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FOX Wednesday night lineup – Clacking the dream

FOX really makes me sad. I feel as if I remember a time when I actually cared about what it aired, but as I review what it offered these last three decades, I keep finding myself being disappointed. Sure, there were shows here and there, and Sunday night has historically been very strong for the network, but what about the rest of the week? And what does it say about FOX that it’s put the most effort into the night that no one else much focuses on?

But certainly it’s never been as barren for me as it is this season. My TiVo only tunes to FOX for two of its animated series these days. Sure, with the return of 24 and American Idol that balance is going to tip quickly, but the numbers will belie just how sad things have become for me and the adrift network.

Anyway, lets get down to business.

8:00-8:30 FOX aired its first Wednesday primetime schedule in 1992, and the initial inhabitant of the hour was Beverly Hills 90210. You have to lead with your strengths, I suppose. I’ll admit that I watched the teen soap for most of its run, but I also know that the show was for a demographic that I just don’t belong to. I watched it online recently for sentimental value, but I don’t think I ever stopped rolling my eyes. Malcolm in the Middle spent a little time here, but unfortunately it’s already accounted for in my week (Sundays). In the 2000s, 8PM saw a flurry of series, including The Bernie Mac Show (I’ve caught snippets of this but never really enjoyed it) That ’70s Show (same as before), Simple Life 3 (kill me), Bones (sorry folks, but kill me again), ‘Til Death (kill them already), Lie to Me (no thanks), and So You Think You Can Dance (close your eyes and hope they go away). American Idol aired something here in 2007 and 2008, but the show’s so scattershot that, even if I wanted to, it would be tough to lock it into a set timetable. In fact, the only thing that interests me here is Back to You. I’ll admit it took me a little while to get into this 2007 Kelsey Grammer and Patricia Heaton vehicle, but by the time the third goldfish died, I was hooked. The show also aired at 8:30, but using my prerogative to glance ahead at what the other networks offered on Wednesdays at 8:00 and 8:30, I think my safest bet for ensuring that Back to You makes it through to the next round is to slot it here. Gary Crezyzewski, use this opportunity wisely.

8:30-9:00 And that kind of forces my hand here. Since most 8PM shows were hour-longs, there isn’t even much to choose from on the half-hour. The first, in 2000, was something called Normal, Ohio, which I can’t place but apparently starred John Goodman … sorry? Grounded for Life’s tagline read: “Raising kids can be tough. It’s even harder when they’re really raising you!” … and so we move onto Cedric the Entertainer Presents, a sketch comedy series that bombed before its second season. Idol aired here at some point in 2002 and 2003, but then the same can probably be said for FOX’s entire primetime schedule, save for Sunday. A Minute with Stan Hooper barely lasted that long, while Quintuplets was another failed attempt by Andy Richter to make it on TV. Stacked starred Pamela Anderson as a bookseller, so you know why that didn’t make it, ‘Til Death didn’t get any better at this hour, and Back to You is accounted for. Which leaves me with only one option: Free Play. Enjoy!

9:00-10:00 Not a bad hour as far as successful television shows go. Melrose Place was slotted after 90210 back in 1992, but like it’s night-buddy, Melrose was not and is not for me. I saw some of the cross-overs after Jake left for the rundown housing complex, but that’s about it. Models Inc. followed Melrose, both in its airing and its place in my heart, and while I saw some of Party of Five the early years, it too never made more of an impression on me than a familiarity with some of the characters who starred on the show. Anne Hathaway’s lucky no one remembers Get Real, The $treet (2000) showed up a little late to catch the boom, and The O.C. … I know a lot of people get insulted when I deride The O.C., so I’ll just move on. Nanny 911 sounds frighteningly awful, Kitchen Nightmares’ title doesn’t do it any favors, and the rescheduled Bernie Mac Show, ‘Til Death, and Lie to Me did no better for me at a new time.

The Moment of Truth was actually somewhat enjoyable, but I think only online — the voyeuristic side of us that craves that type of entertainment should be contained in a small room in the dark. I never really understood how Head Cases saw the light of day — did they really get Chris O’Donnell and Adam Goldberg to sign up for this? — and I think that Glee (I have the right to an opinion!) should have never made it past the idea room. So is there anything left? Well, I’m glad you asked! Justice debuted in 2006 to poor numbers, and got batted around the week in the hopes that it would gain traction on some night; it never did. But what it did manage to achieve was leaving me happy that it had some opportunity for life. I feel like Justice fit neatly into the genre that Boston Legal, Eli Stone, and The Practice (sometimes) carved out, one that, it would seem, is still trying to gain mainstream eyeballs. For me it was a great show, and I particularly enjoyed how it was the only legal series that told us how the crime really took place at the end. Justice it is, for all.

A short night for sure, but definitely one that will leave me smiling. What does your perfect Wednesday night on FOX look like?

Photo Credit: FOX

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18 Responses to “FOX Wednesday night lineup – Clacking the dream”

January 6, 2010 at 3:45 PM

Move right past one of the best shows on TV currently with Lie To Me, eh?

January 6, 2010 at 5:48 PM

I just couldn’t. I watched the pilot, with the collage of faces and the ridiculousness of how he reads them, and I just hit delete. Whether or not it’s still “bad” is beside the point now – is it a “must see?” I haven’t read anything that’s told me that it is. Is it?

January 6, 2010 at 7:04 PM

I thought it was a decent show last year, and with the addition of Shawn Ryan (The Unit, the Shield) has made it considerably better.

The season premiere, in particular, was outstanding.

January 6, 2010 at 10:23 PM

I’m comfortable saying that I found it a poor rip-off of Psych. Now I know that those who watch it (and The Mentalist, another rip) regularly argue with that contention, but that’s why I led by saying I’m comfortable with it. But I’m glad you have something to distract you while you mourn an absent Glee (feel the burn!) :-)

January 7, 2010 at 1:01 AM

I agree with Ivey about “Lie To Me” although I thought it got off to a fairly weak start. I nearly gave up on it, but as the first season progressed it began to find its stride a bit more so I stayed with it. This season is absolutely must-see for my entire household and I can’t wait for new episodes to return.

“Bones” is another show that I wasn’t sure I’d stick with when it began, but now I can’t see myself not watching it. I guess I just don’t get it, but I stuck with “Back To You” for a very long time, but to me it got worse, not better, with jokes whose punchlines you could see coming a mile away.

Anything reality-related isn’t worth my time as it’s all voyeuristic garbage. I guess I don’t have a voyeuristic bone in my body because none of those shows is even remotely interesting to me. Period.

It wasn’t on FOX, but since you mentioned Andy Richter I thought I’d toss in my opinion that “Andy Barker, P.I.” should’ve been given a chance by NBC. Had they given it time to build a following they might actually have something worth watching on their schedule. Although “Chuck” is coming back soon so there’s something I’ll be watching on the molting peacock.

January 7, 2010 at 11:17 AM

Yeah … I’d have to check to be sure, but I think there are all of four things I watch on NBC: The Apprentice, The Office, 30 Rock, and Chuck. So how do I have 50 things on my TiVo prioritizer? :)

January 7, 2010 at 11:21 AM

Comparing Psych to Lie to Me? When the shows are so tonally different like these two, it doesn’t matter. One is a (hilarious) unrealistic comedy, and the other is a damn fine drama, based in reality (And those that don’t think the science of microexpressions is real are SOL).

January 7, 2010 at 11:43 AM

While definitely a fair distinction, I’ve never quite understood the answer in response to claims that the idea behind the two shows are similar. Shawn uses his powers of perception to solve crimes. So does Patrick Jane. Does Cal Lightman not use his observational powers to do the same? Even if it is a recognized science, microexpressions still need to be observed, interpreted, and applied to the issue at hand, and they’re definitely closer related to the clues that Shawn uses than the ones that procedural cops do.

I’m sure it would be easy to enjoy all three shows, but that doesn’t change the fact that its valid to see the newer two as riding the Psych train. And I feel okay if I’m the only one who thinks so. :)

January 7, 2010 at 2:53 PM

I think where most people disagree with you saying “Lie To Me” and “The Mentalist” are riding the Psych train is in the fact that Psych isn’t the first (or probably 20th) show to rely on characters whose powers of observation are very well honed. To be honest, we could take it all back to Sherlock Holmes (as some recent articles have done with “House”) and I think “Psych” is the bump in the deductive road you’ve laid out. It’s not that the other 2 shows are like it in some fundamental way, it’s just that “Psych” is an odd choice as a basis for comparison. I’m not so much disagreeing with you as I am simply stating why I think others find your comparison odd, because I do, too.

Did that make any sense to anyone?

January 8, 2010 at 12:33 PM

I get it, but like I said it’s my perspective. CSI didn’t found the procedural either, but because it was the most recent and popular version, and because it came right before an onslaught of imitators, it gets billed as the first. Is The Forgotten more like CSI than Lie to Me is like Psych? It all depends on where you’re stanging.

January 9, 2010 at 4:37 AM

Hell no, you’re not the only one. It was pretty obvious for my friends and I that were watching Psych when these other shows started popping up, and a lot of people online noted the similarities in the show description for The Mentalist before it actually aired.

January 10, 2010 at 2:00 PM

Yeah, it was covered pretty heavily in the entertainment media when each show premiered. I guess everyone seems to have forgotten?

January 7, 2010 at 9:07 AM

At least you bothered to watch the pilot. Watching just two commercials drove me far, far away from the show. Accidentally watching a few minutes where the case of the week threatens to interfere with their vetting of a frickin’ Supreme Court nominee didn’t in any way cause me to regret my antipathy.

I hadn’t realized that The OC and Glee, two of my all-time favorites, were competing for the same slot. Sophie’s Choice, that one.

January 7, 2010 at 11:25 AM

If that’s your Sophie’s Choice, then you’re in for some real surprises in life. :)

Unless the choice is which cast to leave on a deserted island for the crows to eat….

January 9, 2010 at 4:31 AM

When used in the generic sense, Sophie’s Choice need not involve a life-and-death situation, nor be limited to once in a lifetime.

No crows on deserted islands, so we’d have to leave them for the crabs to pick apart. If you’d asked me six months ago, Studio 60 would have been a good bet for that sacrifice. Now Stargate Universe takes the crown.

January 10, 2010 at 1:58 PM

I know … I was just poking fun. And I’ve never even seen the movie. :)

January 6, 2010 at 4:23 PM

I thought Stacked was pretty funny, so that gets my vote for the 8:30 slot.

January 6, 2010 at 5:48 PM

Was she any good in it?

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