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By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES, August 28 (Reuters) – Reality shows, revivals, and covers make up the bulk of the TV menu this fall, as the top 4 U.S. broadcasters paint to fill the gaps in their schedules caused by coronavirus production closures.
Most scripted dramas, which add popular exhibits like “This Is Us” and “9-1-1”, may not be available until November or later, while the “Star Trek: Discovery” series, which has been a paywall for 3 Years will have a loose career on CBS, announced the networks this week.
Elsewhere, it will more commonly be a regimen of old and new TV games, adding “The Ellen Game Game”, essays from “Celebrity Family Feud” and the canopy of the 1960s “Supermarket Sweep” exhibition.
“This isn’t a classic fall season, however, we’re ready with a fake list of original content when our normal scripted series begins production,” said Kelly Kahl, CBS entertainment president, speaking the lineup.
The coronavirus pandemic halted film and television production in Hollywood in mid-March and the industry struggled to return to paintings under new fitness guidelines. Scripted dramas and COMEdies are filmed in August and begin airing in September.
NBC’s Comcast Corp said the hospital drama “New Amsterdam” and the police comedy “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” were among the exhibits that may not go back to January, while a new season of the family circle series “This Is Us” may not seem like it until November 10.
CBS said it would provide the Latin circle of family members with the comedy “One Day at a Time”, which has been running on other platforms since 2017, and purchased Spectrum TV’s “Manhunt: Deadly Games” police series.
Clips that will return with new content in September come with Walt Disney Co’s “Dancing With The Stars” on ABC, which is filmed under COVID-19, and “The Masked Singer” on Fox Television at Fox Corp. (Report through Jill Serjeant; Edited through Lisa Shumaker)