
UPDATE 7 PM: NBC has picked up two more single-camera comedy series, 1600 Penn and Animal Practice (form. Animal Kingdom). That brings the number of new NBC series orders today to five, four comedies: 1600 Penn, Animal Practice, Save Me and The New Normal, and one drama, the JJ Abrams-produced Revolution. Animal Practice, from writers Brian Gatewood and Alex Tanaka, Universal TV and American Work, centers on a “House”-like
veterinarian (Justin Kirk), who loves animals but usually hates their owners (especially the new woman who runs the clinic). Tyler Labine, Bobby Lee and Amy Huberman co-star. 1600 Penn, from 20th TV, is a family comedy set in the White House. Josh Gad co-created the show with Jon Lovett and is starring. Bill Pullman, Jenna Elfman and Martha MacIsaac co-star. The pilot was directed by Jason Winer, who also directed the pilots for two comedy series on the air, ABC’s Modern Family and Don’t Trust The B. Ditto for Animal Practice helmers Anthony and Joe Russo who also directed the pilots for NBC’s Community and ABC’s Happy Endings and serve as executive producers on both.
ANALYSIS: NBC Bets On Single-Camera Comedies And J.J. Abrams In Early Orders
UPDATE, 2:20 PM: The Ryan Murphy-Ali Adler single-camera comedy pilot The New Normal and the JJ Abrams-Eric Kripke action drama Revolution also have received series orders from NBC. Co-written by Murphy and Adler and directed by Murphy, The New Normal is described as a heartwarming comedy about a blended family of a gay couple — Bryan (Andrew Rannells) and David (Justin Bartha) — and a cash-strapped waitress and mother of one Goldie (Georgia King) who becomes a surrogate to help them have a child. Co-starring in the 20th Century Fox TV-produced project is Ellen Barkin as Goldie’s glamorous/bigoted grandmother. Like the other newly picked up NBC comedy series Save Me and Go On, The New Normal also has been eyed for an early launch after the Olympics in August.
Related: ‘30 Rock’ Near Final-Season Renewal; NBC Eyes Short Orders For Returning Comedies
Written by Kripke, directed by Jon Favreau and produced by Abrams’ Bad Robot and Warner Bros TV, Revolution is described as a high-octane action drama following a group of characters struggling to survive and reunite with loved ones in a world where all forms of energy have mysteriously ceased to exist. Billy Burke plays the lead, with Giancarlo Esposito, Tracy Spiradakos, Graham Rogers and Anna Lise co-starring. Both New Normal and Revolution were already on track for pickup as they had been allowed to make staffing offers. This marks Abrams’ return to NBC two years after the brief run of his spy drama Undercovers.
Related: PRIMETIME PILOT PANIC: Pre-Upfront Week Update
PREVIOUS 11:50 AM: It looks like it’s starting — NBC has picked up to series comedy Save Me starring Anne Heche with a 13-episode order. It was one of the pilots which were allowed to start making staffing offers and has been fast-tracked for an August launch. I’ve learned that Alexa Junge is in negotiations to come on board as showrunner of the series, from Original Film and Sony Pictures TV. The single-camera comedy, written/executive produced by John Scott Shepherd, stars Anne Heche as a woman who lets herself – and her marriage – go until she undergoes an “awakening” that transforms her spiritually and physically into a desirable and outspoken woman who just might be channeling god.
Related: First Glimpse At NBC’s Newly Picked Up Comedy Series ‘Go On’ And ‘Save Me’
This is NBC’s second newly-picked up series for next season, along with another single-camera comedy, the Matthew Perry starrer Go On, which was picked up last month. Both are being eyed for a premiere right after NBC’s coverage of the Summer Olympics. This is the first of a slew of pickups expected over the next couple of days at NBC, which is first at bat to present to advertisers exactly a week from now.
Likely to join Go On And Save me are the NBC comedy pilots that have been making staffing offers, The New Normal, 1600 Penn, Guys With Kids and Revolution. Friends alumna Junge most recently served as showrunner on NBC’s midseason comedy BFFs.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


Any word on a fourth season of Parenthood?
I am really hoping for COUNTY to be picked up.
I am getting really nervous about Parks and Recreation & Community. I really hope both are renewed. Even if I only got 10 new episodes of each I would be okay with it as long as they were still on the air. But as people have mentioned give them both full orders so they can have a full amount of episodes for syndication.
Jenna Elfman and Josh Gad on the same set. Not sure what’s worse. Too bad they couldn’t throw Debra Messing Ito that soup.
Revolution looks ridiculously under cast. Looks like a Syfy series based on the cast photo.
i loved the “Friday Night Dinner” script, it was very funny and hated “Animal Practice”. Who cares about a vet who hates people, i give it four shows before it pulled from the lineup.
Once again, how are you getting to read these scripts?
Anyway, I was skeptical of the “Animal” premise. It’s broad, sure, but it seems kind of stupid. But then again, “Go On” and “Save Me” seem like great ideas for series, so it could just be a personal thing.
Animal Practice sounds like a clever concept. Get it right and grab that massive animal-lover demo.
Brian, there is a whole industry of people who have to read these scripts in order to get them made. The shows don’t magically go straight from someone’s laptop to your television.
Really? Thanks for the update! :]
I guess the group of people involved with the process of getting a show from idea to pilot to series, as opposed to the size of the group involved with filming it once it’s been on, is much larger than I thought. I had assumed it was more of an upper-level thing; perhaps I was wrong. It just seems kind of odd that so many people involved with the process are here and talking out it so freely.
Save Me sounds pleasant enough and I like Anne Heche.
I just liked it all far better when it was “Wonderfalls” 8 years ago.
It was about time Jenna got a lead!
I need to know if Midnight Sun is being picked up, can’t wait any longer
Hey it’s the new boss, he’s exactly like the old one. The only thing that changes is the name on the door.
Just what the network needs. More criticism where it is not needed our wanted. Besides they don’t even know if these shows would be canceled or not.
wasn’t brittany snow cast as the daughter in 1600 penn? who the hell is that girl in the green then?
The role was re-cast. It’s what’s know as a re-casting.
It will be a real shame if “Downwardly Mobile” doesn’t get a shot. The country could really use some social comment in the guise of sitcom and few half-hours did that better than “Roseanne” at its best. Plus chasing the prefab yuppie sheen of “Friends-” style development hasn’t worked for N.B.C. in years. Different sitcoms for different times I say. Isn’t that always how hits happen? They lacerate the Zeitgeist by embodying it? The pilot script was off-handed yet perceptive – a good sign. One thing that I’ve noticed over the years is that the pilots most hyped by the networks often go down the fastest. It’s the sleepers that save the day. Everybody knows that 80% of these pick-ups will be gone by November anyway. N.B.C. has a unique opportunity to re-invent itself now. I look forward to that transition. TV is becoming too Producer-as-Brand heavy. Yet more J.J. Abrams? I think “Felicity” and “Lost” were his last cultural phenoms. Networks overpaying for the potential next one (with guarantees and more)isn’t going to do it I don’t think. Like beating the bushes for a new “Friends” – for ten years. And what happened to all those “Sex and the City” – let’s call them homages? “Must See TV” – as a convention for programming choices – is long gone but N.B.C. still feels stuck in that rut of glory days sentiment in terms of its development. Some of their best shows are winding down. Comcast, take the opportunity to move forward in surprising ways. Break the old constricting mold of safe regeneration of the same concepts and premises of similarly successful programming. Start trends don’t chase them.
Knowing very little beyond what I have read online about these series, I don’t think any of them sound particularly terrible. Some of them, like “Animal Practice,” seem kind of silly, but that’s just me. The end result could turn out a lot better than I can imagine right now.
What’s puzzling is that (a) so many people are criticizing NBC for derivative shows while defining the concepts and themes too broadly and, in the same thought process, (b) criticizing them for being too quirky, original, or daring with both content and format. You can’t be upset for both of those reasons at the same time.
I don’t think there’s any silver bullet for the network, neither in content nor in format. Were “Downwardly Mobile” a single-cam show, it might not make a difference. The key is to find one show, any show, that works, and then build the night around that. I certainly understand the reluctance of the networks in keeping a show on when it’s not doing what the brass would like it to do, but what else do they expect? After a certain point, losses need to be cut, but NBC in particular is ridiculous when it comes to constant scheduling shifts. Leaving “30 Rock” in one particular spot might not have helped it become “Seinfeld 2.0,” but the series might not be in such rough shape, like it is now, were it given a more stable position on the schedule. The sorry state of NBC didn’t help make doing that any easier, but still…
Anyway, I am looking forward to see what the network orders and how everything turns out. For all of its problems, it does have good shows, and it’s time that people start tuning in.
NBC MULTI-CAMS DAMN’T! STOP PICKING UP ALL OF THESE SINGLE-CAMS!
No need to yell, Grandpa.
Love Ellen Barkin! I think her new show will be fun to watch, and NBC can thank her in advance for helping to make the show a hit!