2021, the first progress report for the new pilots of the 2021-2022 season! At this point, the primary TV viewing season is over (we think, who knows what is being defined as the “TV season” now), and the calendar has struck the month of October…the fall TV season, such as it is in these pandemic-influenced times, is upon us!  Thus, it’s time to shop for new pilots! Since up-fronts were held in May, new TV offerings by networks and some cable outlets (as well as streaming networks) have been announced. It’s time to examine them closely and choose which will be added to the extremely extended lineup covered by this blog!

Thanks to TVLine and Metacritic for helping a girl out.

*Note: with the expansion of CPU!, these initial thoughts are based upon the CPU! Chief’s assessments. As with previous seasons, a growing number of CPU! members may find shows initially passed by the CPU! Chief and choose to review them.  CPU! readers will be informed if the show’s status changes regarding coverage as the season progresses through the handy CPU! Progress Reports, and all written reviews will be published!

**Second Note: If you haven’t already figured it out, we measure the TV year from June 1st to May 31st.

4400, The CW

4400

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 25

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 9/8c

WHO: Joseph David-Jones (Arrow), Brittany Adebumola (Grand Army), Jaye Ladymore (Chicago P.D.), AMARR (American Housewife), Cory Jeacoma (Power Book II: Ghost), Derrick A. King (Call Your Mother), Khaliah Johnson, TL Thompson, Ireon Roach, Autumn Best

WHAT: Based on the original USA Network drama, the new take follows 4400 overlooked, undervalued, or otherwise marginalized people who vanished without a trace over the last hundred years are all returned in an instant, having not aged a day and with no memory of what happened to them. As the government races to analyze the potential threat and contain the story, the 4400 themselves must grapple with the fact that they’ve been returned with a few… upgrades, and the increasing likelihood that they were all brought back now for a specific reason.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Welcome to the 2021-2022 CPU! network pilot review, always full of snark and real talk about upcoming TV from your friendly neighborhood TV podcast, whose business is otherwise unaffected by global pandemics, because TV is an indoor, mask-less activity! Unite with us (and wear a mask/get vaccinated/stay socially distant because this thing ain’t over yet)! 

We start off with a Pick Up because the original 4400 has been mentioned to us every so often as a podcast coverage topic (not necessarily accompanied by volunteers…unless you, gentle reader, would like to be the first), so it seems like this reboot would lend itself well to a “Looking Back to Look Forward” series for both the original and new versions. Plus, adding the twist that the “4400” affected by what is likely extraterrestrial goings-on are from underrepresented and marginalized communities gives the original premise a decidedly spooky and socially relevant context veering into alterna-history places, while also freshening up the premise somewhat to keep it from feeling totally recycled in this era of far too many reboots. Also, the CW airs the kind of stuff that our Couch Potatoes tend to like. So, that’s just a few of the 4400 reasons why we’re aiming to pick up 4400.

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ABBOTT ELEMENTARY, ABC

Abbott Elementary

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Quinta Brunson (A Black Lady Sketch Show), Tyler James Williams (Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders, Everybody Hates Chris), Chris Perfetti (In the Dark), Lisa Ann Walter (Emeril), Sheryl Lee Ralph (Ray Donovan, Instant Mom), Janelle James

WHAT: In this workplace comedy, a group of dedicated, passionate teachers — and a slightly tone-deaf principal — are brought together in a Philadelphia public school where, despite the odds stacked against them, they are determined to help their students succeed in life. Though these incredible public servants may be outnumbered and underfunded, they love what they do — even if they don’t love the school district’s less-than-stellar attitude toward educating children.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. A few chuckles could be had in this sitcom/one camera comedy, and it certainly covers some relevant subject matter. Plus, ABC might be searching for more programming that falls within the same category as black-ish, which is about to air its final season. Still, as winning as Quinta Brunson seems to be in this trailer, the jokes are not exactly inspired, and there will probably be a few “kids say the darndest things” type shenanigans. There seems to be some pro-family viewing possibilities, but will it appeal to our Couch Potatoes? Right now, the bets are no. So, to get this bit of annual flavor out of the way, if buzz and steam and starvation for new network sitcoms in these, our COVID times – or your more direct contact with us via comment on any post, a visit to our guestbook or our social media, or an email to couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – convince us to change our minds, which is very easy to do with the right amount of minimal persuasion, we most certainly will go back to school and do the thing.

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AGT: EXTREME, NBC

AGT: Extreme

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Judge Simon Cowell

WHAT: Showcases the most outrageous and jaw-dropping daredevil acts. Each week, extreme contestants will go head-to-head in the most wild, wacky and craziest stunts to vie for the ultimate title.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We don’t cover reality/game show competitions like your Voices and your American Idols and your America Having Talents-type goings-on – no matter what kind of withering gaze Simon Cowell might throw our way.

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ALL AMERICAN: HOMECOMING, The CW

All American: Homecoming

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Geffri Maya (All American), Peyton Alex Smith (Legacies), Cory Hardrict (S.W.A.T., The Oath), Kelly Jenrette (Manhunt, Grandfathered), Sylvester Powell (Five Points), Camille Hyde (Katy Keene), Netta Walker

WHAT: The spinoff follows a young tennis hopeful from Beverly Hills and an elite baseball player from Chicago as they contend with the high stakes of college sports, while also navigating the highs, lows and sexiness of unsupervised early adulthood at a prestigious Historically Black College.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. The original All American is still on our “Pass” list. No one has requested it for viewing or podcast dissection. Until that changes, we will also pass on relevant spin-offs. Feel free to comment or message with persuasion oriented toward changing our minds.

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ALTER EGO, Fox

Alter Ego Fox Judges

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 22

TIME SLOT: Wednesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Judges Alanis Morissette, Nick Lachey, Grimes and will.i.am, plus host Rocsi Diaz

WHAT: A singing competition where lost dreams and second chances are reignited when singers from all walks of life become the stars they’ve always wanted to be. However, these contestants won’t perform as themselves. Rather, they’ll be given the chance to show how they’ve always wanted to be seen, creating their dream avatar alter ego to reinvent themselves and perform like never before.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We still don’t cover reality/game show competitions on the podcast or blog. Even if we like the judges here (and their music, more or less).

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AMERICAN AUTO, NBC

American Auto

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Ana Gasteyer (Suburgatory), Harriet Dyer (The InBetween), X Mayo (The Daily Show), Jon Barinholtz (Superstore), Humphrey Ker (Mythic Quest), Michael B. Washington (Ratched), Tye White (Greenleaf)

WHAT: A single-camera workplace comedy set at the headquarters of a major American automotive company in Detroit, where a floundering group of executives try to rediscover the company identity amidst a rapidly changing industry.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. Honestly, the only reason this reviewer is suggesting the potential of CPU! perusal here comes down to two of the most hesitant reasons: Ana Gasteyer, whose claim to fame is Saturday Night Live, really, but who is a very funny lady, and the fact that this comedy is set in Detroit, which is 2 hours away from our home base in Grand Rapids, Michigan. If we see a trailer, as one is not currently available, to help us review more profoundly the possibility of whether or not this comedy revs our American Auto-type engines, we might reconsider, but this is the minimal of the benefit of the doubt that we can afford based upon home-state pride and, you know, Ana Gasteyer. You go, Ana Gasteyer.

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AMERICAN SONG CONTEST, NBC

American Song Contest

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHAT: Based on the worldwide phenomenon Eurovision Song Contest, the U.S. version will feature live original musical performances, representing all 50 states, five U.S. territories and our nation’s capital, competing to win the country’s vote for the Best Original Song. An incredible solo artist, duo, DJ or a band will represent each location and will perform a new, original song, celebrating the different styles and genres across America. The live competition consists of three rounds as the acts compete in a series of Qualifying Rounds, followed by the Semi Finals and the ultimate Grand Final, where one state or territory will emerge victorious.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. What a mass quantity of reality/game show competitions being introduced this year, particularly on NBC. Et tu, Peacock?

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THE BIG LEAP, Fox

The Big Leap

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 20

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 9/8c

WHO: Scott Foley (Scandal, Whiskey Cavalier), Piper Perabo (Covert Affairs), Teri Polo (The Fosters), Mallory Jansen (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Kevin Daniels (Council of Dads), Ser’Darius Blain (Charmed), Ray Cham (Five Points), Jon Rudnitsky (Catch-22), Simone Recasner

WHAT: A group of diverse underdogs from all different walks of life compete to be part of a competition reality series that is putting on a modern, hip remake of Swan Lake. What they lack in the traditional dancer body type, they make up for with their edge, wit and desire to reimagine an iconic story to fit their own mold.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. If we’re going to pick up one show set in Detroit, we might as well pick ’em all up. More to the point, however, this show has many more of the ingredients that convincingly appeal to our Couch Potatoes – an underdog story, some snappy social commentary, theater and dancing (!), and an appeal to our larger world. Having a trailer is helpful when making these sorts of observations, you know. Plus, Scott Foley is somewhat underrated, quite possibly ever since his Felicity days. Maybe this new series will be one that sticks. Note: this show has already premiered at the time of publication of this Fall Preview, so if you have any snap judgments, let us know by commenting below!

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THE CLEANING LADY, Fox

The Cleaning Lady

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Élodie Yung (Marvel’s Daredevil, The Defenders), Adan Canto (Designated Survivor), Oliver Hudson (Rules of Engagement), Martha Millan (The OA, As the World Turns), Sebastien LaSalle & Valentino LaSalle

WHAT: Based on the Argentine series La Chica que Limpia, this darkly aspirational character drama follows a whip-smart doctor who comes to the U.S. for a medical treatment to save her ailing son. But when the system fails and pushes her into hiding, she refuses to be beaten down and marginalized. Instead, she becomes a cleaning lady for the mob and starts playing the game by her own rules.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Well, this Americanized retooling of an Argentine thriller bears the hallmarks of potential, drawing upon a premise that has not been overly done on any US TV series, much less on network TV. There are two problems here, however. One is that the trailer suggests something soapy and sexy but without much substance. One is that the featured player is Elodie Yung, otherwise known as Elektra in Marvel’s Daredevil and the related Netflix Marvel properties. For our Marvel’s Defenders Series panel, and primarily for the Chief Couch Potato (aka me), who moderated the panel, Yung was a bit of a weak spot performance-wise in an otherwise exemplary adaptation of a beloved comic property. Elektra is not really a sympathetic character; however, Yung did not really bring nuance to the lack of sympathy owed to Matt Murdock’s toxic love interest. She feels about as convincing in this role as she did in that one. She might be able to pull off some more sweet fight choreography if the eponymous cleaning lady is able to throw down at a mob-sponsored hoedown, but the emotional character development is the stretch we’re reaching for here, and, granted, a trailer is but two minutes, but we have a dossier of less convincing dimensionality for a less dimensional character (seemingly). If buzz or steam convince us to take another look, we’ll be more than cheerful to scrub the floor of this initial hot take, but for right now, call housekeeping and take this one to the corner. Sorry, Ms. Yung.

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CSI: VEGAS, CBS

CSI: Vegas

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 6

TIME SLOT: Wednesdays at 10/9c

WHO: Original CSI stars William Petersen, Jorja Fox and Wallace Langham, plus Paul Guilfoyle, who will guest-star. New cast includes Matt Lauria (Friday Night Lights, Kingdom), Paula Newsome (Chicago Med, Barry), Mel Rodriguez (The Last Man on Earth) and Mandeep Dhillon (After Life).

WHAT: The series opens a brand new chapter in Las Vegas, the city where it all began. Facing an existential threat that could bring down the entire Crime Lab and release thousands of convicted killers back onto the neon-lit streets of Vegas, a brilliant new team of investigators led by Maxine Roby (Newsome) must enlist the help of old friends, Gil Grissom (Petersen), Sara Sidle (Fox) and David Hodges (Langham). This combined force will deploy the latest forensic techniques to do what they do best —follow the evidence — in order to preserve and serve justice in Sin City.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We are not currently covering any entry in the CSI franchise and have no percolating requests to do so. If we start to receive some indication that people want to hear our opinions about any of the CSIs, we will probably start with the original show and work our way out from there. For now, CSI: Vegas will just have to stay in Vegas.

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COME DANCE WITH ME, CBS

Come Dance With Me

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Philip Lawrence with judges Jenna Dewan, Tricia Miranda and Dexter Mayfield

WHAT: Young dancers from across the country invite one inspirational, untrained family member or other adult who has supported their dance dreams, to become their dance partner for a chance to strut their stuff for a grand prize.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. It’s a dance/reality competition. We don’t cover those on our podcast, but we do like to keep you informed, gentle listener. For the pilot season, anyway.

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DOMINO MASTERS, Fox

Domino Masters

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Eric Stonestreet

WHAT: The competition series features teams of domino enthusiasts facing off in an unbelievable domino toppling and chain reaction tournament.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Hey – isn’t that the guy from Modern Family? This is a game show. With dominoes. We don’t cover those on our podcast, either. With or without dominoes. Tell us how the topples go.

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DON’T FORGET THE LYRICS!, Fox

Don't Forget the Lyrics

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Niecy Nash

WHAT: The game show returns to challenge contestants’ musical memory, as they get one song closer to winning $1 million if they don’t forget the lyrics. Contestants will choose songs from different genres, decades and musical artists. Then they’ll take center stage to sing alongside the studio band as the lyrics are projected on screen – but suddenly the music will stop, and the words will disappear.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Another game show, another pass. Though, music is nice.

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THE ENDGAME, NBC

The Endgame NBC

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Morena Baccarin (Gotham), Ryan Michelle Bathe (All Rise), Costa Ronin (The Americans), Noah Bean (Nikita), Kamal Bolden (Rosewood), Jordan Johnson-Hinds (Nurses), Mark D. Espinoza (Major Crimes)

WHAT: A pulse-pounding, high-stakes thriller about Elena Federova (Baccarin), a very recently captured international arms dealer and brilliant criminal mastermind who even in captivity orchestrates a number of coordinated bank heists, and Val Turner (Bathe), the principled, relentless and socially outcast FBI agent who will stop at nothing to foil her ambitious plan.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. A trailer would be so helpful, but as this series is a midseason entry, we want what we can’t have. The reason we are giving this a hesitant shot: Morena Baccarin. She has nerd cred for days with our resident Couch Potatoes, and her portraying some kind of antihero/criminal mastermind orchestrating crimes from prison seems like an interesting premise to play off Morena’s trademark sense of dramatic delivery. The endgame of The Endgame could fall flat, but Morena induces the slowly rising thumbs-up. Let’s see what the future holds here.

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FBI: INTERNATIONAL, CBS

FBI: International CBS

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 21 at 10/9c (special time)

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Luke Kleintank (The Man in the High Castle, Bones), Heida Reed (Poldark), Vinessa Vidotto (Lucifer), Christiane Paul (Counterpart), Carter Redwood (The Long Road Home)

WHAT: Debuting in a crossover episode of FBI and FBI: Most Wanted next season, the offshoot follows the FBI’s International Fly Team as they travel the world with the mission of tracking and neutralizing threats against American citizens wherever they may be. Not allowed to carry guns, the Fly Team relies on intelligence, quick thinking and pure brawn as they put their lives on the line to protect the U.S. and its people.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Like the CSI franchise, we have no one clamoring for our opinions about the now apparent FBI franchise. Until someone wants to discuss or wants us to discuss the flagship show, we’re going to have to remand this back to Quantico. Unless Fox Mulder or Dana Scully appear in it. Then we can talk about the FBI, International and otherwise.

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GHOSTS, CBS

Ghosts

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 7

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 9/8c

WHO: Rose McIver (iZombie), Utkarsh Ambudkar (Brockmire, The Mindy Project), Brandon Scott Jones (The Good Place)

WHAT: In the single-camera comedy, a struggling young couple’s dreams come true when they inherit a beautiful country house, only to find it’s both falling apart and inhabited by many of the deceased previous residents.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Maybe it’s because we’re completing our Fall Preview reviews late and during spooky season, but this trailer and the premise for this sitcom are both fresh and funny. The comedy comes from a group of spirits haunting a house that the couple, part of whom is played by the erstwhile Liv from CPU! favorite iZombie, Rose McIver, wants to turn into a bed and breakfast. The problem is, the place is haunted by some decidedly sassy spirits, who all seem to team up to render the living couple’s nightmares some of the living dead, only Rose’s character hits her head, spends time in a coma, and begins to commune with the deceased occupants of the property. It’s a premise that takes a bit from a few genres, mixes the bits up in a blender, and pairs the resulting goo with some snappy joke-telling. I see a lot of appeal for our CP’s and for those who listen to them, so possessing these ghosts on our watchlist we shall.

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GRAND CREW, NBC

Grand Crew

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Nicole Byer (Nailed It!), Echo Kellum (Arrow), Aaron Jennings (Pure Genius), Carl Tart (Bajillion Dollar Propertie$), Justin Cunningham (When They See Us)

WHAT: A group of Black friends unpack the ups and downs of life and love at a wine bar.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Wine bars are appealing, and this friendship-based comedy might have some grand (crew) potential, but we need a trailer to do a full evaluation. If you see one, let us know, though Mr. Terrific from Arrow, i.e. Echo Kellum, is a welcome face that we love at CPU!

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GOOD SAM, CBS

Good Sam

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Sophia Bush (Chicago P.D.), Jason Isaacs (The OA, Star Trek: Discovery), Michael Stahl-David (Narcos, The Deuce), Skye P. Marshall (Black Lightning), Edwin Hodge (Mayans M.C., Chicago Fire), Davi Santos (Tell Me a Story), Omar Maskati (Unbelievable), Wendy Crewson (Saving Hope)

WHAT: A talented yet stifled surgeon embraces her leadership role after her renowned and pompous boss falls into a coma. When he awakens and wants to resume surgery, however, it falls to her to supervise this overbearing blowhard who never acknowledged her talents — and also happens to be her father.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. So many medical dramas pockmark the TV landscape, and they are hit or miss with our resident sofa-occupying taters. The trailer for this medical drama does not offer much in terms of new and different, except maybe Lucius Malfoy from the Harry Potter films sporting an American accent. This is really a family/father-daughter drama set in a hospital, and while that sort of dynamic is bound to appeal to some, this reviewer is not convinced that this will be a good entry for our Good Sam(antha) or any of our other panelists. Of course, please feel free to request it for podcast coverage if you see potential that we do not. We can change (and have changed) our minds.

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HOME SWEET HOME, NBC

Home Sweet Home

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 15

TIME SLOT: Fridays at 8/7c

WHAT: Executive-produced by Ava DuVernay, the unscripted series follows two families who lead very different lives for a life-changing experience. It explores what it’s like to walk a mile in another person’s shoes by challenging racial, religious, economic, geographic, gender and identity assumptions as participants exchange homes for a week and experience the life of someone unlike them.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This is an unscripted home-swap show. We cover scripted shows on the CPU! podcast. Someday, when our reality arm gets up and running… if you would like to be a producer for that arm, contact the Chief CP!

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KRAPOPOLIS, Fox

Untitled Animated Dan Harmon Comedy

PREMIERE DATE: 2022

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: The voices of Hannah Waddingham (Ted Lasso), Richard Ayoade (The IT Crowd), Matt Berry (What We Do in the Shadows), Pam Murphy (Mapleworth Murders), Duncan Trussell (The Midnight Gospel)

WHAT: Created by Dan Harmon (Rick and Morty), the animated comedy is set in mythical ancient Greece and is centered on a flawed family of humans, gods and monsters that tries to run one of the world’s first cities without killing each other.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox’s newest primetime animation entry brings in a new creation of Rick and Morty‘s Dan Harmon, and while a teaser would be particularly helpful, we know that Mr. Harmon doesn’t produce c(k)rap. We have a few requests to cover R&M, but a cartoon set in mythical ancient Greece that has not been Disney-fied, and that could be satirical even as its animation is about the ancients, has some serious potential. How much potential remains to be seen – so seeing the season itself will probably be most informative in that regard. Thus, a hesitant pick up but one all the same.

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LA BREA, NBC

La Brea

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 28

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Natalie Zea (The Detour), Eoin Macken (The Night Shift), Jon Seda (Chicago P.D.), Nicholas Gonzalez (The Good Doctor), Veronica St. Clair (13 Reasons Why), Jack Martin (All Rise), Rohan Mirchandaney (Hotel Mumbai), Chiké Okonkwo (Being Mary Jane), Josh McKenzie (Filthy Rich), Chloe De Los Santos (Tidelands), Zyra Gorecki, Lily Santiago

WHAT: When a massive sinkhole mysteriously opens in Los Angeles, it tears a family in half, separating mother and son from father and daughter. When part of the family find themselves in an unexplainable primeval world, alongside a disparate group of strangers, they must work to survive and uncover the mystery of where they are and if there is a way back home.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Though this show is on NBC, who does not do right by its genre entries often, this Land of the Lost meets Neverending Story mystery/sci-fi/fantasy vehicle feels like it would have likely appeal for our United Couch Potatoes, and there are some cool, cinematic visual effects that certainly present intrigue in this trailer. Will this fictional, primeval world entice for the long haul? We’ll have to visit La Brea ourselves to fully see.

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LA FIRE AND RESCUE, NBC

LA Fire and Rescue

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHAT: The docuseries chronicles the Los Angeles County Fire Department. “From helicopter mountain rescues, lifeguard beach SOS, fireboats, hazmat units, to California’s raging wildfires… they do it all,” read the official synopsis. ‘These firefighters are true everyday heroes and their compelling stories will be told alongside the heart-pounding action of unpredictable and dangerous circumstances as they face the front lines of life and death.”

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This is a docuseries. As in actual reality, not even stylized reality, like The Voice or similar. We talk about the long-form storytelling of the small screen. As in, we like to escape reality. Though we support all of our first responders, we prefer not to watch or talk about them (for now).

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LEGENDS OF THE HIDDEN TEMPLE, The CW

Legends of the Hidden Temple

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 10

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Host Cristela Alonzo, Dee Bradley Baker returning as the voice of Olmec

WHAT: A reimagining of the Nickelodeon game show, now featuring adults as contestants. The new take will bring back fan-favorite elements, including the Moat Crossings, the Steps of Knowledge and the Temple Run. The team names — Purple Parrots, Blue Barracudas, Orange Iguanas, Red Jaguars, Silver Snakes and Green Monkeys — will also remain unchanged. This revamped Hidden Temple promises “tougher challenges” and “much bigger prizes” as each episode pits five teams against one other to enter Olmec’s Temple, discover a treasure and return it to its rightful place — all while avoiding the infamous Temple Guards.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Though it’s a fun, adult remake of a fun game show once produced on Nickelodeon, it’s still a game show. Tell Olmec we said hello.

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MAGGIE, ABC

Maggie

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Rebecca Rittenhouse (The Mindy Project), Nichole Sakura (Superstore), Angelique Cabral (Life in Pieces), Chloe Bridges (The Carrie Diaries), Kerri Kenney (Reno 911), David Del Rio (The Baker and the Beauty), Chris Elliott (Schitt’s Creek), Ray Ford (Grey’s Anatomy), Leonardo Nam (Westworld)

WHAT: Follows a young woman trying to cope with life as a psychic. Maggie regularly sees the fate of her friends, parents, clients, and random strangers on the street, but when she suddenly sees a glimpse of her own future, Maggie is forced to start living in her own present. Based on the short film of the same name by Tim Curcio.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. While placing a psychic at the center of this romantic comedy makes for an interesting premise, the teaser did not present enough establishing information to bear witness to any potential chemistry between the characters comprising the main couple. Also, as this comedy is based upon a short film, the question becomes whether or not this premise, clairvoyant though it might be, can sustain over several episodes, much less several seasons of episodes. If we hear or see buzz or steam suggesting the contrary, we’ll be happy to look into our crystal balls or do a bit of palmistry to walk back our initial snap judgment, but for now, there is too little to go on to make the future of this series seem like a bright one.

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MONARCH, Fox

Monarch Fox

PREMIERE DATE: Jan. 30 (after the NFC Championship) and continuing Feb. 1

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Susan Sarandon (Feud), Anna Friel (Pushing Daisies), Trace Adkins, Josh Sasse (Galavant), Beth Ditto, Meagan Holder, Inigo Pascual, Martha Higareda, Emma Milani

WHAT: A Texas-sized, multigenerational musical drama about America’s first family of country music. The Romans are headed by the insanely talented, but tough as nails Queen of Country Music Dottie Cantrell Roman (Sarandon). Along with her beloved husband, Albie, Dottie has created a country music dynasty. But even though the Roman name is synonymous with authenticity, the very foundation of their success is a lie. And when their reign as country royalty is put in jeopardy, heir to the crown Nicolette “Nicky” Roman (Friel) will stop at nothing to protect her family’s legacy, while ensuring her own quest for stardom.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This is a tough pass because Susan Sarandon is worth her weight in Oscar gold, but does this not seem like a slightly repurposed Nashville with a bigger star than Connie Britton at its forefront – and with a little Dallas thrown into the mix, given the size of the family and potential location? Convince us to give it a look when a trailer comes around, and maybe we’ll be singing some lowdown country confessional walking back our initial pass, but the echoes of other TV shows gone by reverberate a bit too closely to the premise of this series, which, for now, leaves our preview snap judgment reigning supreme.

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NAOMI, The CW

Naomi

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Kaci Walfall (Army Wives), Barry Watson (7th Heaven), Alexander Wraith (Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Cranston Johnson (Hap and Leonard), Mouzam Makkar (The Fix, Champions), Mary-Charles Jones (Kevin Can Wait), Aidan Gemme (Broadway’s Finding Neverland),  Daniel Puig, Camila Moreno, Will Meyers

WHAT: Based on DC Comics characters, the drama follows a teen girl’s journey from her small northwestern town to the heights of the multiverse. When a supernatural event shakes her hometown to the core, Naomi sets out to uncover its origins, and what she discovers will challenge everything we believe about our heroes.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The teaser offers little on which to base much of an assessment, particularly since the lead actress does not even get much chance to act; however, it is set in the DC Universe, and the premise description presents a small amount of intrigue, even as going into watching this new DC-based entry inspires a large amount of hesitation. We love our superheroes around here, though, so we’ll give Naomi a go.

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NCIS: HAWAI’I, CBS

NCIS: HAWAI'I

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 20

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 10/9c

WHO: Vanessa Lachey (BH90210, Call Me Kat), Yasmine Al-Bustami (The Originals), Jason Antoon (Claws), Noah Mills (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, The Brave), Tori Anderson (No Tomorrow), Alex Tarrant (800 Words, New Zealand’s Vegas)

WHAT: The franchise expands to the Aloha State, where the first female Special Agent in Charge of NCIS Pearl Harbor, Jane Tennant (Lachey), has thrived and risen through the ranks by equal parts confidence and strategy in a system that has pushed back on her every step of the way. Together with her unwavering team of specialists, they balance duty to family and country while investigating high-stakes crimes involving military personnel, national security and the mysteries of the sun-drenched island paradise itself.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Like the CSI and FBI franchises, we have no one clamoring for our opinions about the NCIS franchise. Until someone wants to discuss or wants us to discuss the flagship show, this one goes on the pass pile along with the other procedural spinoff series.

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NEXT LEVEL CHEF, Fox

Next Level Chef

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Mentors Gordon Ramsey, Nyesha Arrington, Gino D’Acampo

WHAT: Aspiring chefs compete in cooking challenges on each level of a three-story tower for the $250,000 grand prize.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. If it’s hosted by Gordon Ramsey, it’s probably ineligible for Couch Potatoes Unite! type podcast discussions. I wonder if he’ll still yell at the contestants?

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NIGHT COURT, NBC

Night Court NBC

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Melissa Rauch (The Big Bang Theory), John Larroquette (the original Night Court, The Good Fight)

WHAT: Unapologetically optimistic judge Abby Stone (Rauch), the daughter of the late Harry Stone, follows in her father’s footsteps as she presides over the night shift of a Manhattan arraignment court and tries to bring order to its crew of oddballs and cynics, most notably former night court prosecutor Dan Fielding (Larroquette).

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The original Night Court was enjoyable situation comedy comfort-TV from the 80s sitcom heyday, and we’re game to give this revival/reboot a teensy peek based upon the parent series’ strength of comedy and entertainment. Our hesitation, however, comes from the fact that most of the actors who comprised the cast have aged away from their decades-old roles or have passed away, including the inimitable Harry Anderson, the late actor who played the late, magic trick-performing Judge Harry Stone, the apparent father of the judge at the heart of this remake. Can only Dan Fielding as the character connective tissue to the original be enough to make this sitcom sequel as funny as its predecessor? We’re skeptical, but we’re nostalgic, and we like to Look Back to Look Forward around here. If the night court is in session, we’ll let the bailiff call us into the whole affair but only because it’s all at night.

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ORDINARY JOE, NBC

Ordinary Joe

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 20

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 10/9c

WHO: James Wolk (Watchmen, Zoo), Natalie Martinez (Under the Dome), Charlie Barnett (Arrow, Russian Doll), Elizabeth Lail (YOU)

WHAT: Explores the three parallel lives of the show’s main character after he makes a pivotal choice at a crossroads in his life. The series asks the question of how different life might look if you made your decision based on love, loyalty, or passion.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The hesitation for this pick up rests with the fact that the show demands viewer identification with the main character three times over in a sort of This Is Us meets It’s a Wonderful Life telltale of three possible life trajectories. This could either be original and enticing, if all three of the trajectories are compelling, or could fall flat if neither the life at the center of the story nor his parallel lives offer a solid and universal enough connection to viewer to sustain over a season or more of this story. Points are awarded for originality, though, and the thought of the so-called Joe at the heart of the tale being able to “see” each of these life trajectories is intriguing – is it real, and what does it mean? This show has aired a few episodes at the time of publication; tell us what you think in the comments below!

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OUR KIND OF PEOPLE, Fox

Our Kind of People

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 21

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Yaya DaCosta (Chicago Med), Morris Chestnut (The Resident), Joe Morton (God Friended Me, Scandal), Rhyon Nicole Brown (Empire), Lance Gross (House of Payne, Star), Kyle Bary (Ginny & Georgia), Nadine Ellis (Greenhouse Academy), Alana Bright, recurring player Debbi Morgan (Power, All My Children)

WHAT: Executive-produced by Lee Daniels (Empire), the drama takes place in the aspirational world of Oak Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard, a historical stronghold where the rich and powerful Black elite have come to play for over 50 years. Strong-willed single mom Angela Vaughn sets out to reclaim her family’s name and make an impact with her revolutionary haircare line that highlights the innate, natural beauty of Black women. But she soon discovers a dark secret about her mother’s past that will turn her world upside-down and shake up this community forever.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. The cast is fabulous. Hey hey, Morris Chestnut! The story, however, derivatively resonates from Empire meets Revenge or Dynasty. This show will find an audience, this reviewer suspects, but how much of one will be the podcasting kind of people? If the show gets requested for podcast coverage, we’ll readily put it on the list, but right now, this sudsy soap might be too like others that have come before to entice many of our discerning television viewers – at least for now.

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PIVOTING, Fox

Pivoting

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Eliza Coupe (Happy Endings), Ginnifer Goodwin (Why Women Kill, Once Upon a Time), Maggie Q (Designated Survivor), Tommy Dewey (Casual, The Mindy Project), JT Neal (Bless This Mess), Marcello Julian Reyes (Modern Family)

WHAT: The single-camera comedy follows three women after the death of their childhood best friend. Faced with the reality that life is short, in desperate attempts to find happiness, they make a series of impulsive, ill-advised and self-indulgent decisions, strengthening their bond and proving it’s never too late to screw up your life.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Hm. This appears to be a wish fulfillment comedy, and while there is quite a trio of compelling actresses at the heart of this sitcom, the premise feels like it’s going to win some or lose some just by riding its foundations. In other words, this comedy will be funniest to people who have made similar choices and have learned to laugh at themselves and their circumstances and will be least funny to those who have made similar choices and don’t see the joke in their own lives. All other viewers will likely fall somewhere in between. The trailer also offers what feels like a stunted sampling of the best this sitcom has to offer, so if this is viewed and seen as funnier than the two minutes produced here, let us know. We can certainly be convinced to pivot ourselves (even if doing so reminds us of a large white couch in a decidedly narrow stairwell).

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PROMISED LAND, ABC

Promised Land ABC

PREMIERE DATE: TBA

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO:  John Ortiz (Rake), Bellamy Young (Prodigal Son, Scandal), Cecilia Suárez (La casa de las flores), Augusto Aguilera (Made for Love), Christina Ochoa (A Million Little Things), Mariel Molino (Papis muy padres), Tonatiuh (Vida), Katya Martín (The Affair) as Juana, Andres Velez, Rolando Chusan

WHAT: An epic, generation-spanning drama about two Latino families vying for wealth and power in California’s Sonoma Valley.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. It seems dramas featuring big, wealthy, powerful families – a la Dallas and Dynasty – are the genre du jour this season. Like Monarch and Our Kind of People, we are going to jump into the passing lane and find a different promised land, especially without a trailer available by which to evaluate the goods. If we’re not watching one of these ilk, we feel compelled to pass on all of them – at least, until someone recommends that we do otherwise, of course.

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QUEENS, ABC

Queens

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 19

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 10/9c

WHO: Eve (Eve), Brandy (Moesha), Naturi Naughton (Power), Nadine Velazquez (My Name Is Earl), Pepi Sonuga (Famous in Love), Taylor Selé (P-Valley)

WHAT: In the drama, estranged and out-of-touch, four women in their 40s reunite for a chance to recapture their fame and regain the swagger they had as the Nasty Bitches, their ’90s group that made them legends in the hip-hop world.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. While the drama of a reuniting 90s girl hip-hop group could get old fast if not handled well, there is something super enticing about pairing a less-sassy Eve with a sassier Brandy and seeing how the 90s nostalgia provides ample incidental underscoring for something that could just be fun and entertainment to watch. On the other hand, it could also be a little too “mad corny” as Brandy’s character opines in the trailer, so the hesitation in this evaluation emerges. Still, there are more than a few queens in this stellar cast with the promise of potential musical fun, so it’s worth a cautious look-see at least.

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SMALLWOOD, CBS

Smallwood

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Pete Holmes (Crashing), Katie Lowes (Scandal), Chi McBride (Hawaii Five-O)

WHAT: After being laid off from the assembly line at the GM factory, a seemingly ordinary man makes the extraordinary decision to provide for his family by following his dream of becoming a professional bowler. Based on professional bowler Tom Smallwood’s life.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. It’s a human interest story about a factory-worker turned professional bowler, but, beyond that, the tone is confusing. Is it a comedy? Is it a drama? Is it a comedy-drama? Also, the acting in this trailer is not the best, and it features canned laughter punctuating certain moments of this mundanely executed two minutes. This was, frankly, a boring preview, and there is nothing strong in what we see to entice us to go deeper. If you think that we’re being small about Smallwood, drop us a line, but we do not expect a long life for this series based upon this preliminary review.

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THAT’S MY JAM, NBC

That's My Jam

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Jimmy Fallon

WHAT: An hourlong music and comedy variety event series that draws its creative DNA from The Tonight Show games such as “Wheel of Musical Impressions,” “Roots Name That Song” and “Slay It Don’t Spray It.” In each episode, two teams of two celebrities compete for charity in a series of music and dance-based games, performative segments and play-along trivia.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We also don’t cover variety shows or shows featuring celebrity competition (see also: The Masked Singer). That isn’t to say we won’t be watching. We just won’t be talking about the fact that we’re watching. Though Daniel Radcliffe should get himself a slot on this show. His rendition of “Alphabet Rap” was pretty dope.

This was delayed from the 2020-2021 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2020.

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THE THING ABOUT PAM, NBC

The Thing About Pam

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Renee Zellweger (What/If), Josh Duhamel (Las Vegas), Judy Greer (Kidding), Katy Mixon (American Housewife)

WHAT: The six-episode limited drama is based on the 2011 murder of Betsy Faria that resulted in her husband Russ’ conviction, but he insisted he did not kill her. His conviction was later overturned. This brutal crime set off a chain of events that would expose a diabolical scheme deeply involving Pam Hupp (Zellweger).

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. As much as we love Renee Zellweger around here (and Josh Duhamel and Judy Greer and Katy Mixon), this limited true-crime drama series does not seem to hold much in the way of storytelling new and different from the podcast(s) and journalism covering this same story. The thing about this show is, if this series is requested for podcast coverage, we will reconsider, but true crime is not one of the requested genres currently being discussed.

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TOM SWIFT, The CW

Tom Swift

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Tian Richards (Being Mary Jane), the voice of LeVar Burton (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

WHAT: The Nancy Drew spinoff follows the serialized adventures of its titular Black, gay, billionaire inventor who is thrust into a world of sci-fi conspiracy and unexplained phenomena after the shocking disappearance of his father. Tom takes to the road on a quest to unravel the truth, leaving behind the comforts of his usual moneyed lifestyle, all while fighting to stay one step ahead of an Illuminati-scale group hell-bent on stopping him. Tom’s missions will require his genius and flair for innovation guided by love, romance, friendship and the mysteries of the universe yet-unsolved.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass For Now. Nancy Drew has been requested for podcast coverage and is on our long list of requested discussions waiting to be produced. Since this show is a spin-off of that venerable adaptation, we prefer to start by visiting the parent show before perusing the content surrounding Tom Swift. You don’t have to take our word for it, though (that one’s for you, LeVar).

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WELCOME TO FLATCH, Fox

Welcome to Flatch

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Chelsea Holmes, Sam Straley (The Kids Are Alright), Seann William Scott (Lethal Weapon), Aya Cash (You’re the Worst), Taylor Ortega (Kim Possible movie), Krystal Smith, Justin Linville

WHAT: In this half-hour mockumentary inspired by the BBC format, a documentary crew goes to a small town to study young adults and their current concerns. Their focus is the daily lives of cousins Kelly (Holmes) and Shrub Mallet (Straley) and their idiosyncratic surroundings. We follow the cousins as they pursue their dreams, confront challenges, and fight each other for frozen pizza. These two don’t have much, but they do have each other.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. With the creators and producers (and their sensibilities) of The Office behind this mockumentary-driven slice of small town, Midwestern life – a vantage point to which may of our resident Couch Potatoes can most likely relate – the potential for sincere comedy, so long as it stays above the line of too much judgment and/or criticism, is rife in this new series. We probably can all think of a place like Flatch. The question is, can we laugh at that notion over the course of multiple episodes (and/or seasons of episodes). The trailer leaves us thinking that it’s worth a trip to Flatch to find out.

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THE WHEEL, NBC

The Wheel

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Michael McIntyre

WHAT: Based on the BBC game show, the series will put viewers into a spin each week as celebrity guests attempt to help contestants win big, with a 42-foot-wide spinning wheel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. If it’s not a drama about a big, multi-generational, multi-geographical family with a heaping dose of entitlement seeping through the camera lens, it’s a game show this season. We’ll be spinning right round this wheel as a result, thanks.

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WOMEN OF THE MOVEMENT, ABC

Women of the Movement

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Adrienne Warren, Tonya Pinkins, Cedric Joe, Ray Fisher, Glynn Turman, Chris Coy, Carter Jenkins, Julia McDermott

WHAT: The limited series tells the story of Mamie Till-Mobley, who in 1955 risks her life to find justice after her son Emmett is brutally murdered in the Jim Crow South. Unwilling to let Emmett’s murder disappear from the headlines, Mamie chooses to bear her pain on the world stage, emerging as an activist for justice and igniting the Civil Rights movement as we know it today.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. It’s a limited engagement dramatization of the Emmett Till story. If you don’t know this tragic piece of history, and you are looking to understand more about the history of civil rights and the movement in this country, you should watch it simply for the educational value. Will Smith is among the show’s laudable production team.

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THE WONDER YEARS, ABC

The Wonder Years

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 22

TIME SLOT: Wednesdays at 8:30/7:30c

WHO: Elisha “EJ” Williams, Dulé Hill (Suits, Psych), Saycon Sengbloh (In the Dark), Laura Kariuki (Black Lightning), Milan Ray, Julian Lerner, Amari O’Neil, narrator Don Cheadle

WHAT: The reboot is a coming of age story set in the late 1960s that takes a nostalgic look at a black middle-class family in Montgomery, Alabama through the point-of-view of imaginative 12 year-old Dean. With the wisdom of his adult years, Dean’s hopeful and humorous recollections show how his family found their “wonder years” in a turbulent time.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Like the classic series starring Fred Savage and featuring narrator Daniel Stern, this version of The Wonder Years hearkens back to life in the late 1960s. The difference here is that this story shifts the narrative to the black/African-American perspective in the American South during that period, rather than focusing upon a white family from Anywhere, USA. The reviews of the new show have been somewhat middling; we hope that the series is just taking some time to find its footing. There is potential for a Looking Back to Look Forward CPU! compare and contrast exercise here. We hope that this series survives long enough to make it worthwhile.

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The following is a link to all premiere dates for shows covered beyond the main networks: 

http://www.metacritic.com/feature/tv-premiere-dates

Non-Broadcast Network Pick-Ups

We Are Lady Parts (Peacock): It’s been requested for podcast coverage by resident Couch Potatoes (CP’s). (Premieres June 3, 2021)

PhD student Amina Hussain (Anjana Vasan) is convinced to join a Muslim female punk band named Lady Parts as its lead guitarist in the British music comedy created, written and directed by Nida Manzoor.

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Sweet Tooth (Netflix): It’s a fantasy adapted from DC Comics. (Premieres June 4, 2021)

A half human and half deer-boy (Christian Convery) leaves his isolated home to find a post-apocalyptic world as he befriends other hybrids and humans in this series based on the DC comic by Jeff Lemire.

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Starstruck (HBO Max): This one has also been requested for podcast discussion by a CP or two. (Premieres June 10, 2021)

The one-night stand London twenty-something Jessie (Rose Matafeo) has with the famous movie star Tom Kapoor (Nikesh Patel) becomes something more in this British comedy created by Matafeo.

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Loki (Disney+): Who doesn’t love Tom Hiddleston’s wily trickster god, now on TV? (Premieres June 11, 2021)

Loki (Tom Hiddleston) returns as the God of Mischief after the circumstances of 2019’s “Avengers: Endgame.”

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Kevin Can F**k Himself (AMC): Annie Murphy has a new show and a new character far from “Schitt’s Creek’s” Alexis that has generated quite a bit of buzz(Premieres June 13, 2021)

Allison McRoberts (Annie Murphy) has been living like a stereotypical sitcom housewife but after 10 years, she reaches her breaking point in this dark comedy created by Valerie Armstrong.

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We the People (Netflix): It’s “Schoolhouse Rock” – but for civics – and it’s produced by the Obamas, who probably know a thing or two about civics. (Released July 4, 2021)

Sort of a modern take on Schoolhouse Rock, these animated, three-minute-long civics lessons are set to original songs performed by the likes of Lin-Manuel Miranda, Janelle Monae, Adam Lambert, H.E.R., Brandi Carlile, Andra Day, and Bebe Rexha. The series comes from Barack and Michelle Obama (true fact: one is a former U.S. president) along with Kenya Barris.

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Monsters at Work (Disney+): The more Sully and Mike Wazowski, the better. (Premieres July 7, 2021)

Rescheduled from July 2. A sequel to the Pixar films Monsters, Inc. and Monsters University, this animated series returns the voices of Billy Crystal, John Goodman, Bonnie Hunt, John Ratzenberger, and Jennifer Tilly and adds Ben Feldman, Henry Winkler, Mindy Kaling, Lucas Neff, and Aisha Tyler.

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The White Lotus (HBO Max, miniseries): This miniseries has been requested for podcast coverage(Premieres July 11, 2021)

Written and directed by Mike White (Enlightened), this six-episode social satire spends a week at an exclusive Hawaiian resort where the guests, employees, and resort itself turn out to be far less perfect than first appearances would suggest. The ensemble cast includes Connie Britton, Steve Zahn, Sydney Sweeney, Murray Bartlett, Jennifer Coolidge, Alexandra Daddario, Jake Lacy, Natasha Rothwell, and Molly Shannon.

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Welling Paranormal (HBO Max/the CW): We have fans and requesters of podcast coverage of “What We Do In the Shadows,” so we’re banking on some crossover appeal. (Premieres July 11, 2021)

Making its American debut three years after it first aired in New Zealand, this mockumentary-style TV series spinoff from the original What We Do in the Shadows film should appeal to fans of the hit FX TV show also based on that movie. Two of the movie’s stars, Karen O’Leary and Michael Minogue, reprise their roles in Wellington as clueless cops who are members of their city’s paranormal policing unit, and the series was created by Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi, who were also responsible for both the film and its American TV spinoff. Two new episodes air back-to-back tonight, and all episodes will be available to stream on HBO Max the day after they air on The CW.

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Dr. Death (Peacock, miniseries): A stellar cast and some critical acclaim make this true-crime miniseries one of intrigue. (Premieres July 15, 2021)

One of the first shows ordered by Peacock when the streaming service was announced in 2019 (but delayed, like everything else, by the pandemic), this eight-episode limited series is a fictionalized adaptation of the first season of the true-crime podcast of the same name, focusing on the investigation into a Texas neurosurgeon who was accused of gross malpractice after over 30 of his patients were left seriously injured or dead. The delay in production led to numerous changes behind and in front of the camera, starting with the lead role of Dr. Christopher Duntsch, now played by Joshua Jackson after Jamie Dornan was forced to drop out due to scheduling conflicts. Alec Baldwin, AnnaSophia Robb, Carrie Preston, and the Mr. Robot duo of Christian Slater and Grace Gummer also star. Maggie Kiley (a late replacement for Stephen Frears) directs the first two episodes as part of an all-female director slate that also includes Jennifer Morrison and So Yong Kim.

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American Horror Stories (FX): Our “American Horror Story Series” panel, now called our “American Horror Story Franchise Series” panel, is eager to take up this one for podcast coverage. (Premieres July 15, 2021)

This FX on Hulu anthology series is a spinoff from Ryan Murphy’s long-running FX series American Horror Story. While the latter (which returns next month) tells a different story each season, the new show is an episodic anthology, similar to The Twilight Zone, with a different story and cast for each hour-long episode. (Some of those cast members include Matt Bomer, Evan Peters, Taissa Farmiga, and Danny Trejo, while Murphy regular Sarah Paulson will be one of the directors on the series.) Two episodes stream today followed by five additional weekly installments.

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Schmigadoon! (Apple TV+): We have far too many musical-loving Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes Adjacent to ignore this new musical comedy. (Premieres July 16, 2021)

Created by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio (the writers of Despicable Me) and produced by SNL‘s Lorne Michaels, this six-episode Apple musical parody series stars Cecily Strong and Keegan-Michael Key as a couple on a backpacking trip who stumble upon a town in which all of the residents believe that they are living inside a 1940s studio musical. Unfortunately for them (but fortunately for us?), they find themselves trapped in the town until they are able to discover “true love.” Alan Cumming, Kristin Chenoweth, Fred Armisen, and Jane Krakowski also star, while Martin Short guests.

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Power Book III: Raising Kanan (Starz): We have “Power” fans and might have to do a podcast series. (Premieres July 18, 2021)

Mekai Curtis, Omar Epps, Hailey Kilgore, and Patina Miller star in the latest Power spinoff—and the only one that’s a prequel. It’s set in the 1990s and follows the teenage years of future drug dealer Kanan Stark, the character originated by 50 Cent and played here by Curtis.

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Masters of the Universe: Revelation (Netflix, miniseries): A surprising number of CPs and CPs Adjacent had stellar things to say about Netflix’s sponsorship of the return of He-Man. Of course, so many of us are Generation X and Millennials. (Premieres July 23, 2021)

Picking up after the events of the 1980s syndicated animated series He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, the Netflix-exclusive Revelation comes from Kevin Smith—yes, the one you are thinking of. He has crafted a series aimed at the Gen Xers who originally watched He-Man (as children) when it first aired. So expect something a bit talkier and more complex than the original, even if the visuals look familiar. Naturally, Jason Mewes is in the cast, but so are Mark Hamill, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Chris Wood, Lena Heady, Stephen Root, Henry Rollins, Phil LaMarr, Diedrich Bader, and Alicia Silverstone. The series will air in two parts, so only five episodes will stream today, but they will be accompanied by an aftershow, Revelations: The Masters of the Universe Revelation Aftershow.

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Reservation Dogs (Hulu): We have requests to discuss this comedy, featuring an all-Indigenous cast. (Premieres August 9, 2021)

The latest “FX on Hulu” original series comes from Taika Waititi and Sterlin Harjo. Featuring an all-Indigenous cast and writing/directing staff, the comedy is set on a reservation in Oklahoma where four teenaged friends attempt to save (and steal) enough money to move to California.

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What If…? (Disney+): It’ s Marvel characters, animated, and tossed into a salad bowl of mixed-up narratives, similar to the DC Elseworlds stories. Here, Peggy Carter might be Captain Britain, or T’Challa might be Star Lord. Plus, all the real actors from the films return to voice their characters! (Premieres August 11, 2021)

Yes, it’s yet another Marvel series on Disney+, but this one’s different: It’s animated. It’s also literally different. Based on the comic book series of the same name, the anthology series What If reimagines classic Marvel characters in hypothetical situations that depart from the stories you know from the MCU films. What if it were Peggy Carter who took the Super Soldier serum and became Captain America Britain? What if it were Steve Rogers who donned the Iron Man suit? What if T’Challa became Star Lord? These and other alternate realities will be explored across 10 episodes, streaming weekly. Jeffrey Wright voices Uatu The Watcher, who narrates the series, while MCU regulars Michael B. Jordan, the late Chadwick Boseman, Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Natalie Portman, Jeff Goldblum, Paul Rudd, Jeremy Renner, Sebastian Stan, Toby Jones, Hayley Atwell, Chris Evans, Michael Douglas, Samuel L. Jackson, Mark Ruffalo, Taika Waititi, and many more will reprise their film and TV roles (at least in voice form).

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Brand New Cherry Flavor (Netflix, miniseries): Some percolations of high praise have cropped up from the resident CP’s. (Premieres August 13, 2021)

Todd Grimson’s hallucinatory horror novel gets an eight-episode adaptation from Channel Zero vets Nick Antosca and Lenore Zion. The series follows an aspiring film director (Rosa Salazar) who heads to L.A. in the 1990s, only to find her dream project turn into a nightmare—apparently, one that includes “zombies, hit men, supernatural kittens, and a mysterious tattoo artist.” Catherine Keener, Manny Jacinto, Eric Lange, and Mark Acheson also star.

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Heels (Starz): Shirtless Stephen Amell wrestling…who cares what else it might be about (hearts hearts hearts)? (Premieres August 15, 2021)

Stephen Amell and Alexander Ludwig star as small-town professional wrestlers (and brothers) in an eight-episode series from Michael Waldron (Loki) that also stars Mary McCormack, Alison Luff, and Kelli Berglund.

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Nine Perfect Strangers (Hulu, miniseries): From several minds behind “Big Little Lies,” the reviews have been mixed, but the talk (and requests for talk) have been palpable. (Premieres August 18, 2021)

The latest star-filled cable drama from David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies) is an adaptation of the best-seller by Liane Moriarty set during a 10-day retreat at a luxury health-and-wellness resort. Nicole Kidman, Melissa McCarthy, Bobby Cannavale, Regina Hall, Michael Shannon, Luke Evans, Manny Jacinto, and Samara Weaving star, while Jonathan Levine (50/50) directs all eight episodes (which will stream weekly following today’s triple-episode debut).

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The Chair (Netflix): From the guys behind “Game of Thrones,” it boasts a superb cast with Sandra Oh at its forefront, and apparently anyone who works in higher education is going to feel this show acutely in the heart and mind spaces – it’s already been requested for podcast discussion. (Premieres August 20, 2021)

For their first series since Game of Thrones (and their subsequent signing of an enormous contract with Netflix), the production team of David Benioff and D.B. Weiss have opted for something very different: a six-episode dramedy set within the English department of a fictional university. Killing Eve‘s Sandra Oh, playing the newly installed first female head of the department, heads a cast that also features Jay Duplass, Holland Taylor, Bob Balaban, David Morse, Nana Mensah, and Everly Carganilla. Actress Amanda Peet created the series (with Annie Julia-Wyman) and serves as showrunner—it’s her debut in those roles—though she doesn’t appear in the show.

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Only Murders in the Building (Hulu): Steve Martin! Martin Short! And a full panel waiting in the wings to discuss the apparent comedic genius of this new streaming entry. (Premieres August 30, 2021)

Steve Martin co-created and stars in a comedic murder mystery about three amigos strangers (including Selena Gomez and Martin’s longtime foil Martin Short) who live in the same ritzy Manhattan apartment building and discover their shared love of true crime stories after another of their building’s residents dies under suspicious circumstances. Believing it to be a murder, the three unite to investigate the case—and record a podcast about their efforts. Amy Ryan, Aaron Dominguez, and Nathan Lane also star, while co-creator John Hoffman (Grace and Frankie) and Dan Fogelman (This Is Us) are among the producers. (Oh, and this is somehow Steve Martin’s first regular TV starring role.) Episodes will stream weekly.

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Q-Force (Netflix): We have an audience for this animated series built into our CP roster. (Premieres September 2, 2021)

In development since 2019, Netflix’s latest animated comedy series centers on an elite gay spy (voiced by Sean Hayes) who is shipped off to a West Hollywood desk job after coming out to his superiors. There, he assembles a rogue team of LGBTQ+ geniuses known as the Q-Force who finally win the support of the agency after a decade, but with one catch: they must add a new member (David Harbour), who is straight. Gary Cole, Laurie Metcalf, Patti Harrison, Matt Rogers, Wanda Sykes, and Gabe Liedman also star in the series, which was created by Liedman (a writer on Kroll ShowBrooklyn Nine-NineBroad City, and PEN15).

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Kin (AMC): It’s set in Ireland and features Daredevil himself, Charlie Cox. (Premieres September 9, 2021)

Charlie Cox, Aidan Gillen, Ciarán Hinds, and Clare Dunne star in a Dublin-set organized crime drama.

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Y: The Last Man (Hulu): A science fiction series adapted from Vertigo comics and featuring all female episode directors. (Premieres September 13, 2021)

This long-in-the-works FX on Hulu original series is an adaptation of the Hugo Award-winning, post-apocalyptic Vertigo series by Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra. Like the comics, the TV series is set in a world in which a cataclysmic event has wiped out every male on Earth (except one), leaving a planet inhabited by women. Diane Lane, Amber Tamblyn, Olivia Thirlby, Ashley Romans, and Marin Ireland star. It has been a bumpy journey from page to screen: The original showrunners, Michael Green and Aida Mashaka Croal, departed the production in 2019 over creative differences, and were eventually replaced by Eliza Clark (Animal KingdomRubicon), while original last man portrayer Barry Keoghan left the series in early 2020 and was replaced by Ben Schnetzer (Warcraft). Three additional stars, Imogen Poots, Timothy Hutton, and Lashana Lynch, were also replaced last fall when filming finally commenced. All 10 episodes were directed by women. Two of those episodes stream today, followed by weekly single-episode installments.

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The Premise (Hulu): “The Office’s” BJ Novak gives us several thought-provoking premises within anthological episodic stories and a stellar cast. (Premieres September 16, 2021)

B.J. Novak’s mysterious and experimental FX on Hulu episodic anthology series finally has a title—and a few details other than the fact that it is written, directed (in part), and hosted by the former co-star and writer on The Office. Said to tackle “the biggest questions of our modern era,” The Premise will blend comedy and drama across five half-hour episodes, which will revolve around stories like a woman who becomes obsessed with an anonymous online comment, a billionaire who offers his childhood bully an unusual opportunity, and an embarrassing sex tape that captures a disputed police incident in the background and with it the chance to save a wrongfully arrested man—if the tape goes public. The impressive cast will feature Jon Bernthal, Amy Landecker, Beau Bridges, Ed Asner, Ben Platt, Jermaine Fowler, Daniel Dae Kim, Lucas Kedges, Kaitlyn Dever, O’Shea Jackson Jr., George Wallace, and more. The first two episodes stream today.

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Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol (Peacock): Can Robert Langdon and his exploits work on the small screen? Let’s find out. (Premieres September 16, 2021)

Dan Brown’s 2009 novel—his third to feature Robert Langdon, following Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci Code, was at one point going to be adapted into another Tom Hanks movie like those other titles (and Inferno). Instead, it became a prequel TV series, with Ashley Zukerman (Designated Survivor, Manhattan) taking over the role of a young Langdon, the Harvard symbologist who is enlisted by the CIA to help save his mentor and stop a global conspiracy. Valorie Curry and Eddie Izzard also star.

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Midnight Mass (Netflix, miniseries): From the horrific brain of Mike Flanagan, who haunted a Hill House and a Bly Manor, a fast CP favorite. (Premieres September 24, 2021)

Zach Gilford and Hamish Linklater head the cast for the latest Netflix thriller from Mike Flanagan (The Haunting of Hill House) that is set on an island where the arrival of a mysterious young priest coincides with some supernatural happenings. All seven episodes stream today.

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Foundation (Apple TV+): Who doesn’t love an Asimov adaptation? (Premieres September 24, 2021)

The famed sci-fi novel trilogy by Isaac Asimov is now an Apple original series from David S. Goyer. (Originally, Josh Friedman was also on board as co-showrunner and co-writer, though he left the project back in 2019.) Jared Harris (playing Hari Seldon, the genius mathematician who forecasts an end to the empire that rules the galaxy and seeks to minimize the duration of the following dark age) and Lee Pace (as Brother Day, the current emperor) star in the series, which unlike Asimov’s books also appears to have room for a few female characters. Those Foundation books have never before been adapted to film or television in large part due to their immense scope, which spans centuries, and it is unclear how large a time period Goyer is planning to cover should the series progress to future seasons. Three episodes—including the opener directed by Rupert Sanders (Snow White and the Huntsman) in his TV debut—stream today, followed by seven additional weekly installments.

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Just Beyond (Disney+): We have got some RL Stine fans in the house, and a “Twilight Zone” riff is spooky season satisfaction. (Premieres October 13, 2021)

Seth Grahame-Smith (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies) adapts the R.L. Stine graphic novel series into a sort of supernatural and comedic take on the Twilight Zone episodic anthology formula. Instead of Disney+’s usual weekly rollout, all eight episodes of Just Beyond will be available to stream today. At least two of those episodes will be directed by Marc Webb (The Amazing Spider-Man), while some of the actors who will appear include Mckenna Grace, Lexi Underwood, Henry Thomas, Nasim Pedrad, Tim Heidecker, and Riki Lindhome.

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Invasion (Apple TV+): Give us aliens – or give us something else. (Premieres October 22, 2021)

From frequent X-Men screenwriter Simon Kinberg and Hunters and Solos creator David Weil comes this long-in-the-works, big-budget, alien invasion drama. Shamier Anderson and Sam Neill head the large ensemble for a 10-episode series set (and filmed) in multiple locations around the globe. Expect a character-driven take on the oft-filmed War of the Worlds formula.

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Maya and the Three (Netflix, miniseries): The previews for this animated fantasy are gorgeous, and the voice cast is outstanding. (Premieres October 22, 2021)

An epic nine-part animated fantasy from animator/director Jorge R. Gutierrez (The Book of Life), Maya is inspired by Mexican mythology and features the voices of Zoe Saldaña (as the titular warrior princess), Gabriel Iglesias, Stephanie Beatriz, Diego Luna, Gael Garcia Bernal, Alfred Molina, Allen Maldonado, Danny Trejo, Cheech Marin, Rosie Perez, Queen Latifah, Wyclef Jean, and Rita Moreno.

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Star Trek: Prodigy (Paramount+): This latest animated “Star Trek” series will be covered by our Star Trek 50+ Series panel. (Premieres October 28, 2021)

Originally ordered as a Nickelodeon series—and the cable network will still air it, but at a later date after its streaming debut—Prodigy is the third animated Star Trek series but the first intended exclusively for younger audiences. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing of interest for longtime Star Trek fans. That group might be delighted by the return of Kate Mulgrew as Voyager‘s Captain Janeway. Or, rather, as an emergency hologram version of Janeway on a derelict Federation ship that is stolen by a group of teen aliens who then take it to explore the universe, as teen aliens often do. (They are voiced by Jason Mantzoukas, Dee Bradley Baker, and Breet Gray, among others, while recurring guests include Jameela Jamil, Jason Alexander, Daveed Diggs, and Robert Beltran, the latter reprising his Voyager role of Chakotay.) Today’s premiere runs one hour, while subesequent episodes (arriving weekly) will be 30 minutes.

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Head of the Class (HBO Max): Morbid curiosity will have us checking out this latest reboot. Plus Robin Givens. (Premieres November 3, 2021)

Isabella Gomez (One Day at a Time) is the head of the cast for this reboot of the high school sitcom that ran for five years on ABC in the late ’80s (and featured Howard Hesseman and then Billy Connolly in the lead role). Set at a different school, the new series is produced by Bill Lawrence (Ted LassoScrubs) alongside American Vandal vets Amy Pocha and Seth Cohen. Robin Givens guests as a grown-up version of Darlene Merriman, the role she played in the original series and who is now the head of the PTA at the school attended by her son.

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Dexter: New Blood (Showtime): This revival has our “Dexter”-loving CPs all a-twitter with anticipation, particularly since many members of the original cast return. (Premieres November 7, 2021)

Famed serial killer lumberjack Dexter Morgan is back in a 10-episode revival of the Showtime drama series Dexter that concluded its original eight-season run in 2013. The new episodes are set a decade after the events of the much-criticized finale and on the opposite side of the country in the fictional upstate New York town of Iron Lake, where Michael C. Hall’s title character is posing as a local shopkeeper (and, conveniently, dating the town’s police chief, played by Julia Jones). Other new faces include Clancy Brown, Alano Miller, and Jamie Chung, while Dexter vet Jennifer Carpenter will again be a series regular despite the minor detail that her character happens to be dead. (Also back from the dead: John Lithgow’s Trinity Killer.) Also returning is showrunner Clyde Phillips, who guided Dexter‘s first four (and, arguably, best) seasons.

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The Shrink Next Door (Apple TV+, miniseries): It’s got Paul Rudd and Will Ferrell in it. That’s good by itself. (Premieres November 12, 2021)

A darkly comedic, eight-part miniseries based on true events as chronicled in the podcast of the same nameShrink focuses on the increasingly odd, dysfuntional, and manipulative relationship between a celebrity psychiatrist (Paul Rudd) and his longtime patient (Will Ferrell). (How odd? At one point the doctor moves into his patient’s summer home and attempts to take over his business.) Kathryn Hahn and Casey Wilson also star. Michael Showalter (The Big SickSearch Party) and Jesse Peretz (GLOWGirls) direct from a script by Georgia Pritchett (VeepSuccession). Three episodes stream today followed by single episodes each Friday through 12/17.

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Marvel’s Hit-Monkey (Hulu): Read the description. Read it again. (Premieres November 17, 2021)

Nearly two years ago many of Hulu’s planned Marvel series were scrapped as Marvel instead reoriented itself around Disney+. But not Hit-Monkey. The adult animated series comes from Josh Gordon and Will Speck (Blades of Glory) and could be TV’s only series to center on a revenge-seeking Japanese macaque who is mentored by the ghost of an assassin after his family his murdered. (At least this year.) Jason Sudeikis, Olivia Munn, George Takei, Ally Maki, and Fred Tatasciore head the voice cast. All 10 episodes stream today.

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Cowboy Be-Bop (Netflix): I think it’s a live-action “Cowboy.” Inquiring minds need to know. (Premieres November 19, 2021)

Delayed a year not (necessarily) due to the pandemic but because of an on-set injury to its star, Netflix’s live-action series adaptation of Cowboy Bebop finally makes its 10-episode debut. The original Cowboy Bebop was a Japanese-produced, jazz-inspired anime series from the late 1990s that later earned an American fanbase through airings on Adult Swim. This remake similarly attempts to blend science fiction and noir tropes as it depicts the adventures of a group of bounty hunters operating throughout the solar system. Some of those bounty hunters are played by John Cho (as Spike Spiegel), Mustafa Shakir (as Jet Black), and Daniella Pineda (as Faye Valentine), while Alex Hassell plays Vicious, part of the evil Syndicate. Yes, that jazzy soundtrack will return: Yoko Kanno, who scored the anime series, is back to put the bebop in the new series as well.

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The Wheel of Time (Amazon Prime): We’ve been waiting on this fantasy adaptation a while. (Premieres November 19, 2021)

In its quest for its own Game of Thrones, Amazon isn’t putting all of its (dragon) eggs in one basket. In addition to next year’s Lord of the Rings series, another epic fantasy novel adaptation is headed to Prime Video this fall. Amazon has already committed to at least two seasons of The Wheel of Time, which adapts the best-selling book series by Robert Jordan (and, after his death, Brandon Sanderson) that spans 14 individual novels plus a prequel. There have been several prior attempts to bring the books to both TV and the big screen, but the massive scope of the series made those projects ultimately untenable. Amazon’s version stars Rosamund Pike and comes from former Survivor contestant (and writer on Agents of SHIELD and Chuck) Rafe Judkins and like the books is set in a world where magic exists but only a select group of women are allowed to use it. (If you are keeping score at home, that makes two shows this year created by Survivor contestants—and the other one was pretty great.) The first three episodes stream today, followed by five additional weekly installments on Fridays. Season 2 has already begun filming (albeit with a different actor, Donal Finn rather than Barney Harris, playing Mat Cauthon), and Judkins has a total of eight seasons planned out if Amazon agrees to move forward.

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Hawkeye (Disney+): Another eagerly anticipated entry in the Marvel Cinematic TV Universe by our superhero-loving CP’s. (Premieres November 24, 2021)

What if … Disney+ went several months without a new live-action Marvel series? No need to think about such a dire scenario any longer; the next one is here. Hawkeye finds Jeremy Renner reprising the title role (which he has played in half a dozen Marvel films) of Clint Barton. But he’s not the only one: Joining the MCU is Hailee Steinfeld as a young fan who trains with Barton to become the next Hawkeye. The series comes from Jonathan Igla, who is new to the MCU but has written and produced for shows ranging from Mad Men to Bridgerton, and the cast also includes Vera Farmiga, Florence Pugh, Linda Cardellini, and newcomer Alaqua Cox, whose character (Maya Lopez/Echo) is being considered for a spinoff. Two episodes stream today, followed by single episodes on each of the following four Wednesdays.

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The Book of Boba Fett (Disney+): Something about Star Wars. (Premieres December 29, 2021)

Temuera Morrison (playing Boba Fett) and Ming-Na Wen (as fellow bounty hunter Fennec Shand) star in a spinoff from the hit Star Wars streaming series The Mandalorian that is set (at least in part) on Tatooine. Robert Rodriguez, who directed the Mandalorian episode that saw the return of Fett (a character that was first seen in The Empire Strikes Back—or, if you prefer, the Star Wars Holiday Special), will direct multiple episodes of the new series and serve as a producer alongside Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni (both of whom will also direct episodes, as will fellow Mandalorian director Bryce Dallas Howard).

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Others on radar: The Lord of the Rings series in development at Amazon; The Chronicles of Narnia at Netflix; The Watch (BBC); Conan at Amazon; The Dark Tower at Amazon; and the Three-Body Problem adaptation at Netflix.

-*-

There you have it!  We will add Pick Ups to the CPU! Watchlist and cover them in this blog or via our ever growing podcast. For those passed, if you think we should give them another chance, head on over to the comments section and sound off!  If you would like to be a guest blogger about any passed shows, send me a message, and we’ll talk terms!

In short:

Picked Up

ABC

Queens (hesitantly)
Women of the Movement (limited series)
The Wonder Years

CBS

Ghosts

Fox

The Big Leap (hesitantly)
Krapopolis (hesitantly)
Welcome to Flatch

NBC

American Auto (very hesitantly)
The Endgame (hesitantly)
La Brea
Night Court (very hesitantly)
Ordinary Joe (very hesitantly)

CW

4400
Naomi (very hesitantly)

Netflix

Sweet Tooth
We the People
Masters of the Universe: Revelation (miniseries)
Brand New Cherry Flavor (miniseries)
The Chair
Q-Force
Midnight Mass (miniseries)
Maya and the Three (miniseries)
Cowboy Be-Bop

Amazon Prime

The Wheel of Time

Hulu

Reservation Dogs
Nine Perfect Strangers (miniseries)
Only Murders in the Building
Y: The Last Man
The Premise
Marvel’s Hit-Monkey

AMC

Kevin Can F**k Himself
Kin

Starz

Power Book III: Raising Kanan
Heels

Paramount+

Star Trek: Prodigy

Disney+

Loki
Monsters at Work
What If…?
Just Beyond
Hawkeye
The Book of Boba Fett

Peacock

We Are Lady Parts
Dr. Death (miniseries)
Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol

HBO Max

Starstruck
The White Lotus (miniseries)
Wellington Paranormal
Head of the Class

Showtime

Dexter: New Blood

FX

American Horror Stories

Apple TV+

Schmigadoon!
Foundation
Invasion
The Shrink Next Door (miniseries)

Winning Network: Netflix

Passed

ABC

Abbott Elementary
Maggie
Promised Land

CBS

CSI: Vegas
Come Dance with Me
FBI: International
Good Sam
NCIS: Hawai’i
Smallwood

Fox

Alter Ego
The Cleaning Lady
Domino Masters
Don’t Forget the Lyrics
Monarch
Next Level Chef
Our Kind of People
Pivoting

NBC


AGT: Extreme
American Song Contest
Grand Crew
Home Sweet Home
LA Fire and Rescue
That’s My Jam
The Thing About Pam (limited series)
The Wheel

CW

All American: Homecoming
Legends of the Hidden Temple
Tom Swift (for now)

Losing Networks: Fox and NBC (tie)

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Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Tomorrow, CPU! offers an encore presentation of one of our Patreon bonus episodes: our M*A*S*H Legacy Panel, entitled “Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen,” in which viewers who have a better memory of watching the classic comedy in real time comment upon the series’ longevity and timeless appeal to younger generations of viewers. Stay tuned for this thoughtful and nostalgic discussion!

Progress Report: End of Season Scorecard, 2020-2021 Pilots

This Progress Report…is later than usual. But this year…is unusual. With a pandemic affecting every major studio, network, and workspace in the USA and beyond, the dust is only now settling when it comes to what made it to a new season and what did not.

To that end, Couch Potatoes Unite! delayed all of our annual Progress Reports to make sure we are understanding the TV landscape in such a way that we would be able to effectively communicate it to you, gentle reader and listener. We think we’re almost there. There is quite a lot still unsorted, but the main five networks are trying to resume their traditional rhythms, and some of the other content outlets are attempting to follow suit.

Thus, we now present Progress Report 2 of 2021, the final progress report for the new pilots of the 2020-2021 season! Where are the new shows (that are left), and how are they doing nowadays?  Read below to find out! Thanks as always to TVLine and to other sources for helping a girl out.

*Note: with the expansion of CPU!, these initial thoughts are based upon the CPU! Chief’s assessments.  As with last season, a growing number of CPU! members may find shows initially passed by the CPU! Chief and choose to review them.  CPU! readers will be informed if the show’s status changes regarding coverage as the season progresses through the handy CPU! Progress Reports, and all written reviews will be published!

**Second Note: If you haven’t already figured it out, we measure the TV year from June 1st to May 31st.

***Third Note: Given the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the TV industry, the concept of “ratings weeks” was kind of moot this year. Also, given the glut of TV entertainment, we are hereby suspending progress reports for anything other than start of season, mid-season, and end of season. If this makes you sad, please let us know. We aim to please!

B Positive' Review: CBS Fall Comedy, Thomas Middleditch Stars | TVLine

B POSITIVE, CBS

WHO: Thomas Middleditch (Silicon Valley), Annaleigh Ashford (Masters of Sex), Sara Rue (Impastor), Kether Donohue (You’re the Worst), Kamryn Kunody

WHAT: A multi-cam comedy about a therapist and newly divorced dad who is faced with finding a kidney donor when he runs into a rough-around-the-edges woman from his past who volunteers her own. Together they form an unlikely bond and begin a journey that will change both of their lives.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Welcome to the 2020-2021 CPU! network pilot review, always full of snark and real talk about upcoming TV from your friendly neighborhood TV podcast, whose business is otherwise unaffected by global pandemics, as we’re too afraid to leave our houses and, therefore, spend an even more inordinate time watching TV! Unite with us (and wear a mask)! 

We start off with a pass because, as earnestly as we support humanity’s giving natures and organ donation when needed, the subject and the slapstick cut of this teaser trailer render us feeling like the topic and the tone of this series don’t quite match, despite a fairly fresh premise to start this situation comedy off reasonably right. Another way of looking at this snap judgment comes down to the idea that if this the best thirty seconds the Eye can provide to sell this sitcom, the humor falls flat quickly, even if spontaneous organ donation is intended to elicit at least a few smiles. We want to “b” into it, positively, but we’re not quite there.

And to get this bit of annual flavor out of the way, if buzz and steam and starvation for new network sitcoms in these, our COVID times – or your more direct contact with us via comment on any post, a visit to our guestbook or our social media, or an email to couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – convince us to change our minds, which is very easy to do with the right amount of minimal persuasion, we most certainly will! I’m positive!

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, CBS renewed this sitcom for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on May 13, 2021, after a total of 18 episodes. Season 2 is set to premiere on October 14, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Reviews and reception from critics are (B?) positive. Plus, it was CBS’ only new comedy entry during this, our era of COVID, which might be bolstering its survival chances somewhat. Unfortunately, no one is talking to us about it yet, so we’ll stay pretty positive that passing is our best option. We have to prioritize the sheer volume of television entertainment somehow!

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New Montana ABC TV show 'Big Sky TV' premiered this past week

BIG SKY, ABC

WHO: Kylie Bunbury (Pitch), Katheryn Winnick (Vikings), Ryan Phillippe (Shooter), Brian Geraghty (Chicago P.D.), John Carroll Lynch (American Horror Story), Dedee Pfeiffer (Cybill), Natalie Alyn Lind (The Gifted), Jade Pettyjohn (Little Fires Everywhere), Jesse James Keitel

WHAT: In this procedural thriller, private detective Cassie Dewell (Bunbury) partners with ex-cop Jenny Hoyt (Winnick) on a search for two sisters who have been kidnapped by a truck driver on a remote highway in Montana, but when they discover that these are not the only girls who have disappeared in the area, they must race against the clock to stop the killer before another woman is taken.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Without a trailer to help steer us toward this procedural thriller, I am afraid that we’ll have to steer away. Procedural TV is a genre not typically requested by our resident Couch Potatoes unless the procedural overlay is set off by a gimmick or a quirk that renders it somewhat different from the typical fare. Various vehicles featuring murder and detective work have come and gone in recent seasons; some have been canceled quickly, and though the lead actress is named Kylie (which this Kylie can get behind), we don’t have enough information about either this series premise or its cast to feel motivated to add it to our already as-large-as-the-sky lists of recommended TV. Big facts.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, the Alphabet network renewed this Ryan Phillippe thriller for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on May 18, 2021, after a total of 16 episodes. Season 2 is due to premiere on September 30, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: After viewing the trailer for this series, your friendly neighborhood Chief Couch Potato was not motivated to watch this seemingly run-of-the-mill crime-solving thriller. Also, no one is talking about it in CPU!’s increasingly widespread circles of Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes Adjacent, and this past season, of all times, has been the time for hunkering in and watching things. The premise is not pie in the big sky, but this particular Alphabet entry feeling new and different from other ilk in its genre seems like a pretty tall order; or, perhaps, the trailer was not well cut (of course, usually, that means there’s not a lot from which to cut). Anyway, we remain in the passing line on the TV highway until we hear requests, same as it ever was, same as it ever was.

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Call Me Kat' Preview: Which 'New Girl' Alum Will Show Up in Kat's Cat Cafe?  - TV Insider

CALL ME KAT, Fox

WHO: Mayim Bialik (The Big Bang Theory), Swoosie Kurtz (Mike & Molly), Cheyenne Jackson (American Horror Story), Kyla Pratt (One on One) and Leslie Jordan (Will & Grace). Bialik and Jim Parsons serve as EPs.

WHAT: Based on the BBC sitcom Miranda, the multi-cam follows a 39-year-old woman (Bialik) who struggles every day against society (and her mother) to prove that you can not have everything you want and still be happy. That’s why she spent the money her parents set aside for her wedding to open a cat café in Louisville.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. The hesitancy comes from the lack of a trailer, but there are three reasons why we are motivated to give this one a look-see: it’s based on an established British comedy, so if it can be Americanized in a way that lands with the audiences on this side of the pond, we’re all for giving it a nod; it features Mayim Bialik, a Big Bang Blossom if there ever was one; and who doesn’t want to see a comedy about an owner of a cat cafe? Imagine all the feline hi-jinks! On the other hand, this sitcom could be incredibly stupid, but with Mayim and Jim Parsons, both capable of intelligence and warmth when it comes to comedy, at the helm, we’re thinking this one at least deserves a chance, though you can call me “krazy” if you want.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. The premise is a little shaky, but the cast is the reason to watch this one, and by cast, I mean those supporting Ms. Bialik. As much as Mayim will bring the sass and apparently a few songs via a karaoke set-up (because why not?), those to watch include Swoosie Kurtz and Leslie Jordan doing what they do best. We are still evaluating Cheyenne Jackson beyond his appearances on American Horror Story and so will need to tune in to get the full sense of the coalescing of this particularly cat-crazy ensemble – but we do not regret our Pick Up decision (yet).

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, Fox renewed this Mayim Bialik kitty-littered sitcom for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on March 25, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: We have had two requests already to cover this show on the podcast, so this Pick Up has become much less hesitant. Though the series seems critically panned, we have two discerning CP’s who advocate otherwise. To be continued!

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Call Your Mother (Season 1 Episode 1) Comedy, trailer - Startattle

CALL YOUR MOTHER, ABC

WHO: Kyra Sedgwick (The Closer), Rachel Sennott (High Maintenance), Joey Bragg (Liv and Maddie), Emma Caymares (Fosse/Verdon), Austin Crute (Daybreak), Patrick Brammall (Evil, No Activity)

WHAT: In this multi-cam, an “empty nester” mom wonders how she ended up alone while her children live their best lives thousands of miles away. She decides her place is with her family and as she re-inserts herself into their lives, her kids realize they might actually need her more than they thought.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. I am sure that Kyra Sedgwick will play a wonderful helicopter mom, but without a trailer or teaser to help seal the deal (likely a scarcity in these COVID circumstances), this new sitcom feels as by rote as most. If buzz or steam picks up when this premieres mid-season, if the TV production schedule remotely stays on track, we could be convinced to reassess, but in the meantime, we’ll just call our mothers.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – and it plays like it reads: as by rote as more than most. Kyra Sedgwick seems potentially winning, but thirty seconds of teasing promotional clips left this CP comfortable with our initial pass. In the end, Kyra’s fans might be most readily drawn into this empty nest sitcom; otherwise, it’s just another family comedy to add to the Alphabet’s already packed schedule full of them.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! In May 2021, ABC canceled Kyra Sedgwick’s comedic maternal TV run. The series finale aired on May 19, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: This sitcom boasted decent ratings to start, but the drop-off was steep over the course of the show’s mid-season run, and it was critically panned – it has a 0% score on Rotten Tomatoes. These are about the two sharpest nails in any TV program’s coffin: no critic support and sharply waning viewing interest. Thus, it’s no surprise that the series was canceled, and it should also come as no surprise that CPU! will keep our pass firmly passed. Call your mothers if you think we’re being mean; then, she can call us and convince us to do a Canceled Corner…but that’s quite a few steps and too much work to protest the end of such a short-lived and relatively quietly ended one-and-done comedy.

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CLARICE Teaser Trailer (2021) Silence of the Lambs TV Show - YouTube

CLARICE, CBS

WHO: Rebecca Breeds (The Originals), Kal Penn (Designated Survivor, House), Michael Cudlitz (The Walking Dead, Southland), Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black), Lucca De Oliveira (The Punisher), Devyn A. Tyler (Out of Blue)

WHAT: A deep dive into the untold personal story of brilliant and vulnerable FBI Agent Clarice Starling as she returns to the field in 1993, six months after the events of The Silence of the Lambs.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Hesitancy, again, derives from a lack of sneak peek, but we have a few super-fans of the The Silence of the Lambs franchise that hang out on our united couch Around the Water Cooler, including of the erstwhile Hannibal. Plus, it will be interesting to see if Rebecca Breeds can evoke memories of the incomparable Jodie Foster, and if Clarice Starling’s back story can be as compelling as Hannibal Lecter’s. Also, the morbid curiosity of seeing how far the makers of this series can plumb the depths of this mythology comes to play here as well. All in all, we feel motivated to say, “Hello, Clarice.”

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – there wasn’t much in the vague teaser to clarify our feelings of hesitancy about Clarice. In fact, it only served to validate our initial hesitancy, but this drama shall remain a Pick Up. After all, we might do a Silence of the Lambs TV Series focused group of podcast episodes, including coverage of Hannibal. We’re always thinking around here! No fava beans or chianti of which to speak, either.

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on June 24, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made; this show was heavily rumored to be moving to Paramount+ (formerly CBS All Access), but now several TV pundits are estimating that renewal of any type is unlikely.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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NBC Orders Drama Series 'Debris' with Jonathan Tucker & Riann Steele –  Deadline

DEBRIS, NBC

WHO: Jonathan Tucker (Kingdom), Riann Steele (NCIS: New Orleans), Norbert Leo Butz (Fosse/Verdon, Bloodline)

WHAT: Two agents from two different continents, and two different mindsets, must work together to investigate when wreckage from a destroyed alien spacecraft has mysterious effects on humankind.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. This time, there is less hesitancy because aliens, wreckage, mysterious effects, and a global scope, even if the premise is admittedly thin without further trailer evaluation to guide us. We love our science fiction around here, though, and while a trailer would be helpful, sometimes, you just have to go with what works, even if it could all implode in the end and litter our TV-loving hearts with debris from what was once our trust.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – and it was very intriguing in all of the glorious science fiction senses that tend to titillate our TV watching tubers. From the trailer, the premise strikes this viewer as both familiar and different, so of course we’ll have to check it out to see which quality this new series displays more. I really should learn to trust my snap judgments, eh?

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On May 27, 2021, NBC canceled this extraterrestrial one-and-done series. The series finale aired on May 24, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: This science fiction vehicle, which apparently ended on something of a cliffhanger featuring Fringe alum John Noble, had steady but a lower share of ratings (10th, apparently, of NBC’s 14 dramas for the season). On the one hand, such demos shouldn’t doom a genre vehicle, but, on the other hand, this is NBC, which does not, as a network, fare well with genre vehicles generally, given the litter of canceled examples of previous seasons on the proverbial Peacock floor. Because we have a sci-fi soft spot around here, we might check it out eventually (though, notably, no one has discussed it as a potential panel) for a possible Canceled Corner entry. For now, we can only mourn the debris left by the ax-swinging at this series.

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Watch My Show: 'The Equalizer' Bosses on Their Queen Latifah-Led Reboot - TV  Insider

THE EQUALIZER, CBS

WHO: Queen Latifah (Star), Lorraine Toussaint (Orange Is the New Black), Chris Noth (Law & Order, Sex and the City), Liza Lapira (9JKL), Tory Kittles (Colony), Laya DeLeon Hayes (Raven’s Home)

WHAT: The re-imagining of the classic series follows an enigmatic woman with a mysterious background who uses her extensive skills to help those with nowhere else to turn.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Color me dubiously intrigued. Yours truly, the Chief CP, never watched the original Equalizer but not for lack of wanting. Plus, Queen Latifah is always fun to watch; she is a capable actress who can convincingly provide comedy, drama, a catchy tune, or a few slick bars of the rap that started her career. This is an experiment that could pay off in dividends…or, it could not work spectacularly, since the show is a remake of one with a potentially different tone. I’d say the odds of the potential for success and viewer enjoyment are approximately equalized… I’ll see myself out.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! On March 9, 2021, Fox renewed this Queen Latifah starring remake for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on May 23, 2021, after a total of ten episodes. Season 2 is set to premiere on October 10, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The 'Filthy Rich' have their troubles in new Fox series

FILTHY RICH, Fox

WHO: Kim Cattrall (Sex and the City), Gerald McRaney (This Is Us), Aubrey Dollar (Battle Creek), Corey Cott (The Good Fight), Mark L. Young (The Comeback), Aaron Lazar (Quantico)

WHAT: When the patriarch of a mega-rich Southern family (famed for creating a wildly successful Christian television network) dies in a plane crash, his wife and family are stunned to learn that he fathered three illegitimate children, all of whom are written into his will.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. In the grand tradition of fare like Dallas and Dynasty (the original, to be sure), Fox offers this new sudsy soap with rich people at the forefront mixed with all the scandal and guilty-pleasure inducing backdrop of televangelism and the antebellum lilts of the South, including the requisite homage to Gone with the Wind. Hilariously, the show is created/produced by the makers of Empire and The Help, so there is a small iota of curiosity to entice here. Plus, the presence of an older but no less fabulous Kim Cattrall, the erstwhile Samantha that oozed Sex in her City, leads this pack. Still, the premise sounds very similar to Fox’s Almost Family, also being introduced this season (see above), with the soap angle to propel it forward into Desperate Housewives and the aforementioned Dallas/Dynasty territories, and so it seems like Fox is throwing the idea of illegitimate children around every chance it can get. We passed on the other one and feel it only fair to pass on this one also, but if you think we need to cover more suds and find this candidate suitable to that purpose, drop us a line.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On October 30, 2020, Fox canceled this delayed drama citing rising production costs due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series finale aired on November 30, 2020, after a total of 10 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Clearly, this production seemed somewhat doomed from the start, but adding together the individual variables of slightly above average critical reviews, declining ratings over its short run, not to mention a sizable cast with an oft-played premise, there is little wonder that this show did not survive after everything that appeared to plague its path to airing. Plus, CPU! remains uninterested; not even those with the filthiest, guiltiest penchants for this kind of TV mentioned this series once. We can’t say that’s very rich.

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Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, Will Forte, more star in exclusive The Great  North teaser from Bob's Burgers creators | EW.com

THE GREAT NORTH, Fox

WHO: The voices of Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, Megan Mullally, Paul Rust, Aparna Nancherla, Will Forte, Dulcé Sloan

WHAT: The animated comedy follows the Alaskan adventures of the Tobin family, as single dad Beef does his best to keep his weird bunch of kids close, especially as the artistic dreams of his only daughter, Judy, lead her away from the family fishing boat and into the glamorous world of the local mall.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox is also going hog-wild this year with upping its animation game. Still, this animated entry shows more possibility than other new selections, even without a trailer to more fully and thoroughly evaluate it. First, the voice cast contains one of the funniest married couples on the planet in Nick Offerman and Megan Mullaly, who people might know from shows like Parks & Recreation and Will & Grace, respectively. On top of that, the setting is Alaska, and the premise feels a bit more original and fresh, even as it could also be the cartoon version of Northern Exposure. All of the above is enough to warrant a tiny look-see but no promises from the not-so-great north.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Seasons 2 and 3! Ahead of its premiere, on June 22, 2020, Fox renewed this animated sitcom for a second and third season season. The Season 1 finale aired on May 16, 2021, after a total of eleven episodes. Season 2 premiered on September 26, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: The teaser trailer has been reviewed, but the thirty available seconds were inconclusive. Still, I think it’s a safe bet to say that fans of Bob’s Burgers will probably find something to like about this one. And the stellar voice cast is really why we’re enticed to give The Great North a gander more than a goose, eh?

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New Animated Series Housebroken Coming to Fox Sunday Lineup

HOUSEBROKEN, Fox

WHO: The voices of Lisa Kudrow, Clea Duvall, Nat Faxon, Sharon Horgan, Will Forte, Tony Hale, Jason Mantzoukas, Sam Richardson, Bresha Webb, Greta Lee

WHAT: The animated comedy explores human dysfunction and neurosis through a group of neighborhood animals who live in the suburbs.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox can’t help itself when producing all of its adult animation; I think the network is more addicted to it than the viewing public, or maybe they are beginning to shop around for the next The Simpsons, since we all know that the clock eventually has to run out for our yellow, Springfield-bound family at some point. Still, in a world besieged by a global pandemic that requires social distancing, animation might become a booming industry in this current TV landscape, since drawing/animating and voice acting can be done in a fairly isolated manner. Either way, the only hesitancy here comes from the fact that it’s a show about anthropomorphic animals being neurotic. Yet, the voice cast listed is stellar; I feel confident that the erstwhile Phoebe from Friends, Madame Kudrow herself, could achieve peak-level neurosis, whatever animal she ends up voicing. Also, several of our resident Couch Potatoes, your Chief among them, follow the Friends when we can. Two thumbs partway up in careful anticipation!

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In August 2021, Fox renewed this new entry into their much ballyhooed animation lineup for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on August 30, 2021, after a total of eleven episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Kenan Thompson's Comedy 'The Kenan Show' Lands Series Order At NBC –  Deadline

THE KENAN SHOWKENAN, NBC

WHO: Kenan Thompson (Saturday Night Live), Andy Garcia (Ocean’s Eleven), Punam Patel (Special)

WHAT: The single-camera comedy follows a newly widowed dad determined to be everything for his kids while begrudgingly letting his persistent father-in-law become more involved in their lives.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. While it is about time that Kenan Thompson returns to scripted TV from his long tenure as sketch comedian on Saturday Night Live, and while he is more than deserving of an eponymous comedy, we are not sure that this is the eponymous comedy that is going to keep his career going, unless his biggest fans are the generators of decent ratings to keep this sitcom afloat. This thin premise rings bells echoing My Wife & Kids, or, depending upon Kenan’s delivery, The Bernie Mac Show, but with a Xennial approach to the parental side of this equation. No trailer makes the selling difficult, but if you’re a Kenan Thompson fan and want us to reconsider, send us the messages.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In April 2021, the Peacock renewed Kenan Thompson’s eponymous sitcom for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on April 27, 2021, after a total of 10 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: We have yet to hear any percolations from our loyal CP’s about Kenan’s jump into star vehicle sitcom territory. Until we do, we’ll just stay quietly and less eponymously passed for now. We have so much TV to watch!

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Kung Fu Video - | Stream Free

KUNG FU, The CW

WHO: Olivia Liang (Legacies), Jon Prasida (Hiding), Shannon Dang (Sorry for Your Loss), Eddie Liu (Silicon Valley), Tzi Ma (Wu Assassins, The Man In the High Castle), Kheng Hua Tan (Marco Polo), Gavin Stenhouse (9-1-1, Allegiance), Gwendoline Yeo (American Crime)

WHAT: A quarter-life crisis causes a young Chinese-American woman to drop out of college and go on a life-changing journey to an isolated monastery in China. But when she returns to find her hometown overrun with crime and corruption, she uses her martial arts skills and Shaolin values to protect her community and bring criminals to justice… all while searching for the assassin who killed her Shaolin mentor and is now targeting her. Inspired by the original series created by Ed Spielman.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The uniqueness and originality of bringing martial arts and associated cultural principles to the small screen inspires this hesitant pick-up, even though a few properties of similar ilk have been popping up here and there on streamers in recent years. This new drama could be riveting, or it could be hokey, but the question, I think, that we really have to seek an answer for here is how many of our Couch Potatoes, Couch Potatoes adjacent, and Couch Potatoes Unite! listeners need a martial arts show in their lives? It is a serialized drama, so the success will probably ride upon how well the cast and the production team can execute everything (as it usually does). A trailer would be helpful, but a slightly fresh twist on an old premise certainly appeals.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, the CW renewed this martial arts-themed drama for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on July 21, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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NBC Announces Christoper Meloni's Law & Order: Organized Crime Will  Premiere This Fall | PEOPLE.com

LAW & ORDER: ORGANIZED CRIME, NBC

WHO: Christopher Meloni (Law & Order: SVU)

WHAT: Elliot Stabler returns to the NYPD to battle organized crime after a devastating personal loss. However, the city and police department have changed dramatically in the decade he’s been away, and he must adapt to a criminal justice system in the midst of its own moment of reckoning. Throughout the series, we will follow Stabler’s journey to find absolution and rebuild his life, while leading a new elite task force that is taking apart the city’s most powerful criminal syndicates one by one. 

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass For Now. The Law & Order franchise has been suggested for podcast dissection via the CPU! request line, so the return of Elliott Stabler (even this non-procedural loving, non-Law & Order watching viewer knows who he is!) only inspires us to wonder just how many spin-offs our potential L&O panel would want to cover. Given the popularity of SVU, I am guessing all of them. Still, this panel is deep in the planning stages and will require a moderator team. If you want us to get to it faster – or to be a moderator – drop us a line!

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, the Peacock renewed this latest spin-off to enter the massive Law & Order universe. The Season 1 finale aired on June 3, 2021, after a total of 8 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: We still have to talk about all the other Law & Order(s) first! Until we do, we will just continue to pass for now. (I can’t even imagine the sheer amount of hours required for this sort of multi-part discussion…).

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Mr. Mayor (TV Series 2021– ) - IMDb

MR. MAYOR, NBC

WHO: Ted Danson (The Good Place), Bobby Moynihan (SNL), Holly Hunter (Top of the Lake, Saving Grace)

WHAT: A single-cam comedy centering around a wealthy businessman (Danson) who runs for mayor of Los Angeles for all the wrong reasons. Once he wins, he has to figure out what he stands for, gain the respect of his staff, and connect with his teenage daughter — all while controlling the coyote population.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Look. Ted Danson has at least earned a “check it out” sort of watch for his string of good TV, including Cheers and, most recently, The Good Place. And, frankly, I really need more information about these coyotes. A trailer would be so helpful here, but the coyote factor intrigues just about as much as the presence of the erstwhile Sam Malone aka Michael Goodman. This premise could very well flop faster than a fish out of its bowl, but a coyote out of its natural habitat and a smooth-talking Mr. Danson? Keeping an open mind seems wise.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. The trailer produces much less hesitancy, owing to the presence of Vella Lovell from Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Ted Danson doing his best Ted Danson (somewhere between Sam Malone and Michael the Ex-Demon), and Holly Hunter playing someone seemingly unhinged and totally hilarious with some great potential chemistry with Mr. Mayor Danson. Paired with Tina Fey and Robert Carlock’s eye for quick and zany wit (see also: 30 Rock, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), and this CP is more excitedly veering toward a solid Pick Up rather than a Hesitant(ly) Pick Up. Like LeVar Burton says, though, you don’t have to take my word for that, Mr. Mayor. Watch the trailer; see for yourself!

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In March 2021, NBC renewed this Ted Danson-helmed sitcom for a second season. A thirteen-episode season was ordered, but only nine episodes were produced and aired due to effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Season 1 finale aired on February 25, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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NEXT': TV Review | Hollywood Reporter

NEXT, Fox

WHO: John Slattery (Mad Men), Eve Harlow (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Michael Mosley (Sirens), Jason Butler Harner (Ozark), Elizabeth Cappuccino (Jessica Jones), Fernanda Andrade, Aaron Moten, Gerardo Celasco, Evan Whitten

WHAT: A Silicon Valley pioneer discovers that one of his own creations — a powerful A.I. — might spell global catastrophe, and teams up with a cybercrime agent to fight a villain unlike anything we’ve ever seen — one whose greatest weapon against us is ourselves.  

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Oh sure, science fiction revolving around sentient artificial intelligence has been done before and has been arguably done to death. From The Terminator to Person of Interest, from 2001: A Space Odyssey (and its sequel, 2010) to Westworld, the world will never want for the fear that robots will someday turn against us, as humans attempt to play God by creating them in the first place. What makes this upcoming series potentially compelling TV is that, first, it is being billed as an event (read: limited) series, giving it a theoretically tight number of episodes within which to tell its story. Second, the culprit AI is a clear homage to Amazon’s Alexa product, which should add an element of real-world suspension of disbelief to this science fiction sub-genre. Plus, John Slattery is always a fun guy to watch on the small screen. Amazon’s already taking over the world – why shouldn’t its calming AI Alexa, named Iliza in this series, do the same and then turn on us all? What would happen if it did? Nothing good can come of this, that’s what we know from stories like it, but the premise and devices used here definitely intrigue the mind around this oft-employed story concept, so much so that we want to know what’s neXt.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On October 30, 2020, Fox canceled this delayed drama citing rising production costs due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series finale aired on December 22, 2020, after a total of 10 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception was above average for this one and done series, but it never found an audience. It’s too bad, really, but this CP can’t help but wonder if being cooped up at home for months on end due to a global pandemic, where technology is getting smarter and better, and where one would hope it wouldn’t turn on the people operating it, probably influenced non-interest in this series; after all, sometimes timing is everything in the TV biz. Hoping that it did not end on a cliffhanger, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster and voice some feelings, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. It’s the “NEXT” logical course of action, naturally.

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The Republic of Sarah (2020): Pilot Preview - PRIMETIMER

THE REPUBLIC OF SARAH, The CW

WHO: Stella Baker (Tell Me Your Secrets), Luke Mitchell (Blindspot), Megan Follows (Reign), Izabella Alvarez (Westworld), Nia Holloway (Hawaii Five-0), Hope Lauren (Awkward, Supergirl), Landry Bender (Fuller House, Looking for Alaska), Ian Duff (New Amsterdam), Forrest Goodluck (The Miseducation of Cameron Post)

WHAT: Faced with the destruction of her town at the hands of a greedy mining company, rebellious high school teacher Sarah Cooper utilizes an obscure cartographical loophole to declare independence. Now Sarah must lead a young group of misfits as they attempt to start their own country from scratch.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reviewer needs a trailer for this one. Though the CW motivates many of our Couch Potatoes’ personal TV-watching choices with the network’s attempts at giving all types of fare a chance, this premise feels a bit hollow and possibly precariously played for farce or pedantically played for social commentary. Without a way to further vet the concept visually, and with a cast that doesn’t, by itself, excite, we are going to leave this one aside, regardless of whatever republic for which it stands. As always, if buzz or steam generates around this new drama (is it a drama?), we will reconsider our position, but for now, we pledge allegiance to other TV.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On September 2, 2021, the CW canceled this late-premiering spring drama. The series finale aired on September 6, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception was middling to low for this one and done series; plus, it never found an audience, carrying only a 0.1 ratings share for the entire duration of its run, and none of our Couch Potatoes, incumbent, adjacent, or otherwise, mentioned this show. We initially passed without a trailer to rely upon, and it seems as if this was the right call to make, as the CW does not often cancel shows so early. To that end, we shall firmly continue to bypass this republic that was, unless someone convinces us that it is worth it to do otherwise (which would be for a Canceled Corner, so we’re not holding our breaths…or planting our flags).

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Small Fortune': NBC Sets May Premiere For Game Show Hosted By Lil Rel Howery

SMALL FORTUNE, NBC

WHO: Host Lil Rel Howery

WHAT: Based on the U.K. format, the unscripted series features teams of three friends who compete in the tiniest of challenges for a chance to win big money. From a shrunk down Oval Office (“The Waste Wing”) to a mini Arc de Triomphe (“Arc de Wee-Omph”), each team must prove their skills on playing fields that have been squeezed down to the size of a dollhouse. Challenges will require considerable dexterity and intense focus because with games this small, there’s no room for error as the slightest miscalculation or tremble may result in elimination.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. CPU! does not cover game shows in any of our formats, but as this show is new this year, we’ll keep an eye on it for the duration of the season. I would guess our coverage ranks as far less than even a small fortune, but we like scripted TV better here at CPU!

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STATUS: Six episodes have aired as of the publication of this pilot review, most recently on July 19, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: At last check…this is still a game show. Right?

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Superman & Lois' Preview: Tyler Hoechlin & Bitsie Tulloch First Look |  TVLine

SUPERMAN & LOIS, The CW

WHO: Tyler Hoechlin (Supergirl), Elizabeth Tulloch (Supergirl), Dylan Walsh (Nip/Tuck), Emmanuelle Chriqui (The Passage, Entourage), Erik Valdez (General Hospital), Jordan Elsass (Little Fires Everywhere), Alexander Garfin, Wolé Parks (All American, The Vampire Diaries), Inde Navarrette (13 Reasons Why)

WHAT: The Arrowverse spin-off follows the world’d most famous superhero and comic books’ most famous journalist as they deal with all the stress, pressures and complexities that come with being working parents in today’s society.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Enthusiastically Pick Up. As an Arrowverse spin-off, this is an automatic Pick Up for our CPU! “DCTU Series” panel. Considering that our panel has expressed consistent excitement and appreciation, as well as glowing praise, for each appearance of Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch in recent Arrowverse mid-season crossovers, I would say that this latest incarnation in the “Superman” annals will probably be at least somewhat popular with our panel of DC enthusiasts, with or without an available trailer. To this we say, up, up, and away!

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. IT CHANGES NOTHING! MORE ENTHUSIASM!

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! The CW renewed this and many of its flagship properties on March 2, 2021 for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on August 17, 2021, after 15 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Our DCTU Series will cover Season 1 of this new “Arrowverse” or “CWVerse” (blah) drama later this year. Early reviews by constituent members of the panel who are up on their CW superhero viewing are largely positive.

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Supermarket Sweep host Leslie Jones on game show reboot, filming in COVID |  EW.com

SUPERMARKET SWEEP, ABC

WHO: Host Leslie Jones (SNL)

WHAT: The competition show revival follows three teams of two as they battle it out using their grocery shopping skills and knowledge of merchandise to win big cash prizes.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. See the above note about game shows and new TV. (We don’t cover them, except their renewal/cancellation prospects in their first year. Oh wait, I gave it away. Rats).

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! The Season 1 finale aired on January 3, 2021, after a total of ten episodes. Season 2 premiered on September 26, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: It’s still a game show, right?

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NBC Orders Jimmy Fallon-Inspired 'That's My Jam' Music & Variety Game Show  – Deadline

THAT’S MY JAM, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: Moving to the 2021-2022 season (no premiere date yet announced)

WHAT: Inspired by the musical segments on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the hourlong competition series will be infused with Fallon’s one-of-a-kind comedic style, feel-good energy, and a carousel of his classic and brand-new music-based games, featuring a new group of celebrities each week.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We also don’t cover variety shows or shows featuring celebrity competition (see also: The Masked Singer). That isn’t to say we won’t be watching. We just won’t be talking about the fact that we’re watching. Though Daniel Radcliffe should get himself a slot on this show. His rendition of “Alphabet Rap” was pretty dope.

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NBC Orders Hybrid Series 'True Story' Starring Ed Helms & Randall Park From  Warner Horizon – Deadline

TRUE STORY, NBC, PEACOCK

PREMIERE DATE: TBA

WHO: Hosts Ed Helms (The Office) and Randall Park (Fresh Off the Boat)

WHAT: In the hybrid alternative-scripted series, based on the Australian hit, everyday Americans sit down with Helms and Park to share their most extraordinary and unbelievably true stories for the first time. As the stories unfold, events are humorously brought to life by a star-studded cast of comedians and actors in heightened, dramatized re-enactments of cinematic proportions.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. What is “alternative-scripted?” This sounds like an experiment requiring a review by our resident TV lovers and Couch Potatoes, but I am not sure how we would make it work on our podcast. Change my mind, though, if you disagree. I think it’s got potential, but it also sounds like Whose Line Is It Anyway? crossed with This Is Your Life, so I am on the struggle bus. If you think we should assemble a panel to podcast about it, contact us!

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PHOTO] 'Walker': Jared Padalecki in Texas Ranger Uniform for CW Drama |  TVLine

WALKER, The CW

WHO: Jared Padalecki (Supernatural), Lindsey Morgan (The 100), Keegan Allen (Pretty Little Liars), Mitch Pileggi (Supernatural, The X-Files), Molly Hagan (iZombie, Jane the Virgin), Coby Bell (The Gifted), Jeff Pierre (Once Upon a Time, Beyond)

WHAT: The Walker, Texas Ranger reboot follows Cordell Walker (Padalecki), a widower and father of two with his own moral code, who returns to Austin after being undercover for two years, only to discover there’s harder work to be done at home. He’ll attempt to reconnect with his children, navigate clashes with his family, and find unexpected common ground with his new partner (one of the first women in Texas Rangers history), while growing increasingly suspicious about the circumstances surrounding his wife’s death.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. I am not sure how many of our viewers and listeners, i.e. our resident Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes-adjacent, watched the original Walker, Texas Ranger, starring Chuck Norris. If you did, please comment below. The Chief Couch Potato and author of these annual progress reports never did; westerns aren’t quite in the wheelhouse, and I was never a fan of Master Norris beyond a bemused appreciation of his existence. Yet, Jared Padalecki is/was Sam Winchester, and he’s earned the trust of at least six of us for 15 years. I think it’s worth seeing what he does with the role – he could just elevate it. Or, he could make Chuck Norris cry. Wait, does Chuck Norris cry? Let’s just hope it doesn’t come to tears, or we’ll walk(er) right out the door.

What? No? That doesn’t work either? I’ll see myself out again.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The teaser has been reviewed. Meh. It does not provide much in the way of any kind of information that could not be gleaned from a simple knowledge of anything having to do with “Walker” and “Texas Ranger.” Still, JarPad is in it, and after years of stellar reliability on Supernatural and Gilmore Girls, he deserves at least one watch for fair chance’s and judgment’s sake (and in this CP’s opinion, he’s far more easy on the eyes than Chuck Norris, but to each their own).

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In February 2021, the CW gave JarPad’s Walker remake a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on August 12, 2021, after a total of 18 episodes. Season 2 will premiere on October 28, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Weakest Link' Recap: NBC Premiere Hosted by Jane Lynch — Reviews | TVLine

WEAKEST LINK, NBC

WHAT: The reboot “will deliver the fast-paced and quick-witted pillars of the original British format created by the BBC with a few modern twists,” per the network. “The hybrid game show sees contestants answer general knowledge questions to bank prize money across multiple rounds. At the end of each round, the contestants vote out who they perceive to be the Weakest Link remaining.”

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reboot is the weakest link. Goodbye.

(Look, we love Jane Lynch as much as the next person, but she can’t possibly be nearly as withering as Anne Robinson without sounding like Sue Sylvester. Also, it’s another game show….which is probably the en vogue way to fill empty airing slots when TV production has been shut down for months by a pandemic. You know I’m right.)

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In January 2021, the Peacock announced renewal for a second season for this Jane Lynch-headed game show. The Season 1 finale aired on February 1, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: It’s still a game show, right? We’ve covered it as long as we’re going to cover it. Goodbye!

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NBC Announces Young Rock TV Series About Dwayne Johnson's Life [TCA 2020]  /Film

YOUNG ROCK, NBC

WHO: Dwayne Johnson

WHAT: The single-cam comedy chronicles the formative childhood years of Dwayne Johnson, aka The Rock.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. The audience for this show is going to have to *really* love the Rock. The Rock is fine. The Rock is nice. The Rock is the voice of Maui in Moana. Do we need a sitcom about his life story? Without a trailer, I’m thinking that the answer is no, but if you think we’re not giving due deference to Mr. Johnson, ring that bell (or, just send us an email, or comment down below).

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In April 2021, the Peacock renewed this Dwayne Johnson biopic sitcom for a second season. The Season 1 finale aired on May 4, 2021, after a total of 11 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Given his popularity, I am surprised that we don’t have any secret “Rock” fans in our CP midst. No one is talking to this Chief CP about the Rock and his younger years, though. We have to prioritize this stuff somehow! We are still passing at this time.

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Connecting' Pulled From NBC Schedule, Final Episodes to Air Online - Variety

CONNECTING, NBC

WHO: Parvesh Cheena, Keith Powell

WHAT: Set against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the series follows the lives of a group of friends who try to stay connected via videotelephony as they navigate through the various nuances of life in a lockdown.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This “COVID era” series was announced late and canceled too quickly to be enticing; plus, Toofer from 30 Rock is the only familiar presence, as delightful a presence as he might be. It’s not even worth the look, given how quickly NBC tossed it from the main network lineup to its streaming outlets.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! In November 2020, NBC canceled this new entry and burned off remaining episodes on Peacock and the NBC streaming apps. The series finale aired on November 16, 2020, after a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: The reviews were generally favorable, but the audience was decidedly anemic, and it’s fairly obvious as to why. In a pandemic-driven quarantine/isolation/shutdown/slowed world order due to a contagious virus, people want to go to there, i.e. TV, for escape, not to watch a Zoom or equivalent conversation play out on their television screens. THAT’S WHAT WE’VE BEEN DOING RIGHT NOW EVERYDAY – those who work in offices, education, and similar, anyway. Too soon, Peacock Party, too soon.

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Introducing the stars from CBC's Trickster | CBC Television

TRICKSTER, CW

WHO: Joel Oulette

WHAT: A Canadian series adaptation of Eden Robinson’s supernatural novel Son of a Trickster.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. A preview of a trailer shows a somewhat solid supernatural premise situated within Canadian indigenous cultures. The series is short and is being given American network treatment in a time of COVID, so we’re always happy to dip into horror/fantasy waters, even if it’s just a test.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! In January 2021, the CW by way of the CBC, on which this series originally aired, canceled this supernatural novel adaptation, potentially due to questions surrounding the cultural standing of one of the show’s head writers and directors. The series finale aired on November 11, 2020, after a total of six episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Due to the brief run of this series, CPU! will switch our initial verdict to “pass” in favor of the plethora of genre-specific content out there (though, sadly, so few of them feature casts of largely indigenous peoples). Still, it’s hard to be in favor of sticking with such a show, when there is so little of it to cover. If someone requests otherwise, we will, of course, be happy to discuss this show in a “Canceled Corner” episode. You let us know, gentle reader, if we should.

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Home Economics' Starring Topher Grace Ordered to Series at ABC - Variety

HOME ECONOMICS, ABC

WHO: Topher Grace (That 70’s Show); Caitlin McGee (Bluff City Law)

WHAT: A situation comedy inspired by the life of co-creator Michael Colton, Home Economics takes a look at the heartwarming yet super-uncomfortable and sometimes frustrating relationship among three adult siblings: one in the one percent, one middle-class, and one barely holding on.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. As much of a fan as the Chief CP is of Topher Grace (because Eric Forman forever), the trailer for this show suggests a fairly by rote premise of sibling rivalry turned union in a largely milquetoast comedy drama premise. This show might find an audience in certain generations of adults who are just embarking upon life after high school or college in these, our modern times, but the sibling dynamic that is supposed to be the draw feels largely shallow in the preview we reviewed.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, the Alphabet renewed this late entry into the TV season for a second go, which premiere on September 22, 2021. The Season 1 finale aired on May 19, 2021, after a total of seven episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Since we just reviewed this trailer, our pass is fresh. If you think we are being harsh, it makes good home economic sense for you to encourage our podcast discussion of this show by requesting it. So far, we’ve heard nothing in the way of buzz or steam about it, Topher Grace or no.

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How to Watch 'Rebel' TV Show Online Without Cable 2021 | Heavy.com

REBEL, ABC

WHO: Katey Sagal (Married…With Children; Futurama; 8 Simple Rules; Sons of Anarchy); John Corbett (Northern Exposure; Sex and the City; United States of Tara; Parenthood)

WHAT: A legal comedy-drama television series inspired by the life of Erin Brockovich.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. a) We know this was canceled within a short space of time. b) A comedy-drama inspired by the life of Erin Brockovich is probably not well-timed with the current global crises overshadowing the sorts of David v. Goliath situations in which the real life inspiration quite frequently finds herself. It’s hard to see how it would be worth watching whatever is out there now.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! In May 2021, ABC canceled this series shortly after it premiered, which caused a bit of a stir for a minute and produced some vocal outcry from star Katey Sagal, who tried to stir network shopping and fan petitions, all of which ultimately did nothing to reverse the fate of the cancellation. The series finale aired on June 10, 2021, after a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: What else can be said? If the only ten episodes of this show are worth the watch, let us know via the usual ways and means. It would certainly be a sort of rebellion for us to take up a show with so little life to it (though the trailer was not convincing enough on its own to suggest otherwise, so…).

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The United States of Al producer responds to criticism of show | EW.com

UNITED STATES OF AL, CBS

WHO: Adhir Kalyan (Rules of Engagement); Parker Young (Suburgatory)

WHAT: A situation comedy following the life of an interpreter from Afghanistan as he moves to Columbus, Ohio, with his friend Riley, a veteran of the United States Marine Corps that he helped during his service.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This sitcom from Chuck Lorre, purveyor of other comedies containing at least two men, has brought back his buddy cop/odd couple formula of tried and true buddy cops and odd couples to provide this latest entry, featuring a war veteran and the ongoing relationship he has with his interpreter from his tour in Afghanistan. It’s a thin premise with an even thinner veneer of the same old Chuck Lorre stamp, which tends to turn away our most ardent Couch Potatoes, none of whom have requested to discuss any member of this family of comedies from a producer who favors them so.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In May 2021, the Eye renewed this comedy (as it typically does for Chuck) for a second season, which is set to premiere on October 7, 2021. The Season 1 finale aired on June 24, 2021, after a total of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: We stand by our position, unless you really think we should reconsider it (we will cave to the peer pressure in all of the unitedness we offer).

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Is Transplant Returning To NBC For Season 2 After That Cliffhanger? -  CINEMABLEND

TRANSPLANT, NBC

WHO: Hamza Haq; Laurence Leboeuf; John Hannah (Spartacus, Agents of SHIELD)

WHAT: A Canadian medical drama television series created by Joseph Kay, which centers on Bashir “Bash” Hamed, a doctor from Syria who comes to Canada as a refugee during the Syrian Civil War and is rebuilding his career as a medical resident in the emergency department at the fictional York Memorial Hospital in Toronto.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. It’s a medical drama with a cultural twist, but it’s still a medical drama. We have some Couch Potatoes who gravitate toward the genre, but none have yet mentioned this show. Until they do, we will leave this one be. It was such a late entry to the network lineup, it’s probably best to leave it for a catch-up, if people desire to do so.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! In December 2020, NBC by way of the CBC, on which this series originally aired, renewed this drama for a second season. Season 1 consists of 13 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: See above.

The following is a link to all premiere dates for shows covered beyond the main networks: 

http://www.metacritic.com/feature/tv-premiere-dates

Non-Broadcast Network Pick-Ups

Crossing Swords (Hulu): It’s an animated spoof of “Game of Thrones.” It’s not very well reviewed, but maybe we need the catharsis. Plus, Hulu already renewed it for a second season, so something must be right about it. (Released June 12, 2020)

The latest stop-motion-animated comedy from the team behind Robot Chicken is a spoof of Game of Thrones (and similar projects) featuring the voices of Nicholas Hoult, Seth Green, Tony Hale, Luke Evans, Adam Pally, and Wendi McClendon-Covey.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Hulu renewed this animated spoof on June 18, 2020. The Season 1 finale was released on December 21, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Love, Victor (Hulu): It has already been requested for the podcast and may feature as part of a future Pride month seriesespecially since it was already renewed for a second season. (Released June 17, 2020)

Originally developed for Disney+ before moving to the more adult-oriented Hulu, this 10-episode spin-off from the 2018 feature film Love, Simon (itself an adaptation of a YA novel by Becky Albertalli) centers on a new character, Victor (Michael Cimino), a gay teen who is adjusting to life in a new city and at a new high school. The film’s star (and titular Simon), Nick Robinson, will narrate the series, and the cast also includes Sophia Bush, James Martinez, and Ana Ortiz.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Seasons 2 AND 3! Hulu renewed this drama in August 2020. The first season consisting of ten episodes was released on June 17, 2020. The second season consisting of ten episodes was released in June 11, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release and may feature as part of a future Pride month series.

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Perry Mason (HBO): This reboot is critically acclaimed, and though initially billed as a miniseries, it has been renewed for a second season(Premiered June 21, 2020)

Matthew Rhys (The Americans) stars as the titular criminal defense attorney in this remake of the classic TV drama that aired in various forms, most famously as an Emmy-winning series on CBS from 1957-66 (with Raymond Burr in the title role). HBO’s version is also based on the Los Angeles-set novels and stories by author Erle Stanley Gardner, though the time period is now 1931, when Mason is trying to eke out a living as a private investigator and gets drawn into a case involving a child kidnapping. John Lithgow, Tatiana Maslany, Shea Whigham, Stephen Root, Nate Corddry, Lili Taylor, Robert Patrick, and Juliet Rylance also star.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! HBO renewed this remake in July 2020. The Season 1 finale aired on August 9, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Brave New World (Peacock): Though the reviews are mixed, why not take a look at a small screen adaptation of a dystopian novel to match our real-life dystopia? The book is a must-read (along with “1984”). (Released July 15, 2020)

After a lengthy journey to the small screen that saw the property change networks twice (it was previously intended for Syfy and then USA), this series adaptation of Aldous Huxley’s classic 1932 novel set in a theoretically utopian (but in actuality more dystopian) future London is the highest-profile original show available on the public launch day for Comcast’s new streaming service. (As with other Peacock originals, you’ll need to be a “Premium” member to watch it, though Comcast and Cox cable subscribers will get a free premium subscription.) Harry Lloyd, Jessica Brown Findlay, and Alden Ehrenreich head a cast that also includes Demi Moore, Kylie Bunbury, and Hannah John-Kamen. The adaptation, a co-production with the UK’s Sky, comes from David Wiener, who previously wrote for Homecoming and The Killing.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! NBC canceled this adaptation in October 2020. The entire series was released on July 15, 2020, with a total of nine episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception was middling to below average for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Peacock. I believe that this series suffered from the same general barriers as Fox’s NEXT: the globe is already cooped up at home for months on end due to a global pandemic, where technology is getting smarter and better, and where everything feels modestly apocalyptic and somewhat totalitarian in a socio-political context. The book is important, however, despite some of its problematic contextual themes arising from the time period in which it was written; hoping that it did not end on a cliffhanger, and knowing the end of the novel, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster and voice some feelings, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Be part of our brave new world, why don’t you?

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Cursed (Netflix): It’s already been requested for the podcast, and, really, who doesn’t love an alternative take on the Arthurian legend? Though it will be probably be canceled after 2 seasons (who gets that joke?).  (Released July 17, 2020)

Katherine Langford stars in a gritty take on the Arthurian legend told from the perspective of Nimue, the Lady of the Lake.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Netflix canceled this series in July 2021. Season 1 was released on July 17, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release and will come to CPU! sometime in the future as a Canceled Corner discussion; if you would like to join this budding panel, please feel free to contact us!

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Muppets Now (Disney+): Muppets. Like you have to ask. (Premiered July 31, 2020)

The first new Muppets title for Disney’s streaming service is a six-episode, short-form “unscripted” series featuring classic Muppets characters. Non-Muppet guest stars include Aubrey Plaza, RuPaul, Linda Cardellini, and Seth Rogen (who, admittedly, might be part Muppet).

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on September 4, 2020, with a total of six episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Star Trek: Lower Decks (CBS All Access): This is an automatic pick-up for our “Star Trek 50+ Series,” but the critics have not been kind to it, even though CBS has already ordered production on a second season. (Premiered August 6, 2020)

CBS All Access expands its growing Star Trek universe with the first animated series in the franchise in 46 years. Lower Decks comes from Rick and Morty writer Mike McMahan (who also co-created Hulu’s just-debuted Solar Opposites) and centers on a group of low-ranking crew members aboard one of Starfleet’s least-important ships, the U.S.S. Cerritos. (It’s a comedy, in case you were wondering.) The voice cast includes Noel Wells, Jerry O’Connell, Tawny Newsome, Eugene Cordero, Dawnn Lewis, and Jack Quaid. A second season has already been ordered.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Seasons 2 AND 3! CBS ordered two seasons in its first series order. The Season 1 finale aired on October 8, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. Season 2 premiered on August 12, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: This series will be folded into our Star Trek 50+ Series, though preliminary reviews from our resident Trekkers yielded roughly the same level of tepidity as the critical reaction.

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Lovecraft Country (HBO): This has also been quickly requested for the podcast. With Jordan Peele and JJ Abrams at the helm, and a combination of social commentary as well as historical commentary about notorious racist HP Lovecraft (who also wrote about lovable monsters like Cthulu), this is being described as a must-watch and a must-discuss. (Premiered August 16, 2020)

Producers Jordan Peele and J.J. Abrams join forces for a series adaptation of Matt Ruff’s novel of the same name, an allegorical horror tale set in segregated 1950s America where three Black Americans on a road trip to find a missing person must overcome both human racists and Lovecraftian supernatural forces. Jonathan Majors, Jurnee Smollett, Aunjanue Ellis, Jada Harris, Courtney B. Vance, and Michael Kenneth Williams head the cast.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! HBO canceled this series in July 2021. The series finale aired on October 18, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release; we already have a full panel waiting in the wings, so this show will be covered on the podcast in the future (even as a Canceled Corner) for sure!

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Raised by Wolves (HBO Max): Science fiction with contributions by Ridley Scott! The “Alien” man himself! (Releases September 3, 2020)

Originally developed for TNT, this HBO Max original sci-fi series marks the American TV directorial debut for Ridley Scott. He directs the first two episodes of a 10-episode season set on a mysterious planet where androids are tasked with raising human children in a colony that is being torn apart by religious differences. The series comes from screenwriter Aaron Guzikowski (Prisoners) and stars Travis Fimmel (Vikings), Amanda Collin, and Abubakar Salim.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! HBO renewed this sci-fi thriller in September 2020. The Season 1 finale aired on October 1, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Away (Netflix): Science fiction dreaming of trips to Mars. (Releases September 4, 2020)

Jason Katims (Friday Night Lights), Matt Reeves (Felicity), and Andrew Hinderaker (Penny Dreadful) combine for a 10-episode Netflix drama series depicting the first manned mission to Mars, based loosely on a recent Esquire story by Chris Jones. Hilary Swank heads the cast as the astronaut in charge of the year-long international mission, while Josh Charles plays her husband (and NASA engineer) left behind on Earth to care for their teenage daughter. Ed Zwick directs the pilot.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! The series was released on September 4, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. Netflix canceled it in October 2020.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception hovered starkly in the middle for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Netflix. The consensus of opinion seems to focus on the fact that this series relied on science fiction tropes too heavily while allowing its cast to elevate what could have been something rather by rote. Though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster before doing completely “away” with it (ahem), email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

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Noughts + Crosses (Peacock): Alternative history stories are popular around here, and the timely social commentary could be ham-fisted, but it could also be a jolt when and where a jolt is needed. (Premieres September 4, 2020)

American premiere of the BBC-produced YA series based on Malorie Blackman’s novel set in the present day of an alternate world where Africa colonized Europe and enslaved its white citizens.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Season 1 was released in the USA on Peacock on September 4, 2020, with a total of six episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Power Book II: Ghost (Starz): The original “Power” series has been on the request list for sometime, so the possibility of making this a podcast discussion series for CPU! is powerfully high. (Premieres September 6, 2020)

The first of four planned spinoffs from the recently concluded Starz original series Power stars Mary J. Blige, Method Man, Sherri Saurn, Shane Johnson, Naturi Naughton, and Michael Rainey Jr, and picks up the action just days after the events of the Power finale. Subsequent episodes will air Sundays at 8p.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Starz renewed this sequel spin-off series in September 2020. The Season 1 finale aired on January 3, 2021, after a total of ten episodes. Season 2 is scheduled to premiere on November 21, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Woke (Hulu): Lamorne Morris meets a hybrid animated/live action vehicle addressing some timely social commentary; we imagine some of the Winston magic will seep into the proceedings. (Releases September 9, 2020)

Lamorne Morris (New Girl) stars in this timely comedy about a Black cartoonist living in San Francisco who has an encounter with cops that changes his life. The semi-autobiographical series from real-life cartoonist Keith Knight (The K Chronicles) mixes some animated sequences with live action. All eight episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Hulu renewed this hybrid comedy on November 17, 2020. Season 1 was released on September 9, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Julie and the Phantoms (Netflix): It’s musical and carries with it, at least if the premise synopsis is read right, a slight satricial bend – it could also be Netflix’s answer to “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist,” but we’ll never know until we try. (Premieres September 10, 2020)

High School Musical director Kenny Ortega returns with a new musical series for Netflix about a high school singer who rekindles her love of music after being approached by the ghosts of three dead ’90s pop stars. It’s based on a Brazilian series.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on September 10, 2020, with a total of nine episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Third Day (HBO, Miniseries): The plot premise is confusing yet intriguing and original; plus, there is a fine cast in this British import. Everything kind of makes you want to watch it, including imagining a trailer in your head for this sort of story. (Premieres September 14, 2020)

Rescheduled from May 2020. Co-produced by the UK’s Sky, this six-part limited series is divided into two sections: “Summer” and “Winter.” The former tells the story of Sam (Jude Law), who finds himself drawn to a mysterious and isolated island off the British coast whose inhabitants are determined to preserve their traditions “at any cost,” while the latter centers on Helen (Naomie Harris), whose arrival on the same island throws its future into question. Emily Watson, Katherine Waterston, and Paddy Considine also star.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on October 19, 2020, with a total of six episodes and one intervening special. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Ratched (Netflix): This unlikely “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” prequel created by Ryan Murphy has already been requested for the podcast…when no one has even seen it yet... Plus, it’s already been renewed for a second season… (Releases September 18, 2020)

Already renewed for a second season, the latest Netflix series from Ryan Murphy serves as a prequel to the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (and Ken Kesey’s novel), with Sarah Paulson starring as a younger version of the character Nurse Mildred Ratched (a role originated by Oscar-winner Louise Fletcher in the movie). The creepy 1947-set drama also stars Cynthia Nixon, Judy Davis, Sharon Stone, Corey Stoll, Finn Wittrock, and Vincent D’Onofrio.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Netflix ordered two seasons upon picking up this Ryan Murphy entry. Season 1 was released on September 18, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage before its release; if you would like to join the seeded panel, get a hold of us!

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Utopia (Amazon Prime): The premise gives this reviewer chills; after all, we have a lot of comic book fans in our ranks, some of whom also like thrillers/horror. I’m guessing it’s a Utopian choice. (Releases September 25, 2020)

This long-gestating conspiracy thriller—an adaptation of a 2013 UK series that was first developed for HBO as a David Fincher project beginning in 2014, only for the network and the director to drop out over budget concerns—comes from author Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl), who also serves as showrunner. The story revolves around a group of obsessive comic book fans who find themselves targeted by a shadowy government organization after they gain possession of an underground graphic novel that depicts a conspiracy that may not be entirely fictional. John Cusack, Sasha Lane, Rainn Wilson, Dan Byrd, Desmin Borges, and Jessica Rothe star.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Amazon canceled this complex thriller in November 2020. Season 1 was released on September 25, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception ran in the middle to below average for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Amazon Prime. The consensus of opinion noted the violence and the timing of dealing with governmental conspiracy in an era where the effectiveness of operating governments is seriously in question, in the USA and beyond. Still, some of our resident Couch Potatoes mentioned this one positively (while also referring to the ample gore), so, though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram to discuss whether “Utopia” is the best name of a TV series of such a dark nature.

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Monsterland (Hulu): A cast of some CPU! favorites combined with some fertile fantasy and horror potential makes this one seem like an easy pick-up. (Releases October 2, 2020)

Hulu’s eight-episode anthology adapts short stories from Nathan Ballingrud’s book North American Lake Monsters. The ensemble includes Taylor Schilling, Mike Colter, Kaitlyn Dever, Hamish Linklater, Bill Camp, Kelly Marie Tran, Jonathan Tucker, and Nicole Beharie. All episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on October 2, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The Good Lord Bird (Showtime, Miniseries): The trailer intrigues, the cast is dynamite, and these kinds of historical stories need to be told and retold. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Reschuled from spring and then summer. Albert Hughes (replacing Anthony Hemingway, who left the project due to scheduling conflicts) directs this delayed eight-episode adaptation of the award-winning novel by James McBride about 19th century abolitionist John Brown, played by Ethan Hawke. Daveed Diggs (playing Frederick Douglass), Lodge 49‘s Wyatt Russell, David Morse, Steve Zahn, Orlando Jones, and Ellar Coltrane also star.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on November 15, 2020, with a total of seven episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Walking Dead: The World Beyond (AMC): “The Walking Dead” has also been on the request list for a time. Will the potential panel want to veer into the franchise of zombie spin-offs? We’ll ask them when we catch up to it, which will probably be in the World Beyond. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Rescheduled from April 2020. The latest Walking Dead spinoff follows a new set of characters who are all part of the generation born after the start of the zombie menace. The series is designed to run for just two seasons unlike the other Walking Dead shows, which refuse to end.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2; however, Season 2 will be the final season and will premiere on October 3, 2021! AMC ordered two seasons for this series when it greenlit the show. The Season 1 finale aired on November 29, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Soulmates (AMC): An intriguing science fiction premise meets AMC’s willingness to go wacky. We think it’s a match made in heaven. (Premieres October 5, 2020)

Recently renewed for a 2nd season, this six-episode anthology series from Will Bridges and Brett Goldstein (adapting their own short film For Life) is set 15 years in the future, when new technology allows every person on the planet to know the identity of their soulmate. Each episode will find a different set of characters dealing with the repercussions of this breakthrough in a different way. Season 1 stars include Shamier Anderson, Malin Akerman, Betsy Brandt, Kingsley Ben-Adir, David Costabile, Charlie Heaton, and Sarah Snook.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! AMC renewed this series in August 2020 ahead of its premiere. The Season 1 finale aired on November 9, 2020, with a total of six episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The Right Stuff (Disney+): Television remake of an Oscar-winning film about the American space program, with Disney’s funding. It potentially has all the right stuff. (Premieres October 9, 2020)

Originally developed for Nat Geo before moving over to Disney’s streaming service, The Right Stuff is a new drama series adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s nonfiction book chronicling the early days of America’s space program. (That book, of course, was previously adapted into the terrific Oscar-winning 1983 film of the same name.) Patrick J. Adams, Jake McDorman, Patrick Fischler, Colin O’Donoghue, James Lafferty, Aaron Staton, and Michael Trotter head the cast. Season 1 focuses in depth on the seven astronauts in the Mercury program, and potential future seasons would cover other stories and historical figures. Two episodes stream today, with the remaining six hours arriving one per week on Fridays.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! The series finale aired on November 20, 2020, after a total of eight episodes. Disney+ canceled the series on April 3, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Apparently, Disney+ canceled the series due to a “redesign” in NatGeo’s channel focus, but producer Warner Bros. is shopping the series to other networks. Though critical reception is decidedly mixed, and because the series may yet have life left in it, CPU! will keep this show on the watchlist for eventual viewing, whatever the outcome of its future. It’s got some friendly names in the cast and some intrigue for our resident CP’s. It has some of the “right stuff,” so it can’t hurt.

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Marvel’s Helstrom (Hulu): Marvel meets horror? I can’t imagine many of the CPU! faithful NOT watching this. (Premieres October 16, 2020)

Marvel’s latest TV venture is a horror series starring Elizabeth Marvel (no relation) as the institutionalized mother of two adult children (Tom Austen, Sydney Lemmon) with superpowers who moonlight as demon hunters, drawing on their backgrounds as the offspring of Satan. All 10 episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Season 1 was released on October 16, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. Hulu canceled the series on December 14, 2020.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception proved quite negative for this Marvel Hulu entry; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on what is essentially the Disney Adult Streaming Division. The consensus of opinion noted that the show was dull, formulaic, and uninteresting; the Chief CP took a sneak peek at the premiere and found it to be largely uninspired. We do have a lot of comic book-oriented resident Couch Potatoes, however, so, though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. No jokes this time.

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The Queen’s Gambit (Netflix; miniseries): There are some percolating Couch Potatoes requesting this chess-flavored miniseries. (Releases October 23, 2020)

Anya Taylor-Joy stars as a young chess prodigy in a six-episode adaptation of Walter Tevis’ novel from acclaimed screenwriter turned director Scott Frank.

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STATUS: The series was released on October 23, 2020, with a total of seven episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Undoing (HBO; miniseries): Lots of Water Cooler coverage and talk on and offline intrigues – plus, my Chromecast really keeps pushing this one…a conspiracy I wish to undo. (Premieres October 25, 2020)

Rescheduled from May 2020Big Little Lies creator David E. Kelley returns to HBO—and reunites with star Nicole Kidman—for a six-episode adaptation of Jean Hanff Korelitz’s 2014 novel You Should Have Known, a psychological thriller about a therapist, wife, and mother (Kidman) who, on the cusp of a major success, finds herself plunged into a crisis triggered by a violent death. Susanne Bier (The Night Manager) directs every episode of the series, which also stars Hugh Grant, Donald Sutherland, Lily Rabe, Edgar Ramirez, and Noah Jupe.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on November 29, 2020, with a total of six episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Truth Seekers (Amazon Prime): Requested for the podcast, it’s been billed as funny – it’s a send-up of “Ghost Hunter” type vehicles and features Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. That’s a recipe for some type of success, methinks, and we’re prepared to seek the truth. (Releases October 30, 2020)

Frequent movie co-stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost reunite on the small screen for the first time since Spaced with a supernatural comedy series that they co-created with James Serafinowicz and Nat Saunders. They star as employees of a broadband provider who balance out their boring day jobs with a more interesting sideline: paranormal investigations, which they share with the public online. Malcolm McDowell and Emma D’Arcy co-star.

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STATUS:  Officially canceled! Season 1 was released on October 30, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. Amazon canceled the series on February 21, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know! We would cover it as a “Canceled Corner” feature if there is interest.

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Two Weeks to Live (HBO Max; miniseries): It comes down to the presence of Maisie Williams, why this character is a doomsday prepper, and how that affects the overall premise (if at all…). (Premieres November 5, 2020)

Likened by some British TV writers to Killing Eve, this darkly comedic six-episode UK import stars Game of Thrones‘ Maisie Williams as a doomsday prepper who enlists her two brothers on a mission to avenge the murder of her father. (Let’s hope she brought Needle.) Sian Clifford (Fleabag) also stars.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on October 7, 2020, with a total of six episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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I Hate Suzie (HBO Max): The British peoples love it, and why wouldn’t they WHEN ROSE TYLER IS IN IT? We’re here for Billie. (Premieres November 19, 2020)

Doctor Who‘s Billie Piper stars as a celebrity who has her phone hacked, resulting in the public exposure of graphic photos of an extramarital affair. The darkly comedic, eight-episode British series comes from Lucy Prebble, who has written for Succession. The UK press greeted the series with an enthusiastic response when it debuted on Sky in August.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! HBO Max by way of Sky Atlantic renewed this series on February 19, 2021. Season 1 was released on November 19, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Animaniacs (Hulu): We have baloney in our slacks and a plan to podcast both the original series and this originally-voiced reboot in the coming year, if not the coming quarter. (Premieres November 20, 2020)

The Steven Spielberg-produced 1990s animated series gets a Hulu reboot that will bring 13 new episodes today and a second season sometime in 2021. Returning characters including Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, as well as Pinky and the Brain, all voinced by the original actors.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Two seasons were ordered when this revival of the animated classic was given a go. Season 1 was released on November 20, 2020, with a total of thirteen episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Our Animaniacs “Looking Back to Look Forward” Series is currently in the production line and will be published in 2022.

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Saved By the Bell (Peacock): In the era of reboots and sequels, this might be the one we regret the most, but enough people talk about the original Bayside gang, we’d probably be remiss in not checking it out (Premieres November 25, 2020)

Original stars Elizabeth Berkley and Mario Lopez return for a revival of the 1990s teen sitcom that is again set at Bayside High School but in the present day (albeit a fictitious version of the present day in which Mark-Paul Gosselaar’s Zack Morris is now the governor of California). New cast members include John Michael Higgins. The reboot comes from 30 Rock writer (and Great News creator) Tracey Wigfield.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Peacock renewed this series in January 2021. Season 1 was released on November 25, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Selena: The Series (Netflix): This series has already been requested for podcast coverage. (Premieres November 25, 2020)

Christian Serratos (The Walking Dead) portrays the late Tejano pop star Selena Quintanilla in a two-part series dramatizing her life and career. The first part, spanning six episodes, streams today, with the remainder arriving at a later date.

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STATUS: Part One of Season 1 was released on December 4, 2020, with a total of nine episodes. Part 2 was released on May 4, 2021, with a total of nine episodes. Most outlets indicate this second part will be the “final part,” but it is unclear whether Netflix is treating this as a miniseries, a limited series, or a canceled series.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Stand (CBS All Access, Miniseries): Stephen King allegedly wrote a new ending….but there’s already been a miniseries and a book with an original ending for decades. We might have to watch just for the comparison’s sake. (Premieres December 17, 2020)

Streaming weekly, this nine-episode adaptation of Stephen King’s epic apocalyptic novel about life in America after a devastating global pandemic (no relation) stars Alexander Skarsgård, Whoopi Goldberg, James Marsden, Amber Heard, Heather Graham, Greg Kinnear, Odessa Young, and Nat Wolff. The series, which wrapped up two years of production just before covid-19 hit, features an all-new ending written by King.

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STATUS: The series was released on October 2, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

Bridgerton (Netflix): Shonda Rimes’ first Netflix series – an answer for all those that might love “Downton Abbey” – has already been requested for podcast coverage… (Releases December 25, 2020)

Is this the next Downton Abbey? Producer Shonda Rhimes’ first Netflix series is created by Scandal‘s Chris Van Dusen, who adapts Julia Quinn’s popular novel series. The costume drama is set in London in the 1810s, where it focuses on the large and powerful Bridgerton family and other members of the city’s aristocracy. Julie Andrews, Polly Walker, Rege-Jean Page, Ruby Barker, Jonathan Bailey, Claudia Jessie, Ruth Gemmell, Luke Thompson, and Luke Newton are among the stars.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Seasons 2, 3, AND 4! Netflix renewed the series for a second season in January 2021 and then apparently jumped headlong into an additional two seasons in April 2021. Season 1 was released on December 25, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Watch (BBC America): This long anticipated adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s “Discworld” has been on the CPU! watch list for a bit. (Premieres January 3, 2021)

Terry Pratchett’s beloved Discworld novels come to the small screen in a BBC-produced eight-episode series from Simon Allen (Das Boot). The series will be a comedic fantasy crime procedural centering on the misfit police force (aka The City Watch) of the Discworld city of Ankh-Morpork. Richard Dormer, Lara Rossi, Wendell Pierce, and Matt Berry are among the stars. Various versions of the series have been in and out of production for most of the past decade, and fans of the books have been discouraged by the BBC’s early marketing attempts (which suggested to some that the series will deviate in both tone and content from Pratchett’s work).

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on February 14, 2021, after a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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WandaVision (Disney+; miniseries): This long anticipated first of the MCU television train on Disney+ has been on the CPU! watch list for a bit; plus, we have a few resident podcasters already salivating over the whole schedule – if you want to be on any Disney+ MCU panels (or Star Wars panels), speak quickly! (Premieres January 15, 2021)

Disney+’s first (of many) series set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the massively budgeted WandaVision is also the most unusual Marvel series to date. Centering on the characters of Wanda/Scarlet Witch and Vision (played by Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany, reprising their big-screen roles), the six-episode series takes a self-aware approach by cycling the pair through different decades of the recent past, forcing them to adapt to a variety of classic TV tropes along the way. (Today’s 1950s-set opener, for example, was filmed in black-and-white with vintage equipment and utilizes a live studio audience to emulate the feel of an early sitcom, while a future episode will embrace the mockumentary style of The Office.) Matt Shakman directs a cast that also includes Kathryn Hahn, Teyonah Parris, Randall Park, and Kat Dennings.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on March 5, 2021, after a total of nine episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: CPU! already has a full panel waiting in the wings ready to discuss the MCU on Disney+, including the inaugural WandaVision. Stay tuned!

Fate: The Winx Saga (Netflix): This adaptation was quickly requested for podcast coverage, with its fantasy-themed premise. (Releases January 22, 2021)

Aimed at a slightly older audience, this six-episode Netflix YA drama is a live-action adaptation of the animated series Winx Club, which aired for eight seasons on Nickelodeon.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Netflix renewed the series for a second season in February 2021. Season 1 was released on January 22, 2021, with a total of six episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

Resident Alien (SyFy): Alan Tudyk is a national treasure (#justiceforwash!), and there seems to be some potential for merry space-related science fiction comedy. It feels like the whole thing is in our residential wheelhouse. (Premieres January 27, 2021)

Alan Tudyk stars in an adaptation of the Dark Horse comic about an alien (the space kind) who crash lands on Earth and passes himself off as a country doctor. Will he choose to fit in with his neighbors, or will he pursue his original mission: killing all humans. Allice Wetterlund, Corey Reynolds, Sara Tomko, and Levi Fiehler also star.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! SyFy renewed the series for a second season in March 2021. The Season 1 finale aired on March 31, 2021, after a total of ten episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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Devil May Care (SyFy): Alan Tudyk is *still* a national treasure (#justiceforwash!), and this premise – well, it’s solid gold, I tell you, but only the devil may care. (Premiered February 6, 2021)

The latest adult animated comedy to debut in Syfy’s “TZGZ” block centers on Hell’s new social media manager and features the voices of Alan Tudyk, Asif Ali, Pamela Adlon, and Stephanie Beatriz.

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on March 31, 2021, after a total of seven episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Punky Brewster (Peacock): Morbid curiosity over this curiously produced and not well critically acclaimed revival makes us want to check it out – but we would have to pair it with an appreciable review of the original, naturally. (Released on February 25, 2021)

Star Soleil Moon Frye returns for a revival of the 1980s NBC family sitcom. (Spoiler alert: Punky is an adult now.) Cherie Johnson also returns from the original series, while newcomers include Freddie Prinze Jr. All 10 episodes stream today, and the original series is also available to stream on Peacock.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Season 1 was released on February 25, 2021, with a total of ten episodes. Peacock canceled the series in August 2021. 

CPU! STATUS: We have had at least one request for podcast coverage; it will probably still be worth it to “Look Back to Look Forward” and see how the original property translated into this revived incarnation.

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The One (Netflix): The premise is interesting, and the critics’ reviews aren’t helpful, but science fiction is always fun. (Released on March 12, 2021)

Hannah Ware stars in an eight-episode Netflix series adaptation of John Marrs’ novel set in the near future, when a simple DNA test can determine your soulmate.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on March 12, 2021, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (Disney+, Miniseries): Another long anticipated MCU television entry on Disney+ also being salivated over – if you want to be on any Disney+ MCU panels (or Star Wars panels), speak quickly! (Premieres March 19, 2021)

Delayed (by the pandemic) from its original August launch window, the latest TV series in the Marvel Cinematic Universe finds Anthony Mackie (as Sam Wilson/Falcon) and Sebastian Stan (as Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier) reprising their film roles. Daniel Bruhl, Emily VanCamp, and Wyatt Russell also star in the Malcolm Spellman-guided (Empire) series, which picks up after the events of Avengers: Endgame and cost a reported $150 million to make. There are just six episodes (streaming one per week), and for now it looks like it’ll be a miniseries rather than an ongoing show, though that could change.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on April 23, 2021, after a total of six episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: CPU! already has a full panel waiting in the wings ready to discuss the MCU on Disney+, including The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. Stay tuned!

The Mighty Ducks: Game Changers (Disney+): We have quite a few Millennial Couch Potatoes who might find and enjoy this television revival about a junior hockey team and its Emilio Estevez-portraying coach that featured in a movie or two in the nineties. (Premieres March 19, 2021)

Twelve-year-old Evan is cut from the Mighty Ducks junior hockey team but with the help of his mother (Lauren Graham), sets out to form a new team with former Ducks coach Gordon Bombay (Emilio Estevez) in this live-action series.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Disney renewed this series for a second season in August 2021. The Season 1 finale aired on May 28, 2021, after a total of ten episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

The Irregulars (Netflix): Supernatural mysteries! Teen sleuths searching for Sherlock Holmes! Seems like its right up our CP’s respective alleys. (Released on March 26, 2021)

In Victorian London, a group of street teens who are used by Dr. Watson (Royce Pierreson) and Sherlock Holmes (Henry Lloyd-Hughes) to solve their cases find themselves investigating supernatural happenings in this darker take of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s writings created by Tom Bidwell.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Netflix canceled this series in May 2021. The series was comprised of a total of eight episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed but potentially worth a Canceled Corner review if the premise holds.

Invincible (Amazon Prime): It’s an animated TV series about superheroes – and it’s already been requested a few times over for podcast coverage. (Premieres March 26, 2021)

Seventeen-year-old Mark Grayson (voiced by Steven Yeun) is the son of superhero Omni-Man (J. K. Simmons) and as he develops his own powers to become Invincible, he learns more about his father’s past in this animated series based on Robert Kirkman’s comic book series.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Seasons 2 AND 3! Amazon renewed this series twice over in April 2021. The Season 1 finale aired on April 29, 2021, after a total of eight episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Several of our comic book and superhero-television enthusiasts have already requested for this show for podcast coverage. Stay tuned!

The Nevers (HBO): Persona non grata though he might be, creator Joss Whedon never fails to disappoint creatively – and we’ve had requests for podcast discussion appear already. (Premieres April 11, 2021)

Set in 19th century London, Amalia True (Laura Donnelly) and her best friend Penance Adair (Ann Skelly) head up a group of “Touched” people – those with unusual abilities in this sci-fi series created by Joss Whedon, with Philippa Goslett taking over as showrunner in November 2020.

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STATUS: Season 1, Part 1 finished airing on May 6, 2021, after six episodes with Part 2 and another six episodes due to debut in 2022. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Podcast requests have already been made. To be continued!

Mare of Easttown (HBO, limited series): Emmys, buzz, and Kate Winslet! (Premieres April 18, 2021)

Mare Sheehan (Kate Winslet), a small-town Pennsylvania detective, investigates a murder even as her personal life is falling apart in this limited series created by Brad Ingelsby.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on May 30, 2021, after a total of seven episodes. Because this program was advertised as a limited series, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: There are requests from eager Couch Potatoes for podcast discussion. Stay tuned!

Shadow and Bone (Netflix): New fantasy with Couch Potato-requesting enthusiasm! (Releases on April 23, 2021)

Young soldier Alina Starkov (Jessie Mei Li) discovers she has a power that could free her country, but first, she must learn how to use it while avoiding those who seek to stop her in this series based on Leigh Bardugo’s Grishaverse novels.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Netflix renewed this series in June 2021. Season 1 is comprised of a total of eight episodes. 

CPU! STATUS: Our fantasy-loving Couch Potatoes are on top of this one too.

Star Wars: The Bad Batch (Disney+): Star Wars. That’s all. (Premieres on May 4, 2021)

The animated sequel/spin-off of Star Wars: The Clone Wars is set after that series with members of Clone Force 99 (who call themselves the Bad Batch) beginning new missions in the galaxies.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Seemingly, Disney ordered two seasons of this sequel to Star Wars: The Clone Wars. The Season 1 finale aired on August 13, 2021, after a total of 16 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed, but, like, it’s a matter of time.

Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K. (Hulu): Marvel + Patton Oswalt = probably good TV. (Releases on May 21, 2021)

Supervillain M.O.D.O.K. (voiced by Patton Oswalt) has been kicked out as leader of his evil organization A.I.M. and struggles with family life in this animated adult comedy series based on the Marvel comic characters.

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STATUS: Season 1 is comprised of ten episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

Others on radar: The Lord of the Rings series in development at Amazon; The Chronicles of Narnia at Netflix; The Wheel of Time at Amazon; Conan at Amazon; The Dark Tower at Amazon; all Marvel and Star Wars TV properties in development at Disney+; the Three-Body Problem adaptation at Netflix.

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Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Tomorrow, we’re On the Couch With Kyle, and next week, our Breaking Better Series panel returns to the Water Cooler to discuss the first two seasons of Better Call Saul. Next week, we will publish the final of the CPU! Annual “Summer” Progress Reports, reviewing new shows coming out this TV year (and they have already started, since our TV measurement year starts in June). Stay tuned!

Progress Report: End of Season Scorecard for Shows Covered By CPU! (Long-Running), 2021

This Progress Report…is later than usual. But this year…is unusual. With a pandemic affecting every major studio, network, and workspace in the USA and beyond, the dust is only now settling when it comes to what made it to a new season and what did not.

To that end, Couch Potatoes Unite! delayed all of our annual Progress Reports to make sure we are understanding the TV landscape in such a way that we would be able to effectively communicate it to you, gentle reader and listener. We think we’re almost there. There is quite a lot still unsorted, but the main five networks are trying to resume their traditional rhythms, and some of the other content outlets are attempting to follow suit.

Thus, we now present Progress Report 1 of 2021. Based upon reliable sources, including TVLine, the A.V. Club, and Wikipedia, here are the statuses of shows currently covered by the CPU! Podcast Universe ™. This list does not include shows reviewed from this past season’s pilots list because we will cover those next week in our annual End of Season Scorecard for 2020-2021 Pilots!  In fact, this is the first of the (Usually Summer Series) Progress Reports! 

This particular list comprises the End of Season Scorecard for Long-Running shows covered by and/or requested for coverage by the CPU! Podcast, with current statuses, upcoming premiere dates (if known), and other helpful information.  Shows that ended this year or recently that we have already covered via podcast or blog have been removed from the list, except for any that we missed in our last Progress Report. Also included is a complete list of network renewals and cancellations, some cable, premium, and streaming networks included, at the bottom.  If your show is not being covered by CPU!, and you want it to be, leave a comment or contact us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com (or via Facebook/Twitter/Instagram).  We would probably find a way to make it happen!

*Note: If you haven’t already figured it out, we measure the TV year from June 1st to May 31st.

The CPU! “What We’re Currently Watching” List

Supernatural (PODCAST) – CW

Ended. Season 15 was the final season. A two-part Goodbye Series on the podcast, including a discussion about Season 15B (Part One) and one Looking Back at the entire Series (Part Two), is coming soon.

The Flash  (PODCAST) – CW

Renewed for Season 8, which will premiere on November 16, 2021.

DC’s Legends of Tomorrow (PODCAST) – CW

Renewed for Season 7, which will premiere on October 13, 2021.

Supergirl (PODCAST) – CW

Season 6 is currently airing. Season 6 will be the final season.

Batwoman (PODCAST) – CW

Renewed for Season 3, which will premiere on October 13, 2021.

Stranger Things (PODCAST) – Netflix

Renewed for Season 4.

Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (PODCAST) – Netflix

Ended. Season 2, Part 2 (or Season 4?) was the final season. The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina panel’s Season 2/Part 2 (or Season 4?) review on the podcast is coming soon.

The Crown (PODCAST) – Netflix

Renewed for Seasons 5 AND 6.

American Horror Story (PODCAST) – FX

Renewed for Seasons 10, 11, 12, AND 13; in addition, a spin-off series called American Horror Stories aired during Summer 2021 and will now also be covered by the American Horror Story panel, newly rebranded as the “American Horror Story Franchise Series Panel.” Season 10 premiered on August 25, 2021.

Grace and Frankie (PODCAST) – Netflix

Renewed for Season 7, which will be the final season. Season 7’s first four episodes were released on August 13, 2021.

Charmed, 2018 (PODCAST) – CW

Renewed for Season 4.

Riverdale (PODCAST) – CW

Renewed for Season 6.

Black Lightning (PODCAST) – CW

Ended. Season 4 was the final season. The DCTU Series panel’s podcast review of Season 4, including another once-over Look Back at the series, is coming soon.

This Is Us (PODCAST) – NBC

Renewed for Season 6. Season 6 will be the final season.

Outlander (PODCAST) – Starz

Renewed for Season 6.

Westworld (PODCAST) – HBO

Renewed for Season 4.

Arrested Development (PODCAST) – Netflix

No renewal or cancellation announcement has been made. Season 5’s second part was released on March 15, 2019. In addition, Jessica Walter passed away on March 24, 2021. It is not expected that more seasons will be produced of this series.

Doctor Who (PODCAST) – BBC/BBC America

Renewed for Series 13.

The Orville (PODCAST) – formerly Fox

Renewed for Season 3 but moving to Hulu.

The X-Files (PODCAST) – Fox

Ended for now, and CPU! has already posted its goodbye review, but the messaging has been somewhat confusing…

The Good Doctor (PODCAST) – ABC

Renewed for Season 5, which will premiere on September 27, 2021.

Sherlock (PODCAST) – PBS

Series 4 aired from January 1-January 15, 2017.  Though possibility of a fifth series is being contemplated, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

The 100 (PODCAST/Jumped the Shark) – CW

Ended. Season 7 is the final season.  CPU! Jumped the Shark, with only moderator Kylie left standing. Kylie’s Final Thoughts Review on the podcast is coming soon.

Fargo – FX

No renewal or cancellation announcement has yet been made. The Season 4 finale aired on November 29, 2020.

The Mindy Project – Hulu

Ended 2017. Review or podcast to come.

Sleepy Hollow – Fox

Ended 2017.  Review or podcast to come.

Madam Secretary – CBS

Ended 2019. Review or podcast to come.

Bones – Fox

Ended 2017.  CPU! will be covering this show in a future “Looking Back” podcast episode. Stay tuned!

About a Boy – NBC

Ended 2015.  Review (either blog or podcast) to come.

Network Shows and Other Shows Mentioned by CPU!ers

(does not include this year’s freshman series, currently covered shows, shows we’ve already covered and eliminated, shows that have ended via cancellation or natural means but are still on the list, or game and reality shows)

By Popular Demand

ABC

A Million Little Things (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on September 22, 2021.

American Housewife (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 5 is the show’s final season.

black-ish (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 8. Season 8 will be the show’s final season.

The Conners (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on September 22, 2021.

For Life (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the show’s final season.

The Goldbergs (added to the CPU! list)
Renewed for Season 9, which will premiere on September 22, 2021.

Grey’s Anatomy (CPU! picked this up again for imminent podcast coverage)
Renewed for Season 18, which will premiere on September 30, 2021.

mixed-ish (passed by CPU! for now)
Canceled. Season 2 is the show’s final season.

The Rookie (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on September 26, 2021.

Station 19 (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 5, which will premiere on September 30, 2021.

CBS

All Rise (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the show’s final season.

Blood & Treasure (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 2.

Blue Bloods (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 12, which will premiere on October 1, 2021.

Bob ❤ Abishola (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3, which premiered on September 20, 2021.

Bull (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 6, which will premiere on October 7, 2021.

FBI (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on September 21, 2021.

FBI: Most Wanted (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3, which will premiere on September 21, 2021.

MacGyver (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 5 is the final season.

Magnum PI (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on October 1, 2021.

Mom (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 8 is the final season.

NCIS (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 19, which premiered on September 20, 2021.

NCIS: Los Angeles (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 13, which will premiere on October 10, 2021.

NCIS: New Orleans (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 7 is the final season.

The Neighborhood (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which premiered on September 20, 2021.

SEAL Team (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 5, which will premiere on October 10, 2021, and moving to Paramount+.

S.W.A.T. (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 5, which will premiere on October 1, 2021.

The Unicorn (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the final season.

Young Sheldon (passed by CPU! for now)
Renewed for Seasons 5, 6, AND 7; Season 5 will premiere on October 7, 2021.

FOX

9-1-1 (added to the CPU! list)
Renewed for Season 5, which premiered on September 20, 2021.

9-1-1: Lone Star (passed by CPU! for now)
Renewed for Season 3.

Bless the Harts (animated, passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the final season.

Bob’s Burgers (animated, picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 12, which will premiere on September 26, 2021.

Duncanville (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3.

Family Guy (animated)
Renewed for Season 20, which will premiere on September 26, 2021.

Last Man Standing (passed by CPU!)
Ended. Season 9 is the final season.

The Moodys (passed by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the final season.

Prodigal Son (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 2 is the final season.

The Resident (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 5, which will premiere on September 21, 2021.

The Simpsons (animated)
Renewed for Seasons 33 AND 34; Season 33 will premiere on September 26, 2021.

NBC

The Blacklist (added to the CPU! list)
Renewed for Season 9, which will premiere on October 21, 2021.

Brooklyn Nine-Nine (added to the CPU! list)
Ended. Season 8 is the final season.

Chicago Fire (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Seasons 10 AND 11; Season 10 will premiere on September 22, 2021.

Chicago Med (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Seasons 7 AND 8; Season 7 will premiere on September 22, 2021.

Chicago P.D. (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Seasons 9 AND 10; Season 9 will premiere on September 22, 2021.

Good Girls (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled. Season 4 is the final season.

Law and Order: SVU (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Seasons 23 AND 24; Season 23 will premiere on September 23, 2021.

Manifest (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled by NBC but renewed by and moving to Netflix for Season 4; Season 4 will be the final season.

New Amsterdam (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Seasons 4 AND 5; Season 4 will premiere on September 21, 2021.

Superstore (passed by CPU!)
Ended. Season 6 is the final season.

Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist (picked up by CPU!)
Canceled by NBC but renewed by and moving to The Roku Channel for a holiday special; Season 2 was the most recent season.

The CW

All American (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on October 25, 2021.

Burden of Truth (passed by CPU!)
Ended. Season 4 was the final season.

Coroner (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3, which premiered on August 19, 2021.

Dynasty (passed by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 5.

In the Dark (added to the CPU! list)
Renewed for Season 4.

Legacies (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on October 14, 2021.

Nancy Drew (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3, which will premiere on October 8, 2021.

The Outpost (added to the CPU! list)
Canceled. Season 4, which is currently airing, will be the final season.

Pandora (picked up by CPU!)
No announcement regarding renewal for Season 3 or cancellation has yet been made.

Roswell, New Mexico (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 4.

Stargirl (picked up by CPU!)
Renewed for Season 3. Season 2 is currently airing.

Current/Ongoing Shows – Cable, Premium, Streaming – Requested
by CPU! Regulars for the Podcast

PBS

Call the Midwife
Renewed for Series 11, which will premiere on October 3, 2021.

BBC America

Killing Eve
Renewed for Season 4. Season 4 will be the final season.

FXX

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Renewed for Seasons 15, 16, 17, AND 18.

FX

Feud
Plans for a Season 2 were discarded; no official renewal or cancellation announcement has yet been made.

Archer
Renewed for Season 12. Season 12 premiered on August 25, 2021.

What We Do in the Shadows
Renewed for Season 4. Season 3 premiered on September 2, 2021.

American Horror Stories
Renewed for Season 2; this series will be covered as part of CPU!’s “American Horror Story Franchise Series” in the future.

Netflix

Peaky Blinders
Renewed for Series 6. Season 6 will be the final season.

Master of None
Renewed for Season 3, which was released on May 23, 2021  No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

GLOW
Though initially renewed for Season 4, COVID-19 effects resulted in the show’s cancellation. Season 3 is the final season.

Mindhunter
The series is on indefinite hold (neither renewed or canceled) as of January 2020.

The End of the F***ing World
Season 2 was released on November 4, 2019. No renewal or cancellation announcement has yet been made.

Black Mirror
Season 5 was released on June 5, 2019. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Lucifer
Renewed for Season 6, which was released on September 10, 2021. Season 6 is the final season.

Ozark
Renewed for Season 4, which will be the final season.

Big Mouth
Renewed for Seasons 5 AND 6.

Frontier
Renewed for Season 3, which premiered on December 7, 2018. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Derry Girls
Renewed for Season 3.

The Protector
Ended. Season 4 is the final season.

Bodyguard
Relabeled a limited series. Ended.

Sex Education
Renewed for Season 3, which was released on September 17, 2021.

The Umbrella Academy
Renewed for Season 3.

Russian Doll
Renewed for Season 2.

After Life
Renewed for Series 3.

Dead to Me
Renewed for Season 3, which will be the final season.

Dark
Ended. Season 3 is the final season.

Lost in Space
Renewed for Season 3. Season 3 is the show’s final season.

I Am Not Okay with This
Canceled, due to effects caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Season 1 is the final season.

You
Renewed for Season 3, which will be released on October 15, 2021.

Feel Good
Ended. Renewed for Season 2, which was released on June 4, 2021. Season 2 is the final season.

The Stranger
Relabeled a miniseries. Ended.

3%
Ended. Season 4 is the show’s final season.

Cobra Kai
Renewed for Seasons 4 AND 5.

The Last Kingdom
Renewed for Season 5, which will be the final season.

Warrior Nun
Renewed for Season 2.

Ratched
Renewed for Season 2.

Julie and the Phantoms
Season 1 was released on September 10, 2020. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Bridgerton
Renewed for Seasons 2, 3, AND 4.

Fate: the Winx Saga
Renewed for Season 2.

Disenchantment
Season 2 premiered on January 15, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Black Spot
Season 2 was released on June 14, 2019. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Shadow and Bone
Renewed for Season 2.

Lupin
Renewed for “Part 3.”

Showtime

Billions
Renewed for Season 6; Season 5 is currently airing.

Shameless
Ended. Season 11 is the show’s final season.

Starz

American Gods
Canceled. Season 3 is the show’s final season.

AMC

Better Call Saul
Renewed for Season 6. Season 6 is the show’s final season.

The Walking Dead
Renewed for Season 11, which is the show’s final season. Season 11 premiered on August 22, 2021.

SyFy

Wynonna Earp
Canceled. Season 4 is the show’s (current) final season, though the producers are in negotiations to produce and distribute this via an international broadcaster.

Van Helsing
Ended. Season 5 is the show’s final season.

Resident Alien
Renewed for Season 2.

Amazon

Brittania
Renewed for Season 3, which premiered on August 24, 2021.

The Expanse
Renewed for Season 6. Season 6 will be the final season.

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Renewed for Season 4.

The Boys
Renewed for Season 3.

Bosch
Ended. Season 7 is the show’s final season.

Hunters
Renewed for Season 2.

Carnival Row
Renewed for Season 2.

Invincible
Renewed for Seasons 2 AND 3.

Hulu

The Handmaid’s Tale
Renewed for Season 5.

Castle Rock
Canceled. Season 2 is the show’s final season.

Letterkenny
Renewed for Seasons 10 AND 11.

Shrill
Ended. Season 3 is the show’s final season.

The Act
Relabeled a limited series. Ended.

Love, Victor
Renewed for Season 3.

The Great
Renewed for Season 2, which will premiere on November 19, 2021.

Reservation Dogs
Renewed for Season 2.

This Way Up
Series 2 was released on July 9, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

HBO

Big Little Lies
The Season 2 finale aired on July 21, 2019. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Curb Your Enthusiasm
Renewed for Season 11.

True Detective
The Season 3 finale aired on February 24, 2019. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Succession
Renewed for Season 3, which will premiere on October 17, 2021.

Insecure
Renewed for Season 5. Season 5 will be the final season, which will premiere on October 24, 2021.

His Dark Materials
Renewed for Season 3, which will be the final season.

The Nevers
Season 1 premiered on April 11, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Disney Channel

Raven’s Home
The Season 4 finale aired on May 21, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Duck Tales
Ended. Season 3 is the show’s final season.

Cinemax

Strike
The Season 4 finale aired on September 13, 2020. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Cartoon Network

Rick and Morty
Renewed for Season 6.

TV Land

Younger
Ended. Season 7 is the show’s final season.

HBO Max

Titans
Renewed for Season 3, which premiered on August 21, 2021.

Doom Patrol
Renewed for Season 3, which will premiere on September 23, 2021.

Generation
Canceled. Season 1 is the final season.

The Flight Attendant
Renewed for Season 2.

Starstruck
Renewed for Series 2.

Pop

One Day at a Time
Canceled. Season 4 is the show’s final season.

CBS All Access –> Paramount+

The Twilight Zone
Ended. Season 2 is the show’s final season.

Star Trek: Discovery
Renewed for Season 4, which will premiere on November 18, 2021; this series will be covered as part of CPU!’s “Star Trek 50+ Series” in the future.

Star Trek: Picard
Renewed for Season 2; this series will be covered as part of CPU!’s “Star Trek 50+ Series” in the future.

Evil
Renewed for Season 3; Season 2 is currently airing.

Why Women Kill
The Season 2 finale aired on July 29, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

TBS

Miracle Workers
Renewed for Season 3; the season finale aired on September 14, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

Peacock

A.P. Bio (added to the CPU! list)
Renewed for Season 4, which premiered on September 2, 2021.

Saved By the Bell
Renewed for Season 2.

Punky Brewster
Canceled. Season 1 is the final season.

We Are Lady Parts
The Season 1 finale aired on June 24, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

TNT

Claws
Renewed for Season 4. Season 4 will be the final season.

The Alienist
The Season 2 finale aired on August 9, 2020. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

Disney+

Loki
Renewed for Season 2.

Bluey
Renewed for Series 3.

Apple TV+

The Morning Show
Renewed for Season 2, which premiered on September 17, 2021.

Ted Lasso
Renewed for Season 3; Season 2 is currently airing.

BritBox

Line of Duty
The Series 6 finale aired on May 2, 2021. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has been made.

That’s it, fellow Couch Potatoes!  Next up in the Progress Report series: the 2020-2021 Pilots End of Season Scorecard, to be published with as much as information as we have!  Stay tuned! 

Westworld, Season 3 (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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A new podcast episode of Couch Potatoes Unite!, which is based on a blog of the same name hosted at our website: couchpotatoesunite.wordpress.com.  In this episode, recorded in May 2021, our returning panel of stoic hosts and wide-eyed guests – moderator Chief Couch Potato Kylie, Samantha, Jeremy, Ben, and new panelist (new to the panel, not to the podcast) Jana, as two prior panelists jumped the shark and departed the panel – returns to the CPU! Water Cooler to welcome you (back) to Westworld by discussing Season 3 of the HBO science fiction western series based upon the movie of the same name.  As always, if you have not watched any of Westworld, be aware that there are, most definitely, MAJOR SPOILERS! Tell us what you think, and/or if there are other shows you’re interested in CPU! covering, below; email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com; or check out our Guestbook at the website, our Facebook page, our Twitter (@cpupodcast), or our Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite). Until next time, until next episode…buh bye!

Executive Producer/Chief Couch Potato: Kylie C. Piette
Associate Producers: Krista Pennington and Selene Rezmer

Editor: Kylie C. Piette
Logo: Rebecca Wallace
Marketing Graphic Artist: Krista Pennington

Theme Song:
Written by: Sarah Milbratz
Singers: Sarah Milbratz, Amy McDaniel, Kels Rezmer
Keyboard: Kels Rezmer
Bass: Ian McDonough
Guitar: Christian Somerville
Engineer/Production: Kyle Aspinall/Christian Somerville

PODCAST! – Around the Water Cooler: “Westworld,” the Season 3 Recap and Review (MAJOR SPOILERS)

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Moderator: Chief Couch Potato Kylie

THE SPECS:

Who: “Westworld” is a science fiction western based upon the 1973 film of the same name (written and directed by Michael Crichton) and to a lesser extent, the film’s 1976 sequel Futureworld. It is currently on hiatus.

What: “Westworld,” created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, depicts a fictional, technologically advanced Wild West-themed amusement park populated by android “hosts” called “Westworld.” The park caters to high-paying “guests” who may indulge their wildest fantasies within the park without fear of retaliation from the hosts, who are prevented by their programming from harming humans.

SYNOPSIS

In an unspecified time in the future, Westworld allows guests to experience the American Old West in an environment populated by “hosts,” i.e. androids programmed to fulfill the park guests’ every desire. The hosts, who are nearly indistinguishable from humans, follow a predefined set of intertwining narratives but have the ability to deviate from these narratives based upon interactions they have with guests.

The hosts repeat their multi-day narratives anew each cycle. At the beginning of each new cycle (typically following the host’s “death”), each host has its memories of the previous period erased. This continues hundreds or thousands of times until the host is decommissioned or re-purposed for use in other narratives. For guests’ safety, hosts’ programming prevents them from physically harming human guests; this allows guests nearly unlimited freedom to engage without retribution in any activity they choose with the hosts, including rape and murder. Staff—situated in a control center called “The Mesa”, which is connected to the park through vast underground facilities—oversee daily operations, develop new narratives, and perform repairs on hosts as necessary. Unbeknownst to the staff, members of a small group of hosts have retained memories of their past “lives” and are learning from their experiences as they gradually start to achieve sentience.

When: Season 3 aired on HBO from March 15, 2020, to May 3, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

Where: The action in Season 3 is set primarily in the fictional “real world” at some unknown future time.

Why: To find out why individual podcast panelists started watching this show, listen to the Season 1 podcast episode via the link below!

How – as in How Was It? – THOUGHTS

We have been discussing Westworld since the beginning; we caught up on the series in 2019! To listen from the start, click the embedded links below or search our archive here at the website!

Season 1

Season 2

As you might recall, by popular request, though notably by several established CPU! panelists and viewers, Westworld became a new show panel at the CPU! Water Cooler in 2019. Somewhat sadly, however, our cadre of hosts and guests experienced something of an algorithmic changeover since last we covered this series. Two panelists – Kyle and Hilary – jumped the shark, as they became too frustrated with the new direction of the show in Season 3. The rest of our adventurous Westworld panelists – namely Samantha, Jeremy, and Ben as well as a panelist new to the panel but not to the podcast – were still willing to reconvene “Around the Water Cooler” to talk about the “New World” order of this lush and complex drama, and in so doing, to ruminate in-depth upon the production values, performances, writing, and densely plotted mysteries of this show hailing from seeds planted by Michael Crichton’s creative brain in the seventies. In this review, our new reconstituted panelist bodies, pearls in tact (and not cloned, as far as we know), dissect the most mixed reactions we have ever had as a panel to this program, as some panel members were more engaged, others were less engaged, and still others if not the entire panel yearned to recapture the magic of the series’ first season, as panelists continued to struggle with series story direction and with what was perceived to be story development that “missed the mark” by the third season finale.

Thus, in this episode, our panel reflects on and recaps Season 3 of Westworld, in which we learn about the fates of some of the Delos parks, the Man in Black aka William (Ed Harris), Dolores’ (Evan Rachel Wood) plans for the New World, and the existence of a new artificial intelligence that seems to predate the AI embedded within the Delos park attractions. We also meet a new character in Caleb (Aaron Paul), who appears to be more than he seems as well as emblematic of what this so-called “future world” has become. In the meantime, the show continues to explore humanity, consciousness, and conscience as well as the the definitions and boundaries of love and freedom, as defined by existence and/or by the individuals bound to that existence.

This episode was recorded in May 2021, and there are, without question, MAJOR SPOILERS, as the panelists cover key plot points – very key plot points – of the third season. Listen at your own risk, and let us know what you think by commenting below!

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter (@cpupodcast), Instagram (@couchpotatoesunite), Pinterest (@cpupodcast), or email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – or subscribe to this blog, the YouTube channel, our Apple/iTunes channel, our Stitcher Radio channel , find us on Google Play, on Spotify, on Castbox, on iHeartRadio, on Amazon Music, and now on Patreon (!) to keep track of brand new episodes.  In the meantime, let us know what you think!  Comment or review us in any of the above forums – we’d love your feedback!

Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Next Wednesday, our boldly going Star Trek 50+ Series panel returns to the Water Cooler to lovingly discuss the final season, Season 7, of Star Trek: The Next Generation as well as to present their Top 10 Best and Bottom 10 Worst Episode Lists for the entire series.  Stay tuned!

Questions, Impressions, and Future Considerations

Old Questions

1) At what point did/will William aka the Man in Black become a (SPOILER) host version of himself? How does he reach that point, and was that all part of Robert Ford’s plan? Does William figure into Dolores’ machinations for the wider world?

ANSWER: William aka the Man In Black (MIB) is cloned and made into a host in the third season finale by the Charlotte/Dolores clone (Tessa Thompson), who is hellbent on revenge after the many events that occur to bring her to that breaking point (listen to the podcast episode for details). We think it is safe to say that aside from Robert’s dream for the evolution of his AI, most of these events are far removed from whatever he initially intended when he created the host intelligence staffing the Westworld park. The last question above is somewhat tricky to answer, as Dolores Prime initially attempts to remove William from her larger scheme by having him committed to a deprogramming facility, yet her Charlotte/Dolores clone is an evolved offshoot of her original programming, a version of Dolores that has lived Charlotte’s life and walked in her “real world” shoes. This (presumably) new Dolores further decides to have the William host/clone (SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER) kill MIB prime and assume his existence. What this all means for the future is decidedly a Season 4 question.

2) Did William aka the Man in Black actually murder his own daughter, Grace/Emily? Is she actually dead? Aside from the flashback to Emily’s mother’s suicide, were we watching Grace/Emily in a chronology contemporary to Dolores’ insurrection? Was Grace/Emily initially hunting in one of the other Delos parks? Will we see her again?

ANSWER: Yes, William actually murdered Grace/Emily, and it is his internal reaction to this act with which he grapples during his institutional stay in the third season. Grace is actually dead. We see her again when William hallucinates a vision of her, with which he converses, in this season, but her life chronology as depicted in Season 2 is not further clarified. It is safe to say that what we see in Season 2, when William mistakenly takes the life of his own daughter, is in every way real, and that Grace/Emily was in the Delos parks when it happened. Since reality and fantasy frequently blur in the parks, particularly for William, who struggles the most with the blurry line throughout the series, the nightmare and its consequences become very real to him in Season 3.

3) What character will Aaron Paul be playing in Season 3? How will he fit into this picture?

ANSWER: Aaron Paul plays Caleb, who seems to be a military veteran down on his luck when we first encounter him. He becomes a key component of Dolores’ larger plans as someone who (SPOILER) is able to assert free will and break through deprogramming/brainwashing treatment he receives from another AI/entity insidiously governing the world order. Listen to the podcast episode for details.

4) What is Dolores’ true endgame – is it truly “kill all humans,” or is she looking for a way that hosts and humans can coexist, even if hosts hold the power or control over humans? Will Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) stop her if it’s the former? Will killer robots take over the world?

ANSWER: Column B. She sees beauty in humans, she claims near the season’s end, and she becomes aware of the larger AI controlling the flow of money and human decision-making in the world. This is the largest subject of tonight’s episode discussion, as this plot direction might have been the source of the most confusion for our panelists. Bernard does not intervene directly with Dolores this season, except in one failed attempt, but we do not necessarily bear witness to the once and future fate of Dolores, based upon the season-ending events, because of the clone complication and in light of the basic knowledge that the AI of this world can reconstitute itself (Dolores being one of the most adept at this skill). Listen to the podcast episodes for details. Notably, killer robots do not take over the world; humans regain control of their own faculties and wherewithal, but the season ends in chaos as humans wake up to what their lives have been under the control of the AI that dictated those lives and to what it means to again have free will. Listen to the podcast episode for all of the related discussion.

5) Does the Delos Corporation still exist? Are any of the parks, Westworld included, still open? Is someone still searching for the Valley Beyond/the satellite matrix containing the hosts’ consciousnesses? Will that someone or something be after Bernard? Does he still have the encryption key?

ANSWER: Delos was hostilely taken over by a rival company, Insight, in Season 3. In addition, Charlotte/Dolores takes out the Board of Directors near the end of the season. Where does that leave the company? It is hard to say.

We know that Westworld itself is closed, but WarWorld was operating as a prison for Maeve (Thandie Newton) and as a repository for AI that the rival company’s CEO does not want to deal with as the Westworld AI and hosts emerge from the so-called “massacre” of Season 3.

The panelists believe that Bernard accesses Sublime, the satellite matrix contained within the Valley Beyond, at the end of this season, and that Bernard innately possesses or obtains the encryption key this season that accesses that matrix. What he finds is the subject of the major cliffhanger of the third season’s end; we do not expect to learn the results of his journey until the airing of Season 4.

6) What other hosts did Dolores smuggle from the park?

ANSWER: She only smuggled bodies, and not all of them initially belonged to hosts, as the pearls she took were clones of her pearls that she secretly produced while still in the Westworld park. She places pearls in Charlotte, Musashi from Shogun World, and Connells, a man on the outside. Yet, other former hosts appear. The panel is unclear whether Clementine and others we see are Dolores clones or were revived by Maeve or Engerand Serrac (Vincent Cassel) in their effort to stop Dolores.

7) Where is Maeve right now? Is she one of the hosts’ core matrices that Dolores smuggled from the park? Or, did Lee (Simon Quaterman) accomplish that feat and how?

ANSWER: She begins the season imprisoned in WarWorld, which is operated as a sort of cage for errant AI from Westworld, including her. Neither Dolores nor Lee are responsible for placing her there; Serrac claims it was he who did so near the end of the season.

8) Will we see any of the other parks beyond Shogun World, such as Medieval World, to which panelist Kyle alludes in this episode?

ANSWER: We see only WarWorld this season, though we also revisit the empty and unpopulated Westworld.

New Questions

1) Will Caleb return in Season 4? If so, what will his role be?

2) Where is Maeve? Where does she go after Season 4?

3) Is Dolores truly dead?

4) Was the Dolores in Evan Rachel Wood’s body the actual Dolores – Dolores Prime – or is Charlotte/Dolores (or some other clone) hiding the real Dolores or the original Dolores pearl?

5) Will the show ever explain how Dolores was aware of Rehoboam?

6) Is the William/Man in Black clone/host that takes out William Prime in the season finale the same version of William that we saw in the post-credits series finale tag for Season 2?

7) How far into the future does Bernard wake up from his visit to Sublime, and is he in the same general time period or era that we find William/Man in Black in the post-credits series finale tag for Season 2?

8) How many Dolores clones remain, if any, beyond Charlotte/Dolores?

9) What does Bernard learn from Sublime? How can this world be rebuilt in the wake of divorcing the Rehoboam AI from humanity’s collective consciousness?

10) What is the state of the Delos parks in the world in which Bernard returns from Sublime?

11) Does Maeve still care about the whereabouts of her daughter?

12) What is Charlotte/Dolores’ endgame? Does she want to marry AI matrices with human consciousness? Or, is she truly bent upon world destruction?

PARTING SHOTS

Westworld continues to be recommended by our CPU! Westworld panel, unanimously anew but somewhat tepidly all around, to anyone who enjoys an ambitious story, with exciting action coupled with cerebral, intelligent mysteries to titillate and to ponder; to fans of science fiction and/or westerns and/or mysteries in general; and to music lovers who enjoy auditory Easter eggs, as the person responsible for the score, Ramin Djawadi, is both clever and prolific with his use of music, original and adapted, in this series.  The panelists universally agree that the production values on this series remain remarkable, with particularly breathtaking cinematography, costuming, and visual effects representing the series’ crowning achievements. The panelists also continue to unanimously praise the performances by this noteworthy cast/ensemble, especially those of Jeffrey Wright as Bernard and of Ed Harris as the Man in Black.

The panelists’ reactions to the third season, however, are decidedly mixed in tonight’s comprehensive review. Some of our panelists appreciated the more linear storytelling and streamlined pacing of the third season. Some are not altogether in support of how potential details and story/plot points depicted on screen may have been sacrificed overall in an effort to achieve said linear storytelling and streamlined pacing. Some panelists struggle with Episode 5, “Genre,” seeing it as mostly a filler episode with no real bearing on the overarching plot arc and, therefore, time wasted that could have been better spent on table setting in the first half of the season. The panel proves further and markedly split with respect to how each individual panelist received the overall reward for the redefined story build and tonal shift of Season 3: some easily suspended disbelief, happy to be along for a ride that seemed to lose much of the distracting and perplexing ballast of the previous season, while others saw this third season as considerably less gratifying in terms of its punchline than the mind-bending twists of the preceding seasons. In fact, half of the panel believes that Season 2 was more engaging and enjoyable, while the other half found Season 3 to be a vast improvement over the confusion and uneven pacing wrought by the preceding season.

Our panelists, though, continue to (strongly) suggest that any would-be viewer be prepared for an engaging puzzle of a tale that should be actively watched and processed without distraction, like the “multi-screen experience,” and possibly with a notebook or journal at one’s side to keep track of the story information. They also opine that the story continuity and complexity remain intermittently clunky in Season 3, despite the aforementioned streamlining and redefinition, and that the show does not adequately build upon the momentum of the endpoint of Season 2’s finale in a satisfying way, particularly since the viewer must begin Season 3 with the somewhat tedious task of reestablishing bearings, given the ending events of the second season and how Season 3 begins with Caleb as the point-of-view character. Still, all panelists consider Westworld’s third season to be worth the watch, so long as potential viewers abandon most preconceived notions (and forget much of Season 2’s seeding plot) in order to adequately engage and to suspend disbelief for any length of the viewing experience. Furthermore, though our panel remains committed to watching the future fourth season, one panelist has all but lost interest in the show, regarding Season 3 as far less satisfying and less worth the watch than prior seasons, but, at least, panelist Jeremy intends to give Season 4 a chance, as do all the rest of the panelists, with varying and oscillating levels of interest, engagement, and enthusiasm going forward.

LOOKING AHEAD

HBO renewed Westworld for a fourth season, which is expected to release in 2022, though no tentative premiere date has yet been announced. CPU! will next visit Westworld at some point following the Season 4 finale.  Like, follow, and/or subscribe to the website, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Amazon Music, Patreon, or our social media accounts to stay abreast of new episodes regarding Westworld as well as new episodes for all of our podcast panels! And, if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review. Thank you!

Progress Report: Mid-Season Report Card for 2020-2021 Pilots and Premieres

It’s that time of year!  Call it CPU!’s Holiday Present to you!  Or a New Year present! Time to check in on the progress of shows and see which shows are surviving this season and beyond on the major networks and what news shows have been announced for the second half of this strange, pandemically-infused season.  Is your show on the list? Did it survive cancellation? Are you keeping your eye out for some good new small screen entertainment? Read below.

Thanks to TVLine, Metacritic, and other sources for helping a girl out. Note: this is a compilation of internet research from TV pundits and watchdogs. The information is as accurate as the internet can provide as of the date of this publication.

*Note: with the expansion of CPU!, these initial thoughts are based upon the CPU! Chief’s assessments.  As with previous seasons, a growing number of CPU! members may find shows initially passed by the CPU! Chief and choose to review them.  CPU! readers will be informed if the show’s status changes regarding coverage as the season progresses through the handy CPU! Progress Reports, and all written reviews will be published!

**Second Note: If you haven’t already figured it out, we measure the TV year from June 1st to May 31st.

B Positive' Review: CBS Fall Comedy, Thomas Middleditch Stars | TVLine

B POSITIVE, CBS

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 8:30/7:30c

WHO: Thomas Middleditch (Silicon Valley), Annaleigh Ashford (Masters of Sex), Sara Rue (Impastor), Kether Donohue (You’re the Worst), Kamryn Kunody

WHAT: A multi-cam comedy about a therapist and newly divorced dad who is faced with finding a kidney donor when he runs into a rough-around-the-edges woman from his past who volunteers her own. Together they form an unlikely bond and begin a journey that will change both of their lives.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Welcome to the 2020-2021 CPU! network pilot review, always full of snark and real talk about upcoming TV from your friendly neighborhood TV podcast, whose business is otherwise unaffected by global pandemics, as we’re too afraid to leave our houses and, therefore, spend an even more inordinate time watching TV! Unite with us (and wear a mask)! 

We start off with a pass because, as earnestly as we support humanity’s giving natures and organ donation when needed, the subject and the slapstick cut of this teaser trailer render us feeling like the topic and the tone of this series don’t quite match, despite a fairly fresh premise to start this situation comedy off reasonably right. Another way of looking at this snap judgment comes down to the idea that if this the best thirty seconds the Eye can provide to sell this sitcom, the humor falls flat quickly, even if spontaneous organ donation is intended to elicit at least a few smiles. We want to “b” into it, positively, but we’re not quite there.

And to get this bit of annual flavor out of the way, if buzz and steam and starvation for new network sitcoms in these, our COVID times – or your more direct contact with us via comment on any post, a visit to our guestbook or our social media, or an email to couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – convince us to change our minds, which is very easy to do with the right amount of minimal persuasion, we most certainly will! I’m positive!

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STATUS: Five of eighteen ordered episodes have aired as of the publication of this post, but the pundits, including our favorite TVLine, think renewal possibilities are a safe bet. On December 21, 2020, CBS ordered five additional episodes, elevating the Season 1 episode total to 18. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Early reviews and reception from critics are (B?) positive. Plus, it was CBS’ only new comedy entry during this, our era of COVID, which might be bolstering its survival chances somewhat. Unfortunately, no one is talking to us about it yet, so we’ll stay pretty positive that passing is our best option. We have to prioritize the sheer volume of television entertainment somehow!

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New Montana ABC TV show 'Big Sky TV' premiered this past week

BIG SKY, ABC

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 10/9c

WHO: Kylie Bunbury (Pitch), Katheryn Winnick (Vikings), Ryan Phillippe (Shooter), Brian Geraghty (Chicago P.D.), John Carroll Lynch (American Horror Story), Dedee Pfeiffer (Cybill), Natalie Alyn Lind (The Gifted), Jade Pettyjohn (Little Fires Everywhere), Jesse James Keitel

WHAT: In this procedural thriller, private detective Cassie Dewell (Bunbury) partners with ex-cop Jenny Hoyt (Winnick) on a search for two sisters who have been kidnapped by a truck driver on a remote highway in Montana, but when they discover that these are not the only girls who have disappeared in the area, they must race against the clock to stop the killer before another woman is taken.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Without a trailer to help steer us toward this procedural thriller, I am afraid that we’ll have to steer away. Procedural TV is a genre not typically requested by our resident Couch Potatoes unless the procedural overlay is set off by a gimmick or a quirk that renders it somewhat different from the typical fare. Various vehicles featuring murder and detective work have come and gone in recent seasons; some have been canceled quickly, and though the lead actress is named Kylie (which this Kylie can get behind), we don’t have enough information about either this series premise or its cast to feel motivated to add it to our already as-large-as-the-sky lists of recommended TV. Big facts.

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STATUS: Five of sixteen ordered episodes have aired as of the publication of this post. The pundits also see this series’ renewal chances as being a safe bet or likely. On December 7, 2020, ABC ordered six additional episodes to reach the sixteen-episode total. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: The trailer was reviewed and is available by searching YouTube; this series is a procedural but with an overarching dramatic through-line. The creator and cast pedigree are certainly there, and the ratings seem to fare better than average, but I wonder how much the influence of COVID on the TV landscape – and the boom in the streaming industry – are affecting traditional perceptions of network TV? After viewing this trailer, your friendly neighborhood Chief Couch Potato was not any more motivated to watch this seemingly run-of-the-mill crime-solving thriller than I was after I read a mere textual premise. Also, no one is talking about it in CPU!’s increasingly widespread circles of Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes Adjacent, and this, of all times, is the time for hunkering in and watching things. The premise is not pie in the big sky, but this particular Alphabet entry feeling new and different from other ilk in its genre seems like a pretty tall order; or, perhaps, the trailer was not well cut (of course, usually, that means there’s not a lot from which to cut). Anyway, we remain in the passing line on the TV highway until we hear requests, same as it ever was, same as it ever was.

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Call Me Kat' Preview: Which 'New Girl' Alum Will Show Up in Kat's Cat Cafe?  - TV Insider

CALL ME KAT, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: January 3, 2021

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Mayim Bialik (The Big Bang Theory), Swoosie Kurtz (Mike & Molly), Cheyenne Jackson (American Horror Story), Kyla Pratt (One on One) and Leslie Jordan (Will & Grace). Bialik and Jim Parsons serve as EPs.

WHAT: Based on the BBC sitcom Miranda, the multi-cam follows a 39-year-old woman (Bialik) who struggles every day against society (and her mother) to prove that you can not have everything you want and still be happy. That’s why she spent the money her parents set aside for her wedding to open a cat café in Louisville.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. The hesitancy comes from the lack of a trailer, but there are three reasons why we are motivated to give this one a look-see: it’s based on an established British comedy, so if it can be Americanized in a way that lands with the audiences on this side of the pond, we’re all for giving it a nod; it features Mayim Bialik, a Big Bang Blossom if there ever was one; and who doesn’t want to see a comedy about an owner of a cat cafe? Imagine all the feline hi-jinks! On the other hand, this sitcom could be incredibly stupid, but with Mayim and Jim Parsons, both capable of intelligence and warmth when it comes to comedy, at the helm, we’re thinking this one at least deserves a chance, though you can call me “krazy” if you want.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. The premise is a little shaky, but the cast is the reason to watch this one, and by cast, I mean those supporting Ms. Bialik. As much as Mayim will bring the sass and apparently a few songs via a karaoke set-up (because why not?), those to watch include Swoosie Kurtz and Leslie Jordan doing what they do best. We are still evaluating Cheyenne Jackson beyond his appearances on American Horror Story and so will need to tune in to get the full sense of the coalescing of this particularly cat-crazy ensemble – but we do not regret our Pick Up decision (yet).

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Call Your Mother (Season 1 Episode 1) Comedy, trailer - Startattle

CALL YOUR MOTHER, ABC

PREMIERE DATE: January 13, 2021

TIME SLOT: Wednesdays, 9:30/8:30c

WHO: Kyra Sedgwick (The Closer), Rachel Sennott (High Maintenance), Joey Bragg (Liv and Maddie), Emma Caymares (Fosse/Verdon), Austin Crute (Daybreak), Patrick Brammall (Evil, No Activity)

WHAT: In this multi-cam, an “empty nester” mom wonders how she ended up alone while her children live their best lives thousands of miles away. She decides her place is with her family and as she re-inserts herself into their lives, her kids realize they might actually need her more than they thought.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. I am sure that Kyra Sedgwick will play a wonderful helicopter mom, but without a trailer or teaser to help seal the deal (likely a scarcity in these COVID circumstances), this new sitcom feels as by rote as most. If buzz or steam picks up when this premieres mid-season, if the TV production schedule remotely stays on track, we could be convinced to reassess, but in the meantime, we’ll just call our mothers.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – and it plays like it reads: as by rote as more than most. Kyra Sedgwick seems potentially winning, but thirty seconds of teasing promotional clips left this CP comfortable with our initial pass. In the end, Kyra’s fans might be most readily drawn into this empty nest sitcom; otherwise, it’s just another family comedy to add to the Alphabet’s already packed schedule full of them.

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CLARICE Teaser Trailer (2021) Silence of the Lambs TV Show - YouTube

CLARICE, CBS

PREMIERE DATE: February 11, 2021

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 10/9c

WHO: Rebecca Breeds (The Originals), Kal Penn (Designated Survivor, House), Michael Cudlitz (The Walking Dead, Southland), Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black), Lucca De Oliveira (The Punisher), Devyn A. Tyler (Out of Blue)

WHAT: A deep dive into the untold personal story of brilliant and vulnerable FBI Agent Clarice Starling as she returns to the field in 1993, six months after the events of The Silence of the Lambs.

Teaser trailer available at CBS’ YouTube channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Hesitancy, again, derives from a lack of sneak peek, but we have a few super-fans of the The Silence of the Lambs franchise that hang out on our united couch Around the Water Cooler, including of the erstwhile Hannibal. Plus, it will be interesting to see if Rebecca Breeds can evoke memories of the incomparable Jodie Foster, and if Clarice Starling’s back story can be as compelling as Hannibal Lecter’s. Also, the morbid curiosity of seeing how far the makers of this series can plumb the depths of this mythology comes to play here as well. All in all, we feel motivated to say, “Hello, Clarice.”

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – there wasn’t much in the vague teaser to clarify our feelings of hesitancy about Clarice. In fact, it only served to validate our initial hesitancy, but this drama shall remain a Pick Up. After all, we might do a Silence of the Lambs TV Series focused group of podcast episodes, including coverage of Hannibal. We’re always thinking around here! No fava beans or chianti of which to speak, either.

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NBC Orders Drama Series 'Debris' with Jonathan Tucker & Riann Steele –  Deadline

DEBRIS, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Jonathan Tucker (Kingdom), Riann Steele (NCIS: New Orleans), Norbert Leo Butz (Fosse/Verdon, Bloodline)

WHAT: Two agents from two different continents, and two different mindsets, must work together to investigate when wreckage from a destroyed alien spacecraft has mysterious effects on humankind.

Trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. This time, there is less hesitancy because aliens, wreckage, mysterious effects, and a global scope, even if the premise is admittedly thin without further trailer evaluation to guide us. We love our science fiction around here, though, and while a trailer would be helpful, sometimes, you just have to go with what works, even if it could all implode in the end and litter our TV-loving hearts with debris from what was once our trust.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed – and it was very intriguing in all of the glorious science fiction senses that tend to titillate our TV watching tubers. From the trailer, the premise strikes this viewer as both familiar and different, so of course we’ll have to check it out to see which quality this new series displays more. I really should learn to trust my snap judgments, eh?

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Watch My Show: 'The Equalizer' Bosses on Their Queen Latifah-Led Reboot - TV  Insider

THE EQUALIZER, CBS

PREMIERE DATE: February 7, 2021

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Queen Latifah (Star), Lorraine Toussaint (Orange Is the New Black), Chris Noth (Law & Order, Sex and the City), Liza Lapira (9JKL), Tory Kittles (Colony), Laya DeLeon Hayes (Raven’s Home)

WHAT: The re-imagining of the classic series follows an enigmatic woman with a mysterious background who uses her extensive skills to help those with nowhere else to turn.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Color me dubiously intrigued. Yours truly, the Chief CP, never watched the original Equalizer but not for lack of wanting. Plus, Queen Latifah is always fun to watch; she is a capable actress who can convincingly provide comedy, drama, a catchy tune, or a few slick bars of the rap that started her career. This is an experiment that could pay off in dividends…or, it could not work spectacularly, since the show is a remake of one with a potentially different tone. I’d say the odds of the potential for success and viewer enjoyment are approximately equalized… I’ll see myself out.

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The 'Filthy Rich' have their troubles in new Fox series

FILTHY RICH, Fox

WHO: Kim Cattrall (Sex and the City), Gerald McRaney (This Is Us), Aubrey Dollar (Battle Creek), Corey Cott (The Good Fight), Mark L. Young (The Comeback), Aaron Lazar (Quantico)

WHAT: When the patriarch of a mega-rich Southern family (famed for creating a wildly successful Christian television network) dies in a plane crash, his wife and family are stunned to learn that he fathered three illegitimate children, all of whom are written into his will.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. In the grand tradition of fare like Dallas and Dynasty (the original, to be sure), Fox offers this new sudsy soap with rich people at the forefront mixed with all the scandal and guilty-pleasure inducing backdrop of televangelism and the antebellum lilts of the South, including the requisite homage to Gone with the Wind. Hilariously, the show is created/produced by the makers of Empire and The Help, so there is a small iota of curiosity to entice here. Plus, the presence of an older but no less fabulous Kim Cattrall, the erstwhile Samantha that oozed Sex in her City, leads this pack. Still, the premise sounds very similar to Fox’s Almost Family, also being introduced this season (see above), with the soap angle to propel it forward into Desperate Housewives and the aforementioned Dallas/Dynasty territories, and so it seems like Fox is throwing the idea of illegitimate children around every chance it can get. We passed on the other one and feel it only fair to pass on this one also, but if you think we need to cover more suds and find this candidate suitable to that purpose, drop us a line.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On October 30, 2020, Fox canceled this delayed drama citing rising production costs due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series finale aired on November 30, 2020, after a total of 10 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Clearly, this production seemed somewhat doomed from the start, but adding together the individual variables of slightly above average critical reviews, declining ratings over its short run, not to mention a sizable cast with an oft-played premise, there is little wonder that this show did not survive after everything that appeared to plague its path to airing. Plus, CPU! remains uninterested; not even those with the filthiest, guiltiest penchants for this kind of TV mentioned this series once. We can’t say that’s very rich.

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Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, Will Forte, more star in exclusive The Great  North teaser from Bob's Burgers creators | EW.com

THE GREAT NORTH, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: February 14, 2021, with special preview scheduled for January 3, 2021

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8:30/7:30c

WHO: The voices of Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, Megan Mullally, Paul Rust, Aparna Nancherla, Will Forte, Dulcé Sloan

WHAT: The animated comedy follows the Alaskan adventures of the Tobin family, as single dad Beef does his best to keep his weird bunch of kids close, especially as the artistic dreams of his only daughter, Judy, lead her away from the family fishing boat and into the glamorous world of the local mall.

Teaser trailer available at Fox’s YouTube Channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox is also going hog-wild this year with upping its animation game. Still, this animated entry shows more possibility than other new selections, even without a trailer to more fully and thoroughly evaluate it. First, the voice cast contains one of the funniest married couples on the planet in Nick Offerman and Megan Mullaly, who people might know from shows like Parks & Recreation and Will & Grace, respectively. On top of that, the setting is Alaska, and the premise feels a bit more original and fresh, even as it could also be the cartoon version of Northern Exposure. All of the above is enough to warrant a tiny look-see but no promises from the not-so-great north.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Ahead of its premiere, on June 22, 2020, Fox renewed this animated sitcom for a second season. There is no widely publicized word regarding how many episodes have been ordered for either season.

CPU! STATUS: The teaser trailer has been reviewed, but the thirty available seconds were inconclusive. Still, I think it’s a safe bet to say that fans of Bob’s Burgers will probably find something to like about this one. And the stellar voice cast is really why we’re enticed to give The Great North a gander more than a goose, eh?

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New Animated Series Housebroken Coming to Fox Sunday Lineup

HOUSEBROKEN, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: The voices of Lisa Kudrow, Clea Duvall, Nat Faxon, Sharon Horgan, Will Forte, Tony Hale, Jason Mantzoukas, Sam Richardson, Bresha Webb, Greta Lee

WHAT: The animated comedy explores human dysfunction and neurosis through a group of neighborhood animals who live in the suburbs.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox can’t help itself when producing all of its adult animation; I think the network is more addicted to it than the viewing public, or maybe they are beginning to shop around for the next The Simpsons, since we all know that the clock eventually has to run out for our yellow, Springfield-bound family at some point. Still, in a world besieged by a global pandemic that requires social distancing, animation might become a booming industry in this current TV landscape, since drawing/animating and voice acting can be done in a fairly isolated manner. Either way, the only hesitancy here comes from the fact that it’s a show about anthropomorphic animals being neurotic. Yet, the voice cast listed is stellar; I feel confident that the erstwhile Phoebe from Friends, Madame Kudrow herself, could achieve peak-level neurosis, whatever animal she ends up voicing. Also, several of our resident Couch Potatoes, your Chief among them, follow the Friends when we can. Two thumbs partway up in careful anticipation!

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Kenan Thompson's Comedy 'The Kenan Show' Lands Series Order At NBC –  Deadline

THE KENAN SHOW, KENAN, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Kenan Thompson (Saturday Night Live), Andy Garcia (Ocean’s Eleven), Punam Patel (Special)

WHAT: The single-camera comedy follows a newly widowed dad determined to be everything for his kids while begrudgingly letting his persistent father-in-law become more involved in their lives.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. While it is about time that Kenan Thompson returns to scripted TV from his long tenure as sketch comedian on Saturday Night Live, and while he is more than deserving of an eponymous comedy, we are not sure that this is the eponymous comedy that is going to keep his career going, unless his biggest fans are the generators of decent ratings to keep this sitcom afloat. This thin premise rings bells echoing My Wife & Kids, or, depending upon Kenan’s delivery, The Bernie Mac Show, but with a Xennial approach to the parental side of this equation. No trailer makes the selling difficult, but if you’re a Kenan Thompson fan and want us to reconsider, send us the messages.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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Kung Fu Video - | Stream Free

KUNG FU, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Olivia Liang (Legacies), Jon Prasida (Hiding), Shannon Dang (Sorry for Your Loss), Eddie Liu (Silicon Valley), Tzi Ma (Wu Assassins, The Man In the High Castle), Kheng Hua Tan (Marco Polo), Gavin Stenhouse (9-1-1, Allegiance), Gwendoline Yeo (American Crime)

WHAT: A quarter-life crisis causes a young Chinese-American woman to drop out of college and go on a life-changing journey to an isolated monastery in China. But when she returns to find her hometown overrun with crime and corruption, she uses her martial arts skills and Shaolin values to protect her community and bring criminals to justice… all while searching for the assassin who killed her Shaolin mentor and is now targeting her. Inspired by the original series created by Ed Spielman.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The uniqueness and originality of bringing martial arts and associated cultural principles to the small screen inspires this hesitant pick-up, even though a few properties of similar ilk have been popping up here and there on streamers in recent years. This new drama could be riveting, or it could be hokey, but the question, I think, that we really have to seek an answer for here is how many of our Couch Potatoes, Couch Potatoes adjacent, and Couch Potatoes Unite! listeners need a martial arts show in their lives? It is a serialized drama, so the success will probably ride upon how well the cast and the production team can execute everything (as it usually does). A trailer would be helpful, but a slightly fresh twist on an old premise certainly appeals.

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NBC Announces Christoper Meloni's Law & Order: Organized Crime Will  Premiere This Fall | PEOPLE.com

LAW & ORDER: ORGANIZED CRIME, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 10/9c

WHO: Christopher Meloni (Law & Order: SVU)

WHAT: Elliot Stabler returns to the NYPD to battle organized crime after a devastating personal loss. However, the city and police department have changed dramatically in the decade he’s been away, and he must adapt to a criminal justice system in the midst of its own moment of reckoning. Throughout the series, we will follow Stabler’s journey to find absolution and rebuild his life, while leading a new elite task force that is taking apart the city’s most powerful criminal syndicates one by one. 

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass For Now. The Law & Order franchise has been suggested for podcast dissection via the CPU! request line, so the return of Elliott Stabler (even this non-procedural loving, non-Law & Order watching viewer knows who he is!) only inspires us to wonder just how many spin-offs our potential L&O panel would want to cover. Given the popularity of SVU, I am guessing all of them. Still, this panel is deep in the planning stages and will require a moderator team. If you want us to get to it faster – or to be a moderator – drop us a line!

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Mr. Mayor (TV Series 2021– ) - IMDb

MR. MAYOR, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: January 7, 2021

TIME SLOT: Thursdays, 8/7c

WHO: Ted Danson (The Good Place), Bobby Moynihan (SNL), Holly Hunter (Top of the Lake, Saving Grace)

WHAT: A single-cam comedy centering around a wealthy businessman (Danson) who runs for mayor of Los Angeles for all the wrong reasons. Once he wins, he has to figure out what he stands for, gain the respect of his staff, and connect with his teenage daughter — all while controlling the coyote population.

Trailer available at NBC’s YouTube Channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Look. Ted Danson has at least earned a “check it out” sort of watch for his string of good TV, including Cheers and, most recently, The Good Place. And, frankly, I really need more information about these coyotes. A trailer would be so helpful here, but the coyote factor intrigues just about as much as the presence of the erstwhile Sam Malone aka Michael Goodman. This premise could very well flop faster than a fish out of its bowl, but a coyote out of its natural habitat and a smooth-talking Mr. Danson? Keeping an open mind seems wise.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. The trailer produces much less hesitancy, owing to the presence of Vella Lovell from Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Ted Danson doing his best Ted Danson (somewhere between Sam Malone and Michael the Ex-Demon), and Holly Hunter playing someone seemingly unhinged and totally hilarious with some great potential chemistry with Mr. Mayor Danson. Paired with Tina Fey and Robert Carlock’s eye for quick and zany wit (see also: 30 Rock, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), and this CP is more excitedly veering toward a solid Pick Up rather than a Hesitant(ly) Pick Up. Like LeVar Burton says, though, you don’t have to take my word for that, Mr. Mayor. Watch the trailer; see for yourself!

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NEXT': TV Review | Hollywood Reporter

NEXT, Fox

WHO: John Slattery (Mad Men), Eve Harlow (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Michael Mosley (Sirens), Jason Butler Harner (Ozark), Elizabeth Cappuccino (Jessica Jones), Fernanda Andrade, Aaron Moten, Gerardo Celasco, Evan Whitten

WHAT: A Silicon Valley pioneer discovers that one of his own creations — a powerful A.I. — might spell global catastrophe, and teams up with a cybercrime agent to fight a villain unlike anything we’ve ever seen — one whose greatest weapon against us is ourselves.  

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Oh sure, science fiction revolving around sentient artificial intelligence has been done before and has been arguably done to death. From The Terminator to Person of Interest, from 2001: A Space Odyssey (and its sequel, 2010) to Westworld, the world will never want for the fear that robots will someday turn against us, as humans attempt to play God by creating them in the first place. What makes this upcoming series potentially compelling TV is that, first, it is being billed as an event (read: limited) series, giving it a theoretically tight number of episodes within which to tell its story. Second, the culprit AI is a clear homage to Amazon’s Alexa product, which should add an element of real-world suspension of disbelief to this science fiction sub-genre. Plus, John Slattery is always a fun guy to watch on the small screen. Amazon’s already taking over the world – why shouldn’t its calming AI Alexa, named Iliza in this series, do the same and then turn on us all? What would happen if it did? Nothing good can come of this, that’s what we know from stories like it, but the premise and devices used here definitely intrigue the mind around this oft-employed story concept, so much so that we want to know what’s neXt.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! On October 30, 2020, Fox canceled this delayed drama citing rising production costs due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series finale aired on December 22, 2020, after a total of 10 episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception was above average for this one and done series, but it never found an audience. It’s too bad, really, but this CP can’t help but wonder if being cooped up at home for months on end due to a global pandemic, where technology is getting smarter and better, and where one would hope it wouldn’t turn on the people operating it, probably influenced non-interest in this series; after all, sometimes timing is everything in the TV biz. Hoping that it did not end on a cliffhanger, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster and voice some feelings, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. It’s the “NEXT” logical course of action, naturally.

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The Republic of Sarah (2020): Pilot Preview - PRIMETIMER

THE REPUBLIC OF SARAH, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Stella Baker (Tell Me Your Secrets), Luke Mitchell (Blindspot), Megan Follows (Reign), Izabella Alvarez (Westworld), Nia Holloway (Hawaii Five-0), Hope Lauren (Awkward, Supergirl), Landry Bender (Fuller House, Looking for Alaska), Ian Duff (New Amsterdam), Forrest Goodluck (The Miseducation of Cameron Post)

WHAT: Faced with the destruction of her town at the hands of a greedy mining company, rebellious high school teacher Sarah Cooper utilizes an obscure cartographical loophole to declare independence. Now Sarah must lead a young group of misfits as they attempt to start their own country from scratch.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reviewer needs a trailer for this one. Though the CW motivates many of our Couch Potatoes’ personal TV-watching choices with the network’s attempts at giving all types of fare a chance, this premise feels a bit hollow and possibly precariously played for farce or pedantically played for social commentary. Without a way to further vet the concept visually, and with a cast that doesn’t, by itself, excite, we are going to leave this one aside, regardless of whatever republic for which it stands. As always, if buzz or steam generates around this new drama (is it a drama?), we will reconsider our position, but for now, we pledge allegiance to other TV.

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Small Fortune | NBCUniversal Media Village

SMALL FORTUNE, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Lil Rel Howery

WHAT: Based on the U.K. format, the unscripted series features teams of three friends who compete in the tiniest of challenges for a chance to win big money. From a shrunk down Oval Office (“The Waste Wing”) to a mini Arc de Triomphe (“Arc de Wee-Omph”), each team must prove their skills on playing fields that have been squeezed down to the size of a dollhouse. Challenges will require considerable dexterity and intense focus because with games this small, there’s no room for error as the slightest miscalculation or tremble may result in elimination.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. CPU! does not cover game shows in any of our formats, but as this show is new this year, we’ll keep an eye on it for the duration of the season. I would guess our coverage ranks as far less than even a small fortune, but we like scripted TV better here at CPU!

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Superman & Lois' Preview: Tyler Hoechlin & Bitsie Tulloch First Look |  TVLine

SUPERMAN & LOIS, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: February 23, 2021

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Tyler Hoechlin (Supergirl), Elizabeth Tulloch (Supergirl), Dylan Walsh (Nip/Tuck), Emmanuelle Chriqui (The Passage, Entourage), Erik Valdez (General Hospital), Jordan Elsass (Little Fires Everywhere), Alexander Garfin, Wolé Parks (All American, The Vampire Diaries), Inde Navarrette (13 Reasons Why)

WHAT: The Arrowverse spin-off follows the world’d most famous superhero and comic books’ most famous journalist as they deal with all the stress, pressures and complexities that come with being working parents in today’s society.

Teaser trailer available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Enthusiastically Pick Up. As an Arrowverse spin-off, this is an automatic Pick Up for our CPU! “DCTU Series” panel. Considering that our panel has expressed consistent excitement and appreciation, as well as glowing praise, for each appearance of Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch in recent Arrowverse mid-season crossovers, I would say that this latest incarnation in the “Superman” annals will probably be at least somewhat popular with our panel of DC enthusiasts, with or without an available trailer. To this we say, up, up, and away!

PANDEMIC EDIT: The trailer has been reviewed. IT CHANGES NOTHING! MORE ENTHUSIASM!

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Supermarket Sweep host Leslie Jones on game show reboot, filming in COVID |  EW.com

SUPERMARKET SWEEP, ABC

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Host Leslie Jones (SNL)

WHAT: The competition show revival follows three teams of two as they battle it out using their grocery shopping skills and knowledge of merchandise to win big cash prizes.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. See the above note about game shows and new TV. (We don’t cover them, except their renewal/cancellation prospects in their first year. Oh wait, I gave it away. Rats).

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STATUS: Eight episodes have aired as of the publication of this post. There is no widely publicized word regarding how many episodes have been ordered nor has an announcement yet been made regarding renewal or cancellation.

CPU! STATUS: It’s still a game show, right?

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NBC Orders Jimmy Fallon-Inspired 'That's My Jam' Music & Variety Game Show  – Deadline

THAT’S MY JAM, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHAT: Inspired by the musical segments on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the hourlong competition series will be infused with Fallon’s one-of-a-kind comedic style, feel-good energy, and a carousel of his classic and brand-new music-based games, featuring a new group of celebrities each week.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We also don’t cover variety shows or shows featuring celebrity competition (see also: The Masked Singer). That isn’t to say we won’t be watching. We just won’t be talking about the fact that we’re watching. Though Daniel Radcliffe should get himself a slot on this show. His rendition of “Alphabet Rap” was pretty dope.

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NBC Orders Hybrid Series 'True Story' Starring Ed Helms & Randall Park From  Warner Horizon – Deadline

TRUE STORY, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Hosts Ed Helms (The Office) and Randall Park (Fresh Off the Boat)

WHAT: In the hybrid alternative-scripted series, based on the Australian hit, everyday Americans sit down with Helms and Park to share their most extraordinary and unbelievably true stories for the first time. As the stories unfold, events are humorously brought to life by a star-studded cast of comedians and actors in heightened, dramatized re-enactments of cinematic proportions.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. What is “alternative-scripted?” This sounds like an experiment requiring a review by our resident TV lovers and Couch Potatoes, but I am not sure how we would make it work on our podcast. Change my mind, though, if you disagree. I think it’s got potential, but it also sounds like Whose Line Is It Anyway? crossed with This Is Your Life, so I am on the struggle bus. If you think we should assemble a panel to podcast about it, contact us!

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PHOTO] 'Walker': Jared Padalecki in Texas Ranger Uniform for CW Drama |  TVLine

WALKER, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: January 21, 2021

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 8/7c

WHO: Jared Padalecki (Supernatural), Lindsey Morgan (The 100), Keegan Allen (Pretty Little Liars), Mitch Pileggi (Supernatural, The X-Files), Molly Hagan (iZombie, Jane the Virgin), Coby Bell (The Gifted), Jeff Pierre (Once Upon a Time, Beyond)

WHAT: The Walker, Texas Ranger reboot follows Cordell Walker (Padalecki), a widower and father of two with his own moral code, who returns to Austin after being undercover for two years, only to discover there’s harder work to be done at home. He’ll attempt to reconnect with his children, navigate clashes with his family, and find unexpected common ground with his new partner (one of the first women in Texas Rangers history), while growing increasingly suspicious about the circumstances surrounding his wife’s death.

Teaser available here.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. I am not sure how many of our viewers and listeners, i.e. our resident Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes-adjacent, watched the original Walker, Texas Ranger, starring Chuck Norris. If you did, please comment below. The Chief Couch Potato and author of these annual progress reports never did; westerns aren’t quite in the wheelhouse, and I was never a fan of Master Norris beyond a bemused appreciation of his existence. Yet, Jared Padalecki is/was Sam Winchester, and he’s earned the trust of at least six of us for 15 years. I think it’s worth seeing what he does with the role – he could just elevate it. Or, he could make Chuck Norris cry. Wait, does Chuck Norris cry? Let’s just hope it doesn’t come to tears, or we’ll walk(er) right out the door.

What? No? That doesn’t work either? I’ll see myself out again.

PANDEMIC EDIT: The teaser has been reviewed. Meh. It does not provide much in the way of any kind of information that could not be gleaned from a simple knowledge of anything having to do with “Walker” and “Texas Ranger.” Still, JarPad is in it, and after years of stellar reliability on Supernatural and Gilmore Girls, he deserves at least one watch for fair chance’s and judgment’s sake (and in this CP’s opinion, he’s far more easy on the eyes than Chuck Norris, but to each their own).

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Weakest Link' Recap: NBC Premiere Hosted by Jane Lynch — Reviews | TVLine

WEAKEST LINK, NBC

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 10/9c

WHO: Host Jane Lynch

WHAT: The reboot “will deliver the fast-paced and quick-witted pillars of the original British format created by the BBC with a few modern twists,” per the network. “The hybrid game show sees contestants answer general knowledge questions to bank prize money across multiple rounds. At the end of each round, the contestants vote out who they perceive to be the Weakest Link remaining.”

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reboot is the weakest link. Goodbye.

(Look, we love Jane Lynch as much as the next person, but she can’t possibly be nearly as withering as Anne Robinson without sounding like Sue Sylvester. Also, it’s another game show….which is probably the en vogue way to fill empty airing slots when TV production has been shut down for months by a pandemic. You know I’m right.)

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STATUS: Ten episodes have aired as of the publication of this post. There is no widely publicized word regarding how many episodes have been ordered nor has an announcement yet been made regarding renewal or cancellation.

CPU! STATUS: It’s still the weakest link (and a game show). Goodbye.

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NBC Announces Young Rock TV Series About Dwayne Johnson's Life [TCA 2020]  /Film

YOUNG ROCK, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Dwayne Johnson

WHAT: The single-cam comedy chronicles the formative childhood years of Dwayne Johnson, aka The Rock.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. The audience for this show is going to have to *really* love the Rock. The Rock is fine. The Rock is nice. The Rock is the voice of Maui in Moana. Do we need a sitcom about his life story? Without a trailer, I’m thinking that the answer is no, but if you think we’re not giving due deference to Mr. Johnson, ring that bell (or, just send us an email, or comment down below).

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Connecting' Pulled From NBC Schedule, Final Episodes to Air Online - Variety

CONNECTING, NBC

WHO: Parvesh Cheena, Keith Powell

WHAT: Set against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the series follows the lives of a group of friends who try to stay connected via videotelephony as they navigate through the various nuances of life in a lockdown.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This “COVID era” series was announced late and canceled too quickly to be enticing; plus, Toofer from 30 Rock is the only familiar presence, as delightful a presence as he might be. It’s not even worth the look, given how quickly NBC tossed it from the main network lineup to its streaming outlets.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! In November 2020, NBC canceled this new entry and burned off remaining episodes on Peacock and the NBC streaming apps. The series finale aired on November 16, 2020, after a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: The reviews were generally favorable, but the audience was decidedly anemic, and it’s fairly obvious why. In a pandemic-driven quarantine/isolation/shutdown/slowed world order due to a contagious virus, people want to go to there, i.e. TV, for escape, not to watch a Zoom or equivalent conversation play out on their television screens. THAT’S WHAT WE’RE DOING RIGHT NOW EVERYDAY – those who work in offices, education, and similar, anyway. Too soon, Peacock Party, too soon.

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Introducing the stars from CBC's Trickster | CBC Television

TRICKSTER, CW

PREMIERE DATE: January 12, 2021

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Joel Oulette

WHAT: A Canadian series adaptation of Eden Robinson’s supernatural novel Son of a Trickster.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. A preview of a trailer shows a somewhat solid supernatural premise situated within Canadian indigenous cultures. The series is short and is being given American network treatment in a time of COVID, so we’re always happy to dip into horror/fantasy waters, even if it’s just a test.

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The following is a link to all premiere dates for shows covered beyond the main networks: 

http://www.metacritic.com/feature/tv-premiere-dates

Non-Broadcast Network Pick-Ups

Crossing Swords (Hulu): It’s an animated spoof of “Game of Thrones.” It’s not very well reviewed, but maybe we need the catharsis. Plus, Hulu already renewed it for a second season, so something must be right about it. (Released June 12, 2020)

The latest stop-motion-animated comedy from the team behind Robot Chicken is a spoof of Game of Thrones (and similar projects) featuring the voices of Nicholas Hoult, Seth Green, Tony Hale, Luke Evans, Adam Pally, and Wendi McClendon-Covey.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Hulu renewed this animated spoof on June 18, 2020. The Season 1 finale was released on December 21, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Love, Victor (Hulu): It has already been requested for the podcast and may feature as part of a future Pride month seriesespecially since it was already renewed for a second season. (Released June 17, 2020)

Originally developed for Disney+ before moving to the more adult-oriented Hulu, this 10-episode spin-off from the 2018 feature film Love, Simon (itself an adaptation of a YA novel by Becky Albertalli) centers on a new character, Victor (Michael Cimino), a gay teen who is adjusting to life in a new city and at a new high school. The film’s star (and titular Simon), Nick Robinson, will narrate the series, and the cast also includes Sophia Bush, James Martinez, and Ana Ortiz.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Hulu renewed this drama in August 2020. The first season consisting of ten episodes was released on June 17, 2020.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release and may feature as part of a future Pride month series.

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Perry Mason (HBO): This reboot is critically acclaimed, and though initially billed as a miniseries, it has been renewed for a second season(Premiered June 21, 2020)

Matthew Rhys (The Americans) stars as the titular criminal defense attorney in this remake of the classic TV drama that aired in various forms, most famously as an Emmy-winning series on CBS from 1957-66 (with Raymond Burr in the title role). HBO’s version is also based on the Los Angeles-set novels and stories by author Erle Stanley Gardner, though the time period is now 1931, when Mason is trying to eke out a living as a private investigator and gets drawn into a case involving a child kidnapping. John Lithgow, Tatiana Maslany, Shea Whigham, Stephen Root, Nate Corddry, Lili Taylor, Robert Patrick, and Juliet Rylance also star.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! HBO renewed this remake in July 2020. The Season 1 finale aired on August 9, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Brave New World (Peacock): Though the reviews are mixed, why not take a look at a small screen adaptation of a dystopian novel to match our real-life dystopia? The book is a must-read (along with “1984”). (Released July 15, 2020)

After a lengthy journey to the small screen that saw the property change networks twice (it was previously intended for Syfy and then USA), this series adaptation of Aldous Huxley’s classic 1932 novel set in a theoretically utopian (but in actuality more dystopian) future London is the highest-profile original show available on the public launch day for Comcast’s new streaming service. (As with other Peacock originals, you’ll need to be a “Premium” member to watch it, though Comcast and Cox cable subscribers will get a free premium subscription.) Harry Lloyd, Jessica Brown Findlay, and Alden Ehrenreich head a cast that also includes Demi Moore, Kylie Bunbury, and Hannah John-Kamen. The adaptation, a co-production with the UK’s Sky, comes from David Wiener, who previously wrote for Homecoming and The Killing.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! NBC canceled this adaptation in October 2020. The entire series was released on July 15, 2020, with a total of nine episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception was middling to below average for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Peacock. I believe that this series suffered from the same general barriers as Fox’s NEXT: the globe is already cooped up at home for months on end due to a global pandemic, where technology is getting smarter and better, and where everything feels modestly apocalyptic and somewhat totalitarian in a socio-political context. The book is important, however, despite some of its problematic contextual themes arising from the time period in which it was written; hoping that it did not end on a cliffhanger, and knowing the end of the novel, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster and voice some feelings, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Be part of our brave new world, why don’t you?

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Cursed (Netflix): It’s already been requested for the podcast, and, really, who doesn’t love an alternative take on the Arthurian legend? Though it will be probably be canceled after 2 seasons (who gets that joke?).  (Released July 17, 2020)

Katherine Langford stars in a gritty take on the Arthurian legend told from the perspective of Nimue, the Lady of the Lake.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on July 17, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release and will come to CPU! sometime in the future; if you would like to join this budding panel, please feel free to contact us!

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Muppets Now (Disney+): Muppets. Like you have to ask. (Premiered July 31, 2020)

The first new Muppets title for Disney’s streaming service is a six-episode, short-form “unscripted” series featuring classic Muppets characters. Non-Muppet guest stars include Aubrey Plaza, RuPaul, Linda Cardellini, and Seth Rogen (who, admittedly, might be part Muppet).

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on September 4, 2020, with a total of six episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Star Trek: Lower Decks (CBS All Access): This is an automatic pick-up for our “Star Trek 50+ Series,” but the critics have not been kind to it, even though CBS has already ordered production on a second season. (Premiered August 6, 2020)

CBS All Access expands its growing Star Trek universe with the first animated series in the franchise in 46 years. Lower Decks comes from Rick and Morty writer Mike McMahan (who also co-created Hulu’s just-debuted Solar Opposites) and centers on a group of low-ranking crew members aboard one of Starfleet’s least-important ships, the U.S.S. Cerritos. (It’s a comedy, in case you were wondering.) The voice cast includes Noel Wells, Jerry O’Connell, Tawny Newsome, Eugene Cordero, Dawnn Lewis, and Jack Quaid. A second season has already been ordered.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! CBS ordered two seasons in its first series order. The Season 1 finale aired on October 8, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: This series will be folded into our Star Trek 50+ Series, though preliminary reviews from our resident Trekkers yielded roughly the same level of tepidity as the critical reaction.

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Lovecraft Country (HBO): This has also been quickly requested for the podcast. With Jordan Peele and JJ Abrams at the helm, and a combination of social commentary as well as historical commentary about notorious racist HP Lovecraft (who also wrote about lovable monsters like Cthulu), this is being described as a must-watch and a must-discuss. (Premiered August 16, 2020)

Producers Jordan Peele and J.J. Abrams join forces for a series adaptation of Matt Ruff’s novel of the same name, an allegorical horror tale set in segregated 1950s America where three Black Americans on a road trip to find a missing person must overcome both human racists and Lovecraftian supernatural forces. Jonathan Majors, Jurnee Smollett, Aunjanue Ellis, Jada Harris, Courtney B. Vance, and Michael Kenneth Williams head the cast.

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STATUS: The Season 1 aired on October 18, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage shortly after its release; we already have a full panel waiting in the wings, so this show will be covered on the podcast in the future for sure!

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Raised by Wolves (HBO Max): Science fiction with contributions by Ridley Scott! The “Alien” man himself! (Releases September 3, 2020)

Originally developed for TNT, this HBO Max original sci-fi series marks the American TV directorial debut for Ridley Scott. He directs the first two episodes of a 10-episode season set on a mysterious planet where androids are tasked with raising human children in a colony that is being torn apart by religious differences. The series comes from screenwriter Aaron Guzikowski (Prisoners) and stars Travis Fimmel (Vikings), Amanda Collin, and Abubakar Salim.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! HBO renewed this sci-fi thriller in September 2020. The Season 1 finale aired on October 1, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Away (Netflix): Science fiction dreaming of trips to Mars. (Releases September 4, 2020)

Jason Katims (Friday Night Lights), Matt Reeves (Felicity), and Andrew Hinderaker (Penny Dreadful) combine for a 10-episode Netflix drama series depicting the first manned mission to Mars, based loosely on a recent Esquire story by Chris Jones. Hilary Swank heads the cast as the astronaut in charge of the year-long international mission, while Josh Charles plays her husband (and NASA engineer) left behind on Earth to care for their teenage daughter. Ed Zwick directs the pilot.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! The series was released on September 4, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. Netflix canceled it in October 2020.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception hovered starkly in the middle for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Netflix. The consensus of opinion seems to focus on the fact that this series relied on science fiction tropes too heavily while allowing its cast to elevate what could have been something rather by rote. Though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster before doing completely “away” with it (ahem), email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

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Noughts + Crosses (Peacock): Alternative history stories are popular around here, and the timely social commentary could be ham-fisted, but it could also be a jolt when and where a jolt is needed. (Premieres September 4, 2020)

American premiere of the BBC-produced YA series based on Malorie Blackman’s novel set in the present day of an alternate world where Africa colonized Europe and enslaved its white citizens.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released in the USA on Peacock on September 4, 2020, with a total of six episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Power Book II: Ghost (Starz): The original “Power” series has been on the request list for sometime, so the possibility of making this a podcast discussion series for CPU! is powerfully high. (Premieres September 6, 2020)

The first of four planned spinoffs from the recently concluded Starz original series Power stars Mary J. Blige, Method Man, Sherri Saurn, Shane Johnson, Naturi Naughton, and Michael Rainey Jr, and picks up the action just days after the events of the Power finale. Subsequent episodes will air Sundays at 8p.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Starz renewed this sequel spin-off series in September 2020. Nine of ten ordered episodes have aired as of the publication of this post, with the series finale slated to air on January 3, 2021.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Woke (Hulu): Lamorne Morris meets a hybrid animated/live action vehicle addressing some timely social commentary; we imagine some of the Winston magic will seep into the proceedings. (Releases September 9, 2020)

Lamorne Morris (New Girl) stars in this timely comedy about a Black cartoonist living in San Francisco who has an encounter with cops that changes his life. The semi-autobiographical series from real-life cartoonist Keith Knight (The K Chronicles) mixes some animated sequences with live action. All eight episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Hulu renewed this hybrid comedy on November 17, 2020. Season 1 was released on September 9, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Julie and the Phantoms (Netflix): It’s musical and carries with it, at least if the premise synopsis is read right, a slight satricial bend – it could also be Netflix’s answer to “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist,” but we’ll never know until we try. (Premieres September 10, 2020)

High School Musical director Kenny Ortega returns with a new musical series for Netflix about a high school singer who rekindles her love of music after being approached by the ghosts of three dead ’90s pop stars. It’s based on a Brazilian series.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on September 10, 2020, with a total of nine episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Third Day (HBO, Miniseries): The plot premise is confusing yet intriguing and original; plus, there is a fine cast in this British import. Everything kind of makes you want to watch it, including imagining a trailer in your head for this sort of story. (Premieres September 14, 2020)

Rescheduled from May 2020. Co-produced by the UK’s Sky, this six-part limited series is divided into two sections: “Summer” and “Winter.” The former tells the story of Sam (Jude Law), who finds himself drawn to a mysterious and isolated island off the British coast whose inhabitants are determined to preserve their traditions “at any cost,” while the latter centers on Helen (Naomie Harris), whose arrival on the same island throws its future into question. Emily Watson, Katherine Waterston, and Paddy Considine also star.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on October 19, 2020, with a total of six episodes and one intervening special. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Ratched (Netflix): This unlikely “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” prequel created by Ryan Murphy has already been requested for the podcast…when no one has even seen it yet... Plus, it’s already been renewed for a second season… (Releases September 18, 2020)

Already renewed for a second season, the latest Netflix series from Ryan Murphy serves as a prequel to the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (and Ken Kesey’s novel), with Sarah Paulson starring as a younger version of the character Nurse Mildred Ratched (a role originated by Oscar-winner Louise Fletcher in the movie). The creepy 1947-set drama also stars Cynthia Nixon, Judy Davis, Sharon Stone, Corey Stoll, Finn Wittrock, and Vincent D’Onofrio.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Netflix ordered two seasons upon picking up this Ryan Murphy entry. Season 1 was released on September 18, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: As above, this series was requested for podcast coverage before its release; if you would like to join the seeded panel, get a hold of us!

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Utopia (Amazon Prime): The premise gives this reviewer chills; after all, we have a lot of comic book fans in our ranks, some of whom also like thrillers/horror. I’m guessing it’s a Utopian choice. (Releases September 25, 2020)

This long-gestating conspiracy thriller—an adaptation of a 2013 UK series that was first developed for HBO as a David Fincher project beginning in 2014, only for the network and the director to drop out over budget concerns—comes from author Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl), who also serves as showrunner. The story revolves around a group of obsessive comic book fans who find themselves targeted by a shadowy government organization after they gain possession of an underground graphic novel that depicts a conspiracy that may not be entirely fictional. John Cusack, Sasha Lane, Rainn Wilson, Dan Byrd, Desmin Borges, and Jessica Rothe star.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Amazon canceled this complex thriller in November 2020. Season 1 was released on September 25, 2020, with a total of eight episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception ran in the middle to below average for this one and done series; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on Amazon Prime. The consensus of opinion noted the violence and the timing of dealing with governmental conspiracy in an era where the effectiveness of operating governments is seriously in question, in the USA and beyond. Still, some of our resident Couch Potatoes mentioned this one positively (while also referring to the ample gore), so, though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram to discuss whether “Utopia” is the best name of a TV series of such a dark nature.

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Monsterland (Hulu): A cast of some CPU! favorites combined with some fertile fantasy and horror potential makes this one seem like an easy pick-up. (Releases October 2, 2020)

Hulu’s eight-episode anthology adapts short stories from Nathan Ballingrud’s book North American Lake Monsters. The ensemble includes Taylor Schilling, Mike Colter, Kaitlyn Dever, Hamish Linklater, Bill Camp, Kelly Marie Tran, Jonathan Tucker, and Nicole Beharie. All episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on October 2, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The Good Lord Bird (Showtime, Miniseries): The trailer intrigues, the cast is dynamite, and these kinds of historical stories need to be told and retold. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Reschuled from spring and then summer. Albert Hughes (replacing Anthony Hemingway, who left the project due to scheduling conflicts) directs this delayed eight-episode adaptation of the award-winning novel by James McBride about 19th century abolitionist John Brown, played by Ethan Hawke. Daveed Diggs (playing Frederick Douglass), Lodge 49‘s Wyatt Russell, David Morse, Steve Zahn, Orlando Jones, and Ellar Coltrane also star.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on November 15, 2020, with a total of seven episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Walking Dead: The World Beyond (AMC): “The Walking Dead” has also been on the request list for a time. Will the potential panel want to veer into the franchise of zombie spin-offs? We’ll ask them when we catch up to it, which will probably be in the World Beyond. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Rescheduled from April 2020. The latest Walking Dead spinoff follows a new set of characters who are all part of the generation born after the start of the zombie menace. The series is designed to run for just two seasons unlike the other Walking Dead shows, which refuse to end.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2; however, Season 2 will be the final season! AMC ordered two seasons for this series when it greenlit the show. The Season 1 finale aired on November 29, 2020, with a total of ten episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Soulmates (AMC): An intriguing science fiction premise meets AMC’s willingness to go wacky. We think it’s a match made in heaven. (Premieres October 5, 2020)

Recently renewed for a 2nd season, this six-episode anthology series from Will Bridges and Brett Goldstein (adapting their own short film For Life) is set 15 years in the future, when new technology allows every person on the planet to know the identity of their soulmate. Each episode will find a different set of characters dealing with the repercussions of this breakthrough in a different way. Season 1 stars include Shamier Anderson, Malin Akerman, Betsy Brandt, Kingsley Ben-Adir, David Costabile, Charlie Heaton, and Sarah Snook.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! AMC renewed this series in August 2020 ahead of its premiere. The Season 1 finale aired on November 9, 2020, with a total of six episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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The Right Stuff (Disney+): Television remake of an Oscar-winning film about the American space program, with Disney’s funding. It potentially has all the right stuff. (Premieres October 9, 2020)

Originally developed for Nat Geo before moving over to Disney’s streaming service, The Right Stuff is a new drama series adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s nonfiction book chronicling the early days of America’s space program. (That book, of course, was previously adapted into the terrific Oscar-winning 1983 film of the same name.) Patrick J. Adams, Jake McDorman, Patrick Fischler, Colin O’Donoghue, James Lafferty, Aaron Staton, and Michael Trotter head the cast. Season 1 focuses in depth on the seven astronauts in the Mercury program, and potential future seasons would cover other stories and historical figures. Two episodes stream today, with the remaining six hours arriving one per week on Fridays.

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STATUS: The Season 1 finale aired on November 20, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Marvel’s Helstrom (Hulu): Marvel meets horror? I can’t imagine many of the CPU! faithful NOT watching this. (Premieres October 16, 2020)

Marvel’s latest TV venture is a horror series starring Elizabeth Marvel (no relation) as the institutionalized mother of two adult children (Tom Austen, Sydney Lemmon) with superpowers who moonlight as demon hunters, drawing on their backgrounds as the offspring of Satan. All 10 episodes stream today.

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STATUS: Officially canceled! Season 1 was released on October 16, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. Hulu canceled the series on December 14, 2020.

CPU! STATUS: Critical reception proved quite negative for this Marvel Hulu entry; audience reception is difficult to gauge, since it appeared on what is essentially the Disney Adult Streaming Division. The consensus of opinion noted that the show was dull, formulaic, and uninteresting; the Chief CP took a sneak peek at the premiere and found it to be largely uninspired. We do have a lot of comic book-oriented resident Couch Potatoes, however, so, though in no hurry to do so, I think CPU! will still take a look someday, if not anytime soon. If you want us to take a look at it faster, email us at couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmailcom or get at us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. No jokes this time.

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The Queen’s Gambit (Netflix): There are some percolating Couch Potatoes requesting this chess-flavored miniseries. (Releases October 23, 2020)

Anya Taylor-Joy stars as a young chess prodigy in a six-episode adaptation of Walter Tevis’ novel from acclaimed screenwriter turned director Scott Frank.

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STATUS: The series was released on October 23, 2020, with a total of seven episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Undoing (HBO): Lots of Water Cooler coverage and talk on and offline intrigues – plus, my Chromecast really keeps pushing this one…a conspiracy I wish to undo. (Premieres October 25, 2020)

Rescheduled from May 2020Big Little Lies creator David E. Kelley returns to HBO—and reunites with star Nicole Kidman—for a six-episode adaptation of Jean Hanff Korelitz’s 2014 novel You Should Have Known, a psychological thriller about a therapist, wife, and mother (Kidman) who, on the cusp of a major success, finds herself plunged into a crisis triggered by a violent death. Susanne Bier (The Night Manager) directs every episode of the series, which also stars Hugh Grant, Donald Sutherland, Lily Rabe, Edgar Ramirez, and Noah Jupe.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on November 29, 2020, with a total of six episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Truth Seekers (Amazon Prime): Requested for the podcast, it’s been billed as funny – it’s a send-up of “Ghost Hunter” type vehicles and features Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. That’s a recipe for some type of success, methinks, and we’re prepared to seek the truth. (Releases October 30, 2020)

Frequent movie co-stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost reunite on the small screen for the first time since Spaced with a supernatural comedy series that they co-created with James Serafinowicz and Nat Saunders. They star as employees of a broadband provider who balance out their boring day jobs with a more interesting sideline: paranormal investigations, which they share with the public online. Malcolm McDowell and Emma D’Arcy co-star.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on October 30, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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Two Weeks to Live (HBO Max): It comes down to the presence of Maisie Williams, why this character is a doomsday prepper, and how that affects the overall premise (if at all…). (Premieres November 5, 2020)

Likened by some British TV writers to Killing Eve, this darkly comedic six-episode UK import stars Game of Thrones‘ Maisie Williams as a doomsday prepper who enlists her two brothers on a mission to avenge the murder of her father. (Let’s hope she brought Needle.) Sian Clifford (Fleabag) also stars.

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STATUS: The series finale aired on October 7, 2020, with a total of six episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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I Hate Suzie (HBO Max): The British peoples love it, and why wouldn’t they WHEN ROSE TYLER IS IN IT? We’re here for Billie. (Premieres November 19, 2020)

Doctor Who‘s Billie Piper stars as a celebrity who has her phone hacked, resulting in the public exposure of graphic photos of an extramarital affair. The darkly comedic, eight-episode British series comes from Lucy Prebble, who has written for Succession. The UK press greeted the series with an enthusiastic response when it debuted on Sky in August.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on November 19, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Animaniacs (Hulu): We have baloney in our slacks and a plan to podcast both the original series and this originally-voiced reboot in the coming year, if not the coming quarter. (Premieres November 20, 2020)

The Steven Spielberg-produced 1990s animated series gets a Hulu reboot that will bring 13 new episodes today and a second season sometime in 2021. Returning characters including Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, as well as Pinky and the Brain, all voinced by the original actors.

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STATUS: Officially renewed for Season 2! Two seasons were ordered when this revival of the animated classic was given a go. Season 1 was released on November 20, 2020, with a total of thirteen episodes.

CPU! STATUS: Our Animaniacs “Looking Back to Look Forward” Series is currently in the production line and will most likely be published in 2021.

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Saved By the Bell (Peacock): In the era of reboots and sequels, this might be the one we regret the most, but enough people talk about the original Bayside gang, we’d probably be remiss in not checking it out (Premieres November 25, 2020)

Original stars Elizabeth Berkley and Mario Lopez return for a revival of the 1990s teen sitcom that is again set at Bayside High School but in the present day (albeit a fictitious version of the present day in which Mark-Paul Gosselaar’s Zack Morris is now the governor of California). New cast members include John Michael Higgins. The reboot comes from 30 Rock writer (and Great News creator) Tracey Wigfield.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on November 25, 2020, with a total of ten episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

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Selena: The Series (Netflix): This series has already been requested for podcast coverage. (Premieres November 25, 2020)

Christian Serratos (The Walking Dead) portrays the late Tejano pop star Selena Quintanilla in a two-part series dramatizing her life and career. The first part, spanning six episodes, streams today, with the remainder arriving at a later date.

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STATUS: Part One of Season 1 was released on December 4, 2020, with a total of nine episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Stand (CBS All Access, Miniseries): Stephen King allegedly wrote a new ending….but there’s already been a miniseries and a book with an original ending for decades. We might have to watch just for the comparison’s sake. (Premieres December 17, 2020)

Streaming weekly, this nine-episode adaptation of Stephen King’s epic apocalyptic novel about life in America after a devastating global pandemic (no relation) stars Alexander Skarsgård, Whoopi Goldberg, James Marsden, Amber Heard, Heather Graham, Greg Kinnear, Odessa Young, and Nat Wolff. The series, which wrapped up two years of production just before covid-19 hit, features an all-new ending written by King.

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STATUS: The series was released on October 2, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. Because this program was advertised as a miniseries, no announcement regarding renewal or cancellation is expected to be made.

CPU! STATUS: Not yet viewed.

Bridgerton (Netflix): Shonda Rimes’ first Netflix series – an answer for all those that might love “Downton Abbey” – has already been requested for podcast coverage… (Releases December 25, 2020)

Is this the next Downton Abbey? Producer Shonda Rhimes’ first Netflix series is created by Scandal‘s Chris Van Dusen, who adapts Julia Quinn’s popular novel series. The costume drama is set in London in the 1810s, where it focuses on the large and powerful Bridgerton family and other members of the city’s aristocracy. Julie Andrews, Polly Walker, Rege-Jean Page, Ruby Barker, Jonathan Bailey, Claudia Jessie, Ruth Gemmell, Luke Thompson, and Luke Newton are among the stars.

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STATUS: Season 1 was released on December 25, 2020, with a total of eight episodes. No announcement regarding renewal or cancellation has yet been made.

CPU! STATUS: Since its release, this series was requested for podcast coverage; if you would like to join the seeded panel, let us know!

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The Watch (BBC America): This long anticipated adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s “Discworld” has been on the CPU! watch list for a bit. (Premieres January 3, 2021)

Terry Pratchett’s beloved Discworld novels come to the small screen in a BBC-produced eight-episode series from Simon Allen (Das Boot). The series will be a comedic fantasy crime procedural centering on the misfit police force (aka The City Watch) of the Discworld city of Ankh-Morpork. Richard Dormer, Lara Rossi, Wendell Pierce, and Matt Berry are among the stars. Various versions of the series have been in and out of production for most of the past decade, and fans of the books have been discouraged by the BBC’s early marketing attempts (which suggested to some that the series will deviate in both tone and content from Pratchett’s work).

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WandaVision (Disney+): This long anticipated first of the MCU television train on Disney+ has been on the CPU! watch list for a bit; plus, we have a few resident podcasters already salivating over the whole schedule – if you want to be on any Disney+ MCU panels (or Star Wars panels), speak quickly! (Premieres January 15, 2021)

Disney+’s first (of many) series set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the massively budgeted WandaVision is also the most unusual Marvel series to date. Centering on the characters of Wanda/Scarlet Witch and Vision (played by Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany, reprising their big-screen roles), the six-episode series takes a self-aware approach by cycling the pair through different decades of the recent past, forcing them to adapt to a variety of classic TV tropes along the way. (Today’s 1950s-set opener, for example, was filmed in black-and-white with vintage equipment and utilizes a live studio audience to emulate the feel of an early sitcom, while a future episode will embrace the mockumentary style of The Office.) Matt Shakman directs a cast that also includes Kathryn Hahn, Teyonah Parris, Randall Park, and Kat Dennings.

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Resident Alien (SyFy): Alan Tudyk is a national treasure (#justiceforwash!), and there seems to be some potential for merry space-related science fiction comedy. It feels like the whole thing is in our residential wheelhouse. (Premieres January 27, 2021)

Alan Tudyk stars in an adaptation of the Dark Horse comic about an alien (the space kind) who crash lands on Earth and passes himself off as a country doctor. Will he choose to fit in with his neighbors, or will he pursue his original mission: killing all humans. Allice Wetterlund, Corey Reynolds, Sara Tomko, and Levi Fiehler also star.

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The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (Disney+, Miniseries): Another long anticipated MCU television entry on Disney+ also being salivated over – if you want to be on any Disney+ MCU panels (or Star Wars panels), speak quickly! (Premieres March 19, 2021)

Delayed (by the pandemic) from its original August launch window, the latest TV series in the Marvel Cinematic Universe finds Anthony Mackie (as Sam Wilson/Falcon) and Sebastian Stan (as Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier) reprising their film roles. Daniel Bruhl, Emily VanCamp, and Wyatt Russell also star in the Malcolm Spellman-guided (Empire) series, which picks up after the events of Avengers: Endgame and cost a reported $150 million to make. There are just six episodes (streaming one per week), and for now it looks like it’ll be a miniseries rather than an ongoing show, though that could change.

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Others on radar: The Lord of the Rings series in development at Amazon; The Chronicles of Narnia at Netflix; The Wheel of Time at Amazon; Conan at Amazon; The Dark Tower at Amazon; all Marvel and Star Wars TV properties in development at Disney+; the Three-Body Problem adaptation at Netflix.

-*-

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Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly!  Next week, Couch Potatoes Unite! will start the New Year 2021 with a triumphant return by our DCTU Series panel to the Water Cooler to get caught up on Season 3 of Black Lightning just in time for the return of the CWVerse (i.e. the Arrowverse, rebranded). Stay tuned for all of the electric fun!

Progress Report: Fall TV Preview and Selection for 2020-2021 Shows (2020)

At this point, the primary TV viewing season is over, the summer viewing season in all its super limited, pandemic-infused glory is wrapping up, and the calendar has struck the month of September…the fall TV season, such as it is in these pandemic-influenced times, is upon us!  Thus, it’s time to shop for new pilots! Since up-fronts were held (virtually, apparently) in May, new TV offerings by networks and some cable outlets (as well as streaming networks) have been announced. It’s time to examine them closely and choose which will be added to the extremely extended lineup covered by this blog!

Thanks to TVLine and Metacritic for helping a girl out.

*Note: with the expansion of CPU!, these initial thoughts are based upon the CPU! Chief’s assessments.  As with previous seasons, a growing number of CPU! members may find shows initially passed by the CPU! Chief and choose to review them.  CPU! readers will be informed if the show’s status changes regarding coverage as the season progresses through the handy CPU! Progress Reports, and all written reviews will be published!

**Second Note: If you haven’t already figured it out, we measure the TV year from June 1st to May 31st.

New Fall Shows B Positive

B POSITIVE, CBS

PREMIERE DATE: Fall 2020

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 8:30/7:30c

WHO: Thomas Middleditch (Silicon Valley), Annaleigh Ashford (Masters of Sex), Sara Rue (Impastor), Kether Donohue (You’re the Worst), Kamryn Kunody

WHAT: A multi-cam comedy about a therapist and newly divorced dad who is faced with finding a kidney donor when he runs into a rough-around-the-edges woman from his past who volunteers her own. Together they form an unlikely bond and begin a journey that will change both of their lives.

Teaser trailer available at TVLine.com or at CBS’ YouTube Channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Welcome to the 2020-2021 CPU! network pilot review, always full of snark and real talk about upcoming TV from your friendly neighborhood TV podcast, whose business is otherwise unaffected by global pandemics, as we’re too afraid to leave our houses and, therefore, spend an even more inordinate time watching TV! Unite with us (and wear a mask)! 

We start off with a pass because, as earnestly as we support humanity’s giving natures and organ donation when needed, the subject and the slapstick cut of this teaser trailer render us feeling like the topic and the tone of this series don’t quite match, despite a fairly fresh premise to start this situation comedy off reasonably right. Another way of looking at this snap judgment comes down to the idea that if this the best thirty seconds the Eye can provide to sell this sitcom, the humor falls flat quickly, even if spontaneous organ donation is intended to elicit at least a few smiles. We want to “b” into it, positively, but we’re not quite there.

And to get this bit of annual flavor out of the way, if buzz and steam and starvation for new network sitcoms in these, our COVID times – or your more direct contact with us via comment on any post, a visit to our guestbook or our social media, or an email to couchpotatoesunitepodcast@gmail.com – convince us to change our minds, which is very easy to do with the right amount of minimal persuasion, we most certainly will! I’m positive!

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New Fall Shows The Big Sky

BIG SKY, ABC

PREMIERE DATE: Fall 2020

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 10/9c

WHO: Kylie Bunbury (Pitch), Katheryn Winnick (Vikings), Ryan Phillippe (Shooter), Brian Geraghty (Chicago P.D.), John Carroll Lynch (American Horror Story), Dedee Pfeiffer (Cybill), Natalie Alyn Lind (The Gifted), Jade Pettyjohn (Little Fires Everywhere), Jesse James Keitel

WHAT: In this procedural thriller, private detective Cassie Dewell (Bunbury) partners with ex-cop Jenny Hoyt (Winnick) on a search for two sisters who have been kidnapped by a truck driver on a remote highway in Montana, but when they discover that these are not the only girls who have disappeared in the area, they must race against the clock to stop the killer before another woman is taken.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. Without a trailer to help steer us toward this procedural thriller, I am afraid that we’ll have to steer away. Procedural TV is a genre not typically requested by our resident Couch Potatoes unless the procedural overlay is set off by a gimmick or a quirk that renders it somewhat different from the typical fare. Various vehicles featuring murder and detective work have come and gone in recent seasons; some have been canceled quickly, and though the lead actress is named Kylie (which this Kylie can get behind), we don’t have enough information about either this series premise or its cast to feel motivated to add it to our already as-large-as-the-sky lists of recommended TV. Big facts.

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New Fall Shows Call Me Kat

CALL ME KAT, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Mayim Bialik (The Big Bang Theory), Swoosie Kurtz (Mike & Molly), Cheyenne Jackson (American Horror Story), Kyla Pratt (One on One) and Leslie Jordan (Will & Grace). Bialik and Jim Parsons serve as EPs.

WHAT: Based on the BBC sitcom Miranda, the multi-cam follows a 39-year-old woman (Bialik) who struggles every day against society (and her mother) to prove that you can not have everything you want and still be happy. That’s why she spent the money her parents set aside for her wedding to open a cat café in Louisville.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. The hesitancy comes from the lack of a trailer, but there are three reasons why we are motivated to give this one a look-see: it’s based on an established British comedy, so if it can be Americanized in a way that lands with the audiences on this side of the pond, we’re all for giving it a nod; it features Mayim Bialik, a Big Bang Blossom if there ever was one; and who doesn’t want to see a comedy about an owner of a cat cafe? Imagine all the feline hi-jinks! On the other hand, this sitcom could be incredibly stupid, but with Mayim and Jim Parsons, both capable of intelligence and warmth when it comes to comedy, at the helm, we’re thinking this one at least deserves a chance, though you can call me “krazy” if you want.

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New Fall Shows Call Your Mother

CALL YOUR MOTHER, ABC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Kyra Sedgwick (The Closer), Rachel Sennott (High Maintenance), Joey Bragg (Liv and Maddie), Emma Caymares (Fosse/Verdon), Austin Crute (Daybreak), Patrick Brammall (Evil, No Activity)

WHAT: In this multi-cam, an “empty nester” mom wonders how she ended up alone while her children live their best lives thousands of miles away. She decides her place is with her family and as she re-inserts herself into their lives, her kids realize they might actually need her more than they thought.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. I am sure that Kyra Sedgwick will play a wonderful helicopter mom, but without a trailer or teaser to help seal the deal (likely a scarcity in these COVID circumstances), this new sitcom feels as by rote as most. If buzz or steam picks up when this premieres mid-season, if the TV production schedule remotely stays on track, we could be convinced to reassess, but in the meantime, we’ll just call our mothers.

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New Fall Shows Clarice

CLARICE, CBS

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Rebecca Breeds (The Originals), Kal Penn (Designated Survivor, House), Michael Cudlitz (The Walking Dead, Southland), Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black), Lucca De Oliveira (The Punisher), Devyn A. Tyler (Out of Blue)

WHAT: A deep dive into the untold personal story of brilliant and vulnerable FBI Agent Clarice Starling as she returns to the field in 1993, six months after the events of The Silence of the Lambs.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Hesitancy, again, derives from a lack of sneak peek, but we have a few super-fans of the The Silence of the Lambs franchise that hang out on our united couch Around the Water Cooler, including of the erstwhile Hannibal. Plus, it will be interesting to see if Rebecca Breeds can evoke memories of the incomparable Jodie Foster, and if Clarice Starling’s back story can be as compelling as Hannibal Lecter’s. Also, the morbid curiosity of seeing how far the makers of this series can plumb the depths of this mythology comes to play here as well. All in all, we feel motivated to say, “Hello, Clarice.”

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New Fall Shows Debris

DEBRIS, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Jonathan Tucker (Kingdom), Riann Steele (NCIS: New Orleans), Norbert Leo Butz (Fosse/Verdon, Bloodline)

WHAT: Two agents from two different continents, and two different mindsets, must work together to investigate when wreckage from a destroyed alien spacecraft has mysterious effects on humankind.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. This time, there is less hesitancy because aliens, wreckage, mysterious effects, and a global scope, even if the premise is admittedly thin without further trailer evaluation to guide us. We love our science fiction around here, though, and while a trailer would be helpful, sometimes, you just have to go with what works, even if it could all implode in the end and litter our TV-loving hearts with debris from what was once our trust.

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New Fall Shows The Equalizer

THE EQUALIZER, CBS

PREMIERE DATE: Fall 2020

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Queen Latifah (Star), Lorraine Toussaint (Orange Is the New Black), Chris Noth (Law & Order, Sex and the City), Liza Lapira (9JKL), Tory Kittles (Colony), Laya DeLeon Hayes (Raven’s Home)

WHAT: The re-imagining of the classic series follows an enigmatic woman with a mysterious background who uses her extensive skills to help those with nowhere else to turn.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Color me dubiously intrigued. Yours truly, the Chief CP, never watched the original Equalizer but not for lack of wanting. Plus, Queen Latifah is always fun to watch; she is a capable actress who can convincingly provide comedy, drama, a catchy tune, or a few slick bars of the rap that started her career. This is an experiment that could pay off in dividends…or, it could not work spectacularly, since the show is a remake of one with a potentially different tone. I’d say the odds of the potential for success and viewer enjoyment are approximately equalized… I’ll see myself out.

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New Fall Shows Filthy Rich

FILTHY RICH, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 21

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 9/8c

WHO: Kim Cattrall (Sex and the City), Gerald McRaney (This Is Us), Aubrey Dollar (Battle Creek), Corey Cott (The Good Fight), Mark L. Young (The Comeback), Aaron Lazar (Quantico)

WHAT: When the patriarch of a mega-rich Southern family (famed for creating a wildly successful Christian television network) dies in a plane crash, his wife and family are stunned to learn that he fathered three illegitimate children, all of whom are written into his will.

Trailer available at Fox’s YouTube Channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. In the grand tradition of fare like Dallas and Dynasty (the original, to be sure), Fox offers this new sudsy soap with rich people at the forefront mixed with all the scandal and guilty-pleasure inducing backdrop of televangelism and the antebellum lilts of the South, including the requisite homage to Gone with the Wind. Hilariously, the show is created/produced by the makers of Empire and The Help, so there is a small iota of curiosity to entice here. Plus, the presence of an older but no less fabulous Kim Cattrall, the erstwhile Samantha that oozed Sex in her City, leads this pack. Still, the premise sounds very similar to Fox’s Almost Family, also being introduced this season (see above), with the soap angle to propel it forward into Desperate Housewives and the aforementioned Dallas/Dynasty territories, and so it seems like Fox is throwing the idea of illegitimate children around every chance it can get. We passed on the other one and feel it only fair to pass on this one also, but if you think we need to cover more suds and find this candidate suitable to that purpose, drop us a line.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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New Fall Shows The Great North

THE GREAT NORTH, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: The voices of Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, Megan Mullally, Paul Rust, Aparna Nancherla, Will Forte, Dulcé Sloan

WHAT: The animated comedy follows the Alaskan adventures of the Tobin family, as single dad Beef does his best to keep his weird bunch of kids close, especially as the artistic dreams of his only daughter, Judy, lead her away from the family fishing boat and into the glamorous world of the local mall.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox is also going hog-wild this year with upping its animation game. Still, this animated entry shows more possibility than other new selections, even without a trailer to more fully and thoroughly evaluate it. First, the voice cast contains one of the funniest married couples on the planet in Nick Offerman and Megan Mullaly, who people might know from shows like Parks & Recreation and Will & Grace, respectively. On top of that, the setting is Alaska, and the premise feels a bit more original and fresh, even as it could also be the cartoon version of Northern Exposure. All of the above is enough to warrant a tiny look-see but no promises from the not-so-great north.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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New Fall Shows Housebroken

HOUSEBROKEN, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: The voices of Lisa Kudrow, Clea Duvall, Nat Faxon, Sharon Horgan, Will Forte, Tony Hale, Jason Mantzoukas, Sam Richardson, Bresha Webb, Greta Lee

WHAT: The animated comedy explores human dysfunction and neurosis through a group of neighborhood animals who live in the suburbs.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Fox can’t help itself when producing all of its adult animation; I think the network is more addicted to it than the viewing public, or maybe they are beginning to shop around for the next The Simpsons, since we all know that the clock eventually has to run out for our yellow, Springfield-bound family at some point. Still, in a world besieged by a global pandemic that requires social distancing, animation might become a booming industry in this current TV landscape, since drawing/animating and voice acting can be done in a fairly isolated manner. Either way, the only hesitancy here comes from the fact that it’s a show about anthropomorphic animals being neurotic. Yet, the voice cast listed is stellar; I feel confident that the erstwhile Phoebe from Friends, Madame Kudrow herself, could achieve peak-level neurosis, whatever animal she ends up voicing. Also, several of our resident Couch Potatoes, your Chief among them, follow the Friends when we can. Two thumbs partway up in careful anticipation!

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New Fall Shows The Kenan Show

THE KENAN SHOW, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Kenan Thompson (Saturday Night Live), Andy Garcia (Ocean’s Eleven), Punam Patel (Special)

WHAT: The single-camera comedy follows a newly widowed dad determined to be everything for his kids while begrudgingly letting his persistent father-in-law become more involved in their lives.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. While it is about time that Kenan Thompson returns to scripted TV from his long tenure as sketch comedian on Saturday Night Live, and while he is more than deserving of an eponymous comedy, we are not sure that this is the eponymous comedy that is going to keep his career going, unless his biggest fans are the generators of decent ratings to keep this sitcom afloat. This thin premise rings bells echoing My Wife & Kids, or, depending upon Kenan’s delivery, The Bernie Mac Show, but with a Xennial approach to the parental side of this equation. No trailer makes the selling difficult, but if you’re a Kenan Thompson fan and want us to reconsider, send us the messages.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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New Fall Shows Kung Fu

KUNG FU, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Olivia Liang (Legacies), Jon Prasida (Hiding), Shannon Dang (Sorry for Your Loss), Eddie Liu (Silicon Valley), Tzi Ma (Wu Assassins, The Man In the High Castle), Kheng Hua Tan (Marco Polo), Gavin Stenhouse (9-1-1, Allegiance), Gwendoline Yeo (American Crime)

WHAT: A quarter-life crisis causes a young Chinese-American woman to drop out of college and go on a life-changing journey to an isolated monastery in China. But when she returns to find her hometown overrun with crime and corruption, she uses her martial arts skills and Shaolin values to protect her community and bring criminals to justice… all while searching for the assassin who killed her Shaolin mentor and is now targeting her. Inspired by the original series created by Ed Spielman.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. The uniqueness and originality of bringing martial arts and associated cultural principles to the small screen inspires this hesitant pick-up, even though a few properties of similar ilk have been popping up here and there on streamers in recent years. This new drama could be riveting, or it could be hokey, but the question, I think, that we really have to seek an answer for here is how many of our Couch Potatoes, Couch Potatoes adjacent, and Couch Potatoes Unite! listeners need a martial arts show in their lives? It is a serialized drama, so the success will probably ride upon how well the cast and the production team can execute everything (as it usually does). A trailer would be helpful, but a slightly fresh twist on an old premise certainly appeals.

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New Fall Shows Law & Order: Organized Crime

LAW & ORDER: ORGANIZED CRIME, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: Fall 2020

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 10/9c

WHO: Christopher Meloni (Law & Order: SVU)

WHAT: Elliot Stabler returns to the NYPD to battle organized crime after a devastating personal loss. However, the city and police department have changed dramatically in the decade he’s been away, and he must adapt to a criminal justice system in the midst of its own moment of reckoning. Throughout the series, we will follow Stabler’s journey to find absolution and rebuild his life, while leading a new elite task force that is taking apart the city’s most powerful criminal syndicates one by one. 

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass For Now. The Law & Order franchise has been suggested for podcast dissection via the CPU! request line, so the return of Elliott Stabler (even this non-procedural loving, non-Law & Order watching viewer knows who he is!) only inspires us to wonder just how many spin-offs our potential L&O panel would want to cover. Given the popularity of SVU, I am guessing all of them. Still, this panel is deep in the planning stages and will require a moderator team. If you want us to get to it faster – or to be a moderator – drop us a line!

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New Fall Shows Untitled L.A. Mayor Comedy

MR. MAYOR, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Ted Danson (The Good Place), Bobby Moynihan (SNL), Holly Hunter (Top of the Lake, Saving Grace)

WHAT: A single-cam comedy centering around a wealthy businessman (Danson) who runs for mayor of Los Angeles for all the wrong reasons. Once he wins, he has to figure out what he stands for, gain the respect of his staff, and connect with his teenage daughter — all while controlling the coyote population.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Hesitantly Pick Up. Look. Ted Danson has at least earned a “check it out” sort of watch for his string of good TV, including Cheers and, most recently, The Good Place. And, frankly, I really need more information about these coyotes. A trailer would be so helpful here, but the coyote factor intrigues just about as much as the presence of the erstwhile Sam Malone aka Michael Goodman. This premise could very well flop faster than a fish out of its bowl, but a coyote out of its natural habitat and a smooth-talking Mr. Danson? Keeping an open mind seems wise.

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neXt Fox

NEXT, Fox

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 6

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: John Slattery (Mad Men), Eve Harlow (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Michael Mosley (Sirens), Jason Butler Harner (Ozark), Elizabeth Cappuccino (Jessica Jones), Fernanda Andrade, Aaron Moten, Gerardo Celasco, Evan Whitten

WHAT: A Silicon Valley pioneer discovers that one of his own creations — a powerful A.I. — might spell global catastrophe, and teams up with a cybercrime agent to fight a villain unlike anything we’ve ever seen — one whose greatest weapon against us is ourselves.  

Trailer available at the Fox’s YouTube Channel.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pick Up. Oh sure, science fiction revolving around sentient artificial intelligence has been done before and has been arguably done to death. From The Terminator to Person of Interest, from 2001: A Space Odyssey (and its sequel, 2010) to Westworld, the world will never want for the fear that robots will someday turn against us, as humans attempt to play God by creating them in the first place. What makes this upcoming series potentially compelling TV is that, first, it is being billed as an event (read: limited) series, giving it a theoretically tight number of episodes within which to tell its story. Second, the culprit AI is a clear homage to Amazon’s Alexa product, which should add an element of real-world suspension of disbelief to this science fiction sub-genre. Plus, John Slattery is always a fun guy to watch on the small screen. Amazon’s already taking over the world – why shouldn’t its calming AI Alexa, named Iliza in this series, do the same and then turn on us all? What would happen if it did? Nothing good can come of this, that’s what we know from stories like it, but the premise and devices used here definitely intrigue the mind around this oft-employed story concept, so much so that we want to know what’s neXt.

This was delayed from the 2019-2020 TV season, and our initial review was written in fall 2019.

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New Fall Shows The Republic of Sarah

THE REPUBLIC OF SARAH, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: Midseason 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Stella Baker (Tell Me Your Secrets), Luke Mitchell (Blindspot), Megan Follows (Reign), Izabella Alvarez (Westworld), Nia Holloway (Hawaii Five-0), Hope Lauren (Awkward, Supergirl), Landry Bender (Fuller House, Looking for Alaska), Ian Duff (New Amsterdam), Forrest Goodluck (The Miseducation of Cameron Post)

WHAT: Faced with the destruction of her town at the hands of a greedy mining company, rebellious high school teacher Sarah Cooper utilizes an obscure cartographical loophole to declare independence. Now Sarah must lead a young group of misfits as they attempt to start their own country from scratch.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reviewer needs a trailer for this one. Though the CW motivates many of our Couch Potatoes’ personal TV-watching choices with the network’s attempts at giving all types of fare a chance, this premise feels a bit hollow and possibly precariously played for farce or pedantically played for social commentary. Without a way to further vet the concept visually, and with a cast that doesn’t, by itself, excite, we are going to leave this one aside, regardless of whatever republic for which it stands. As always, if buzz or steam generates around this new drama (is it a drama?), we will reconsider our position, but for now, we pledge allegiance to other TV.

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New Fall Shows Small Fortune

SMALL FORTUNE, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Host Lil Rel Howery

WHAT: Based on the U.K. format, the unscripted series features teams of three friends who compete in the tiniest of challenges for a chance to win big money. From a shrunk down Oval Office (“The Waste Wing”) to a mini Arc de Triomphe (“Arc de Wee-Omph”), each team must prove their skills on playing fields that have been squeezed down to the size of a dollhouse. Challenges will require considerable dexterity and intense focus because with games this small, there’s no room for error as the slightest miscalculation or tremble may result in elimination.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. CPU! does not cover game shows in any of our formats, but as this show is new this year, we’ll keep an eye on it for the duration of the season. I would guess our coverage ranks as far less than even a small fortune, but we like scripted TV better here at CPU!

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New Fall Shows Superman & Lois

SUPERMAN & LOIS, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: January 2021

TIME SLOT: Tuesdays at 9/8c

WHO: Tyler Hoechlin (Supergirl), Elizabeth Tulloch (Supergirl), Dylan Walsh (Nip/Tuck), Emmanuelle Chriqui (The Passage, Entourage), Erik Valdez (General Hospital), Jordan Elsass (Little Fires Everywhere), Alexander Garfin, Wolé Parks (All American, The Vampire Diaries), Inde Navarrette (13 Reasons Why)

WHAT: The Arrowverse spin-off follows the world’d most famous superhero and comic books’ most famous journalist as they deal with all the stress, pressures and complexities that come with being working parents in today’s society.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Enthusiastically Pick Up. As an Arrowverse spin-off, this is an automatic Pick Up for our CPU! “DCTU Series” panel. Considering that our panel has expressed consistent excitement and appreciation, as well as glowing praise, for each appearance of Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch in recent Arrowverse mid-season crossovers, I would say that this latest incarnation in the “Superman” annals will probably be at least somewhat popular with our panel of DC enthusiasts, with or without an available trailer. To this we say, up, up, and away!

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Leslie Jones Supermarket Sweep

SUPERMARKET SWEEP, ABC

PREMIERE DATE: Oct. 18

TIME SLOT: Sundays at 8/7c

WHO: Host Leslie Jones (SNL)

WHAT: The competition show revival follows three teams of two as they battle it out using their grocery shopping skills and knowledge of merchandise to win big cash prizes.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. See the above note about game shows and new TV. (We don’t cover them, except their renewal/cancellation prospects in their first year. Oh wait, I gave it away. Rats).

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New Fall Shows That's My Jam

THAT’S MY JAM, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHAT: Inspired by the musical segments on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the hourlong competition series will be infused with Fallon’s one-of-a-kind comedic style, feel-good energy, and a carousel of his classic and brand-new music-based games, featuring a new group of celebrities each week.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. We also don’t cover variety shows or shows featuring celebrity competition (see also: The Masked Singer). That isn’t to say we won’t be watching. We just won’t be talking about the fact that we’re watching. Though Daniel Radcliffe should get himself a slot on this show. His rendition of “Alphabet Rap” was pretty dope.

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New Fall Shows True Story

TRUE STORY, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Hosts Ed Helms (The Office) and Randall Park (Fresh Off the Boat)

WHAT: In the hybrid alternative-scripted series, based on the Australian hit, everyday Americans sit down with Helms and Park to share their most extraordinary and unbelievably true stories for the first time. As the stories unfold, events are humorously brought to life by a star-studded cast of comedians and actors in heightened, dramatized re-enactments of cinematic proportions.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. What is “alternative-scripted?” This sounds like an experiment requiring a review by our resident TV lovers and Couch Potatoes, but I am not sure how we would make it work on our podcast. Change my mind, though, if you disagree. I think it’s got potential, but it also sounds like Whose Line Is It Anyway? crossed with This Is Your Life, so I am on the struggle bus. If you think we should assemble a panel to podcast about it, contact us!

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New Fall Shows Walker

WALKER, The CW

PREMIERE DATE: January 2021

TIME SLOT: Thursdays at 8/7c

WHO: Jared Padalecki (Supernatural), Lindsey Morgan (The 100), Keegan Allen (Pretty Little Liars), Mitch Pileggi (Supernatural, The X-Files), Molly Hagan (iZombie, Jane the Virgin), Coby Bell (The Gifted), Jeff Pierre (Once Upon a Time, Beyond)

WHAT: The Walker, Texas Ranger reboot follows Cordell Walker (Padalecki), a widower and father of two with his own moral code, who returns to Austin after being undercover for two years, only to discover there’s harder work to be done at home. He’ll attempt to reconnect with his children, navigate clashes with his family, and find unexpected common ground with his new partner (one of the first women in Texas Rangers history), while growing increasingly suspicious about the circumstances surrounding his wife’s death.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Very Hesitantly Pick Up. I am not sure how many of our viewers and listeners, i.e. our resident Couch Potatoes and Couch Potatoes-adjacent, watched the original Walker, Texas Ranger, starring Chuck Norris. If you did, please comment below. The Chief Couch Potato and author of these annual progress reports never did; westerns aren’t quite in the wheelhouse, and I was never a fan of Master Norris beyond a bemused appreciation of his existence. Yet, Jared Padalecki is/was Sam Winchester, and he’s earned the trust of at least six of us for 15 years. I think it’s worth seeing what he does with the role – he could just elevate it. Or, he could make Chuck Norris cry. Wait, does Chuck Norris cry? Let’s just hope it doesn’t come to tears, or we’ll walk(er) right out the door.

What? No? That doesn’t work either? I’ll see myself out again.

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New Fall Shows Weakest Link

WEAKEST LINK, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: Sept. 28

TIME SLOT: Mondays at 10/9c

WHO: Host Jane Lynch

WHAT: The reboot “will deliver the fast-paced and quick-witted pillars of the original British format created by the BBC with a few modern twists,” per the network. “The hybrid game show sees contestants answer general knowledge questions to bank prize money across multiple rounds. At the end of each round, the contestants vote out who they perceive to be the Weakest Link remaining.”

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. This reboot is the weakest link. Goodbye.

(Look, we love Jane Lynch as much as the next person, but she can’t possibly be nearly as withering as Anne Robinson without sounding like Sue Sylvester. Also, it’s another game show….which is probably the en vogue way to fill empty airing slots when TV production has been shut down for months by a pandemic. You know I’m right.)

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New Fall Shows Young Rock

YOUNG ROCK, NBC

PREMIERE DATE: 2021

TIME SLOT: TBA

WHO: Dwayne Johnson

WHAT: The single-cam comedy chronicles the formative childhood years of Dwayne Johnson, aka The Rock.

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PICK UP OR PASS?

VERDICT: Pass. The audience for this show is going to have to *really* love the Rock. The Rock is fine. The Rock is nice. The Rock is the voice of Maui in Moana. Do we need a sitcom about his life story? Without a trailer, I’m thinking that the answer is no, but if you think we’re not giving due deference to Mr. Johnson, ring that bell (or, just send us an email, or comment down below).

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The following is a link to all premiere dates for shows covered beyond the main networks: 

http://www.metacritic.com/feature/tv-premiere-dates

Non-Broadcast Network Pick-Ups

Crossing Swords (Hulu): It’s an animated spoof of “Game of Thrones.” It’s not very well reviewed, but maybe we need the catharsis. Plus, Hulu already renewed it for a second season, so something must be right about it. (Released June 12, 2020)

The latest stop-motion-animated comedy from the team behind Robot Chicken is a spoof of Game of Thrones (and similar projects) featuring the voices of Nicholas Hoult, Seth Green, Tony Hale, Luke Evans, Adam Pally, and Wendi McClendon-Covey.

Love, Victor (Hulu): It has already been requested for the podcast and may feature as part of a future Pride month series, especially since it was already renewed for a second season. (Released June 17, 2020)

Originally developed for Disney+ before moving to the more adult-oriented Hulu, this 10-episode spin-off from the 2018 feature film Love, Simon (itself an adaptation of a YA novel by Becky Albertalli) centers on a new character, Victor (Michael Cimino), a gay teen who is adjusting to life in a new city and at a new high school. The film’s star (and titular Simon), Nick Robinson, will narrate the series, and the cast also includes Sophia Bush, James Martinez, and Ana Ortiz.

Perry Mason (HBO): This reboot is critically acclaimed, and though initially billed as a miniseries, it has been renewed for a second season(Premiered June 21, 2020)

Matthew Rhys (The Americans) stars as the titular criminal defense attorney in this remake of the classic TV drama that aired in various forms, most famously as an Emmy-winning series on CBS from 1957-66 (with Raymond Burr in the title role). HBO’s version is also based on the Los Angeles-set novels and stories by author Erle Stanley Gardner, though the time period is now 1931, when Mason is trying to eke out a living as a private investigator and gets drawn into a case involving a child kidnapping. John Lithgow, Tatiana Maslany, Shea Whigham, Stephen Root, Nate Corddry, Lili Taylor, Robert Patrick, and Juliet Rylance also star.

Brave New World (Peacock): Though the reviews are mixed, why not take a look at a small screen adaptation of a dystopian novel to match our real-life dystopia? The book is a must-read (along with “1984”). (Released July 15, 2020)

After a lengthy journey to the small screen that saw the property change networks twice (it was previously intended for Syfy and then USA), this series adaptation of Aldous Huxley’s classic 1932 novel set in a theoretically utopian (but in actuality more dystopian) future London is the highest-profile original show available on the public launch day for Comcast’s new streaming service. (As with other Peacock originals, you’ll need to be a “Premium” member to watch it, though Comcast and Cox cable subscribers will get a free premium subscription.) Harry Lloyd, Jessica Brown Findlay, and Alden Ehrenreich head a cast that also includes Demi Moore, Kylie Bunbury, and Hannah John-Kamen. The adaptation, a co-production with the UK’s Sky, comes from David Wiener, who previously wrote for Homecoming and The Killing.

Cursed (Netflix): It’s already been requested for the podcast, and, really, who doesn’t love an alternative take on the Arthurian legend? Though it will be probably be canceled after 2 seasons (who gets that joke?).  (Released July 17, 2020)

Katherine Langford stars in a gritty take on the Arthurian legend told from the perspective of Nimue, the Lady of the Lake.

Muppets Now (Disney+): Muppets. Like you have to ask. (Premiered July 31, 2020)

The first new Muppets title for Disney’s streaming service is a six-episode, short-form “unscripted” series featuring classic Muppets characters. Non-Muppet guest stars include Aubrey Plaza, RuPaul, Linda Cardellini, and Seth Rogen (who, admittedly, might be part Muppet).

Star Trek: Lower Decks (CBS All Access): This is an automatic pick-up for our “Star Trek 50+ Series,” but the critics have not been kind to it, even though CBS has already ordered production on a second season. (Premiered August 6, 2020)

CBS All Access expands its growing Star Trek universe with the first animated series in the franchise in 46 years. Lower Decks comes from Rick and Morty writer Mike McMahan (who also co-created Hulu’s just-debuted Solar Opposites) and centers on a group of low-ranking crew members aboard one of Starfleet’s least-important ships, the U.S.S. Cerritos. (It’s a comedy, in case you were wondering.) The voice cast includes Noel Wells, Jerry O’Connell, Tawny Newsome, Eugene Cordero, Dawnn Lewis, and Jack Quaid. A second season has already been ordered.

Lovecraft Country (HBO): This has also been quickly requested for the podcast. With Jordan Peele and JJ Abrams at the helm, and a combination of social commentary as well as historical commentary about notorious racist HP Lovecraft (who also wrote about lovable monsters like Cthulu), this is being described as a must-watch and a must-discuss. (Premiered August 16, 2020)

Producers Jordan Peele and J.J. Abrams join forces for a series adaptation of Matt Ruff’s novel of the same name, an allegorical horror tale set in segregated 1950s America where three Black Americans on a road trip to find a missing person must overcome both human racists and Lovecraftian supernatural forces. Jonathan Majors, Jurnee Smollett, Aunjanue Ellis, Jada Harris, Courtney B. Vance, and Michael Kenneth Williams head the cast.

Raised by Wolves (HBO Max): Science fiction with contributions by Ridley Scott! The “Alien” man himself! (Releases September 3, 2020)

Originally developed for TNT, this HBO Max original sci-fi series marks the American TV directorial debut for Ridley Scott. He directs the first two episodes of a 10-episode season set on a mysterious planet where androids are tasked with raising human children in a colony that is being torn apart by religious differences. The series comes from screenwriter Aaron Guzikowski (Prisoners) and stars Travis Fimmel (Vikings), Amanda Collin, and Abubakar Salim.

Away (Netflix): Science fiction dreaming of trips to Mars. (Releases September 4, 2020)

Jason Katims (Friday Night Lights), Matt Reeves (Felicity), and Andrew Hinderaker (Penny Dreadful) combine for a 10-episode Netflix drama series depicting the first manned mission to Mars, based loosely on a recent Esquire story by Chris Jones. Hilary Swank heads the cast as the astronaut in charge of the year-long international mission, while Josh Charles plays her husband (and NASA engineer) left behind on Earth to care for their teenage daughter. Ed Zwick directs the pilot.

Noughts + Crosses (Peacock): Alternative history stories are popular around here, and the timely social commentary could be ham-fisted, but it could also be a jolt when and where a jolt is needed. (Premieres September 4, 2020)

American premiere of the BBC-produced YA series based on Malorie Blackman’s novel set in the present day of an alternate world where Africa colonized Europe and enslaved its white citizens.

Power Book II: Ghost (Starz): The original “Power” series has been on the request list for sometime, so the possibility of making this a podcast discussion series for CPU! is powerfully high. (Premieres September 6, 2020)

The first of four planned spinoffs from the recently concluded Starz original series Power stars Mary J. Blige, Method Man, Sherri Saurn, Shane Johnson, Naturi Naughton, and Michael Rainey Jr, and picks up the action just days after the events of the Power finale. Subsequent episodes will air Sundays at 8p.

Woke (Hulu): Lamorne Morris meets a hybrid animated/live action vehicle addressing some timely social commentary; we imagine some of the Winston magic will seep into the proceedings. (Releases September 9, 2020)

Lamorne Morris (New Girl) stars in this timely comedy about a Black cartoonist living in San Francisco who has an encounter with cops that changes his life. The semi-autobiographical series from real-life cartoonist Keith Knight (The K Chronicles) mixes some animated sequences with live action. All eight episodes stream today.

Julie and the Phantoms (Netflix): It’s musical and carries with it, at least if the premise synopsis is read right, a slight satricial bend – it could also be Netflix’s answer to “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist,” but we’ll never know until we try. (Premieres September 10, 2020)

High School Musical director Kenny Ortega returns with a new musical series for Netflix about a high school singer who rekindles her love of music after being approached by the ghosts of three dead ’90s pop stars. It’s based on a Brazilian series.

The Third Day (HBO, Miniseries): The plot premise is confusing yet intriguing and original; plus, there is a fine cast in this British import. Everything kind of makes you want to watch it, including imagining a trailer in your head for this sort of story. (Premieres September 14, 2020)

Rescheduled from May 2020. Co-produced by the UK’s Sky, this six-part limited series is divided into two sections: “Summer” and “Winter.” The former tells the story of Sam (Jude Law), who finds himself drawn to a mysterious and isolated island off the British coast whose inhabitants are determined to preserve their traditions “at any cost,” while the latter centers on Helen (Naomie Harris), whose arrival on the same island throws its future into question. Emily Watson, Katherine Waterston, and Paddy Considine also star.

Ratched (Netflix): This unlikely “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” prequel created by Ryan Murphy has already been requested for the podcast…when no one has even seen it yet... Plus, it’s already been renewed for a second season… (Releases September 18, 2020)

Already renewed for a second season, the latest Netflix series from Ryan Murphy serves as a prequel to the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (and Ken Kesey’s novel), with Sarah Paulson starring as a younger version of the character Nurse Mildred Ratched (a role originated by Oscar-winner Louise Fletcher in the movie). The creepy 1947-set drama also stars Cynthia Nixon, Judy Davis, Sharon Stone, Corey Stoll, Finn Wittrock, and Vincent D’Onofrio.

Utopia (Amazon Prime): The premise gives this reviewer chills; after all, we have a lot of comic book fans in our ranks, some of whom also like thrillers/horror. I’m guessing it’s a Utopian choice. (Releases September 25, 2020)

This long-gestating conspiracy thriller—an adaptation of a 2013 UK series that was first developed for HBO as a David Fincher project beginning in 2014, only for the network and the director to drop out over budget concerns—comes from author Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl), who also serves as showrunner. The story revolves around a group of obsessive comic book fans who find themselves targeted by a shadowy government organization after they gain possession of an underground graphic novel that depicts a conspiracy that may not be entirely fictional. John Cusack, Sasha Lane, Rainn Wilson, Dan Byrd, Desmin Borges, and Jessica Rothe star.

Monsterland (Hulu): A cast of some CPU! favorites combined with some fertile fantasy and horror potential makes this one seem like an easy pick-up. (Releases October 2, 2020)

Hulu’s eight-episode anthology adapts short stories from Nathan Ballingrud’s book North American Lake Monsters. The ensemble includes Taylor Schilling, Mike Colter, Kaitlyn Dever, Hamish Linklater, Bill Camp, Kelly Marie Tran, Jonathan Tucker, and Nicole Beharie. All episodes stream today.

The Good Lord Bird (Showtime, Miniseries): The trailer intrigues, the cast is dynamite, and these kinds of historical stories need to be told and retold. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Reschuled from spring and then summer. Albert Hughes (replacing Anthony Hemingway, who left the project due to scheduling conflicts) directs this delayed eight-episode adaptation of the award-winning novel by James McBride about 19th century abolitionist John Brown, played by Ethan Hawke. Daveed Diggs (playing Frederick Douglass), Lodge 49‘s Wyatt Russell, David Morse, Steve Zahn, Orlando Jones, and Ellar Coltrane also star.

The Walking Dead: The World Beyond (AMC): “The Walking Dead” has also been on the request list for a time. Will the potential panel want to veer into the franchise of zombie spin-offs? We’ll ask them when we catch up to it, which will probably be in the World Beyond. (Premieres October 4, 2020)

Rescheduled from April 2020. The latest Walking Dead spinoff follows a new set of characters who are all part of the generation born after the start of the zombie menace. The series is designed to run for just two seasons unlike the other Walking Dead shows, which refuse to end.

Soulmates (AMC): An intriguing science fiction premise meets AMC’s willingness to go wacky. We think it’s a match made in heaven. (Premieres October 5, 2020)

Recently renewed for a 2nd season, this six-episode anthology series from Will Bridges and Brett Goldstein (adapting their own short film For Life) is set 15 years in the future, when new technology allows every person on the planet to know the identity of their soulmate. Each episode will find a different set of characters dealing with the repercussions of this breakthrough in a different way. Season 1 stars include Shamier Anderson, Malin Akerman, Betsy Brandt, Kingsley Ben-Adir, David Costabile, Charlie Heaton, and Sarah Snook.

The Right Stuff (Disney+): Television remake of an Oscar-winning film about the American space program, with Disney’s funding. It potentially has all the right stuff. (Premieres October 9, 2020)

Originally developed for Nat Geo before moving over to Disney’s streaming service, The Right Stuff is a new drama series adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s nonfiction book chronicling the early days of America’s space program. (That book, of course, was previously adapted into the terrific Oscar-winning 1983 film of the same name.) Patrick J. Adams, Jake McDorman, Patrick Fischler, Colin O’Donoghue, James Lafferty, Aaron Staton, and Michael Trotter head the cast. Season 1 focuses in depth on the seven astronauts in the Mercury program, and potential future seasons would cover other stories and historical figures. Two episodes stream today, with the remaining six hours arriving one per week on Fridays.

Marvel’s Helstrom (Hulu): Marvel meets horror? I can’t imagine many of the CPU! faithful NOT watching this. (Premieres October 16, 2020)

Marvel’s latest TV venture is a horror series starring Elizabeth Marvel (no relation) as the institutionalized mother of two adult children (Tom Austen, Sydney Lemmon) with superpowers who moonlight as demon hunters, drawing on their backgrounds as the offspring of Satan. All 10 episodes stream today.

Animaniacs (Hulu): We have baloney in our slacks and a plan to podcast both the original series and this originally-voiced reboot in the coming year, if not the coming quarter. (Premieres November 20, 2020)

The Steven Spielberg-produced 1990s animated series gets a Hulu reboot that will bring 13 new episodes today and a second season sometime in 2021. Returning characters including Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, as well as Pinky and the Brain, all voinced by the original actors.

The Stand (CBS All Access, Miniseries): Stephen King allegedly wrote a new ending….but there’s already been a miniseries and a book with an original ending for decades. We might have to watch just for the comparison’s sake. (Premieres December 17, 2020)

Streaming weekly, this nine-episode adaptation of Stephen King’s epic apocalyptic novel about life in America after a devastating global pandemic (no relation) stars Alexander Skarsgård, Whoopi Goldberg, James Marsden, Amber Heard, Heather Graham, Greg Kinnear, Odessa Young, and Nat Wolff. The series, which wrapped up two years of production just before covid-19 hit, features an all-new ending written by King.

Others on radar: The Lord of the Rings series in development at Amazon; The Chronicles of Narnia at Netflix; The Wheel of Time at Amazon; The Watch (BBC); Conan at Amazon; The Dark Tower at Amazon; the Loki and Scarlet Witch properties in development at Disney+; the Three-Body Problem adaptation at Netflix.

-*-

There you have it!  We will add Pick Ups to the CPU! Watchlist and cover them in this blog or via our ever growing podcast. For those passed, if you think we should give them another chance, head on over to the comments section and sound off!  If you would like to be a guest blogger about any passed shows, send me a message, and we’ll talk terms!

In short:

Picked Up

ABC

None

CBS

Clarice (hesitantly)
The Equalizer

Fox

Call Me Kat (hesitantly)
The Great North (hesitantly)
Housebroken (hesitantly)
neXt

NBC

Debris
Mr. Mayor (hesitantly)

CW

Kung Fu (very hesitantly)
Superman & Lois (enthusiastically)
Walker (very hesitantly)

Netflix

Cursed
Away
Julie and the Phantoms
Ratched

Amazon Prime

Utopia

Hulu

Crossing Swords
Love, Victor
Woke
Monsterland
Marvel’s Helstrom
Animaniacs

HBO

Perry Mason
Lovecraft Country
The Third Day (miniseries)

AMC

The Walking Dead: The World Beyond
Soulmates

Starz

Power Book II: Ghost

CBS All Access

Star Trek: Lower Decks
The Stand

Disney+

Muppets Now
The Right Stuff

Peacock

Brave New World
Noughts + Crosses

HBO Max

Raised by Wolves

Showtime

The Good Lord Bird (miniseries)

Winning Network: Hulu

Passed

ABC

Big Sky
Call Your Mother
Supermarket Sweep

CBS

B Positive

Fox

Filthy Rich

NBC


The Kenan Show
Law & Order: Organized Crime (for now)
Small Fortune
That’s My Jam
True Story
Weakest Link
Young Rock

CW

The Republic of Sarah

Losing Network: NBC

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Remember, new episodes and blog posts are published weekly! Tomorrow, our Star Trek 50+ Series panel returns to the Water Cooler to Look Back at Season 3 of The Next Generation, as our mega multi-part Retrospective series continues. Stay tuned!