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The CW Tries Out a Brand New Personality

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Gossip Girl by Timothy White/The CW
A year ago, the former stars of the WB and UPN found themselves uncomfortably mingling on one stage for the first upfront of the new CW network. They looked like the kids at the wedding of two single parents.

This year, the CW took a step toward developing its own personality, shedding the aging Gilmore Girls, Veronica Mars (the longest-running unsuccessful show in prime time) and All of Us (the weakest link in its lineup of urban sitcoms). The network is even taking the teen out of teen-angst drama One Tree Hill. When that show returns in mid-season, the characters will have been fast-forwarded to their lives after college.

The network is replacing All of Us with Aliens In America, a comedy about a Muslim exchange student coming to live in Wisconsin. It looks funny and a little provocative. Who would have thought the CW would have the first sitcom to deal with post-9/11 attitudes?

Tuesday at 9 pm brings Reaper, about a slacker whose parents sold his soul to the Devil, played with a brilliant oiliness by Ray Wise. The show represents the general tone of the new fall lineups presented this week: lighter fare with more special effects and fewer dark, complicated story lines with dense mythologies.

The moms who watched Gilmore Girls with their daughters will be very sad when they see Gossip Girl. Small-town values, reading books and watching old movies have been replaced by a snarky blogger, privileged prep-school girls from the Upper East Side and barely a parental unit in sight. Gossip Girl, which airs Wednesday at 9 pm, is getting the best lead-in the CW has in America's Next Top Model. Clearly the network thinks this one is the future.

On Sunday at 7 pm, the network will try a younger entertainment news show called CW Now, followed by Online Nation, an America's Funniest Home Videos for the YouTube generation. At 8 pm, 7th Heaven will be replaced by Life Is Wild. Although it's shot on location in South Africa, you'll still see more black people on CW's Monday comedies than on this show. Network insiders say that will change — let's hope so. The wildlife backdrop gives this family drama a distinctive look. Too bad the network didn't have this show last year to replace 7th Heaven on Monday at 8 pm, when viewers still looking for a family show would have found it. —Stephen Battaglio


Posted by TV Guide Staff
May 17, 2007 9:01 PM
The CW didn't have Life is Wild to replace 7th Heaven with last year because they hadn't borrowed it from across the pond. It seems that creativity in Hollywood is definitely withering. Just recently we've been subjected to the casting debacle that was Coupling, the bland offspring of the forefather's The Office, the sent back to minors Footballers' Wives, and hopefully, not an off key imitation of Viva Blackpool. I'm just surprised that CBS didn't add Helen Mirren to its crime drama schedule, or that a net didn't develop their own version of Robin Hood for next season. Why can't we just enjoy the originals? Is the language barrier that difficult? Or, is it the fact that these series don't fit the U.S.'s more or less standard 22 episodes per season?
Posted by jawick
May 17, 2007 9:44 PM
All I can say is, SNORE...zzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
By the way, sounds like they're trying to resurrect "Daktari". Oh, sorry, some of you may not know what that is, check it out at TV Guide's Search box at the top.
Posted by Solaughwhydontcha
May 18, 2007 12:22 AM
I'm with you, jawick. I'd rather watch the original versions that the American remake. Those usually are - well - awful! Give me the British version every time!
Posted by tazzy
May 18, 2007 2:30 PM
Amen for acknowledging who foolish the CW was moving the still-solid performing 7th Heaven away from Mondays at 8. Had they not moved, and people not known where to find the still-thought-to-be-cancelled-show-due-to-no-advertising, the Camdens could have easily still been the #2 or #3 show on the CW this season. Even its Monday premiere (when few people knew it was back) still got 4.3 million - who knows how well it could've done once word was out that 7th Heaven was back where it belonged on Monday nights.
Posted by tknowzbest
May 19, 2007 6:53 PM
It doesn't make much sense to have a cancel All of us. All that's left on TV are shows involving over-sexed, drinking, spoiled teens. And let's not forget reality shows. Enough is enough. What happen to the sitcoms.
Posted by tmwd9
Jun 8, 2007 12:52 PM
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