The fall TV season is here, and between the many options delivered by premium cable channels, multiple streaming services and a new slate of shows from the major networks, thereâs a lot of programming to choose from. If you were hoping that that âPeak TVâ bubble was going to burst anytime soon, allowing you a moment to do something other than watch television, you can disabuse yourself of that notion tout de suite. Itâs TV all the time now, and like the Hydra of legend, every show thatâs canceled seems to sprout three in its place. Worse luck, many are excellent â so youâre sunk. Here, we run down what to watch this season as they debut weekly.
âDivorce,â âInsecure,â âAmerican Housewifeâ debut the week of Oct. 9
TV highlights for 10/9 - 10/15:
âDivorceâ (HBO, 10 p.m. Sunday)
Sarah Jessica Parker has had enough of husband Thomas Haden Church (âWhen you threw my laptop out the window I specifically remember thinking that I wanted to hit you in the face with the Chinese ceramic cat thing with the little wavy armâ) in this wintry Cheever-country comedy created by Sharon Horgan (âCatastropheâ).
- Read more: Sarah Jessica Parker returns to HBO to mine laughs from âDivorceâ
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
âInsecureâ (HBO, 10:30 p.m. Sunday)
Issa Rae, whose Web series âThe Misadventures of Awkward Black Girlâ was TV in all but venue, goes full premium cable in this sweet, real-flavored sitcom, co-created with Larry Wilmore, about L.A. south of the 10 and a woman stuck in neutral at 29.
âAmerican Housewifeâ (ABC, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday)
Not an anthology drama but one of those comedies in which an oddball family infests the upscale suburbs, like âThe Munstersâ without the coffins and such. Mom Katy Mixon delivers too many jokes about her weight but her sass wins out. Diedrich Bader is dad. Three kids.
âHaters Back Offâ (Netflix, Friday).
Internet megastar and Friend of Seinfeld Colleen Ballinger gives her bravely untalented Miranda Sings character a sitcom backstory. The adults donât know but the YouTubers understand.
âWestworld,â âTimelessâ and âFrequencyâ debut the week of Oct. 2
TV highlights for 10/2 - 10/8:
âWestworldâ (HBO, 9 p.m. Sunday)
Cowboy robots with guns. Good idea! Michael Crichtonâs pre-âJurassicâ amusement park disaster film gets a serial makeover. Anthony Hopkins, Ed Harris, Evan Rachel Wood, James Marsden, Jeffrey Wright and Thandie Newton star.
- Read more: HBOâs multilayered update of âWestworldâ is TVâs next big game-changer
- Read more: Meet the inhabitants of âWestworldâ
- Read more: The high-concept âWestworldâ on HBO wants to be more than just a show about rich people having sex with robots
- Read more: Anthony Hopkins delights in his âdark, mysteriousâ character in âWestworldâ
- Read more: Jeffrey Wright on working with Anthony Hopkins and why he loves his character on âWestworldâ
âConvictionâ (ABC, 10 p.m. Monday)
Hot-mess legal eagle, scandal magnet and former First Daughter Hayley Atwell is coerced into running a New York unit dedicated to testing the merit of controversial convictions. Can her cynicism survive intact?
âTimelessâ (NBC, 10 p.m. Monday)
Sci-fi romp sends scientist Matt Lanter, history professor Abigail Spencer and soldier guy Malcolm Barrett to key points in history to stop bad guy Goran ViĹĄnjiÄ from messing with the timeline. Of course, they canât help messing with the timeline.
âNo Tomorrowâ (CW, 9 p.m. Tuesday)
Tori Anderson is a buttoned-up life drone and Joshua Sasse her attractive opposite, a seize-the-day type waiting on the imminent end of the world. Echo Park, the Brooklyn of the West, is the heaven in which this location-rich rom-com match is made.
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
âFrequencyâ (CW 9 p.m. Wednesday)
Peyton List is an NYPD cop in touch â by ham radio, why not? â with the past and her since-dead father (Riley Smith), also an NYPD cop, in this two-track murder mystery, partly based on the 2000 Dennis Quaid film. What did I say about messing with the timeline?
Read more: The CWâs âFrequencyâ seizes on two top TV trends but ends up generic and hokey
âSon of Zorn,â âHigh Maintenanceâ and âFleabagâ debut the week of Sept. 11
TV highlights for 9/11 - 9/17:
âSon of Zornâ (Fox, 8 p.m. Sunday; moves to 8:30 Sunday, Sept. 25)
Fox in an âAdult Swimâ mode, with Jason Sudeikis the voice of an animated Conan-like barbarian trying to connect with his teenage son in the live-action world. Cheryl Hines plays his ex.
âHigh Maintenanceâ (HBO, 11 p.m. Friday)
Now-subtle, now-broad Web import follows a New York pot dealer (co-creator Ben Sinclair) on his rounds, in and out of short stories that range from the farcical to the meta-farcical to the merely poetic. Like âRoute 66â on a bike, with weed.
- Read more: HBOâs âHigh Maintenanceâ is both funny and real in its depictions of big city weed delivery
âFleabagâ (Amazon, Friday)
âI have a horrible feeling that Iâm a greedy perverted selfish apathetic cynical depraved morally bankrupt woman who canât even call herself a feminist,â says creator-star Phoebe Waller-Bridge in this black-sheep comedy-with-asides. With Olivia Coleman, Bill Paterson and Brett Gelman, over from America.
âBerlin Stationâ and âChanceâ debut the week of Oct. 16
TV highlights for Oct. 16-22:
âBerlin Stationâ (Epix, Sunday)
Novelist Olen Steinhauer created this contemporary old-school espionage series (more espionage, less pathology), set in the city that once screamed âCold War.â Thereâs a mole. With Michelle Forbes, Rhys Ifans, Richard Jenkins, Richard Armitage.
Wednesday, Oct. 19
âChanceâ (Hulu). Hugh Laurie as a forensic neuropsychiatrist â itâs a thing, you can Google it â in a âVertigoâ and âMaltese Falcon.â-like universe. Kem Nunn co-adapts his own novel, Gretchen Mol co-stars, Lenny Abrahamson (âRoomâ) directs.
Woody Allenâs âCrisisâ and âMarvelâs Luke Cageâ debut the week of Sept. 25
TV highlights for 9/25 - 10/1:
âAftermathâ (Syfy, 10 p.m. Tuesday).
Family action-drama in which the world ends not with a bomb or a whimper, but pretty much everything else you can imagine â meteors, supernatural monsters, deadly plagues, collapsing space-time. Anne Heche and James Tupper, former âMen in Treesâ co-stars and currently married couple, headline.
âCrisis in Six Scenesâ (Amazon, Friday).
Woody Allenâs first TV series -- and as with any Allen project you read the cast list first. This one (set in the late â60s) includes Miley Cyrus, Elaine May (!), Lewis Black, Michael Rapaport, Joy Behar, Rachel Brosnahan, Becky Ann Baker and Allen. Did I say, Elaine May? The rest is just details.
- Read more: As a TV series, Woody Allenâs âCrisis in Six Scenesâ offers many pleasures of a Woody Allen movie
- Read more: Sometimes I wish he would go away: The uncomfortable evolution of being a Woody Allen fan
âMarvelâs Luke Cageâ (Netflix, Friday).
Bulletproof ex-con and reluctant noncaped crusader Mike Colter (as Luke, sort of crossing over from âJessica Jonesâ) comes correct in Harlem. Thereâs a nightclub, naturally. With Alfre Woodard, Mahershala Ali, Simone Missick and Frank Whaley classing up the joint.
- Read more: Hip-hop and a simmering Mike Colter help âMarvelâs Luke Cageâ put the human in âsuperhumanâ
- Read more: âLuke Cageâsâ true superpower is showing an alternate vision of black America
- Read more: âI will never get tired of seeing a bulletproof black manâ: âLuke Cageâsâ show runner on busting barriers
âVersaillesâ (Ovation, 10 p.m. Saturday).
The soap opera that was the court of Louis XIV becomes a soap opera set at the court of Louis XIV. Versailles (available for parties, really) plays itself. Lots of sex, some violence, for international appeal.
âMan With a Planâ and âThe Great Indoorsâ debut the week of Oct. 23
TV highlights for 10/23 - 10/29:
âMan With a Planâ (CBS 8:30 p.m. Monday)
Matt LeBlanc, your friend from âFriends,â stars in the first comedy ever to consider what happens when a man takes care of the kids. Liza Snyder is the wife going back to work. Children there are three.
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
âThe Great Indoorsâ (CBS, 8:30 p.m. Thursday)
Multicamera generational comedy with Joel McHale, 44, as a globe-trotting journalist put in charge of his magazineâs millennial Web jockeys â welcome to publishing 2016. Sniping, grumbling, mutual respect ensue. With Stephen Fry as the boss. Stick around for the bear cub.
âPure Geniusâ (CBS 10 p.m. Thursday).
Augustus Prew is the brilliant but troubled tech guru whose quirky team of red-tape-averse doctors and engineers have built the hospital of tomorrow today; Dermot Mulroney is the man he wants to run it. Jason Katims (âParenthoodâ) lurks behind this wish fulfillment.
âGilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,â âSearch Partyâ and âShut Eyeâ debut the week of Nov. 20
TV highlights for 11/20 - 11/26:
âSearch Partyâ
(TBS, 11 p.m. Monday).Millennial mystery comedy stars Alia Shawkat as a floundering New Yorker (âDory how is it you are so good at all the stuff no one else wants to do?â says a friend, admiringly) who finds focus when a girl she sort of used to know goes missing.
âGilmore Girls: A Year in the Lifeâ (Netflix, Friday)
Catching up with those Stars Hollow folks. This is already on your calendar.
âShut Eyeâ (Hulu, Friday).
You may have passed a hundred storefront psychic shops without thinking, âThereâs a TV show in there.â Jeffrey Donovan and Isabella Rossellini star in that show.
âPeople of Earthâ debuts the week of Oct. 30
TV highlights for Oct. 30-Nov. 5:
âPeople of Earthâ (TBS, 9 p.m. Monday)
Dust-dry Wyatt Cenacâs years as a âDaily Showâ âcorrespondentâ serve him well in this role of a journalist sent to report on an alien abduction support group.
âThe Good Place,â âSpeechless,â âLethal Weapon,â âPitchâ and more debut the week of Sept. 18
âThe Case of: JonBenĂŠt Ramseyâ (CBS, 8:30 p.m. Sunday)
Thereâs no crime like a true crime, and no true crime like one that hasnât been settled yet, and no true crime documentary like one that makes you wait weeks for its payoff. The biggest of four 20th-anniversary Ramsey TV projects this fall, naturally including a Lifetime movie.
âKevin Can Waitâ (CBS, 8:30 p.m. Monday)
Kevin James stays in his comfort zone, as he takes his 21st century Ralph Kramden out for another multi-camera spin. Here heâs a newly retired policeman who canât get that party started. Erinn Hayes plays the traditionally better-looking wife.
- Read more: Kevin James returns in a lazy collection of tropes called âKevin Can Waitâ
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
âThe Good Placeâ (NBC, 10 p.m. Monday; moves to Thurs., 8:30 p.m. Sept. 22)
Spiky afterlife comedy from Michael Schur (âParks and Recreationâ) finds newly dead Kristen Bell accidentally assigned to a pastels-and-froyo heaven her worldly exploits donât qualify her for. Ted Danson is the Mr. Jordan in this scenario.
âBullâ (CBS 9 p.m. Tuesday)
Dangerously titled legal drama about a brilliant but troubled trial consultant (Michael Weatherly) and his quirky team seems to suggest that the only path to justice is to game the jury. Co-created by and based on the earlier career of TV shrink âDr. Philâ McGraw, it floats on a sea of broken souls.
- Read more: Busking with âBullâ: Michael Weatherly goes underground
- Read more: The system is rigged: Why the new CBS show âBullâ is in step with the times. And yet ...
âThis Is Usâ (NBC 10 p.m. Tuesday)
Given that the pilot is a kind of O. Henry dodge, untwisted until the end, letâs just call this a weâve-come-for-your-feelings dramedy â that old word! â in which surprisingly connected characters want to be seen for who they really are. Something like that.
- Read more: Fall TVâs hottest pilot hits 4 out of 5 of its marks. Will âThis Is Usâ fill the âParenthoodâ gap?
- Read more: Dan Fogelman,the writer-producer with the âgolden gut,â is in for a busy TV season with âPitch,â âThis Is Usâ
âSpeechlessâ (ABC, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday)
ABC continues its drive for diversity in single-camera family comedies â no less admirable for being so evidently intentional â with Minnie Driver as the driven mother of teenager Micah Fowler, who has cerebral palsy. Two other kids make three.
âDesignated Survivorâ (ABC, 10 p.m., Wednesday)
Kiefer Sutherland in what would be a minor role in â24,â as a Cabinet secretary who becomes president after a terrorist attack kills everyone more important. Natascha McElhone is the new first lady; Kal Penn, who worked in the actual White House, is working in this pretend one.
- Read more: âDesignated Survivor,â starring Kiefer Sutherland, is even better on screen than on paper
âLethal Weaponâ (Fox, 8 p.m., Wednesday)
Televisionification of the brawny detective film franchise in which a lone wolf with a death wish (Clayne Crawford) and a family man with the opposite of that (Damon Wayans Sr.) somehow make it work.
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
- Read more: Fox TV gives a credible âLethal Weaponâ a new lease on life
âNotoriousâ (ABC, 9 p.m. Thursday)
Heavy-breathing melodrama in which cable news producer Piper Perabo and celebrity lawyer Daniel Sunjata â standing in for producers Wendy Walker and Mark Geragos -- shape reality to their ends. Will leave you feeling good neither about the news nor the law.
âPitchâ (Fox, 9 p.m. Thursday)
Kylie Bunbury plays the first woman in Major League Baseball in this straight-faced grown-up take on âThe Bad News Bearsâ; things go no more smoothly than you would imagine. The San Diego Padres provide the real-world team and park.
- Read more: Foxâs new âPitchâ shows that a female player in the MLB is more than a gimmick
- Read more: The writer-producer with the âgolden gutâ - Dan Fogelman - is in for a busy TV season with âPitch,â âThis Is Usâ
- Read more: Fallâs familiar faces and TV newcomers
âMacGyverâ (CBS, 8 p.m. Friday)
Comical spy adventure reboot leaves the mullet, or most of it, back in 1992 but keeps the Swiss Army knife. Lucas Till is the new Richard Dean Anderson, saving the world with a paper clip and whatever.
âThe Exorcistâ (Fox, 9 p.m. Friday)
Blockbuster 1970s demonic possession novel/film survives the television transition with its cinematic creepiness intact. Ben Daniels and Alfonso Herrera are the old- and new-school priests called to de-Satanize the offspring of Geena Davis, now with two daughters and a husband (Alan Ruck) losing his wits. The central question â will they play âTubular Bellsâ? â is for you to find out.