
NBC went on a comedy pickup spree today, ordering four new series to join previously ordered Go On. That includes 1600 Penn, The New Normal, Save Me and Animal Practice. All five are single-camera, the format that has completely dominated NBC’s comedy slots since the network’s last big multi-camera comedy series, Will & Grace, went off the air in 2006. The quintet includes one workplace comedy, Animal Practice, a genre that has dominated NBC’s Thursday comedy block for the last few years. It also features two family comedies, a genre NBC had been looking to get into, both with a twist and an edge: a blended family of a gay couple and a surrogate (The New Normal) and a dysfunctional First Family living in the White House (1600 Penn). The remaining two comedies, Save Me and Go On, have a somewhat cable sensibility as they are centered on a flawed/wounded central character.
Related: ’1600 Penn’, ‘Animal Practice’, ‘New Normal’, ‘Revolution’ & ‘Save Me’ Picked Up To Series At NBC
Missing from the list of NBC comedy pickups so far are multi-camera sitcoms. The network was very bullish on the multi-camera format earlier this pilot season, with 30% of its pilot orders going to traditional sitcoms. Despite being shut out today, multi-camera comedies will still likely have some presence on NBC’s schedule next year. There are three multi-camera pilots that are still in contention, with NBC expected to make a decision shortly. The Jimmy Fallon-produced Guys With Kids, which is meeting with writers, is considered a strong bet. If multi-camera freshman Whitney is indeed going away, its is logical to assume that NBC would pick up a companion for Guys between the two other multi-camera pilots still in the running, Daddy’s Girls, which has been gaining momentum, and early standout Lady Friends, which has lost some steam. (Also a possibility for midseason is singe-camera magical family comedy Isabel. The remaining NBC pilots, Friday Night Dinner, Sarah Silverman, Hilary Winston and Downwardly Mobile, are no longer in contention.)
Related: First Speculative NBC Schedule Surfaces
NBC is expected to launch a number of series in August, following coverage of the Summer Olympics. Several newly picked-up comedies, including Go On, Save Me and The New Normal, are among those eyed for an August debut. NBC is expected to give short orders to its returning comedies, and word has it the same may apply to at least some of the new comedy series, which normally start with 13 episodes and, in success, get picked up for 9 more. With an unofficial August start of the season, NBC’s schedule could resemble that of a cable network, with (almost) year-round original programming and shorter series runs.
Never bet against J.J. Abrams. Despite the massive penalty attached to his NBC drama project Revolution, it was the second to last one to get a pilot order at the network in early February. Then the pilot, written and executive produced by Eric Kripke, had great difficulty casting, in the end moving Billy Burke from a supporting role to the lead, and was one of the the last NBC drama pilots to go into production. But today, as in the “last will be first” Bible verse, Revolution became the first NBC drama pilot to receive a series order. It brings Abrams back to the network where he most recently fielded the short-lived spy drama Undercovers. The pickup also assures that Abrams will have three series on the air next season: Revolution and the recently renewed Person Of Interest on CBS and Fringe on Fox (for a final season). Revolution was one of two pilots Abrams’ Bad Robot had this season. The other, the CW’s Shelter, is not expected to go forward.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


I don’t know why there’s all this focus on JJ Abrams for Revolution. Sure his name may have gotten it a pilot greenlight but he’s off directing Star Trek.
Revolution succeeded because of Kripke. He’s absolutely one of the best writers working in Hollywood today, bar none. It was his show idea and his brilliant script that got Favreau attached. And together they nailed it.
The fact that it can be marketed, however tenuously, as a JJ Abrams show is a big plus for the network. It’s basically like free advertising. It’s kind of like “Bridesmaids” was being marketed as a Judd Apatow affair when it was really more of a Wiig and Mumulo thing.
“I don’t know why there’s all this focus on JJ Abrams for Revolution”—– because they want buyers to open up their checkbooks. You’ll get crickets if you market Revolution as “The dad from the Twilight Movies and the creator of Supernatural”.. Not knocking either guy but there’s ZERO upside to marketing this as a Kripke vehicle. His fan base will show up no matter how they market the series. Prepare for dozens of commercials during the Olympics along the lines of “from the creator of Lost and the director of Iron Man”….
DING DING DING DING
Unless Kripke is being ripped off when it comes to the profits from this show, he will be more than happy to have Abrams and Faverau attached to his show. And if he’s as good as people here say he is, they should be happy, too, since a high initial tune in makes the show more likely to be successful.
Im so glad Shelter is not moving forward.
LOL. Oh, you are just trying to rile up that one Shelter fan here, aren’t you? But, seriously, I agree. From the start it sounded like the most boring concept ever. Even reading the logline made you feel sleepy.
NBC must really enjoy 4th place. I’m looking forward to “The New Normal” but that’s about it. I don’t understand why they insist on filling their schedule with single camera comedies with limited appeal.
Terrence, I totally agree. America has already said we’re sick of seeing whitewashed movies and whitewashed television. Give us something multi-ethnic with a believability factor we can relate to. EXTREMELY disappointed in Greenblatt and his development team’s decision making.
I agree marc.. This is a Kripke’s show not Abrams (J.J. Is just one of the producers, Kripke is the creator/showrunner)
J.J. may be “just one of the producers” but it was his name that got the script picked up, his name that got the show ordered, and his name (and brand) that will be used to promote it – assuming NBC can finally figure out how to launch a show. No use getting in bed with someone and then crying about it. Just do your job and ride the coat tails and STFU.
The creator-writer-exec producer Kripke deserves the largest share of credit.
J.J. Abrams was smart enough to make a deal with him.
Glad Favreau delivered. Everyone was starting to get worried about him. He needs to stop eating all those cheeseburgers.
New Normal will be another tidal wave of righteous conservative Christian outrage. They are going to hate the show with a fear and loathing based on the photo above and the synopsis, they will protest it like nothing before. They will decry it as being Hollywood’s twisted perverted version of normal life so I’m looking forward to all their sound and fury over it. This will be fun to watch.
And NBC couldn’t be happier, as some outside group will be doing much of the marketing for the show. (I would be astonished if this didn’t factor into their thinking just a little.) It’s similar to how the PTC is launching an assault on “America’s Got Talent” because of Howard Stern, as if Greenblatt okayed a live sex show or something. Just a week before the show is going to premiere, they start this crap up. It’s almost as if they are in bed with Hollywood or something.
And they would be dead-on accurate on every one of those points.
As opposed to enjoying watching the ‘outrage’… I look forward to the day an actual NBC show is fun to watch. I don’t expect it to be the new normal — script was too preachy.
NBC will never be a winner until they focus on multi-cams
Yeah, because non-CBS multi-cams have worked so well recently haven’t they?!
That’s a rather small sample size, but “Whitney” did no worse than “Up All Night” or most of NBC’s other single-cams. So the downside of multi-cam is not huge and the upside of a successful one is bigger than almost any single-cam.
Multi-cams like ‘Whitney’ and ‘Chelsea’?
At least their single-cam stuff is occasionally good (The Office, 30 Rock, Community, Parks), and produces quite a bit of revenue through syndication.
Amazing news for Revolution…heard great things about shelter too. Seemed like a perfect character drama for CW
Good god, these all sound horrible.
Thank goodness for cable networks. I get the bad feeling these upfronts are going to be an even bigger wash than 2011/2012′s were.
Agreed. This pilot season has been horrendous. Everything is so mediocre, nothing on the commercial networks sounds even remotely intriguing.
What’s the matter NOTQUITERIGHT, pilot season didn’t go so well for you? What do you have that’s on the air right now?
This may astonish you, but plenty of people who aren’t involved in the TV business, namely the TV AUDIENCE, are very unhappy with the offerings on broadcast. Or haven’t you noticed how ratings are crashing to all new lows across the board? There’s a reason for that.
None of the comedies, on NBC or other networks, interest me. Very few of the dramas do, and the ones that intrigued me in the least are generally not getting picked up.
Broadcast TV is the Titanic. They need to stop rearranging the deck chairs and actually address the problem that is driving the audience to cable: we are bored with the same old cop shows, doctor shows, lawyer shows, sitcoms and reality crap. Greenlight something that will stand out in a crowd.
To be succesful show revolution must be procedural not serialized show – outside ABC all serialized dramas are bad last 3-4 years. Schedule. Billy Burke is BIG plus(twilight open in november can help too. think they have second actor from twilight BD part2) So timetable is important. And most important thing – showrunner! Abrams play big boss now and after lost he don’t stay with his shows after pilots(max for first season but only for fox and cbs) and don’t write/direct so may be Eric Kripke will be “the man”. And he is with no experience in big 4 networks. But is so smart guy and talent is there so deserve a chance! Stay wise Kripke.
How can a post-apocalyptic scenario be a “procedural”? Are they going to form vigilante posses and start arresting people on their own authority? Where’s the process in that? (From what I can gather, there are vigilante/militia types in the story, but they’re the bad guys.)
first critic/writer review for revolution:
The series focuses on a father (who may know more than he lets on about the cause of the worldwide blackout) and his children, trying to survive in new world. His daughter Charlie longs for more and winds up getting it when events send her on a dangerous mission to Chicago, searching for her mysterious uncle. It’s a pretty fun ride and with hints of “The Hunger Games” to it (strong, young female lead), it could prove successful for the network.
@ all for Kripke
Kripke is great but this is no cable tv! I always support the talent. And Kripke is so talented and good writer. But i think with no experience in big 4 networks. Its completely different match/game than cable. Abrams people will help him of course. Who will be the showrunner – Kripke or some from Abrams writers? NBC can rebuild pretty fast! Revolution will be after the voice in the fall! No other show from NBC network can’t be lead-in for such action show!
How does NBC not pick up Roseanne & John Goodman
That is absolutely insane
Someone get some get some sense over there!
Shocked that Downwardly Mobile is out.
Maybe Goodman will go to Community full time.
There are a lot of people including myself that loathe multi-cams & am grateful to NBC for focusing on single cam comedies. I like the idea that there moving towards more of a cable scheduling format meaning less reruns & an even greater selection of shows to sample. Too bad Friday Night Dinner didn’t get picked up but I’m looking forward to most of there new shows including Revolution.
Is there no hope for “Friday Night Dinner”? Given all the names associated with it, I figured it was a sure thing. I guess I am just peeved we might be/are deprived of Allison Janney.
Hey, NBC, here’s an idea: give Allison Janney one half our to read whatever she wants–a classic novel, Men’s Health, the phone book–into the camera, and pair it with Larry David arguing with people, and watch it blow up. I, for one, would be hooked.
Shelter might get picked up. You never know. Maybe its just a dark horse and flying under the radar.
If Deadline says it won’t be, it won’t be. The show is not marketable enough for the CW. It’s been at the bottom of the barrel from the start. They’re looking for hits and Shelter sounds like something that would take time to build a solid audience no matter how good it may be.
Will be so sad if they cancel ‘Up All Night’. The smartest most insightful comedy on TV since ‘Arrested Development ‘. Hilarious performances all around. Why can’t NBC know a good thing when they see it? This show deserves another season. Another chance for more people to fall in love with it.
Wait a minute, when was it decided that “Friday Night Dinner” wasn’t being picked up? WTF?
NBC is going to keep force-feeding the public single-camera until we learn to like it. They’ve turned comedy into medicine.
My favorite comment of the day!!!!
So what happened to Friday Night Dinner? I heard good things about the script, plus it had Greg Daniels at the helm and a great cast.
Not trusting cult comedy series at the peak of their greatness (Community and Parks & Recreation, apparently both not getting full seasons) while renewing your faith in only a single returning comedy (The Office, far from being nearly as good as it once was, and going down in the ratings fairly fast this year) isn’t the right call, NBC.
With 30 Rock gone after 15 episodes and The Office on its way out (maybe not in 2013 but in May 2014), you’re gonna need a new cornerstone at 9pm and I believe it is Parks and Recreation, which should be renewed for a full 22/24-episode season, which would allow the show to reach 90 episodes.
Ditto for Community, except that as much as I’m a big fan, I accept the fact that season 4 might be the final season of the show. But don’t do like 30 Rock, renew it for a full 22/25-episode season so that the show ends with 93/96 episodes, thus reaching the magic number (88 episodes for the syndication promised to Comedy Central in September 2013).
I agree NBC will never get out of the hole its in without single camera comedies — what in the world happened with Downwardly mobile? The perfect return of Roseanne and John Goodman and a multi cam??????
I don’t understand how NBC doesn’t green-light the Roseanne pilot Downwardly Mobile. I would love to see Goodman and Barr co-star again and I think a lot of people would to. How do you rule out Roseanne Barr, the Queen of Blue Collar Comedy, with a sitcom based on a trailer park plus Goodman will be alongside her. Its the perfect show! And the economy is even worse, so it’ll be even more enjoyable. If they don’t pick her show up, I’m boycotting NBC. They passed it up in 1987 to ABC, and they have a second chance for a hit, and their gonna pass it out again, what a bunch of jerks. Those comedies that they picked up look horrible, and the one about the gay couple and their families looks like a cheap imitation of modern family. NBC is pathetic, I hope Roseanne’s show gets picked up, no matter how crazy she is, she is a comedy genius. I was wondering, is it possible for another network to step in and pick up Roseanne’s Downwardly Mobile if NBC doesn’t choose to go forward with it and put it on their schedule??
I don’t like Roseanne (the person or the show), multi cams, or blue collar… anything! I think NBC has a good thing going with comedies that are smart and don’t tell you when to laugh. Multi camera comedies are so confined, you can’t do outdoor scenes easily. With single cameras, you can shoot wherever you want.
The Jimmy Fallon script is beyond bad…it’s embarassing. NBC is only honoring their expensive contract with him and we have to watch this crap get on the air at the expense of some really good shows. Greenblatt plays this “I buy name people” game…and he’s out.
Nobody knows who Kripke is, Supernatural has a small fanbase.
They just use JJ Abrams name to try and get a bigger audience.
LIke Spielberg and Bruckheimer.