Wednesday becomes a full night of music on Fox, and more shuffles coming to the network in 2017-18
Fox Broadcasting is rearranging much of its prime-time lineup in an effort to build better momentum across the week.
The network is poised to finish the season in second place in the advertiser-coveted 18-to-49 demographic, up from third last season â largely thanks to a boost from Super Bowl LI and the World Series. However, when sports are excluded, the slate of entertainment shows was down 25%, compared to last season.
After a season that drew on properties with built-in audiences, such as â24â offshoot âLegacyâ and âLethal Weapon,â the network is largely going with the unknown next season with the launch of four new dramas and two new comedies. The familiar will come with its staging of two live musical events â âRentâ and âA Christmas Storyâ â and another chapter to âThe X-Filesâ revival.
âThe past few seasons were about building a foundation of strong new shows,â Fox Television Group Co-Chairman Dana Walden said in a Monday conference call ahead of the networkâs presentation to advertisers in New York.
Next season, she added, âthe focus is on building stronger nights and building better circulation across our schedule.â
The network is starting out on familiar footing, saving three of its newcomers for mid-season.
In the fall, âLuciferâ takes over âGothamâsâ time period on Monday nights at 8, followed by a new Marvel drama, âThe Gifted,â which tracks a suburban couple (played by Stephen Moyer and Amy Acker) whose lives are upended by the revelation that their children posses mutant powers.
Tuesdays will now kick off with âLethal Weapon,â leading into a comedy block in the 9 p.m. hour featuring âThe Mickâ and âBrooklyn Nine-Nine.â
After rotating out last year, the high-octane histrionics of Lee Daniels-stamped dramas take over Wednesdays when âEmpire,â which remains a strong player despite losing some steam, now leads into the second season of âStar.â Both series will consist of 18 episodes and will have staggered seasons.
As it struggles to gain a handle on increasingly competitive Thursday nights, Fox relocates steady-performing âGothamâ to 8 to serve as a springboard to the new Seth MacFarlane series âThe Orville.â The live-action, one-hour dramedy, set 400 years in the future, follows the adventures of the crew of a mid-level exploratory spaceship.
Friday veteran âHellâs Kitchenâ leads the night at 8, followed by the second season of âThe Exorcist.â Fox will fill out its Saturday night with live sports events.
On Sunday, âThe Simpsonsâ will lead into the new Adam Scott-Craig Robinson comedy âGhosted,â about a duo who explore the paranormal in Los Angeles. âFamily Guyâ and âLast Man on Earthâ will round out the night.
During the call, Walden and fellow Co-Chairman Gary Newman also confirmed the end of âScream Queensâ after two seasons.
Still unknown are the fates of â24: Legacyâ and âPrison Breakâ â though Fox is open to doing more. âLegacyâsâ Corey Hawkins is currently starring on Broadway in âSix Degrees of Separation,â so âhis schedule really wouldnât allow us to consider the show for the fall,â said Newman, while noting that the series is still âvery much in the mix.â
As for more âPrison Break,â Walden said: âWe would definitely consider doing more episodes of âPrison Breakâ⌠Itâs definitely not something we want to do every season. We want to make it special.â
Elsewhere in the coming season will be Foxâs next live musical events. Last year â taking a page from its rival NBC in staging live musical productions as a way to bolster appointment viewing â the network produced a live version of âGreaseâ to strong ratings (12.2 million total viewers). Now, Fox is doubling-down in the upcoming season with live stagings of âRentâ and âA Christmas Story.â
In mid-season, Fox will send off the Zooey Deschanel-fronted âNew Girl,â which wraps its run after seven seasons. The network is also saving the 10-episode second chapter of âThe X-Filesâ reboot, which performed to successful ratings with its return last season, for spring.
The networkâs new programs slated for spring include:
â9-1-1,â a procedural drama starring Angela Bassett that follows the lives and careers of first responders (cops, paramedics, firefighters). The drama is executive produced by Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk (âGlee,â âAmerican Horror Storyâ).
âL.A. to Vegas,â a workplace comedy about an airline crew and the madcap group of passengers who every weekend take a round-trip flight from the City of Angels to Sin City. The series stars Dylan McDermott and counts Will Ferrell and Steve Levitan (âModern Familyâ) among its executive producers.
âThe Resident,â a medical drama that follows three doctors at different stages in their careers and a dedicated young nurse. It stars Matt Czuchry (âThe Good Wifeâ), Emily VanCamp (âRevengeâ) and Bruce Greenwood (âThe People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Storyâ).
Not to go unmentioned, Walden and Newman were asked about Fox losing its long-running reality stalwart, âAmerican Idol,â to ABC for the 2017-18 season.
âItâs obviously a tough one for us,â Walden said. âItâs so connected to the Fox brand⌠It feels bad knowing itâs coming back on another network.â
Walden was open about the frustrations that emerged during conversations with âIdolâ producers FremantleMedia. Walden confirmed that Fox tried to make a move to bring back âIdol,â with the caveat that the return be delayed until 2020. But FremantleMedia, Walden said, rejected the idea because it wanted the singing competition series on the air as soon as possible, and âthey thought ABC was a good opportunity.â
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