News and Quick Comments

Knicks Network? That’s NBC for now

NBC is turning the New York Knicks’ championship into a three-day celebration. That includes:
— Tonight (June 15): The Knicks do a takeover of Jimmy Fallon’s “Tonight Show,” at 11:35 p.m.
— Tuesday: At 10 p.m., “Password” has the Knicks’ Josh Hart competing with Jimmy Fallon; there’s even a category focusing on the team. (The previously scheduled hour with Ice-T will air later.) And at 12:35 a.m., Karl-Anthony Towns (shown here) visits Seth Meyers’ late show.
— Wednesday: Og Anunoby visits Meyers’ show. Read more…

Here’s a fresh surge of PBS documentaries

While some networks are in their summer slumbers, PBS seems to be surging with new documentaries.
Now “POV” starts its 39th season July 20, with a film (shown here) that views China’s unbalanced dating scene. It follows with five more films.
PBS had already set a busy non-fiction line-up. In one burst, it debuts a moving Holocaust film (“The Last Twin”) at 10 p.m. June 15; a deep profile of Katharine Graham, the late Washington Post publisher, at 9 p.m. June 16; and a joyous view of Australian wildlife, at 10 p.m. June 17. Then is a Friday string of multi-part reruns, starting with George H.W.Bush, at 9 p.m. June 19. Read more…

Tony telecast: a lot … and then a lot more

Who would imagine a night when Megan Thee Staillion was only approximately the 43rd most flashy person?
That was Sunday’s Tony Awards, in which the three goals seemed to be: 1) More; 2) Even more; and 3) A whole lot more.
Certainly, I was delighted with the result: “Schmigadoon” (shown here) won for best musical; that may nudge people to see the original version, a gem that’s streaming on Apple.
And Cinco Paul was showered in honors — even if he was sort of invisible. Read more…

Fox plans its post-soccer summer

When soccer ends and the world goes home, Fox will have Part II of its summer line-up.
In mid-July, it will debut one show, start new seasons of two (including Gordon Ramsay’s “Kitchen Nightmares,” shown here in a previous episode) and resume three more.
For now, Fox is obsessing on the World Cub, which brings soccer teams to the U.S., Mexico and Canada, from June 11 to July 19. Every game will be on Fox or Fox Sports1, in addition to Telemundo and streaming on Peacock and Fox One.
To clear the way, the network started many of its summer shows early and will finish three of them early. “Farmer Wants a Wife” and “Bear Grylls is Running Wild” end on June 9, “The Floor” on June 10.
But some others will be back. The plan,announced today (Tuesday) includes: Read more…

It’s time for Tonys … and for Schmiga-streaming

For the geographically disadvantaged (that’s most of us), the annual Tony telecast is important.
It shows us the joy of Broadway. It shows what we’d savor if we had the time … and the money … and a proximity to New York.
We don’t, of course, so we catch the Tonys, at 8 p.m. ET Sunday (June 7) on CBS. In a three-hour stretch, we’ll see lots of awards, get a few laughs … and see production numbers from at least nine musicals.
And this year, there’s a bonus: We can stream (via Apple) “Schmigadoon” (shown here)m which a front-runner is based on, Read more…

Josh Johnson brings fresh approaches to comedy

It’s great to have new ideas, Josh Johnson says … except sometimes it’s not.
“Sometimes, something hasn’t been done before because it’s a bad idea,” Johnson, who has a new HBO special, said in a video press conference.
“Things like peanut-butter-and pickle sandwiches: No one’s done that before, because it’s a bad idea.”
He’s impressed critics with good ideas — both in his comedy and in the way he presents it. Now his “Josh Johnson: Symphony” special (debuting at 8 p.m. Friday and 10:10 p.m. Saturday, May 22-23, and also on HBO Max) offers a fresh approach, including the way he uses music. Read more…

Old master revives young monster?

A very old comedian will be working on “Very Young Frankenstein.”
Mel Brooks –who turns 100 on June 28 — is one of the producers of the comedy, which will be on FX and Hulu.
The show is from the people behind FX’s “What We Do in the Shadows,” the vampire comedy that drew four Emmy nominations for best comedy series. Taika Waititi, co-creator of “Shadows,” directed the pilot film, which stars Zach Galifianakis, Dolly Wells and Spencer House.
This is based on Brooks’ 1974 “Young Frankenstein” (shown here) which the American Film Institute puts at No. 13 on its list of all-time funniest movies. (Brooks’ “Blazing Saddles” and “The Producers” are No. 6 and 11.) Read more…

ABC joins the no-new-shows trend

TV networks are shedding one of their grandest traditions — the debut of big-deal shows each fall.
Today (May 12), ABC announced a schedule with zero new shows. That comes a day after Fox did the same.
Add in CBS and NBC (three apiece) and you still have only six new shows this fall. In the old days, there would be 20-plus.
The flip side is that current shows keep surviving. ABC says this is the first time in its history that it has renewed all of its scripted shows. That includes “R.J. Decker” (shown here) that debuted in March.
To do that, it has many wait for mid-season. That includes a comedy (Tim Allen’s “Shifting Gears”) and three dramas (“High Potential,” “Will Trent” and “The Rookie”), plus “The Bachelor” and “Bachelor in Paradise.” Read more…

NBC’s fall line-up: with time-sharing, plenty of shows

Even as sports gobble up the network, NBC has room for new shows.
Its schedule — announced today (May 11) — has three new ones this fall, with three more for mid-season. In both cases, there’s one of each — a comedy (including “Newlyweds, shown here), a drama and a reality show.
That’s being done with only moderate cancellations. The network is dropping one comedy (“Stumble”) and two dramas (“Brilliant Minds” and “Law & Order: Organized Crime),” while keeping “The Hunting Party” in limbo. Read more…

It’s dancing and games for ABC’s summer

Dance will replace romance, as the Monday key to ABC’s summer line-up.
That’s “Dancing with the Stars: The Next Pro,” hosted by Robert Irwin (shown here). It debuts July 13, as part of line-up that also has three returning game shows and two specials.
For a while, ABC is dominated by the pro-basketball playoffs. This year, they start June 3 and could go as late on June 19.
Then summer has its delayed start — a three-hour annual country-music special is June 25, with other shows starting in July. Read more…