1. Beverly Hills Cop (CBS)
From executive producer Shawn Ryan (The Shield), the continuation of the feature film franchise tested through the roof and is considered perfectly on-brand for CBS. The cop drama starring Brandon T. Jackson as Axel Foley's rookie cop son is described as a procedural that comes wrapped with instant brand recognition and an easy to market premise -- and Eddie Murphy attached. Plus Beverly Hills Cop feature producer Paramount also handpicked the Sony Pictures Television drama to make its return to TV production.
2. Mom (CBS) We hope Chuck Lorre uses part of his summer break to pen a lot of vanity cards as the prolific showrunner is poised to have four shows on the air. Mom, starring Anna Faris as a newly sober single mom attempting to get her life in order, has been considered a sure thing to make the schedule since Lorre and his Two and a Half Men co-writers Eddie Gorodetsky and Gemma Baker sold the spec to CBS. The show also marks Lorre's first female-fronted comedy since the 1990s. With How I Met Your Mother coming to an end after next season, CBS needs to find a new half-hour that works (RIP, Partners.)
3. Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (ABC) ABC Entertainment Group president Paul Lee was already mulling a place on the schedule for the Marvel comics adaptation from The Avengers and Buffy the Vampire Slayer mastermind Joss Whedon back in January, touting the Ming-Na starrer as a prime family viewing. Industry insiders, meanwhile, envision the drama as a solution for ABC's Thursday at 8 p.m. problem -- a slot that's been problematic for years (see Charlie's Angels, Last Resort).
4. Tomorrow People (CW) The adaptation of the 1970s U.K. series of the same name fits right into the younger-skewing network's sci-fi wheelhouse and comes with a built in pedigree featuring two of the network's most valued creators: The Vampire Diaries' Julie Plec and Arrow's Greg Berlanti. The drama tells the story of several young people from around the world who represent the next stage in human evolution, possessing special powers, including the ability to teleport and communicate with each other telepathically. Together they work to defeat the forces of evil.
5. The Goldbergs (ABC) The dysfunctional Wonder Years set in the 1980s is inspired by the childhold of Breaking In creator Adam F. Goldberg and counts Bridesmaids breakout Wendi McLendon-Covey among its cast. The family-friendly single-camera comedy has been generating great buzz coming out of last week's pilot screenings.
6. Blacklist (NBC) Billed as "one of the best scripts of the year" by one TV agent, the drama about the world's most wanted criminal who turns himself in comes with a star with major TV appeal in James Spader, who would make his return to NBC following his run on The Office. Consider the drama from Perfect Stranger's Jon Bokenkamp and Alias' John Eisendrath this year's Revolution.
7. Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Fox) Fox is expected to pickup at least one, potentially two workplace comedies as it shops for a companion to the already renewed The Mindy Project. Expect the cop comedy from Parks and Recreation duo Dan Goor and Mike Schur to be among them. Oh, and the cast happens to include Saturday Night Live's Andy Samberg, Andre Braugher and Terry Crews, the latter of whom was one of pilot season's most sought-after actors.
8. Rake (Fox) After luring Kevin Bacon to his first small-screen regular role in The Following, look for Fox to repeat that strategy with Academy Award nominee Greg Kinnear starring in the adaptation of the Australian drama. The Little Miss Sunshine alum plays a House-like character described as a brilliant but self-destructive attorney in the project from Rescue Me's Peter Tolan.
9. Crisis (aka the untitled Rand Ravich drama) (NBC) The Washington thriller starring Dermot Mulroney and Gillian Anderson has the slight edge over J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cuaron's Believe. The drama from the creator of Life has also been generating rave reviews for its cast, which also includes 666 Park's Rachael Taylor and James Lafferty (One Tree Hill). Look for cable-type fare in the vein of Homeland to feature prominently among NBC's drama pickups.
10. Reign (CW) The CW will likely hand out three additional series orders beyond Plec's Vampire Diaries spinoff The Originals and add the drama about Mary Queen of Scots' rise to power as its big swing. Sources say the network likes the international appeal of Reign, which filmed in Europe and counts a largely unknown cast led by Adelaide Kane in her second stateside role (she'll next be seen in the upcoming third season of MTV's Teen Wolf.)
Source: The Hollywood Reporter
2. Mom (CBS) We hope Chuck Lorre uses part of his summer break to pen a lot of vanity cards as the prolific showrunner is poised to have four shows on the air. Mom, starring Anna Faris as a newly sober single mom attempting to get her life in order, has been considered a sure thing to make the schedule since Lorre and his Two and a Half Men co-writers Eddie Gorodetsky and Gemma Baker sold the spec to CBS. The show also marks Lorre's first female-fronted comedy since the 1990s. With How I Met Your Mother coming to an end after next season, CBS needs to find a new half-hour that works (RIP, Partners.)
3. Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (ABC) ABC Entertainment Group president Paul Lee was already mulling a place on the schedule for the Marvel comics adaptation from The Avengers and Buffy the Vampire Slayer mastermind Joss Whedon back in January, touting the Ming-Na starrer as a prime family viewing. Industry insiders, meanwhile, envision the drama as a solution for ABC's Thursday at 8 p.m. problem -- a slot that's been problematic for years (see Charlie's Angels, Last Resort).
4. Tomorrow People (CW) The adaptation of the 1970s U.K. series of the same name fits right into the younger-skewing network's sci-fi wheelhouse and comes with a built in pedigree featuring two of the network's most valued creators: The Vampire Diaries' Julie Plec and Arrow's Greg Berlanti. The drama tells the story of several young people from around the world who represent the next stage in human evolution, possessing special powers, including the ability to teleport and communicate with each other telepathically. Together they work to defeat the forces of evil.
5. The Goldbergs (ABC) The dysfunctional Wonder Years set in the 1980s is inspired by the childhold of Breaking In creator Adam F. Goldberg and counts Bridesmaids breakout Wendi McLendon-Covey among its cast. The family-friendly single-camera comedy has been generating great buzz coming out of last week's pilot screenings.
6. Blacklist (NBC) Billed as "one of the best scripts of the year" by one TV agent, the drama about the world's most wanted criminal who turns himself in comes with a star with major TV appeal in James Spader, who would make his return to NBC following his run on The Office. Consider the drama from Perfect Stranger's Jon Bokenkamp and Alias' John Eisendrath this year's Revolution.
7. Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Fox) Fox is expected to pickup at least one, potentially two workplace comedies as it shops for a companion to the already renewed The Mindy Project. Expect the cop comedy from Parks and Recreation duo Dan Goor and Mike Schur to be among them. Oh, and the cast happens to include Saturday Night Live's Andy Samberg, Andre Braugher and Terry Crews, the latter of whom was one of pilot season's most sought-after actors.
8. Rake (Fox) After luring Kevin Bacon to his first small-screen regular role in The Following, look for Fox to repeat that strategy with Academy Award nominee Greg Kinnear starring in the adaptation of the Australian drama. The Little Miss Sunshine alum plays a House-like character described as a brilliant but self-destructive attorney in the project from Rescue Me's Peter Tolan.
9. Crisis (aka the untitled Rand Ravich drama) (NBC) The Washington thriller starring Dermot Mulroney and Gillian Anderson has the slight edge over J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cuaron's Believe. The drama from the creator of Life has also been generating rave reviews for its cast, which also includes 666 Park's Rachael Taylor and James Lafferty (One Tree Hill). Look for cable-type fare in the vein of Homeland to feature prominently among NBC's drama pickups.
10. Reign (CW) The CW will likely hand out three additional series orders beyond Plec's Vampire Diaries spinoff The Originals and add the drama about Mary Queen of Scots' rise to power as its big swing. Sources say the network likes the international appeal of Reign, which filmed in Europe and counts a largely unknown cast led by Adelaide Kane in her second stateside role (she'll next be seen in the upcoming third season of MTV's Teen Wolf.)
Source: The Hollywood Reporter


Why choose Reign over Selection? Pardon my bluntness, but what idiots are choosing the pilot pick up at the CW this season?
ReplyDeletePlease no reign
ReplyDeletei rather nikita then tomorrow people and reign but if I cant have nikita at least give me the selection
ReplyDeleteOut of this list Tomorrow People grabs my attention most, and S.H.I.E.L.D. only because of Joss Whedon.
ReplyDeleteMaybe Reign is the better pilot. The Selection sounds better plot-wise but if the writing, acting and directing is better on Reign why wouldn't they choose that over The Selection?
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure how well period dramas will do on network tv, let alone the CW.
ReplyDeleteRachel Taylor is the female Jason O'Mara every show she touches is canceled before it can finish one season. Why choose that over JJ "everything I touch turns to TV gold" Abrams?
ReplyDeleteSome interesting information in there. And it sounds like this is info coming from the screenings...
ReplyDeleteBecause probably the Selection sucks.
ReplyDeleteCall me crazy but I'm actually looking forward to Blacklist. From the descriptions it looks like a potentially darker version of White Collar and I don't mean because of the colors in their names. Also before I read someone from Alias was involved, I thought it sounded like it had a pinch of that in it.
ReplyDeleteTravis Yanan does mini script reviews on twitter so this may of interest to you:
ReplyDeleteTravis Yanan @travisyanan 5 May
Though of the three, I'm least intrigued by Selection 2.0. More GoT tone than last time, feels flawed. Again, burned by 1.0 #pilotread2013
Travis Yanan does mini script reviews on twitter so this may of interest to you
ReplyDeleteTravis Yanan @travisyanan5 May
Reign could play very well in an opulent period piece teen romance way... Could also require a history lesson. #pilotread2013
Travis Yanan @travisyanan5 May
ReplyDeleteI'm a fan of BBC Tomorrow People. CW's feels modern, flawed & fun. Most grounded of CW's many genre scripts. Think it'll air #pilotread2013
Blacklist for me.
ReplyDeleteNBC?
ReplyDeleteThe Blacklist sounds and looks interesting
ReplyDeleteSo I just noticed that one NBC pilot has Rachel Taylor from 666 Park Avenue -- the show doesn't sound that great but I will watch that just for her. I love her so much. Someone needs to put her in a Bewitched remake. :D
ReplyDeleteBoth could get picked up for 13 episodes though I don't know what the CW are thinking with Reign.
ReplyDeleteAgents of S.H.I.E.L.D, Beverly Hills Cop, Blacklist, Crisis and The Goldbergs.
ReplyDeleteMaybe The Selection is more exspensive to produce than Reign?Just looking at thier filming locations though, they both sound really costly to me.Im kinda interested in both.
ReplyDeleteFor me who likes cable-shows it sounds like one of the best on this list. The big networks should do more limited series. They need to put out more quality dramas that aint just a re-hash or something similar as all the other popular dramas. I miss something like 24 from the big networks, and it has proven in the past to work. Rand Ravich also made Life, with Damian Lewis in it. One of the best dramas from NBC this past years.
ReplyDelete