Make An Argument

What we can learn from this year’s upfronts: NBC

By Eric Hughes

May 4, 2011

Sadly, it may not get as good of ratings as The Girls Next Door.

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Prime Suspect

Even though NBC tried unsuccessfully to launch a series based on The Rockford Files last year, I’d like to think the channel will foot a little more confidence this time around in Prime Suspect.

Based on a popular British police procedural that ended its spotty seven-series run in 2006 after 15 years on the air, Prime Suspect starred Helen Mirren as a tough Brit inspector in a male-dominated profession. The American remake’s got Maria Bello, who caught a break about 14 years ago as a med doctor on ER.

Grimm

I’m intrigued whenever competing studios develop similar projects around the same time and then, sometimes, engage in an arms race to see who can beat the other to the finish. We see this all the time in the movies - The Illusionist and The Prestige, Capote and Infamous, Paul Blart and Observe and Report. Even NBC did it to itself when it decided to pick up both Studio 60 and 30 Rock in the same year.

I discussed ABC’s Once Upon a Time a few weeks ago, and can’t help but think insiders from both camps are guilty of stealing a bit from one another. All of a sudden we have two fairy tale-esque dramas on broadcast TV after going X amount of years without one - how perfect.

While ABC’s seems family friendly, NBC’s - called Grimm - is a cop drama set in a universe where Grimm’s Fairy Tales exist.

Wonder Woman

There’s been so much buzz about the reboot that NBC would be silly not to take things to the next step with a 13-episode pickup. Filming in and around the streets of Los Angeles, there’s certainly a level of awareness to Wonder Woman that other prospects aren’t also getting. Arianne Palicki is jumping on cars and running around in her Wonder Woman getup, and plenty of passersby have been milling about to witness it.

Smash

The more I hear about this one, I more I like its prospects. So much so that I think it has the best chance to land a slot on NBC’s fall schedule. Smash, from an executing producing team including the likes of Steven Spielberg, is about a handful of characters working on a Broadway production of a Marilyn Monroe musical. It’s a gold idea, I think, and the success of Glee goes to show that show tunes can carry a series on broadcast.

If picked up - which, I’ll bet, it will be - Smash will reunite NBC with Debra Messing, who not too long ago anchored NBC’s Thursday night comedy slate with Will & Grace. I could see this one airing at 10 p.m., actually. Also signed to the cast are Katherine McPhee and, yes, Angelica Huston. I love me some Angelica.

Missing the mark:

- REM (A thriller about a cop who realizes he’s living in two different realities after an accident). Sounds nifty, but NBC has been burned a few times after trying to develop something special post-Heroes. (I mean, The Cape? The Event?) I just don’t think NBC will risk it with REM.

- 17th Precinct (A sci-fi drama set in a town where magic rules over science). Again, too niche.

- Untitled Stephen Gaghan fka S.I.L.A. aka Special Investigations L.A. (A Traffic-esque drama srt in modern-day Los Angeles). Tipping a cap to CBS’ acronym happy slate, S.I.L.A. would be a good bet if NBC didn’t already have a cop show set in L.A. (Law & Order: L.A.) Although LOLA hasn’t been performing up to snuff, so who knows whether it’ll be back for a second season. Anyway, NBC has done LA cop drama - Southland - and failed, and I’d like to think the network would try something different.

- A Mann’s World (A fiftysomething Beverly Hills hairdresser -- Allan Mann -- struggling to keep his relevancy in modern LA). Again with the LA thing, as if America only has a handful of cities in which to set a television show. A Mann’s World is from the guy who did Sex and the City, but I can’t get past its poor title.


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