NEW YORK ā Something was missing Monday when Fox announced its plans for the fall television season ā a schedule.
Fox Entertainment CEO Charles Collier said that the network was trying a ānew approachā and giving equal weight to its Tubi streaming service by not outlining where its shows will air in the fall.
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Presenting a new schedule to advertisers in May has long been a tradition for television networks, revealing what new shows are coming, what old shows are departing and when they will air during the week and year.
Yet while fixed schedules remain, they are in many ways becoming obsolete for viewers, who are becoming accustomed to deciding themselves when they want to watch or stream programs.
Asked about that on Monday, Collier did not say that was part of Fox's reasoning. By not announcing a schedule Monday, the kickoff to the week where broadcast networks unveil their plans in flashy New York presentations, Fox has the flexibility to adjust its schedule depending upon what its competitors do.
The change might also reflect the fact that Fox has not yet nailed down agreements with producers of the dramas ā911ā and āThe Resident,ā two programs the network expects will be on its fall schedule.
āWe're in good faith negotiations,ā Collier said. āWe feel good about it.ā
Among the plans it did announce on Monday, Fox is expanding the empire of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay. His āMasterChefā keeps rolling along, and Fox announced that Ramsey's series āNext Level Chefā will get the coveted time slot after the Super Bowl next February, which exposes a program to millions of new viewers. Fox will also debut the competition show, āGordon Ramsay's Food Stars" next season.
Fox will also go country with āMonarch,ā described as a āTexas-sized, multi-generational musical drama about America's first family of country music.ā Actress Susan Sarandon and musician Trace Adkins are headliners.
Actor Jamie Foxx will be behind the camera for the missing persons drama āAlert.ā The network will also debut a crime anthology series āAccusedā that begins with someone on trial and the audience learns through flashbacks what they've been accused of.
When will the new shows air? Stay tuned.
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Bauder is reporting from New York, and Elber from Los Angeles.