
Ladies and Gentlemen, this is the end of an era. A welcome end, in my procedural-averse opinion but the end of one nonetheless. After 20 seasons and 453 episodes, TV's second longest-running drama of all time will finally end this year;
Law & Order is no more.
NBC will be announcing its full fall schedule, sans
L&O, at their upfront presentation on May 17th but here's what we know already:
- Thursday night comedy will return 100% in tact with full season pickups for next year already doled out to
The Office,
30 Rock,
Park & Recreation and (most excitingly) My TV's favourite new comedy
Community. That said, reports say that
Office star Steve Carrell is looking to move on after his contract is up at the end of season 7 (next year), which leaves the show in tricky "do we retool or cut and run" territory.
- Hour-longs
Chuck,
Parenthood and
Friday Night Lights will all be making another appearance next season.
Chuck just got a 13 episode season 4 pickup this afternoon to the cheers of avid fans everywhere. The "we desperately want to be
Brothers & Sisters" ensemble family drama
Parenthood will also be back next year for its second season, so I suppose I should actually watch more than the pilot. And the tiny-but-brilliant Direct TV gem
Friday Night Lights was picked up last year for its final season (#5), which will air on NBC next spring.
- The network already has 6 new shows on the roster for next season:
The Event, a conspiracy thriller starring Jason Ritter (a My TV favourite actor); something called
Outsourced which is apparently about a call-center in India and a charming-looking sitcom called
Perfect Couples (I'm going to predict that neither of these will go far); JJ Abrams' spy comedy
Undercovers, which I'm sure will do pretty well; a new Jerry Bruckheimer vehicle about US Marshals called
Chase, which I don't think I'll like very much; and one of My TV's most anticipated shows of the new season,
Love Bites starring My TV obsessions Becki Newton (
Ugly Betty) and Jordana Spiro (
My Boys).
- The Dermot Mulroney reboot of
The Rockford Files, produced by Steve Carrell and
House's David Shore is off to a shaky start with an ill-received pilot, according to
NY magazine but still seems poised for a possible pickup.
- Things aren't looking good for ratings-challenged current series
Heroes,
Trauma and
Mercy either, so I wouldn't expect them back. But I'm sure you can place a safe bet or two on the return of
The Biggest Loser and
The Apprentice, though no announcements about any of these 5 series have been made yet.
Check back throughout the week as the 2010 upfronts roll around.