One way of looking at the Fall Schedule is timeslot-by-timeslot. I figure that the best ones to start with are the most competitive timeslots, those on the most lucrative night of television for broadcasters: Thursday. Starting at the beginning of the night....
Thursday
8:00-9:00 pm
__________ABC: Flash Forward [9/24]
__________CBS: Survivor [9/17]
__________CW: Vampire Diaries [9/10]
__________Fox: Bones [9/17]
__________NBC: SNL Weekend Update Thursday [9/17] / Parks And Recreation [9/17] (mid-season: Community / Parks And Recreation)
This timeslot has the distinction, in our house, of being the only timeslot, this fall, for which we have a significant conflict... and it is a four-way conflict, not just a three-way conflict. In past years, we've had as many as three three-way conflicts. I don't think the smaller number of conflicts this year constitutes a significant trend, because the overall hours of programming that we're interested in has increased, and, of course, the one conflict we have is a four-way conflict.
ABC moves Ugly Betty away to make room for Flash Forward. (Trivia: The book was Flashforward; I'm not sure why the television series is two words.) This has been billed as a show for folks who like LOST. If so, I don't know why they're presenting it at 8:00 (other than the fact that the only later slot that they legitimately could have put it in was Friday 9:00 pm, where they moved Ugly Betty
to, but I suspect that the budget for Flash Forward wouldn't have been warranted by the prospects of a Friday showing). The premise of the series (see above) is great. I've just finished the novel, and I don't think the advertising blurbs for the show really do the premise justice (even assuming that the series will limit itself just to capitalizing on the first two thirds of the novel -- for folks who have read the novel, the reason for the division would be obvious).
(The next paragraph includes my own personal speculation about Flash Forward. However, having read the novel, what is written below might be considered by some to be a little more spoiler-ish than they would like. If so, then just skip the next paragraph.)
There is a lot of ground to cover, potentially, though it really depends on how broadly they're going to extend the scope of the show. I mean, theoretically, they could have guest stars each week, and delve into the flash each had, and play with the ramifications of it on their lives afterward. However, there is a set of series regulars, and I'm not sure (given their specific roles in the novel) how they'd weave those folks into what these guest stars deal with. So if they generally stick to the flashes of the regular cast, and the ramifications of those flashes, I'm not sure how far the series can go. Unless they introduce another device, that "resets" the premise, perhaps every season, or (similar to Heroes) twice per season. That could work, and actually there is some foundation for doing something like that in the final third of the novel.
CW moves Smallville away to make room for Vampire Diaries. This really puzzles me. Smallville is the best CW has, right? (It's surely the only program that they presented last year that my wife and I watch.

) Why spend so much money resigning the cast, and then move it away from the most lucrative night of the week to the second least lucrative night of the week? Very strange. And especially since, between the two shows (Smallville and Vampire Diaries), it seems to me that Vampire Diaries would be just as appropriate for Friday night. And Vampire Diaries cannot be anywhere near as expensive as Smallville is. Very very strange.
What they've said is that they want to build a big audience on Friday night, and they figure that Smallville will draw them in. Really? Okay, they know more about this stuff than I do, but I gotta wonder...
NBC is offering comedies, as they have for many years on Thursday night. Replacing My Name is Earl is Community, with Joel McHale (from The Soup) and even featuring Chevy Chase. We love The Soup and I cannot imagine that Community could be anything other than great fun. 30 Rock gets bumped for its cousins SNL and Parks and Recreation. Quite frankly, I could live without them.
Also in the timeslot is one of the strongest programs on any network, Survivor, on CBS, and veteran drama, Bones, on Fox. Survivor regularly won this timeslot last year. Bones held its own though.
Some critics specified
both Flash Forward
and Vampire Diaries as shows that could indeed be the break-out hits of the fall, despite being up against such strong competition. Time will tell.
As I indicated, we have a four-way conflict. Heck, we used to be big fans of Survivor and if it wasn't for so many other great shows being presented, we'd still be watching, so call this a five-way conflict. This is one kick-tail timeslot. We are going to end up recording Flash Forward and Bones. We'll have Vampire Diaries and Community in our Season Pass List, but they will only record when Flash Forward and/or Bones are reruns. As such, we'll actually get to see a few episodes of Vampire Diaries before it gets cut-off, and then after missing three episodes, we would be able to catch the next three (but won't -- we'll wait until reruns perhaps will allow us to fill in all the gaps). And for Community, we'll be reliant completely on reruns.
How do you see this timeslot working out for you?