13 New TV Shows for Grownups to Watch For This Fall
13 New TV Shows for Grownups to Watch For This Fall TV for Grownups
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Fall TV Preview 13 Shows We Want to See
Here' s what' s coming from Candice Bergen Julia Roberts Tim Allen Michael Douglas and more TV stars
ofThe Good Cop Netflix Sept 21
Tony Danza, 67, makes his big TV comeback in a police show with a difference. It’s a family-friendly dramedy about an NYPD cop, who got the boot for not following rules and now lives with his son (singer/actor Josh Groban), a current NYPD detective, who always follows the rules. ofMagnum P I CBS Sept 24
Original Magnum, Hawaiian Private Investigator Tom Selleck, that he made the character less like James Bond, more like laid-back Jim Rockford, and proud of being a Vietnam vet. New Magnum Jay Hernandez (above, right) is a proud Afghanistan vet, but more like the lead-foot heroes of producer/director Justin Lin’s car-crash epics Fast 5 and 6. Sidekick Higgins is no longer an older Brit muttering “Oh my God!” but a sarcastic young ex-MI6 agent (Perdita Weeks). New Magnum is faster and flashier, but can it be as charming? Perhaps, but no mustache will enhance Magnum's smile this time. ofFBI CBS Sept 25
Few TV producers please as many grownup viewers as Law & Order creator Dick Wolf, whose latest procedural features not cops but the New York office of the FBI. The promising cast includes Law & Order veterans Jeremy Sisto and Missy Peregrym (above, right) and Sela Ward, 62, of CSI: NY. Mobsters and terrorists beware: the FBI is watching. And so shall we. ofMurphy Brown CBS Sept 27
Candice Bergen, 72, and practically everyone else who’s still alive from the 1988-98 cast of TV’s favorite show about an irascible TV newswoman is back, promising more pointed topical political humor, and a parade of odd new secretaries for Murphy who won’t last long. This time, she’s on a morning show, and she’s rivalrous with her journalist son Avery (Jake McDorman), the token liberal on the Wolf Network. ofThe Cool Kids Fox Sept 28
Partly inspired by The Golden Girls, this comedy set in a retirement community — a breakthrough show for the 50-plus audience on youth-oriented Fox — tries to avoid “we’re old” jokes. It’s about three highly vital guys (David Alan Grier, 62, Leslie Jordan, 63, and Roseanne’s Martin Mull, 75) whose social prominence is threatened by a brash interloper (Vicki Lawrence, 69, the Carol Burnett sidekick who played the legendary elder Mama). Mull told the TV Critics Association, “This is not a show about old people. We’re very young people with older skin.” ofLast Man Standing Fox Sept 28
After ABC killed his show about one kind of archetypal American family, Tim Allen sold it to Fox and wrote Hillary pantsuit jokes for it — until Trump forced a rewrite. But Trump won’t be mentioned on the show, which isn’t intended to be as pointedly political as Roseanne, but more about the life of a conservative, church-respecting businessman, Mike Baxter, and his family. His character’s dad (Robert Forster, 77, who’s sensational in the new Alzheimer’s film What They Had) gets killed off this season, and a Chinese exchange student teen moves in with the Baxters. of ADVERTISEMENT ofThe Neighborhood CBS Oct 1
Cedric the Entertainer, 54, is somebody you need to know. He’s as Emmy-worthy as Tracy Morgan in The Last O.G., as Oscar-worthy as Ethan Hawke in First Reformed, and now the star and an executive producer of this comedy from the creative team behind The Big Bang Theory. Cedric plays a curmudgeon who sees his friendly new neighbors from the Midwest (Max Greenfield and Beth Behrs) as intruders gentrifying his black Los Angeles neighborhood.of
The Conners ABC Oct 16
Can Roseanne’s show still be a No. 1 hit without Roseanne, just the rest of the Conner family (John Goodman, Laurie Metcalf, etc.)? As the fired Roseanne sniped, “It is going to be interesting to see a bunch of really privileged people who grew up in Hollywood writing for the working class.” But she wasn’t as central a creative force in the revival as she was in the original show — those “privileged” writers were — and we expect good things with promised storylines about unexpected pregnancy, financial woes and aging in working-class America.of