NBC PRIMETIME SCHEDULE FOR FALL 2006 - 07
MONDAY - September, 18, 2006 - UFN
7-8 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
8-9 p.m. "HEROES"
9-10 p.m. "Medium"
TUESDAY - September 19, 2006 - UFN
7-8 p.m. "FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS"
8-9p.m. "KIDNAPPED"
9-10 p.m. "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit"
WEDNESDAY - September 20, 2006 - UFN
7-8 p.m. "The Biggest Loser"
8-8:30 p.m. "20 GOOD YEARS"
8:30-9 p.m. "30 ROCK"
9-10 p.m. "Law & Order"
THURSDAY - September 21, 2006 - UFN
7-7:30 p.m. "My Name Is Earl" (new time)
7:30-8 p.m. "The Office" (new time)
8-9 p.m. "STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET STRIP"
9-10 p.m. "ER"
FRIDAY - September 22, 2006 - UFN
7-8 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
8-9 p.m. "Las Vegas"
9-10 p.m. "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" (new day and time)
SATURDAY - September 23, 2006 - UFN
7-8 p.m. "Dateline Saturday"
8-10 p.m. Drama Series Encores
SUNDAY - September 24, 2006 - UFN
6-7 p.m. "FOOTBALL NIGHT IN AMERICA"
7-10 p.m. "SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL"
NBC PRIMETIME SCHEDULE
FALL 2006-07
'FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS,' 'HEROES,' 'STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET
STRIP' AND 'KIDNAPPED' BECOME NEW FALL DRAMAS; '20 GOOD
YEARS' AND '30 ROCK' JOIN FALL COMEDY LINEUP
ADDITIONAL SERIES PICKUPS INCLUDE DRAMAS 'THE BLACK DONNELLYS'
AND 'RAINES' PLUS COMEDIES 'THE SINGLES TABLE' AND 'ANDY BARKER, P.I.'
NEW YORK -- May 15, 2006 -- NBC is loading its new 2006-07 primetime
schedule with six new dramas and four new comedies that accentuate
distinctive talent, quality concepts and cornerstone dramas that will allow the
network to play offense -- especially with its new weekend showpiece in
"Sunday Night Football."
The annual program announcement was made today by Kevin Reilly, President,
NBC Entertainment, before the advertising community, affiliate stations and
press at Radio City Music Hall.
"The face of NBC is changing," said Reilly. "We took the first step this season
with Thursday hits 'My Name Is Earl' and 'The Office.' Next season we'll add
momentum and excitement with the addition of 'Sunday Night Football' and
establish a foundation of quality across the week by standing behind shows
that each say something about who we are."
Highlights of the Fall 2006-07 season include two previously announced new
dramas: "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" (Thursdays, 8-9 p.m. CT), Emmy
Award winner Aaron Sorkin's (NBC's "The West Wing") riveting insider's take
on the backstage drama of a late-night comedy sketch show, with an all-star
cast that includes Matthew Perry ("Friends"), Amanda Peet ("Syriana") and
Bradley Whitford ("The West Wing"); and "Kidnapped" (Tuesdays, 8-9 p.m.
CT), a high-stakes, serialized thriller about a teenaged boy's kidnapping,
starring Jeremy Sisto ("Six Feet Under") and Delroy Lindo ("The Core").
Also new to Fall are the dramas "Friday Night Lights" (Tuesdays, 7-8 p.m. CT) -
- inspired by the hit feature film that conveys the passion and sky-high
expectations of a small Texas town for its top-ranked football team and stars
Kyle Chandler ("King Kong") -- as well as "Heroes" (Mondays, 8-9 p.m. CT),
an epic drama centering on the radically changed lives of several ordinary
people who find they possess extraordinary powers.
The two new comedies to arrive in the Fall are "20 Good Years" Wednesdays,
(8-8:30 p.m. CT) and "30 Rock" (Wednesdays, 8:30-9 p.m. CT). "20 Good
Years" is a high-energy romp starring Emmy winner John Lithgow ("3rd Rock
from the Sun") and Jeffrey Tambor ("Arrested Development") as mismatched
buddies who realize that life doesn't last forever. "30 Rock" stars Emmy winner
Tina Fey (NBC's "Saturday Night Live," "Mean Girls") as the head writer of a
frenetic late-night television variety show (Fey is also the writer and an
executive producer with Lorne Michaels). Alec Baldwin ("The Aviator," The
Cooler") and Tracy Morgan (NBC's "Saturday Night Live") also star.
NBC's autumn lineup is buoyed by the return of the National Football League to
NBC with "Sunday Night Football" (7-10 p.m. CT), anchored by Al Michaels and
John Madden, and preceded by "Football Night in America" (6-7 p.m. ET),
network television's first hour-long primetime pre-game show.
Consistent with NBC's ongoing strategy of introducing new series all season
long, January will see the arrival of the previously announced drama "The
Black Donnellys" -- from Oscar winners Paul Haggis ("Crash") and Bobby
Moresco ("Crash"). The series is a gritty saga about four working-class Irish
brothers' exploits in organized crime. It will debut on Thursdays (10-11 p.m.
ET) and continue with consecutive original episodes. As a result, "ER" will
premiere in its 13th season this Fall on Thursdays (9-10 p.m. CT) and will run
with virtually continuous original episodes until its cliffhanger in December. The
Emmy-winning series will resume after "The Black Donnellys" completes its
first season.
After the NFL season concludes in January 2007, NBC will return to
entertainment programs as it introduces a new Sunday-night lineup featuring
"America's Got Talent" (7-8 p.m. CT) with newly announced host Regis Philbin
presiding over a wide-open national talent contest produced by Simon Cowell
("American Idol"). "The Apprentice" (8-9 p.m. CT), with business titan Donald
Trump, returns with a new edition based in Los Angeles. The reality series is
followed by the new drama "Raines," starring Jeff Goldblum ("The Lost World:
Jurassic Park") as an eccentric police detective in an inventive crime drama
from Emmy-winning writer-producer Graham Yost ("Band of Brothers") and
director-writer-producer Frank Darabont ("The Shawshank Redemption").
Also for mid-season, NBC can draw upon such new comedies as "The Singles
Table," depicting a group of witty and single strangers who meet, console and
befriend each other at a wedding, and "Andy Barker, P.I.," starring Andy
Richter, who re-teams with co-writer and executive producer Conan O'Brien
(NBC's "Late Night with Conan O'Brien") as an earnest CPA who embraces the
unlikely chance to become a private detective.
Fan favorites "Crossing Jordan" and "Scrubs" will return to the NBC schedule at
some point later in the season.
Additional Fall schedule changes include the move of "Law & Order: Criminal
Intent" from Sundays (8-9 p.m. CT) -- due to the premiere of "Sunday Night
Football" -- to Fridays (9-10 p.m. CT). Likewise, "My Name Is Earl" (7-7:30
p.m. CT) and "The Office" (7:30-8 p.m. CT) each move up one hour on
Thursday nights.
Following is NBC's primetime series schedule for Fall 2006-07. Nightly strategy
and show descriptions follow (all times are Eastern).
NBC PRIMETIME SCHEDULE FOR FALL 2006-07
*New programs in CAPS (with the exception of "ER")
MONDAY
7-8 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
8-9 p.m.
"HEROES" 9-10 p.m. "Medium"
TUESDAY
7-8 p.m. "FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS"
8-9 p.m.
"KIDNAPPED" 9-10 p.m. "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit"
WEDNESDAY
7-8 p.m. "The Biggest Loser"
8-8:30 p.m.
"20 GOOD YEARS" 9:30-10 p.m.
"30 ROCK" 9-10 p.m. "Law & Order"
THURSDAY
7-7:30 p.m. "My Name Is Earl" (new time)
7:30-8 p.m. "The Office" (new time)
8-9 p.m.
"STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET STRIP" 9-10 p.m. "ER"/("THE BLACK DONNELLYS" in January 2007)
FRIDAY
7-8 p.m. "Deal or No Deal"
8-9 p.m. "Las Vegas"
9-10 p.m. "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" (new day and time)
SATURDAY
7-8 p.m. "Dateline Saturday"
8-10 p.m. Drama Series Encores
SUNDAY
6-7 p.m. "FOOTBALL NIGHT IN AMERICA"
7-10 p.m.
SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
NIGHT-BY-NIGHT PRIMETIME STRATEGY
MONDAY
Monday should remain strong for NBC, especially with the huge new
promotional platform of "Sunday Night Football." Opening at 7 p.m., "Deal or
No Deal" wins the time period with broad appeal and should drive viewers into
the night's new tent-pole series "Heroes," a stylish drama with strong breakout
potential. The new show should prove to be highly compatible with the
suspenseful series "Medium" at 9:00 p.m.
TUESDAY
NBC kicks off at 7 p.m. with "Friday Night Lights," a new drama that
transcends sports and should be ideal for families to view together. NBC
follows this with another new drama, "Kidnapped," a tense serial thriller that
should team well with the 9:00 p.m. incumbent "Law & Order: SVU," which
continues to dominate despite soft lead-ins this past season. Film star Connie
Nielsen ("Gladiator") joins the "SVU" cast for six episodes early in the season
while series star Mariska Hargitay is on maternity leave.
WEDNESDAY
"The Biggest Loser" proved to be a refreshing success story last year at 7 p.m.,
and it ended its second cycle with record numbers, boosting NBC to its biggest
non-Olympics Tuesday in five years. It will be used to combine with the
evergreen "Law & Order" at 9:00 p.m. to hammock two new comedies. At 8
p.m., Emmy winner John Lithgow and Jeffrey Tambor are set to win over
audiences with their masterful chemistry in "20 Good Years." That leads into
the 8:30 p.m. time period premiere of "30 Rock," starring Emmy winner Tina
Fey, Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan. Then Dick Wolf's "Law & Order" will
return re-invigorated by exciting cast changes aimed at keeping the show fresh
and competitive.
THURSDAY
NBC's traditional flagship night starts with two of television's most popular new
series in "My Name Is Earl" and "The Office." Expect renewed vitality on the
night with the arrival of the much-anticipated "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip"
in the vital 8 p.m. hour followed by "ER" -- the series that has defined
Thursdays (9-10 p.m. CT) for a dozen years. However, the medical drama will
have a decided edge this year with all original telecasts leading to a cliffhanger
in December. Additionally, John Stamos joins the regular cast as he reprises
his role as Tony Gates, a charming Gulf War vet working through medical
school as a paramedic. In January, "The Black Donnellys," from Oscar winners
Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco (both for "Crash"), will premiere in the time
period. "ER" will complete its season in the time slot following the run of "The
Black Donnellys."
FRIDAY
NBC will stick with stability with time-period champ "Deal or No Deal" at 7 p.m.
followed by "Las Vegas" and its loyal audience at 8:00 p.m. Closing out Fridays
at 9:00 p.m. will be "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," which re-locates from
Sundays due to the NFL, after having performed solidly against intense
competition on the night.
SATURDAY
"Dateline Saturday" will continue at 7 p.m. and encore telecasts of NBC
dramas will run at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.
SUNDAY
In addition to delivering a powerful night of television, "Sunday Night Football"
will greatly increase NBC's promotional platforms leading into each Fall week.
This four-hour package also allows NBC to reach an elusive young male
demographic. When series programming returns in January, "America's Got
Talent" with host Regis Philbin will take over the 7 p.m. hour. "The Apprentice"
follows at 8:00 p.m., creating a strong unscripted block. At 9:00 p.m.,
"Raines" is a quirky police drama that stars the appealing Jeff Goldblum.
2006-07 NEW SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
New Dramas
"STUDIO 60 ON THE SUNSET STRIP" -- Emmy Award-winning executive
producer-writer Aaron Sorkin ("The West Wing") and Emmy Award-winning
executive producer-director Thomas Schlamme ("The West Wing") return to
television with this crackling take on the drama behind the humor of producing
a popular, late-night comedy sketch show, "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip."
Sorkin lays bare the backstage politics, romances and delicate balance
between creative talent, on-air personalities and network executives in an
instant text-messaging world. Prominent are Jordan McDeere (Amanda Peet,
"Syriana"), a savvy new network entertainment chief who inherits a massive
public relations disaster on the series -- even before she starts her first day --
and Matt Albie (Matthew Perry, "Friends") and Danny Tripp (Bradley Whitford,
"The West Wing"), a brilliant creative team that she wants to resurrect the
program. Also playing crucial roles are the sketch comedy series stars Harriet
Hayes (Sarah Paulson, "Down with Love"), Simon Stiles (D.L. Hughley, "The
Hughleys") and Tom Jeter (Nathan Corddry, "The Daily Show with Jon
Stewart"), their normally cool-headed director, Cal Shanley (Timothy Busfield,
"thirtysomething") as well as supreme network honcho Jack Rudolph (Steven
Weber, "Wings"). Evan Handler ("Sex and the City") and Carlos Jacott ("Being
John Malkovich") also star. The series is a production of Warner Bros.
Television.
"HEROES" -- The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives of ordinary people
who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. As a total eclipse casts it
shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics professor (Sendhil
Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving") in India whose father's disappearance leads
him to uncover a secret theory -- there are people with super powers living
among us. A young dreamer (Milo Ventimiglia, "The Bedford Diaries") tries to
convince his politician brother (Adrian Pasdar, "Judging Amy") that he can fly.
A high school cheerleader (Hayden Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is
totally indestructible. A Las Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"),
struggling to make ends meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey,
"My Wife & Kids"), uncovers that her mirror image has a secret. A prison
inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds
himself waking up outside of his cell. A gifted artist (Santiago Cabrera,
"Empire"), whose drug addiction is destroying his life and the relationship with
his girlfriend (Tawny Cypress, "Third Watch"), can paint the future. A down-onhis-
luck beat cop (Greg Grunberg, "Alias") can hear people's thoughts,
including the secrets of a captured terrorist. In Japan, a young man (Masi Oka,
"Scrubs") develops a way to stop time through sheer will power. Their ultimate
destiny is nothing less than saving the world. "Heroes" is executive produced
by creator/writer Tim Kring ("Crossing Jordan), Dennis Hammer ("Crossing
Jordan") and David Semel ("House"), who also directed the pilot. The drama is
from NBC Universal Television Studio.
KIDNAPPED" -- "Kidnapped" is a high-stakes, serialized thriller in which the
teenaged son of a wealthy Upper East Side family is kidnapped and everyone is
a suspect. The series focuses on the elaborate, triangulated game between the
kidnappers, law enforcement, FBI, and the private negotiating team of the
"perhaps" less-than-picture-perfect family. The ensemble cast includes Jeremy
Sisto ("Six Feet Under"), Delroy Lindo ("The Core"), Emmy winner Dana
Delany ("China Beach"), Timothy Hutton ("Kinsey"), Mykelti Williamson
("Boomtown"), Linus Roache ("Batman Begins"), Carmen Ejogo ("Lackawanna
Blues"), Will Denton ("Palindromes") and Boris McGiver ("The Pink Panther").
"Kidnapped" is produced by Sony Pictures Television and 25C Productions.
David Greenwalt ("Angel"), Jason Smilovic ("Karen Sisco"), Michael Dinner
("Invasion"), Sarah Timberman and Carl Beverly are executive producers;
Dinner is the director and Smilovic is the writer.
Additional Dramas
"THE BLACK DONNELLYS" -- Academy Award winners Paul Haggis and
Bobby Moresco ("Crash") are the creators of "The Black Donnellys," a gritty
new crime drama series loosely based on Moresco's background. The series
follows the exploits of four young, working-class Irish brothers and their
involvement in organized crime in New York City. Despite their rough
surroundings, the Donnelly brothers basically remain "good kids" -- who will do
anything to protect each other against all odds. The ensemble cast includes
Jonathan Tucker ("Texas Chainsaw Massacre"), Billy Lush ("Huff"), Thomas
Guiry ("Mystic River"), Michael Stahl-David ("Uncle Nino"), Keith Nobbs ("25th
Hour"), Olivia Wilde ("The O.C.") and Kirk Acevedo ("Oz"). Haggis, who
directed the pilot, and Moresco are the creators, executive producers and cowriters.
The series is from NBC Universal Television Studio in association with
Blackfriars Bridge Productions.
"RAINES" -- Emmy Award-winning writer-producer Graham Yost ("Band of
Brothers," "Boomtown"), acclaimed director-writer-producer Frank Darabont
("The Shawshank Redemption," "Green Mile") and star Jeff Goldblum ("The
Lost World: Jurassic Park") combine creative forces in this inventive police
drama, which blends traditional noir storytelling with humor and intrigue.
Eccentric LAPD detective Michael Raines' unique ability to have detailed
conversations with deceased crime victims allows him to re-trace their lives
leading up to their murder and helps him to solve their cases. Unfortunately, it
also causes increasing friction with his boss, Captain Daniel Lewis (Matt
Craven, "From the Earth to the Moon"), fellow officers Remy Boyer (Dov
Davidoff, "Third Watch") and Sally Lance (Linda Park, "Star Trek: Enterprise"),
as well as civilian employee Carolyn (Nicole Sullivan, "MADtv"). Aided by
Charlie (Luis Guzman, "Boogie Nights"), his ex-LAPD partner and conscience,
Raines struggles to accept his peculiar gift -- or burden -- as it often forces him
at times to confront his own past and internal demons. "Raines" is from NBC
Universal Television Studio.
New Comedies
"20 GOOD YEARS" -- This high-energy comedy follows two New Yorkers who
have finally realized that life doesn't last forever. Mismatched buddies John
Mason (Emmy Award winner John Lithgow, "3rd Rock from the Sun"), an
impulsive, thrice-divorced surgeon who has been forced into retirement -- and
Jeffrey Pyne (Jeffrey Tambor, "Arrested Development"), a widower judge who
agonizes over every situation -- are polar opposites in every way. The one
thing the duo can agree on is that they only have about 20 good years left and
both men vow to live each day as if it were their last -- with no regrets. "20
Good Years" also stars Heather Burns ("Bewitched") as John's pregnant
daughter Stella, and Jake Sandvig ("The Story of Us") as Hugh, Jeffrey's unmotivated
son. The executive producers are Tom Werner ("Roseanne"), Eric
Gold (the upcoming "Outsourced") Jimmy Miller ("Kicking & Screaming") and
Marsh McCall ("Modern Men"). Marsh McCall and Michael Leeson ("The Cosby
Show") are the writers; Terry Hughes ("Friends") directed the pilot. "20 Good
Years" is produced by Warner Bros.Television.
"30 ROCK" -- Emmy Award winner Tina Fey (NBC's "Saturday Night Live,"
"Mean Girls") writes, executive-produces and stars in this workplace comedy
that takes viewers behind the scenes of a frenetic television variety show.
Single Liz Lemon (Fey) is living every comedy writer's dream. She's head
writer on a demanding, live TV program in New York City whose life is jolted
when a brash new network president (Alec Baldwin, "The Aviator," "The
Cooler") interferes with her show and bullies Liz into convincing Tracy Jordan
(Tracy Morgan, "Saturday Night Live," "The Longest Yard"), a wild and
unpredictable movie star, to join the cast. Now Liz must manage the
unmanageable so that the show -- and her dream -- can go on. Also starring
are Rachel Dratch ("Saturday Night Live") as Jenne DeCarlo, Scott Adsit
("Kicking and Screaming") as Pete Hornberger and Jack MacBrayer ("Arrested
Development") as Kenneth. "30 Rock" is executive-produced by Lorne
Michaels, Fey, JoAnn Alfano, Marci Klein and David Miner, and is produced by
Broadway Video Television and NBC Universal Television Studio.
Additional Comedies
"ANDY BARKER, P.I." -- Andy Richter ("Late Night with Conan O'Brien") reteams
with co-writer and executive producer Conan O'Brien in this comedy as
he portrays Andy Barker, an earnest, hard-working CPA who has succeeded at
everything -- that is until his new accounting business fails to take off. But
when he's mistaken for Lew Staziak (Harve Presnell, "Fargo") -- the retired
private detective who used to occupy his office -- Andy embraces the twist of
fate and takes the case. Andy's incessantly supportive wife Jen (Amy
Farrington, "The New Adventures of Old Christine") isn't sold on this risky new
venture, that is, until she notices a sudden boost in Andy's self-confidence.
Andy's neighboring merchants -- Simon (Tony Hale, "Arrested Development"),
Wally (Marshall Manesh, "Will & Grace") and Jessica (Ion Overman, "The L
Word") join him in the dicey investigation. Whether chiding thugs for "renting
instead of buying" or being pursued by Sri Lankan gangsters, Andy will prove
to be a consummate problem-solver. This comedy series is written by "Late
Night with Conan O'Brien" host O'Brien and former head writer Jonathan Groff
("Ed"), who executive-produce the series with "Late Night" executive producer
Jeff Ross and David Kissinger. "Andy Barker, P.I." is from NBC Universal
Television Studio and Conaco. The pilot was directed by Jason Ensler ("The
West Wing").
"THE SINGLES TABLE" - In this comedy, a group of witty and single
strangers -- Ivan (John Cho, "Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle"), Eli
(Conor Dubin, "Close to Home"), Adam (Jarrad Paul, "The Shaggy Dog") and
Stephanie (Rhea Seehorn, "Modern Men") - meet at a wedding and suddenly
realize they have one thing in common, they are each a party of one stuck at a
remote singles table. Because of their solo status and tenuous relationships
with the bride and groom, they are all destined for Table 18, a far corner of the
wedding reception. But through the course of the party, each emotionally
vulnerable person questions his or her life's issues and vows to make it better.
For richer or poorer, these five kindred spirits will grow to become good friends
-- and, in some cases, they may become more than that. Written by Bill Martin
("Grounded for Life," "3rd Rock from the Sun") and Mike Schiff ("Grounded for
Life," "3rd Rock from the Sun"), "The Singles Table" is from 20th Century Fox
Television. Adam Bernstein ("The Bedford Diaries," "Scrubs") is the director.
Primetime Sports Programming
SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL -- The National Football League returns to NBC
in this spectacular primetime showcase as Al Michaels will call "NBC Sunday
Night Football" games with John Madden, the most honored analyst in
television history with 15 Emmy Awards. Coverage also includes sideline and
feature reporter Andrea Kremer. NBC's 2006 NFL schedule kicks off on
Thursday, September 7, with the Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers
hosting the Miami Dolphins. NBC's inaugural Sunday "Football Night in
America" game on September 10 features the first meeting of sibling
quarterbacks as Eli Manning's New York Giants host Peyton Manning and the
Indianapolis Colts. This season, the league will also implement for the first time
in history primetime "flexible scheduling" for NBC's primetime Sunday games
in Weeks 10-15 and in Week 17.
"FOOTBALL NIGHT IN AMERICA" -- Bob Costas, an 18-time Emmy Award
winner, hosts NBC's studio show alongside co-host Cris Collinsworth, a six-time
Emmy winner. They are joined by analyst Jerome Bettis, one of the most
popular players in recent NFL history, and Sterling Sharpe, considered one of
the most opinionated analysts with the NFL Network and ESPN. Peter King,
who covers the NFL for Sports Illustrated and is considered one of the
country's foremost NFL reporters, serves as a reporter for the studio show.