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mattbib
05-17-2005, 02:54 PM
from EOnline.com (http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,16569,00.html)

MONDAY: 7th Heaven; Just Legal

TUESDAY: Gilmore Girls; Supernatural

WEDNESDAY: One Tree Hill; Related

THURSDAY: Smallville; Everwood

FRIDAY: What I Like About You; Twins; Reba; Living with Fran

SUNDAY: Charmed; Blue Collar TV

Despite buzz and renewed fan fervor for shows like Gilmore Girls (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/Tv/0,1588,50,00.html), Everwood (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/Tv/0,1588,226,00.html) and the TRL crowd's fave, One Tree Hill (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/Tv/0,1588,225,00.html), the WB's ratings are down almost 10 percent this season, and the network will likely end the 2004-05 season at the bottom of the network ratings race behind longtime nemesis UPN.

So it's no surprise that when the network unveiled its 2005-06 schedule on Tuesday, the name of the game was new shows--eight of them, to be exact--and some big time-slot shakeups.

(http://javascript%3Cb%3E%3C/b%3E:smallwin_newsplayer%28%27/Includes/VideoPlayer/select2.jsp?theme=10&clipID=&adCat=mmgallery&seed=vp10%27%29;) WB It Boys Jensen Ackles (Dawson's Creek and Smallville (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/Tv/0,1588,81,00.html)) and Jared Padalecki (Gilmore Girls) are among the teen-friendly network's "new" stars. Meanwhile, teen Superman saga Smallville will face one of its toughest foes in the always competitive Thursday, 8 p.m. time slot, while two of the network's other stalwarts--dramas Everwood and One Tree Hill--also get new prime-time homes.

"The blend of A-list executive producers that have come to the network for the first time, along with our homegrown superstars, form the creative backbone of our new schedule," says David Janollari, the WB's top programming exec.

Among next season's most buzzed about new offerings are the drama Supernatural, produced by Charlie's Angels director McG and starring Ackles and Padalecki as brothers who travel around investigating unexplained phenomenon (a '67 Chevy Impala is their version of the Mystery Van), and Pepper Dennis, starring Rebecca Romijn as an ambitious Chicago TV reporter juggling work, romance and a quirky family. The Romijn series, which costars North Shore's Brooke Burns and Boy Meets World's Rider Strong, won't premiere until midseason.

Here's a rundown of the WB's other new shows:


Just Legal: Prolific producer Jerry Bruckheimer joins the WB with this drama about a teen prodigy attorney (Million Dollar Baby's Jay Baruchel) with a cantankerous mentor (Miami Vice's Don Johnson).
Related: Friends' Marta Kauffman is the executive producer of this dramedy about four sisters who live in New York City. Just Shoot Me's Laura San Giacomo and Spin City's Jennifer Esposito star.
Twins: Roseanne's Sara Gilbert and former daytime soap star Molly Stanton (good witch Charity on NBC's wacky Passions) play the titular sibs who don't really bond, but are thrown together when they inherit the family lingerie business. The series, from Will & Grace cocreators David Kohan and Max Mutchnick, also stars Melanie Griffith as the twins' mom.
Bedford Diaries (midseason): Oz mastermind Tom Fontana created this drama about students at a liberal arts college in New York. Matthew Modine is the professor of a sexuality course, and another WB It Boy, Gilmore Girls' Milo Ventimiglia, is one of the students.
Misconceptions (midseason): Frasier's Jane Leeves stars as a woman who freaks out when her daughter meets the anonymous sperm donor who fathered her.
Modern Men (midseason): The L Word's Eric Lively stars in a comedy about three single pals who hire a life coach (Jake in Progress' Wendie Malick) to help them get dates. The show is the very first TV sitcom produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.
Two bubble shows that will live to see another season are the Sunday night witchy drama Charmed, which is back for an eighth season, an the Friday night Fran Drescher comedy Living with Fran, back for a second go-round.

And then there are the shows headed for the scrap heap: Jack & Bobby, the drama about a future President's childhood was one of the most hyped shows from last year's WB upfront; the Lori Laughlin soapy drama Summerland, which does return to burn off a few new episodes in June; and the oddball variety-ish series Steve Harvey's Big Time.

mattbib
05-17-2005, 02:55 PM
Looks like I'll have to start taping Everwood as I'm never home on Thursdays. But that frees me up to watch Just Legal. Also looking forward to some of the midseason shows.

Michael P
05-17-2005, 03:05 PM
WB's ratings are down almost 10 percent this season, and the network will likely end the 2004-05 season at the bottom of the network ratings race behind longtime nemesis UPN.

That's what you get for cancelling Angel. Jerks.

Gaz
05-17-2005, 03:13 PM
That's what you get for cancelling Angel. Jerks.
I'd be delusional if I suggested UPN having Veronica Mars had anything to do with that swing, wouldn't I?

Michael P
05-17-2005, 03:47 PM
I'd be delusional if I suggested UPN having Veronica Mars had anything to do with that swing, wouldn't I?
As delusional as the worst America-hating liberal on CNN.

LtMarvel
05-17-2005, 04:04 PM
Jack & Bobby I will miss. There were very good episodes and some mediocre ones. Always in a killer time period.

Smallville to Thursdays? I reserve that slot for a local current affairs show, Donneybrook!

Kevinroc
05-17-2005, 07:57 PM
Jack & Bobby I will miss. There were very good episodes and some mediocre ones. Always in a killer time period.


I agree about missing Jack & Bobby. It was a really good series. Not everything was a winner but it was an ambitious project and was a lot different than the other shows on the WB.

Deathstroke
05-17-2005, 08:57 PM
Exactly one show on the WB that I'll be watching, even though it's pissed me off all this season.

Everwood

The official cancellation tally: Commando Nanny (never aired), Drew Carey's Green Screen Show, Grounded For Life, Jack & Bobby, The Mountain, The Starlet, Steve Harvey's Big Time, Summerland (which will return in the summer to burn off unaired episodes).

The Pepper Dennis show was postponed to midseason so Rebecca Romijn can work on X-Men 3.

Because ABC renewed Jake in Progress, Modern Men will have to recast Wendie Malick's role.

The new show Related, due to "creative reasons", will recast the role played by Laura San Giacomo in the pilot.

KenK
05-17-2005, 09:38 PM
I'm genuinely surprised by the cancellation of Jack & Bobby. Not that I was any type of fan of the show, but damn! People swore up and down this was gonna be the next best thing since slice ham!! Oh well.

Deathstroke
05-17-2005, 09:39 PM
I'm genuinely surprised by the cancellation of Jack & Bobby. Not that I was any type of fan of the show, but damn! People swore up and down this was gonna be the next best thing since slice ham!! Oh well.

And then hardly anyone watched it.

Besides what was the point of the show? They reveal which one died and which one became President in the first episode and revealed how Jack died in the last ep.. All that needed being said was said in my mind.

cosmicspidey
05-17-2005, 11:02 PM
Man, how is it WB still doesn't have programming for Saturday nights? Can you get more minor league than that? Hell, they're losing to UPN and there's only one UPN affiliate in the state I live in (and it's not even on the broadcast channels).

Z-man
05-17-2005, 11:20 PM
And then hardly anyone watched it.

Besides what was the point of the show? They reveal which one died and which one became President in the first episode and revealed how Jack died in the last ep.. All that needed being said was said in my mind.

How? Spoil me.

Deathstroke
05-18-2005, 05:32 AM
How? Spoil me.

Go to TV Tome.com and look up the episode guide. The detail for the final episode is quite involved.

Patman
05-18-2005, 08:45 AM
The last episode of Jack and Bobby was pretty good TV. I've seen it at least twice now, and re-watched the final last 10-15 minutes about 4 times.

KenK
05-18-2005, 08:50 AM
And then hardly anyone watched it.

Besides what was the point of the show? They reveal which one died and which one became President in the first episode and revealed how Jack died in the last ep.. All that needed being said was said in my mind.

The whole hook of the show never really seemed to make sense, anyway. One of them becomes president, and that's relevant because. . . . ? I never understood while it was integral to the show's storylines.

KenK
05-18-2005, 09:08 AM
Among next season's most buzzed about new offerings are the drama Supernatural, produced by Charlie's Angels director McG and starring Ackles and Padalecki as brothers who travel around investigating unexplained phenomenon (a '67 Chevy Impala is their version of the Mystery Van), and Pepper Dennis, starring Rebecca Romijn as an ambitious Chicago TV reporter juggling work, romance and a quirky family. The Romijn series, which costars North Shore's Brooke Burns and Boy Meets World's Rider Strong, won't premiere until midseason.

Here's a rundown of the WB's other new shows:

[list]
Just Legal: Prolific producer Jerry Bruckheimer joins the WB with this drama about a teen prodigy attorney (Million Dollar Baby's Jay Baruchel) with a cantankerous mentor (Miami Vice's Don Johnson).

Won't last, too quirky.

Related: Friends' Marta Kauffman is the executive producer of this dramedy about four sisters who live in New York City. Just Shoot Me's Laura San Giacomo and Spin City's Jennifer Esposito star.

OOH! Another show where black people don't exist in New York City, no doubt! Although weekly dose of Lizzy Caplan might make it tolerable.

Twins: Roseanne's Sara Gilbert and former daytime soap star Molly Stanton (good witch Charity on NBC's wacky Passions) play the titular sibs who don't really bond, but are thrown together when they inherit the family lingerie business. The series, from Will & Grace cocreators David Kohan and Max Mutchnick, also stars Melanie Griffith as the twins' mom.

It'll be nice to see Sara Gilbert not being relegated to a recurring guest role on an already popular show, only to be quickly forgotten(24, ER).

Bedford Diaries (midseason): Oz mastermind Tom Fontana created this drama about students at a liberal arts college in New York. Matthew Modine is the professor of a sexuality course, and another WB It Boy, Gilmore Girls' Milo Ventimiglia, is one of the students.

Look at Modine makin' a comeback! Here's hopin', playa!

Misconceptions (midseason): Frasier's Jane Leeves stars as a woman who freaks out when her daughter meets the anonymous sperm donor who fathered her.

A little late to be doing the series version of Made In America, isn't it?

Modern Men (midseason): The L Word's Eric Lively stars in a comedy about three single pals who hire a life coach (Jake in Progress' Wendie Malick) to help them get dates. The show is the very first TV sitcom produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.

Does Bruckheimer have a sense of humor? That is the question!

Quarterwolf
05-18-2005, 04:30 PM
TUESDAY: Supernatural

WEDNESDAY: One Tree Hill;

THURSDAY: Smallville; Everwood

SUNDAY: Charmed

*sigh* The network I used to watch the most is now on the downswing.

I really cannot stand how they moved all the shows around. On Thursdays I am going to have to have 3 VCR taping just to see all my shows.

Royal
05-18-2005, 04:55 PM
A McG produced X-Files ripoff. yay.

I can hear the money draining into un needed flash cuts & CG up the wazzoo.

Deathstroke
05-18-2005, 09:15 PM
Sara Gilbert wasn't forgotten on 24 she was killed off. Small difference there. :D