Tag: cbs

  • ‘Under the Dome’ Cancelled by CBS After 3 Seasons

    The dome is coming down, and so is “Under the Dome”: CBS has cancelled the sci-fi drama after three seasons.

    The network announced the cancellation on Monday, revealing that the show would end with the season three finale on September 10. While the series, based on the popular Stephen King novel of the same name, initially premiered to blockbuster ratings back in 2013, it just couldn’t keep up that momentum.

    “Two years ago, ‘Under the Dome’ broke new ground in the summer and became an instant hit on CBS, as well as with viewers around the world,” said Nina Tassler, chair of CBS Entertainment, in a statement. “‘Dome”s event storytelling and multiplatform business model paved the way for more original summer programming with the successful rollouts of ‘Extant’ and ‘Zoo.’ We’re excited to present the final chapter in Chester’s Mill as the story comes full circle, with the dome coming down as dramatically as it went up.”

    “Dome” was originally envisioned as a one-season adaptation of King’s novel, but was so popular that CBS brass decided to amend the storyline, add new characters, and continue the series indefinitely. But all good things must come to an end, and with “Dome”‘s declining ratings — and the showrunners’ decision to take down the titular mysterious obstacle — it seemed like the time for the show to end had finally arrived.

    According to Variety, the series finale “will answer many questions about the dome’s origin and power, as two groups of residents will engage in one final conflict that some won’t survive.”

    “Under the Dome” wraps its run on CBS on September 10.

    [via: Variety]

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  • Watch Stephen Colbert’s New ‘Late Show’ Promos, Featuring Mitt Romney

    “Late Show with Stephen Colbert” promos, with three brief spots appearing over the weekend.

    Here are the new promos, including one with the real Mitt Romney and his pancake promise disappointment:

    That was not the card we were thinking of, but totally agree that that’s a sweet Trapper Keeper.

    It’ll be interesting to see how the late night world looks after this latest shift. There have already been a lot of changes this year. Craig Ferguson left “The Late Late Show” and James Corden stepped in, with his very Jimmy Fallon-like games and viral videos. David Letterman retired and now Stephen Colbert is ready to debut. And Jon Stewart is getting ready to leave on August 6, with Trevor Noah poised to take his spot on “The Daily Show” starting September 28.

    Are you excited to see what Stephen Colbert brings to “The Late Show”? Check out all the videos and promos on the show’s YouTube page.

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  • Melissa Benoist Feels a Responsibility to ‘Stay True’ to ‘Supergirl’

    It runs in the family: she’s faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound just like her famous Kryptionian cousin. But as both a superheroine and as a young woman still coming into her own, “Supergirl” has a lot to learn about the world.

    For the new CBS series debuting in the fall, actress Melissa Benoist (“Glee,” “Whiplash”) takes on the iconic mantle of the Ingenue of Steel and her alter ego Kara Danvers, and during her first trip to Comic-Con International in San Diego she revealed all sorts of Super-details, from learning to throw a punch during her super-workout to dancing through the sky to a particularly constraining portion of that caped costume.

    Moviefone: Taking on this character, there’s all the comic book history, there’s Helen Slater’s interpretation from the ’80s, the animated version, Laura Vandervoort on “Smallville” — what do you want to make out of this?

    Melissa Benoist: Wow! Well, obviously, there’s a daunting feeling to arrive at a point where this is a character that is so developed and so many people already love. So there’s responsibility, and I arrive wanting to just stay true to a lot of that. But what I want to bring is: I love her humanity, even though she is an alien. I love that she really has a lot of discovering to do and growth and makes mistakes. I think she’s so relatable, and I just want to stay true to that.

    Did you audition with a Kara scene or Supergirl scene?

    I’m trying to remember. I think the auditions were Kara and Jimmy. Kara and Winn, for sure. And Kara and Cat. So I don’t think there were any Supergirl [scenes].

    Once you got the role, did you immediately run to the gym?

    [Laughs] Kind of!

    What did you do to get in Supergirl shape? Did you have to step up your workouts?

    Oh, yeah, I did. I immediately [did] — I am such a pacifist in my everyday life. I don’t think I’ve ever hit anyone before, and so I definitely had to learn technique. Like, how to actually punch someone and not hurt yourself more than you’re hurting the person you’re punching. And so boxing was part of it, and core work and Pilates and biometrics — a lot of it.

    Did it change your mindset, getting yourself physically transformed?

    Yeah, yeah, the motivation there, and the drive, it definitely affects. Because I don’t have a choice, and I can’t sit down and be like, “Oh, I’m done. I want some popcorn.” Like I have to stay on top of my game.

    What about the wirework for the flying sequences?

    It’s hard. The wirework is really difficult, but so fun. And when you get it right, watching the result is exhilarating. It’s a really, really cool feeling to know what it felt like, the energy I had to exert to create those flying scenes. And then the way they look is really rewarding.

    How did it feel to see yourself in the costume?

    There’s this internal feeling. Something changes. It’s this transformation, almost, to the point where I don’t recognize myself when I’m in it. I feel like a different person.

    On a practical level, what do you love about the costume and what do you not love?

    That’s a really good question [laughs]. I love that -– I grew up as a dancer, so it feels like a leotard and skirt and tights that I wore when I was a ballerina. But what is impractical or sometimes painful — even though I think I’m very lucky in terms of my suit; I know a lot of people have masks that sweat and don’t breathe at all — mine has a corset. My cape is a corset, and so that sometimes when I’m on the wire is like… it’s constricting.

    Are you doing your own stunts?

    I’m trying to do a lot of them because I want to. I think they’re so fun. There are some that I just can’t — I really could get injured. But I’m trying to. My stunt double is amazing. She was Jen Garner’s on “Alias.” She’s all over the place, and she’s so cool. I wish people could see what they go through. It’s insane.

    Are you trying to bring that dancer’s grace to the flying and to the movement?

    Of course. What I think is cool is to try to bring kind of a femininity to her strength. You see Superman and it’s obviously this solid thing. But I do like the idea of bringing in like a grace to it, and a fluidity and kind of this femininity to flying. It’s fun.

    When you did this pilot, did you think this was a show that would get a series order?

    Yes and no. I think I was 50/50. I really believed in it. And I think I knew deep down that people would like it, especially like young girls. That’s who I really wanted to affect. But, of course, there’s always that moment where you’re like, “Oh, man, I don’t know what’s going to happen.” But now, I’m fairly certain that people are really excited, from what everyone’s been saying.
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  • Is the Network TV Sitcom Dying? Ask Jim Gaffigan

    AOL BUILD Speaker Series: Jim Gaffigan Wondering why some networks have all but given up on creating new sitcoms? Maybe Jim Gaffigan knows the answer.

    The stand-up comic, whose sitcom “The Jim Gaffigan Show” debuted on TV Land this week, has been promoting the show with interviews (including here, here, and here) where he explains why he took his new series to basic cable.

    According to Gaffigan, each broadcast network tried to shoehorn his autobiographical series into its preferred sitcom format, with less of an eye on what would make the show unique or good and more on what would make it test well with audiences and run long enough to be sold into syndication. That’s where the real money is for a TV production company — we’re talking hundreds of millions of dollars for a successful series with at least 100 episodes in its library — but to get there, the networks apparently believe that risk-avoidance is more important than preserving the idiosyncratic, personal voice that led them to pick up the show in the first place.

    In this case, that voice belongs to Gaffigan and his wife Jeannie, who has co-written his stand-up material and who serves as a writer and co-producer with her husband on the TV Land show. Initially, she’d have played herself, too, but the couple eventually decided it was better to have Jeannie focus her efforts behind the scenes, so Jim’s on-screen Jeannie is played by Ashley Williams. Both Gaffigans say they feel the show is true to their life experience — a showbiz couple raising a Catholic family of five kids in a cramped apartment in downtown Manhattan.

    It’s not even like the usual complaint about network sitcoms applies to the Gaffigans’ development woes. After all, Gaffigan prefers to work clean — not out of any moral conviction, but because it suits his material, which is largely about snack food and babies. That doesnt mean his material doesn’t border on the risque; Jim’s penis is the source of running gags in two early episodes, though nothing is shown.

    Still, even that wasn’t raunchy enough for CBS, which has had great success in recent years with “Two and a Half Men” (and other sexually frank Chuck Lorre shows) and “2 Broke Girls.” According to Gaffigan, they actually wanted to make his show more vulgar and crass.

    Over at NBC, the Gaffigans say, the executives wanted each script’s plot to follow a pattern, beginning with an “inciting event,” followed by a complication that raises the stakes. These are the sort of tactics writers use to make audiences worry about the characters, so that they’ll be more relatable and more likable. (Remember, this is the network that brought you “Seinfeld,” “The Office,” and “30 Rock,” long-running shows about groups of generally unlikable people, with plots based more on the characters’ inability to cope with the world than their tendency to rise to the occasion when faced with obstacles.)

    Many of the networks’ objections to the show as the Gaffigans conceived it seemed to have less to do with subject matter, plotting, and character than they did with formal issues. Save for the pilot, the episodes start with sped-up montages of Jim and Jeannie interacting with their kids. (There’s your raised stakes.) The show is shot on location in Manhattan, which is costly but lends the show an air of realism that makes the series’ visuals look more like those of “Louie” than any current network sitcom. And it’s shot single-camera, like “The Office,” “30 Rock,” or ABC’s “Modern Family.” (The comedian says CBS initially agreed to the single-camera format, then reversed itself and insisted on a multi-camera, studio-bound setup of the sort that CBS has been using since “I Love Lucy.”)

    None of this is especially innovative or cutting-edge. In the pilot that aired on TV Land this week and the “Super Fun Daddy Day” episode that previewed on Amazon before that, there was little in the way of plot or character to distinguish “The Jim Gaffigan Show” from the wave of shlubby-guy-hot-wife shows that were CBS’ bread and butter a decade ago (“Everybody Loves Raymond,” “The King of Queens,” “Yes, Dear,” “Still Standing,” and others that have worked for CBS going all the way back to “The Honeymooners” 60 years ago). What’s unique about the series is its voice, which includes its visuals (New York is really another character), its rhythms, its obsession with food, its matter-of-fact portrayal of the family’s Catholicism, and its satiric take on the vast gap between the parents’ idealism and dreams and their shortcomings and dashed hopes.

    That sensibility, more than anything else, is what makes “The Jim Gaffigan Show” seem fresh and current. As he told the Daily Beast, “We’re in this golden age of dramas, and with that and reality TV, the cadence of sitcoms seems inauthentic. So there’s time for a single-camera show that’s humorous, but based in reality.”

    It’s that sensibility that TV Land offered to preserve, the Gaffigans suggest. The executives there were much less particular; they just wanted 10 good episodes. If those draw viewers, then they can make more. If not, TV Land got the presitge of having Jim Gaffigan do a show, and the Gaffigans got to make the series they wanted to make.

    Why was TV Land so different? The Gaffigans don’t say, but here are some possible reasons. As a basic cable channel, it doesn’t need to worry about network-sized ratings or syndication sales to make money, so the bar for success is lower, and so are the stakes for any one series (there’s that word again). TV Land chief Doug Herzog also oversees Comedy Central, where “Gaffigan” reruns will air almost immediately (giving the executive essentially a two-for-the-price-of-one deal), and where buzzworthy hits from “South Park” to “Inside Amy Schumer” have been built around the personal voices of original comedy minds, not cookie-cutter formulas.

    The networks have tried to make use of original comic voices before. Two decades ago, after the successes of “Roseanne,” “Home Improvement,” and “Seinfeld,” the networks binged on shows built around stand-up comics — but they made the shows all look and sound the same, with the stars playing overwhelmed parents or overwhelmed workplace drones. Gaffigan was part of that wave; his CBS show “Welcome to New York” was a workplace comedy built around him but largely taken out of his creative hands. It was canceled after 13 episodes. In the years since, he’s become a hugely successful touring comic, to the point where TV needs him more than he needs TV. He was in a position this time to hold out until he got to make the show that he wanted, a waiting process that, as it turned out, lasted several years.

    So the networks’ loss here is basic cable’s gain. And Jim and Jeannie Gaffigan’s experience here is probably typical. After all, Tina Fey, after a decade and a half with NBC, first took “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” there; they passed, and now it’s an Emmy-nominated hit on Netflix. Like basic cable, the streaming sites would rather have buzz than syndication sales (at least, for now), which is why they’ve been only too happy to pick up sitcoms the networks have canceled for being too idiosyncratic and original, like “Arrested Development,” “Community,” and “The Mindy Project.”

    The networks’ reliance on formula for sitcoms is not only driving potential hits and shows they couldn’t capitalize on toward other platforms, it’s also driving creators away. (Gaffigan says he’ll never work for a network again.) Will there come a time when broadcasters drive away their last remaining laugh-craving viewers, too?
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  • ‘Big Brother 17’ Spoilers: Da’Vonne Evicted Second, Twists No Help

    UPDATE: Da’Vonne was evicted in a 7-2 vote against Meg. No idea why Day didn’t cancel Clay’s vote, not that it would’ve been enough. But he was the one who really put her on the block. Day thinks the houseguests are cowards who won’t nominate Audrey because she’s transgender and they’re worried what America might say about them. She’s right that they should judge Audrey — and everyone else — as a player, not a symbol. It would’ve been interesting for Julie Chen to tell Da’Vonne about Vanessa, too, since Vanessa is a famous poker player and Day is a poker dealer.

    Warning: BB17 spoilers ahead from the live feeds.

    Hey, remember when Audrey Middleton was the “Big Brother 17” Week 2? Those were the days! And those days are gone. Right now, Da’Vonne Rogers looks like she’ll be following Jace Agolli out the door as the second houseguest evicted from BB17. No last laugh for her — the house is basically unanimous against her, except for Jason Roy, now that she’s up against Meg Maley. Three votes won’t be enough. And no help from the Twin Twist, either, since she was too late in seeing something off about Liz Nolan. Now that most of the house knows about Liz’s secret, it’s not even useful for leverage.

    How did it come to this?

    Shelli Poole and Becky Burgess won the two Head of Household competitions, and even though Becky’s plan was to backdoor Audrey, Becky was dethroned as HOH when her nominations won the Battle of the Block. Shelli remains HOH, and she never planned to backdoor Audrey. She even seems to be working with Audrey at this point, and she and her showmance partner and co-HOH (it seems that way, anyway) Clay Honeycutt decided to target Da’Vonne. Last week, CBS aired Clay vs. Day, so it’s no surprise that he would want her out, and Clay and Shelli believe Day will never trust them and always want to target them.
    Shelli nominated Da’Vonne and John, and Day could’ve saved herself in the Power of Veto competition, but — as we’ll see on TV on Wednesday, July 8 — John won the POV. During the POV ceremony, held on Monday, John took himself off the block, and Shelli nominated Meg Maley as the replacement nominee, because everyone likes her and she won’t be voted out. Shelli almost nominated Liz — which, ironically, would be wise, since Liz is the twin twist and if she survives five evictions her sister Julia enters the game on her own — but it was feared that Liz might actually leave so they picked Meg as someone who would be a good pawn next to Day. Da’Vonne doesn’t even seem to have any loyal allies beyond Jason, so how she’s more of a threat than Audrey is unclear. And if Meg really is that popular, why isn’t SHE a better person to target and evict? It’s not going to happen, but…
    The one thing that maybe could’ve saved Da’Vonne is if she (or Jason) answered the seventh call in the house in Kathy Griffin’s BB Takeover Twist under different circumstances. As Kathy explained on Thursday night, she’ll be calling into the house this week to give the HGs the power of the last laugh. Whoever answers the seventh call will get the power to prevent three people from voting at the next live eviction.


    As of now (Tuesday) it looks like maybe Day was the one to answer the seventh call — which is very convenient, for drama purposes — but it’s still probably too late, because who is really willing to shake up the house for her benefit? But still. Day is now trying.

    So it’s Meg vs. Da’Vonne this Thursday, July 9 and we’ll see if Day does have enough massive luck — and social/strategic skill — to pull this off. There’s still only about a 0.1 percent chance. Do you hope she stays?

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  • ‘Big Brother 17’ Spoilers: Jace Evicted First, Audrey Is (No Longer) Next Target

    Warning: Spoilers ahead from the “Big Brother” live feeds.

    UPDATE 1: Jace was indeed sent home on Thursday, July 2 in the first eviction of BB17. He got 12 of the available 13 votes. Audrey voted for Jackie. (Jackie, Jace and James had no votes.) It was also revealed, to TV viewers, that Liz has an identical twin and she and her sister Julia cast their vote together, then switched places live. Kathy Griffin announced the new twist: This coming week, she’d be calling into the house and whoever answers the seventh call gets the power to prevent three people from voting in the next eviction. That’s huge. Shelli and Becky won the Week 2 Head of Household competition, so now we have to see 1) who they nominate, 2) who wins the Battle of the Block, 3) who wins Power of Veto, 4) who are the final nominees, 5) who is the HOH/House target, and 6) who answers that seventh call. That person will have a ton of power. Right now, it still looks like Audrey is Becky’s target (for a backdoor eviction) but Shelli would rather see Da’Vonne gone. So if Becky stays HOH, that’s potentially bad for Audrey, and if Shelli stays HOH, that’s good for Audrey.

    UPDATE 2: Good news for Audrey: Becky nominated Steve and Jason, hoping to backdoor Audrey, but they won the Battle of the Block, dethroning Becky. So Shelli is the official Week 2 HOH, and she is targeting Da’Vonne. Da’Vonne and John were nominated, but John won POV. He’s planning to take himself off the block and, at this point, Shelli is planning to nominate Meg as a replacement pawn, with the continued goal to oust Da’Vonne. Shelli figures Meg is so popular that she’d stay over Day, but Meg is so connected — to Jeff, James, Jason and others — that she really would be a good person to vote out. But that’s not the plan at the moment. The plan is still to dump Day.

    Original post:

    “Big Brother 17” has only been airing for a week but a month’s worth of drama has been happening on the live feeds. This house is already an asylum and it’s not even clear who’s running things anymore. Tonight (July 1) we’ll see the results of the Power of Veto competition, which was actually held on Friday, and tomorrow (Thursday) BB17 will give us the first live eviction of the summer. The BB Takeover twist can alter whatever it wants at any time, and plans change within minutes in the “Big Brother” house, but as of now two things seem clear: 1) Jace Agolli will be evicted and 2) the majority of the house wants Audrey Middleton out ASAP.

    On Sunday’s show ,we saw that James Huling remains the Head of Household in Week 1, with “The Amazing Race” alum Jackie Ibarra and Ian Terry clone Steve Moses on the block. However, Steve won himself the Power of Veto and he used the POV to save himself. HOH James did what the house wanted at the time and put Jace on the block as the backdoor target. Jace knows at this point that he is leaving, although he’s now scrambling to get the votes to evict Jackie instead of himself, so he can work with his allies — especially Austin Matelson and Liz Nolan (who has a twin named Julia, just FYI).

    But in the first week, Audrey has played HARD — too hard. It was noticed that she has an alliance with just about everyone and she basically circles the house from conversation to conversation playing telephone, stirring up drama, then complaining that the house is just playing telephone and there’s so much drama. It caught up to her. So, as of now, the target for Week 2 has moved from Austin or Liz to Audrey. Will it last? We’ll see. It could be that Audrey (BB’s first ever transgender houseguest) wins the Week 2 HOH on Thursday or she wins back the house’s trust.

    Audrey had Da’Vonne Rogers and Shelli Poole as her Day 1 allies, and she got close with Clay Honeycutt, but the house has lost trust in her. However, since Jace, Austin, Liz and (sort of) Vanessa Rousso are on the outside of what seems like the main alliance, Audrey may be able to work with them and find some leverage. A lot will be decided by who wins both HOHs, who is nominated, and who wins the all-important POV in Week 2. Audrey seems like the majority target for the moment, but “The Amazing Race’s” Jeff Weldon also has his share of haters and there may be even more reasons to oust him, since he’s very close to both Jackie and Meg. So … Jeff vs. Audrey may be the story of Week 2, unless an even bigger target emerges.

    For now, expect to see Steve win POV tonight and Jace become the first houseguest to leave BB17 tomorrow. However, the motto of this show is Expect the Unexpected, so there may be a last minute change on Thursday to send Jackie from pawn to packing. It’s happened before.

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  • 9 Stephen King TV Adaptations That Will Totes Creep the Hell Outta You

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    Writer Stephen King is regarded as one of the great masters of suspense (no disrespect to Mr. Hitchcock, of course) and his contribution to entertainment over the five decades has been huge. His thrilling, spooky, and often campy stories have been turned into countless film and TV projects, delighting horror and sci-fi fans alike on-screen since “Carrie” got doused in pig’s blood back in 1976.

    King has dozens of TV adaptations to his credit, including current CBS hit “Under the Dome,” so we think now’s a great time to look back at a few standouts. Here are 9 creep-tastic Stephen King TV adaptations worth getting scared by. (Spoiler alert: If you live in a small and sleepy New England town, prepare to be extra freaked out.)

  • ‘Under the Dome’ Season 3 Unites Julia and Big Jim to ‘Fight the Enemy Within’

    "Awakening" -- When Barbie enlists his father\'s help to reach out to Julia, he realizes that Don may know more about the Dome than he is letting on. Meanwhile, Big Jim appoints himself sheriff of Chester\'s Mill, on UNDER THE DOME, Monday, August 18 (10:00-11:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.    Pictured (L-R) Rachelle Lefevre     as Julia Shumway and Dean Norris as James "Big Jim" Rennie  Photo: Best Possible Screen grab/CBS2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.Are you ready to go back “Under the Dome” — and outside the Dome, around the corner from the Dome, or wherever CBS sends us next? Season 3 of the show that is really not following Stephen King’s book at all anymore premieres this Thursday, June 25 at 9 p.m. with back-to-back episodes. In “Move On” and “But I’m Not,” CBS says:

    The residents of Chester’s Mill appear both inside and outside the Dome following their mysterious encounter in the tunnels beneath the town. As the Dome begins to reveal its ultimate agenda, the townspeople are forced to question what and whom they can trust as fresh threats appear, new residents emerge and surprising alliances form.”

    On the new residents front, it looks like Marg Helgenberger will guest star as Christine Price, a Chester’s Mill resident with insight into the Dome’s origins, and Eriq La Salle guest stars as Hektor Martin, the ruthless CEO of the energy company run by Barbie’s (Mike Vogel) father.

    And on the “surprising alliances” front, TV Guide has some scoop on why (gasp!) Big Jim Rennie (Dean Norris) and Julia Shumway (Rachelle Lefevre) will actually be on the same side this season, even though she was last seen stabbing him to stop him from killing her. As UTD creator Neal Baer told TV Guide:

    Julia and Big Jim become – I wouldn’t say bosom buddies, but they certainly become allies against everyone. They unite against the enemy within. That’s the theme of this season … struggling to live under the dome and fight the enemy within. And it’s not Big Jim.”

    The showrunner said this alliance is tied to who or what is really behind the Dome:

    Big Jim and Julia really come to terms where he says, ‘You’ve always said the Dome was here to protect us. You’ve always had faith in the Dome. You’re wrong.’ And Julia comes to see that maybe Big Jim is right.”

    Big Jim is right?! Don’t tell him, it’ll go straight to his ego. Are you coming along for the ride with this crazy train departs on Thursday?

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  • CBS Announces Fall Premiere Dates, New ‘Supergirl’ Premiere Date

    “Supergirl” is bound to be a big hit for CBS, and the network is so excited about the new show that it’s moving up its premiere date.

    The series, which was set to debut sometime in November, will now premiere on Monday, October 26 at 8:30 p.m., before shifting to its permanent timeslot on Monday, November 2 at 8 p.m. That switch is part of a larger strategic scheduling plan, according to CBS brass, meant to expose the largest audiences possible to new programming.

    “With many of the biggest hits on primetime television as well as Thursday Night Football, we have the ability to strategically roll out our new season over several weeks this fall,” said CBS Entertainment Chairman Nina Tassler in a statement. “We’ve created a very focused scheduling and promotional environment to provide the best possible launch platform for new and returning series across the schedule.”

    Check out CBS’s full fall lineup premiere dates below.

    Thursday, Sept. 17
    7:30/6:30c: Thursday Night Football pre-game
    8:25/7:25c: Thursday Night Football kickoff

    Monday, Sept. 21
    8/7c: The Big Bang Theory
    8:30/7:30c: Life in Pieces
    9/8c: Scorpion
    10/9c: NCIS: LA

    Tuesday, Sept. 22
    8/7c: NCIS
    9/8c: NCIS: New Orleans
    10/9c: Limitless

    Wednesday, Sept. 23
    8/7c: Survivor 9:30/8:30c: Big Brother

    Friday, Sept. 25
    8/7c: The Amazing Race
    9/8c: Hawaii Five-0
    10/9c: Blue Bloods

    Saturday, Sept. 26
    10/9c: 48 Hours

    Sunday, Sept. 27
    9/8c: CSI (two-hour series finale)

    Wednesday, Sept. 30
    9/8c: Criminal Minds
    10/9c: Code Black

    Sunday, Oct. 4
    8/7c: Madam Secretary
    9/8c: The Good Wife
    10/9c: CSI: Cyber

    Monday, Oct. 26
    8:30/7:30c: Supergirl

    Monday, Nov. 2
    8/7c: Supergirl (regular timeslot)

    Thursday, Nov. 5
    8/7c: The Big Bang Theory (regular timeslot)
    8:30/7:30c: Life in Pieces (regular timeslot)
    9/8c: Mom
    9:30/8c: Angel From Hell 1
    10/9c: Elementary

    [via: TV Guide]

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  • Stephen Colbert Sheds Beard, Adds Bandleader in ‘Late Show’ Promos

    stephen colbert, jon batiste, late showThe first promos for “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” are here, and with them, Colbert loses his new beard, and gains a new bandleader.

    The Colbert Report” in December and his work on “Late Show.” “Good news! I still exist!” the host excitedly declares, before explaining that he’s experimenting with a new look before beginning his new gig.

    He then shaves off small portions of his beard one at a time, donning styles he dubs “un-Hitler,” “half Wolverine,” and finally, “classic clean Colbert.” But the comedian can’t help but be wistful about his shaven look, devoting a decidedly weird montage to his former facial hair that proves that he hasn’t shed his goofy sensibilities just because he’s moved down the dial.

    The second promo introduces Colbert’s “Late Show” bandleader, Jon Batiste. While the clip suggests that Colbert merely decided on the musician after eating a plateful of beignets in New Orleans, a release from CBS helps fill in the blanks a bit more.

    According to the network, Batiste (who made a memorable appearance on “The Colbert Report” back in 2014) has gained an international following with his band, Stay Human, and has performed with artists including Prince and Lenny Kravitz. He appeared as himself on acclaimed HBO series “Treme,” and also had a role in Spike Lee‘s 2012 flick “Red Hook Summer.” Batiste currently serves as Artistic Director at Large of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, and has a full-length album due out later this year.

    “His music makes the audience feel so good, we may have to install a ‘Do Not Make Love’ sign,” Colbert said in a statement.

    Batiste added in his own statement, “I’m thrilled! This is a match made in heaven. Get ready for a love riot in late night.”

    “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” starts on September 8 on CBS.

    Photo credit: YouTube

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