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Fox stalks its prey on Thursdays

TELEVISION

The network will use 'Bones' and 'Fringe' to try to pry the lucrative night away from rivals.

May 19, 2009|Scott Collins; Maria Elena Fernandez; Kate Aurthur

NEW YORK CITY — Fox has been TV's top network among young adults for five years. And now it hopes it has the goods to take control of Thursday, TV's most lucrative night.

The network kicked off TV's upfront week on Monday by announcing a fairly conservative fall schedule -- four comedies, two dramas and a late-night talk show -- that nevertheless contained a bold play for Thursdays, which has for years been ruled by rivals.


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In contrast, ABC is expected to unveil a much larger crop of new shows for the fall today, while NBC, which already revealed its pickups two weeks ago, will finally announce its upcoming schedule as well. CBS and the CW will follow with their presentations later in the week as part of the annual event aimed at media buyers.

In the fall, Fox will start off Thursdays with "Bones," its durable fifth-season forensics drama, followed by the second season of "Fringe," J.J. Abrams' sci-fi drama. Last fall, Fox had essentially punted for the night, airing back-to-back episodes of the reality series "Kitchen Nightmares."

This time around, though, Fox -- which continues to derive most of its strength from the No. 1-rated "American Idol" -- smells weakness at other networks on Thursdays, when movie studios and other big advertisers spend heavily to lure consumers planning their weekends.

CBS has suffered sharp erosion for "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," and ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" is not racking up the huge numbers of old.

NBC has struggled to rebuild its Thursday comedy block.

"Thursday is more open this year than it's been in a really long time," Fox Entertainment President Kevin Reilly told reporters in a conference call.

Otherwise, Fox seems to be taking few chances with its fall schedule, given that the recessionary ad market has put broadcasters in the worst position in years. Fox has long had trouble developing audiences for new shows because of disruptions from postseason baseball.

So executives will give "So You Think You Can Dance," a summer perennial, its first regular-season berth. Tuesdays will be given over to a two-hour performance show. Wednesdays will have a one-hour "Dance" results show, followed by the quirky high school comedy-drama "Glee," which previews this week.

On Mondays, caution is again the order of the night. "House," Fox's top drama, will provide a strong lead-in for "Lie to Me," a second-year crime drama. This past season, Fox rolled the dice Mondays with two struggling shows, "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" and "Prison Break." Neither will return next year.

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