Cancelled shows of Tomorrow: The War on Chuck Lorre

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I could dig that. I would say my only issue would be if there was a MNF game I wanted to watch, but I rarely watch TV shows when they actually come on. I usually watch either after it starts to fast forward through commercials or days later after work.

That is true. I guess either Monday, Tuesday could work
 
http://www.deadline.com/2013/03/mel...gothica-nicholas-golzalez-joins-the-returned/
Melissa George has been tapped for a lead role opposite Janet Montgomery in ABC’s drama pilot Gothica. Set in the present day, the project, created by Matt Lopez and exec produced by Mark Gordon and Nick Pepper of The Mark Gordon Co., weaves together a mythology that incorporates the legends of Dracula, Jekyll and Hyde, Frankenstein and Dorian Gray. It centers on journalist Grace Van Helsing (Janet Montgomery) who takes over her family’s hometown newspaper. George, repped by ICM Partners, 3 Arts and Smelkinson, will play Fiona Hunter, the series’ most formidable force, and everyone – from Grace, to Dorian (Chris Egan), to Victor Frankenstein (Tom Ellis) – will find their mettle and savvy tested by this deliciously cunning woman. Aussie George recently toplined Frank Spotnitz’s BBC/Cinemax series Hunted. While the series ended when BBC opted not to renew it, Ciinemax and Sportnitz have been plotting two-hour movies centered on George’s character, which has developed strong fan following.
 
Oh great, he's going to.screw over another man waay more talented than him
 
http://www.deadline.com/2013/03/the-talks-sara-gilbert-to-co-star-in-cbs-pilot-bad-teacher/
‘The Talk’s Sara Gilbert To Co-Star In CBS Pilot ‘Bad Teacher’
By NELLIE ANDREEVA

EXCLUSIVE: The Talk creator/exec producer/co-host Sara Gilbert is returning to her comedy series roots with a co-staring role on the CBS comedy pilot Bad Teacher, from Sony TV. If the project goes to series, Roseanne alumna Gilbert will do both Bad Teacher and The Talk the way Kelly Ripa juggled her co-hosting duties on Live! and starring role on the ABC comedy Hope & Faith. In both cases, the talk shows and the primetime series are on the same network, which helps in coordinating schedules. Based on the 2011 movie, CBS’ single-camera pilot Bad Teacher, written by Hilary Winston, directed by Don Scardino and produced by Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg, centers on hot, confident, unapologetic former trophy wife Meredith Davis (Ali Graynor), who becomes a teacher to find a new man after her husband leaves her without a dime. Gilbert, repped by Domain, Framework Entertainment and Cliff Gilbert-Lurie, will play Irene, a shy, introverted drama and English teacher who, when activated, can be a bit intense. Her recent series credits include a role on CBS’ flagship comedy The Big Bang Theory.
 
The Year’s 21 Television Pilots Most Likely To Get A Greenlight
UPROXX:
There have been over 100 pilots announced this television season, but as usual, most of them sound dreadfully generic: Lawyers, doctors, procedurals, friends hanging out together, single-moms, blah blah blah. However, there were several with great promise, either because of the showrunner, the talent involved, or because of an intriguing premise (although not necessarily because they sound good). There’s no promise, of course, that any of them will be greenlit to series for next fall (only about 40 percent of pilots are picked up to series), but of the announcements made so far, these are the 21 Most Promising Pilots. A few of these will vie for the slots left by the slew of cancellations we can expect in March and April, and if NBC was smart, they’d just greenlight their whole damn slate and start from scratch (except for Parks and Recreation). Not included among the 12 are those pilots that were picked up for series before a pilot was even shot, like the new Michael J. Fox sitcom and CBS’s summer series, Under the Dome.


21. Super Fun Night (ABC) — With the departing Don’t Trust the B—- in Apt. 23 and the likely departure of Happy Endings, ABC is struggling to find a successful sitcom, and they still have the post-Modern Family timeslot with which to play. Super Fun Night follows three nerdy female friends: Kimmie (Rebel Wilson), Helen-Alice (Lisa Lapira) and Marika (Lauren Ash) on their “funcomfortable” quest to have “super fun” every Friday night. The pilot was pitched to CBS last year as a multi-camera, but they’re trying again as a single camera for ABC and with the growing popularity of Rebel Wilson and departing The Mindy Project co-star, Anna Camp (both previously of Pitch Perfect), this seems like a solid bet.

20. Bad Teacher (CBS) —
Name recognition still holds a lot of value, and while CBS is easily the highest rated network on television, it still has a problem with younger viewers (the average age of a CBS viewer is around 55). Bad Teacher — about a foul-mouthed school teacher searching for her next husband — would seem to fit the bill. Ari Graynor has landed the lead, and Party Down’s Ryan Hansen and David Allan Grier are also in the cast as fellow teachers.

19. Rake (Fox) — It is yet another legal drama, but this one is based on an Australian series, and those who have seen it speak incredibly highly of it. Greg Kinnear, making his television series debut, stars as a criminal defense attorney. Brilliant, frustratingly charming, and with zero filter, Keegan is one of life’s great addicts. His staggering lack of discretion and inability to self-censor land him the cases that nobody else wants, but behind that lies a resolute optimism and belief in justice that fuel his dogged determination to defend those who seem beyond redemption. He’s also got a lot of personal problems. It sounds like a suitable show to replace the hole still felt by the absence of House.

18. Untitled Gillian Anderson Drama (NBC) — Conspiracy dramas are kind of hit and miss, but NBC is desperate, and since big titles haven’t really worked for the network (Prime Suspect, The Firm), they’re going after big stars. Gillian Anderson stars as a CEO named Meg Fitch whose daughter and daughter’s classmates are taken prisoner. The show itself, which will be produced and written by Rand Ravich with Far Shariat, will center on a vast conspiracy that comes to involve some of the most powerful people in Washington, D.C. Rachel Taylor (Charlie’s Angels) co-stars, and it sounds like the kind of show that wants to grab some of the success that Scandal has gotten.

17. Hatfields and McCoys (NBC) — It was only a matter of time after the massive success of the A&E Hatfields and McCoys miniseries before one of the networks would try to capitalize. A desperate NBC leapt. Set in present day Pittsburgh, a startling death re-ignites the feud between these two legendary families. It’s got a decent cast, and all the hallmarks of a Dallas-like soap opera. On any other network, I wouldn’t give it a huge shot at a greenlight, but on NBC and with Rebecca De Mornay, Sophia Bush, and Virginia Madsen in the cast, I suspect it will get the go.

16. Bad Robot Pilot (Fox) —
J.J. Abrams’ production company, Bad Robot, isn’t exactly stellar with keeping shows on the air, but they are good at creating pilots and getting them greenlit. This one is interesting, and my biggest hesitation is that it might be too high concept for network television. The buddy cop show is set in the near future when all LAPD officers are partnered with highly evolved human-like androids. It centers on one such pairing, cop John Kennex and his android partner Dorian, who is played by the awesome Michael Ealy. Michael Irby (The Unit) and Brit Mackenzie Crook (The UK’s The Office) are also on board.

15. Bill Lawrence’s Pilot (TBS) —
This may be a simple case of wishful thinking, but Bill Lawrence does have a good working relationship with TBS — which airs Cougar Town — and reuniting with John C. McGinley from his Scrubs days pleases me to no end. It’s a multi-camera sitcom set in the world of corporate America, where a 29-year-old successful alpha male crosses paths with his company’s support staff, a tight-knit group of truly happy and care-free people, and quickly realizes he’s not nearly as happy as he thought he was. McGinley will play his overbearing boss, obviously.

14. Friends and Family (Fox) — A remake of the British series, Gavin and Stacey, they’re bringing along the original creators to develop the remake. The U.S version is a bit different: It will focus on the key life moments of the title characters, who try to maintain their relationship while combining their polarizing families’ lives (the original focused on a long-distance relationship). I’m betting on this, however, because of the solid, sitcom-friendly cast: Jason Ritter (Parenthood) and Alexis Bledel (Gilmore Girls), although it is strange that Ritter would trade one Gilmore Girl love interest (Lauren Graham in Parenthood) for another.

13. Mixology (ABC) — There’s not a big name cast in Mixology, and the writers behind it (Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, who also wrote The Hangover) aren’t exactly household names, but I’ve heard things from other folks who have read the script that suggest the pilot will be amazing. Set in the world of a sexy Manhattan bar, the high-concept Mixology chronicles the exploits of singles in search of love — all over the course of one night. Kate Simses, Blake Lee, Andrew Santino, Mercedes Masohn, Alexis Carra make up the cast, and I don’t recognize a one of them, but Ryan Seacrest’s company apparently had enough faith in it getting the greenlight to come aboard as a producer earlier this week.

12. Untitled Jim Gaffigan Pilot (CBS) —
I actually like Jim Gaffigan, but this show — a semi-autobiographical series about a guy named Jim lives with his wife and two kids in a small two-bedroom apartement in NYC — sounds kind of dumb, but also perfect for CBS, likely as a companion to a show like Mike and Molly. Mira Sorvino will play Gaffigan’s wife. It’s a multicamera laugh-track comedy, but that’s exactly what CBS loves. The one downside: CBS has a lot of promising pilots, but very few available slots but they have to start thinking about a future without How I Met Your Mother and Two and a Half Men.

11. To My Future Assistant (Fox) —
The single-camera project sounds like Horrible Bosses without the murder plots. It’s revolves around the assistants at a big New York law firm who band together as a family to help each other cope with the obnoxious, overbearing bosses who test their sanity on a daily basis. The selling point, however, is the stellar cast, especially among the bosses: Catherine O’Hara and Stephen Root have signed on to play employers, while Brittany Snow will play the lead assistant.

10. About a Boy (NBC) — NBC turned down Jason Katims’ hospital pilot last season, but since Parenthood and Friday Night Lights are two of the only great dramas that NBC has had on its schedule over the last several years, I’m guessing that this one — based on the Nick Hornby novel — will get the go ahead. David Walton (who played Jess’ doctor boyfriend on New Girl) has landed the lead, while Minnie Driver snagged the single-mother neighbor role originated by Toni Collette. Kind of perfect. This one will not only get a greenlight, I will actually watch it.

9. Intelligence (CBS) —
Yet another CBS procedural, the ones that land a greenlight almost always do well. This one focuses on a unit inside U.S. Cyber Command that has been created around one agent with a very special gift -&#8212; a microchip that has been implanted in his brain that allows him to access the entire electromagnetic spectrum. It&#8217;s sounds a little too high-concept for CBS, but Josh Holloway has landed the lead (and CBS loves former <>Lost cast members, see Hawaii Five-O) and Marg Helgenberger also stars, and she just screams CBS PROCEDURAL, probably a companion to Persons of Interest should CBS want to use Elementary to boost another night.

8. Pulling (ABC) &#8212;
Another pilot based on a British series, this one comes from The Office&#8217;s Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky. It&#8217;s about three dysfunctional women in their 30s living their lives the way they want, even if society tells them they should have it all figured out by this point. The selling point? Mandy Moore. She was great in Scrubs, and she&#8217;s a better comedic presence than you might realize.
7. Untitled Greg Garcia Pilot (CBS) &#8212; Again, this is a case where the biggest hold up may be CBS&#8217;s limited primetime real estate, but clearly a lot of people have put stock in this one. Greg Garcia left his post as showrunner to focus on the multicamera series, which is about recently divorced man whose life gets more complicated when his parents have marital problems of their own. Will Arnett left Up All Night to tackle his third series since Arrested Development, and Beau Bridges, JB Smoove, and Margo Martindale have also signed on as series regulars.


6. Crazy Ones (CBS) &#8212;
Honestly, this pilot sounds awful, but again CBS has nabbed top tier talent which makes this comedy a near certainty: Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar as a father and daughter working at an ad agency. If that&#8217;s not enough, David Kelley is the creator/showrunner, which makes it the trifecta of washed-up talent. CBS loves washed-up talent.

5. Beverly Hills Cop (CBS) &#8212;
Out of the gate, this was one of the first pitches to get a pilot to greenlight. The continuation of the movie franchise comes from showrunner Shawn Ryan and will feature at least one guest appearance from Eddie Murphy himself, handing the reins off to his son (Brandon T. Jackson). Kevin Pollak and Christine Lahti also round out the cast as detectives, though why Judge Reinhold wasn&#8217;t brought back is a complete mystery to me. What else has he got to do?

4. Untitled Michael Schur Pilot (Fox) &#8212; Another Fox series, their most high-profile sitcom pilot, this one comes from Michael Schur (Parks and Recreation). The show &#8212; about a diverse group of detectives in a precinct at the very edge of New York City &#8212; has a stellar television cast that includes Andy Samberg, Andre Braugher, and Terry Crews.


3. Mom (CBS) &#8212;
Yet ANOTHER CBS sitcom, Mom comes from Chuck Lorre (boo!), but with CBS&#8217;s biggest showrunner behind it, and a cast that includes Anna Faris, Allison Janney, Nate Corddry, Matt Jones (Badger from Breaking Bad) and French Stewart, how can this not get the greenlight? It helps that it&#8217;s the most high-profile of similar sitcom premises this season, as it&#8217;s another about a newly (sober) single mom who movies in with her mom (Janney) and tries to pull her life together in Napa Valley (Napa Valley = Drunk Janney = Comedy Gold).


2. Vatican (Showtime) &#8212;
Showtime is already more choosy about which pitches it picks up for pilots, so the odds were already in this drama&#8217;s favor before it landed the casting get of the season, in Kyle Chandler. Matthew Goode and Anna Friel will also star in the provocative contemporary genre thriller about spirituality, power and politics set against the modern-day political machinations within the Catholic church. The series will explore the relationships and rivalries as well as the mysteries and miracles behind one of the world&#8217;s most hidden institutions. The Pope stepping down last week only makes this series even more relevant.

1. S.H.I.E.L.D. (ABC) &#8212; The pilot could be absolute ass (it won&#8217;t be), but ABC would have to be dumbest network on the planet (or NBC) to turn down the Joss Whedon series based on characters from the third highest-grossing film of all time. Clark Gregg returns, and there&#8217;s a lot of potential for other high-profile cameos. As currently comprised, the international peace-keeping group already includes Ming-Na, Brett Dalton, Elizabeth Henstridge, Ian De Caestecker, and Chloe Bennet in its cast, and has Whedon has an exec producer and director of the pilot, as well as his brother, Jed, and Maurissa Tancharoen as showrunners.

NBC

Dracula
Crossbones
Michael J. Fox Comedy
Untitled Gillian Anderson Drama
Hatfields & McCoys
About A Boy
CBS
Under the Dome
Bad Teacher
Untitled Jim Gaffigan Comedy
Intelligence
Untitled Greg Garcia Comedy
Crazy Ones
Mom
Beverly Hills Cop
ABC
Super Fun Night
Mixology
Pulling
S.H.I.E.L.D.
FOX
Rake
Bad Robot Drama
Friends & Family
To My Future Assistant
Untitled Michael Schur Pilot
TBS
Bill Lawrence&#8217;s Pilot
Showtime
Vatican
 
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lol is Uproxx a source I should actually be taking seriously? :funny:
 
Sara Gilbert needs to get her ass in her own sitcom! That is all. :o
 
lol is Uproxx a source I should actually be taking seriously? :funny:

Gets some discussion going until the pilots are edited, viewed and word leaks.

What shows do you disagree with and should be on the list?
 
Nothing in particular. Alot seem like pretty good possibilities. The comment about Happy Endings just sent me into rage/sadness mode. :csad:

Don't you do me like this, ABC... :argh:
 
Looking foward to:

S.H.I.E.L.D
Bad Robot Pilot
Untitled Michael Schur Pilot
 
I feel like the Schur/Samberg pilot is a fairly sure thing, after all of FOX's comedies this season failed to impress. I think the network will see Samberg as a bigger draw for audiences, especially given that none of the leads for The Mindy Project or Ben and Kate are particularly well-known. I mean, what, you've got Kaling who was best known for being at just about the bottom of The Office's totem pole, and the B&K starring Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith's daughter and an Academy Award winning WRITER of The Descendants.
 
My Fantasy NBC Fall / Midseason Schedule

Use 3 hours of The Voice to launch Hatfields & McCoys as well as Michael J. Fox's new show, MJF which leads into Without A Boy. Move Revolution away from Monday Night Football. Single camera comedies on Tuesdays, Multicamera on Wednesdays. I feel ABC's lineup is vulnerable. Comedies aren't working on Thursdays and CBS is likely to finally expand on that night so counter with some dramas. Move SVU to plug the old ER slot for now. More riskier with new shows but NBC needs to gamble here and what they have now isn't working as the shows they do keep only get smaller in audience. They just keep sinking. The Voice, Revolution, etc. would air new episodes in the fall and then return in the spring to air uninterrupted episodes. Create a comedy block on Sundays in the winter, if it fails they're easily replaced with Dateline and a drama. Unfortunately cancel Community. Along with Smash, Guys with Kids, 1600 Penn, Whitney. Though it frees up a cable network to pick up Community.

Monday
The Voice / Wonderland, The Sixth Gun
Hatfields & McCoys

Tuesday

The Voice / Brenda Forever, Gates
MJF
About A Boy
Revolution / Bloodlines

Wednesday
Happiness
Joe & Joe & Jane
The John Mulaney Show
Undateable
Chicago Fire

Thursday
I Am Victor
Untitled Gillian Anderson Drama / Hannibal
Law & Order: SVU

Friday
Dracula / The Biggest Loser /
Grimm / Parenthood
Dateline

Sunday

NFL / Dateline, Assistance, Go On, Parks and Recreation, The New Normal, The Secret Lives of Husbands & Wives

Other midseason replacements: Crossbones, Fashion Star
 
I'm only looking forward to Greg Garcia's and Bill Lawrence's shows. I'll check out most of the rest when/if they air, but I'm only excited about those two. Shame about SHIELD, I'd be all over that **** if Whedon weren't involved.
 
I'm only looking forward to Greg Garcia's and Bill Lawrence's shows. I'll check out most of the rest when/if they air, but I'm only excited about those two. Shame about SHIELD, I'd be all over that **** if Whedon weren't involved.

:eek:
[YT]EW-2Im4OiE0[/YT]
 
:eek:
[YT]EW-2Im4OiE0[/YT]

Well if he was better at it I'd like more of his stuff! :o

But really, I don't like the way he writes. I liked Dr. Horrible, same with Toy Story and Roseanne including the time he was involved, but I don't think he had much input there.
 
FOX
Monday
Bones / Bad Robot Drama, Bones
Rake / The Following

Tuesday
Schur comedy
Friends & Family
New Girl
The Mindy Project / To My Future Assistant

Wednesday
The X-Factor / American Idol

Thursday
The X-Factor / American Idol
Glee

Friday
Kitchen Nightmares / Hotel Hell
Boomerang / Sleepy Hollow

Sunday
The Cleveland Show
The Simpsons
Raising Hope / Bob's Burgers
Family Guy
American Dad!

Single cameras struggle on CBS so if there is going to be one then there has to be two to have some consistency and not stick out in the multi cam schedule. Person of Interest moves but gets the NCIS spinoff as a lead in. Beverly Hills Cop gets the best lead in with NCIS/NCIS LA. Hawaii-Five 0 goes to Fridays to create more stability and joins CSI.

CBS

Monday
How I Met Your Mother
Two Broke Girls
Two and a Half Men
Mike & Molly
Criminal Minds

Tuesday
NCIS
NCIS: LA
Beverly Hills Cop

Wednesday

Survivor
NCIS: Red
Person of Interest

Thursday
Big Bang Theory
Mom
Bad Teacher
Untitled Greg Garcia / Gaffigan
Elementary

Friday
Hawaii Five-0
CSI
Blue Bloods

Sunday
60 Minutes
The Amazing Race
The Good Wife / Intelligence
The Mentalist
 
I'm sorry, but Rake doesn't interest me at all. The only thing it has going for it is Tolan.
 
I just discovered TNT are turning Baldacci's King & Maxwell books into a series! :awesome:
 
Well, it's got dat Rebecca Romijn, so... :up:
 
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