Channel Surfing: "Harper's Island" to Graveyard on Saturdays, Abrams Confident About "Fringe" Renewal, "Privileged" Still Kicking, and More

Welcome to your Tuesday morning television briefing.

CBS has announced that it will move struggling freshman drama series Harper's Island to Saturday nights at 9 pm ET/PT, beginning May 2nd. What saved the series from outright cancellation are its strong DVR numbers and the fact that all thirteen episodes of Harper's Island's limited run were already in the can, making it much easier for the Eye to just burn off the episodes. "This move gives us an opportunity to improve the time period on Thursday while experimenting with more original programming on Saturday," said CBS senior exec VP Kelly Kahl of the network's decision. Harper's Island won't be alone on Saturday nights, which the networks have been increasingly using as a dumping ground for series with small but loyal viewers; Kings, Pushing Daisies, Eli Stone, and Dirty Sexy Money will all air episodes on Saturdays this summer. (Variety)

J.J. Abrams is confident that freshman drama series Fringe will return this fall. "It should be returning," Abrams told SCI FI Wire. "I'm really happy with so much of what we did this year. And I feel like we have barely gotten going. There's so much that we know we want to explore and knew we did from the beginning. A lot of it is yet to come." Apparently, one episode of the second season has already been shot, despite the network not having officially renewed the series. "I think that season two should be pretty great, pretty dynamic," said Abrams. "We have some cool ideas. I'm very excited about that. I'm proud of the group. My only regret is I wish we could have stayed shooting in New York. We had a terrific crew. That's the one thing I'd wish we'd be able to do differently. It's a show that's still, as it's going, evolving. Finding the balance between relatable characters and absolute science fiction takes a while, but I think we're getting there." (SCI FI Wire)

The curtain hasn't fallen on CW's Privileged just yet. Entertainment Weekly's Michael Ausiello is reporting that a second season order is still possible, pointing toward the netlet's decision to air repeats of Privileged's first season on Friday nights at 8 pm ET/PT throughout the summer. "It's definitely a positive sign," one Privileged insider told Ausiello, though CW has yet to make a decision about the dramedy series. (Entertainment Weekly's Ausiello Files)

The writing is on the wall: FOX has opted to shift new comedy Sit Down, Shut Up to the less desirable timeslot of 7 pm ET/PT on Sundays. It had aired two installments in its post-Simpsons 8:30 pm slot; the network will now air episodes of King of the Hill after The Simpsons. It's thought extremely unlikely that the series, from Sony Pictures Television, will continue past this season. (Futon Critic)

Missi Pyle (Boston Legal) will replace Leslie Bibb in NBC's untitled Justin Adler comedy pilot, following the latter's departure from the project in the wake of a creative overhaul. Pyle will play domestic goddess Vanessa, the eldest sibling. As Pyle already shot CBS comedy Big D, her participation here will be in second position to the CBS project. (Hollywood Reporter)

ABC is said to be in talks with ABC Studios about continuing comedy series Scrubs next season. Should a deal be reached for Season Nine, the studio would have to accept a reduced license fee while creator Bill Lawrence would return as showrunner/executive producer and star Zach Braff is now "believed to be interested in returning for at least a portion of the episodes." Scrubs is said to be popular with advertisers due to its upscale viewers and ABC is said to need another half-hour on its lineup. Meanwhile, Variety is reporting that Better Off Ted "appears to be a real candidate for renewal as well, thanks to decent buzz -- and the fact that it's not produced by ABC Studios (as the network is looking to spread the financial risk beyond the Disney borders)." And Samantha Who? could also return next season. (
Variety)

Lisa Rinna has changed her tune about wanting to join the cast of CW's revival of Melrose Place. "I don’t think I wanna go back anymore," Rinna told Entertainment Weekly's Hollywood Insider. "Seriously, I watched some old tapes recently -- Harry [Hamlin, her husband] and I were going through stuff. It doesn’t feel right! It feels weird. I’ve changed my mind. You can’t go back!" (Entertainment Weekly's Hollywood Insider)

NCIS' still untitled spin-off starring Chris O'Donnell and LL Cool J will be set in Los Angeles and will focus on the employees in the Office of Special Projects, "where they do a lot of undercover and surveillance work," said NCIS executive producer Shane Brennan. "There are no forensics or autopsies in it. There is no [lab tech] Abby character in it. It's not going to trample on our traditional NCIS show." (New York Post)

Spooks (which has aired Stateside under the name MI-5) is set to go into production on its eighth season, which will air this autumn on BBC One and will star Richard Armitage, Peter Firth, and Hermione Norris. (BBC)

Talent agencies William Morris and Endeavor formally approved a merger yesterday, laying the groundwork for the two firms to launch the joint WME Entertainment, which is expected to move into new offices that William Morris is building in Beverly Hills in 2010. Many agents are being courted by rival agencies. William Morris chairman Jim Wiatt will serve as the chairman of WME, with Endeavor's Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell sharing oversight with William Morris president Dave Wirtschafter and a nine-person board--five seats from WMA and four from Endeavor--will be formed as well. (Los Angeles Times)

Maureen FitzPatrick has been named SVP of comedy development at FremantleMedia North America, where she will oversee comedy development, sell and adapt British comedy series, and develop formats from the company's Atomic Wedgie online site. She was formerly SVP of digital content and development at the company's licensing arm. (Variety)

Stay tuned.

Televisionary Rant: "MI:5" (a.k.a. "Spooks") Vanishes Right Off A&E Schedule

I was all excited to watch MI-5 tonight. While it's on at 11 pm and, though preceded by two and a half hours of Doctor Who tonight, I couldn't wait to catch up on those daring Brit spies and whatever dastardly plot they're foiling this week. Hell, I even wrote about the espionage drama this morning.

And then A&E had to go and mess up all of my carefully laid TiVo plans. The cabler, better known for reality fare like Dog the Bounty Hunter and Criss Angel, Mindfreak than top-notch quality programming from across the pond, has decided in its infinite wisdom to pull tonight's episode of MI-5--and all subsequent episodes--and burn off the fourth series on Saturday, October 21st, airing the remaining episodes (um, that would be all of them other than the two-part premiere) in a single eight-hour block during the day.

Um, wow. Really, thanks, A&E, for depriving the American audience of a quality drama like MI-5 and relegating it to burn-off status on a weekend a few weeks from now. A move like that really shows a healthy appreciation for your audience. Fortunately, there's absolutely nothing on this network that I'll ever plan on watching.

From Across the Pond: "MI-5" (a.k.a. "Spooks")

No one ever said that the spy trade was a particularly easy or, um, long-lived profession to go into. The pay isn't great, the hours are long (particularly if you're Jack Bauer, there isn't even time for a bathroom break), the conditions are downright dangerous, and the survival rate is pretty bleak.

Especially, that is, for the operatives on the smart and sleek British import MI-5 (or as it's know on the other side of the pond, Spooks). Their life expectancy is somewhere around 1 or 2 seasons of the show, if they're lucky. Their lives are nasty, brutish (and British), and short and it goes without saying that on a show like MI-5, no one is safe. Part of the excitement of the show is the danger that accompanies it. Any one of the characters can be killed off at any time, without warning and without sentiment from the series' producers. I realized this quite early on in the series' second episode when a female spy (Lisa Faulkner) whom I believed to be a series regular was dispatched when a villain stuck her face in a scalding deep fat fryer as fellow spy Tom Quinn (Matthew MacFadyen) looked on in horror. It was brutal and necessary to set the stakes for this show: it's not a cozy drama about relationships between spies. It's a gritty exploration of the intelligence industry's post-9/11 attempts to defuse any terrorist attacks and the weight it puts on its agents.

To look at the series' cast in MI-5's fourth season, which premiered two weeks ago on A&E (BBC recently launched the Season Five in the UK), it's hard to see a familiar face from the original days. (Only Peter Firth's intel boss Harry Pearce remains.) In a show that has gone through so many cast permutations (we miss you Keely Hawes!), it's amazing that it's remained so successful at finding new actors and characters to take up the reins and keep the audience invested in their situations, without the hook of an ongoing central character like 24's Jack Bauer. The closest thing MI-5 had to Jack was Tom Quinn, the leader of this MI-5 team, played by MacFadyen, who departed the show in 2004. Likewise, Keely Hawes' Zoe and David Oyelowo's Danny, easily two of my favorite television characters, are no longer on the series, either.

Danny's death provided the Season Three finale and his funeral takes place during the two-part opener of the fourth season, which finds the team attempting to process their grief while also investigating a series of bombings in London (filmed, sadly, just before the actual London subway and bus bombings). And while there might have been a lag of nearly two years between seasons for us here in the US, it hasn't made me miss Danny any less.

So who's actually still on the show? Well, for a start there's Rupert Penry-Jones's dashing spy Adam Carter, who's taken over Tom Quinn's place in MI-5, the steely head of counter-terrorism branch Harry Pearce (Firth), Tom's wife Fiona Carter (Olga Sosnovska), an MI-6 agent, cuckoo researcher Ruth Evershed (Touching Evil's Nicola Walker), Adam's latest sidekick Zafar Younis (Raza Jaffrey), ruthless colleague Juliet Shaw (Anna Chancellor, though she'll always be "Duckface" to me), and techies Malcolm (Hugh Simon) and Colin (Rory Macgregor).

Regardless of rotating cast (whom I love all the same), I tune in for the intelligent and gripping plots which, while though lacking the gimmick of real-time like 24, feel just as real and thought-provoking (not to mention adrenaline-rushing). The three-dimensional characters, their quick witted dialogue, and the ominous and tense atmosphere created by everything from the Thames House HQ set design to the music to that eerie fade to black and white image at the end of every episode makes MI-5 much more than just a Brit version of 24.

And, while the world is certainly a scary enough place as it is, it's a comforting thought to know that the Adam Carters of the world are putting themselves on the line to protect it.

"MI-5" airs Friday evenings on A&E at 11 pm ET/PT.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Ghost Whisperer (CBS); Deal or No Deal (NBC); WWE Friday Night SmackDown (CW; 8-10 pm); Grey's Anatomy (ABC); Celebrity Duets (FOX; 8-10 pm); Desire (MyNet)

9 pm: Close to Home (CBS);
Dateline (NBC); Men in Trees (ABC); Fashion House (MyNet)

10 pm: NUMB3RS
(CBS); Law & Order (NBC); 20/20 (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8-10:30 pm: Doctor Who on Sci Fi.

It's the second season premiere of Doctor Who, complete with the latest incarnation of the Doctor played by the talented David Tennant. First up is the Christmas Special ("Christmas Invasion"), in which we (and Rose Tyler) are introduced to the newly regenerated Doctor. Then it's a second episode ("New Earth"), in which the Doctor and Rose use the TARDIS to visit mankind's new, um, Earth, but instead discover some gruesome secrets in a luxury hospital. It's the food, isn't it?

11:00 pm: MI-5 on A&E.

The fourth season of this superb Brit espionage drama continues tonight. On tonight's episode ("Divided They Fall"), the team tries to subvert a racist MP who has joined a far-right wing political party.

A&E Gears Up for More "MI-5" Intrigue

Fans of BBC's Spooks--or MI-5 as it's known here in the States--need not wait any longer to find out what happened with their favorite British spy group after this long hiatus.

A&E has announced that it will premiere MI-5's fourth season beginning with a two-part special kicking off on 15 September at 11 pm ET/PT that will deal head on with agent Danny Hunter's, um, untimely end at the conclusion of last season.

So set your TiVos and catch up with Adam Carter & Co... because it might be another few years before you get your next chance.