For the second straight year, FOX has shifted their game plan, abandoning their single camera comedies and, instead, moving closer ideologically with its sister news network. The end result is a fall schedule with only one show that interests me, and even that 9 unwatched episodes from this season still sitting on my DVR.
Monday has two returning shows, The Resident and 9-1-1, which didn’t pull me in last year. The Gifted, based on Marvel’s X-Men characters, moves to Tuesdays, followed by a revamped Lethal Weapon. Wednesday’s lineup remains consistent, with Empire followed by Star.
Thursdays get turned over to the NFL, as the much-reviled game moves over from CBS. Friday has the revival of Tim Allen’s Last Man Standing and The Cool Kids, about a group of friends in a retirement community, followed by Hell’s Kitchen. Sunday’s animated block remains mostly the same, with a new comedy, REL, closing off the night.
The second season of The Orville will return to Thursday after the NFL season. Gotham will also appear at some point for its final season. Also on tap for mid-season are The Passage, a post-apocalyptic thriller starring Mark-Paul Gosselar, Proven Innocent, a legal drama from Danny Strong, and the return of Cosmos.
Gone and mostly forgotten are Brooklyn Nine-Nine (which was saved by NBC), The Exorcist, Ghosted, Kicking & Screaming, The Last Man On Earth, LA To Vegas, Lucifer, The Mick, New Girl, Superhuman, Wayward Pines, and The X-Files.