Wednesday, June 24, 2026
HomeSpoilersNBC's Fall Schedule Is a Desert for Scripted TV Fans, and One...

NBC’s Fall Schedule Is a Desert for Scripted TV Fans, and One New Drama Isn’t Enough

- Advertisment -

NBC unveiled its Fall 2026 premiere schedule, and if you’re a fan of scripted television, you may want to sit down before taking a look.

Actually, scratch that. You’ll have plenty of time to sit down because there won’t be much scripted programming to watch.

NBC’s lineup is packed with football, reality competitions, and unscripted fare, leaving longtime fans of the network’s dramas with a surprisingly barren fall calendar. 

(Screengrab -/NBC)

While other broadcasters will likely unveil returning hits and new scripted offerings throughout September, NBC appears content to hand over much of the season to The Voice, America’s Got Talent, The Traitors: New Blood, and football.

The most glaring issue isn’t that NBC has reality programming. Every network does.

It’s that NBC barely seems interested in offering scripted alternatives.

The network’s lone new fall drama, Line of Fire, starring Peter Krause and Hope Davis, premieres September 21 after The Voice. That’s it.

One.

A single hour of new scripted drama serving as the lone representative for an entire genre on one of the country’s major broadcast networks.

(Elizabeth Sisson/NBC)

Meanwhile, Chicago Med, Chicago Fire, and Chicago P.D. won’t return until October 7. Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU follow on October 8.

That means NBC’s biggest drama brands will spend most of September sitting on the sidelines while viewers are encouraged to invest their time in singing competitions and reality contests.

And if you’re hoping additional scripted programming is waiting in the wings, NBC has already confirmed that The Rockford Files reboot and Sunset P.I. are being held for midseason.

In other words, the network isn’t merely delaying a few premieres. It’s delaying entire portions of its scripted slate until 2027.

(Euan Cherry/Peacock)

The schedule becomes even more striking when viewed as a whole.

September opens with football. Then comes The Traitors: New Blood. Then multiple nights of The Voice. America’s Got Talent occupies two-hour blocks. Dateline fills Friday nights. 

Even the comedies arrive gradually, with Happy’s Place and the new series Newlyweds not premiering until late October and St. Denis Medical waiting until November.

For viewers who still tune into broadcast television primarily for scripted storytelling, the message feels impossible to ignore.

Wait. Wait until October. Wait until January. Wait until spring. Wait while reality programming gets first dibs on the schedule.

(Scott Gries/NBC)

NBC executives would likely argue that these decisions are driven by ratings economics. Reality shows cost less, can air more episodes, and often deliver dependable audiences. From a business perspective, the strategy makes sense.

From a viewer perspective, it’s becoming harder to understand what NBC wants to be.

Once upon a time, fall premiere season was an event. Networks packed their schedules with ambitious dramas, new comedies, and returning favorites. There was a sense that broadcasters were competing to earn viewers’ attention.

Now NBC’s schedule feels less like a showcase and more like a placeholder.

The frustrating part is that NBC still has some of broadcast television’s strongest scripted brands. One Chicago remains a powerhouse.

(Virginia Sherwood/NBC)

Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU continue to draw loyal audiences. New dramas like Line of Fire deserve room to breathe and build momentum.

Instead, scripted television feels like an afterthought.

Perhaps Line of Fire will be a breakout hit. Maybe The Rockford Files and Sunset P.I. will make midseason worth the wait.

But looking at NBC’s fall schedule as it currently stands, it’s difficult to escape one conclusion:

If you love scripted television, NBC is asking for a remarkable amount of patience.

And after years of shrinking episode counts, delayed premieres, and increasingly crowded reality schedules, viewers may be running out of it.

(Scott Gries/NBC)

NBC Fall 2026 Premiere Calendar

Thursday, September 17

  • 8:00-10:00 PMThe Traitors: New Blood

Monday, September 21

  • 8:00-10:00 PMThe Voice
  • 10:00-11:00 PMLine of Fire(NBC’s only new fall drama)

Tuesday, September 22

  • 8:00-9:00 PMThe Voice
  • 9:00-11:00 PMAmerica’s Got Talent
(George Burns Jr/NBC)

Wednesday, September 23

  • 8:00-9:00 PMThe Voice
  • 9:00-11:00 PMAmerica’s Got Talent Season Finale

Friday, September 25

  • 9:00-11:00 PMDateline NBC

Wednesday, October 7

(Greg Gayne/NBC)

Thursday, October 8

  • 9:00-10:00 PMLaw & Order: SVU
  • 10:00-11:00 PMLaw & Order

Friday, October 23

  • 8:00-8:30 PMHappy’s Place
  • 8:30-9:00 PMNewlyweds

Monday, November 2

  • 8:00-8:30 PMSt. Denis Medical
  • 8:30-9:00 PMThe Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins  
(Matt Hill/NBC)

Coming Midseason

  • The Rockford Files
  • Sunset P.I.  

Well, there you have it. Mark your calendars!

Or, don’t.

I guess it depends on what shows on the NBC schedule bring light to your life. Me? I’ll be holding out hope for David Boreanaz to work wonders with Jim Rockford.

  • NBC’s Fall Schedule Is a Desert for Scripted TV Fans, and One New Drama Isn’t Enough

    NBC unveiled its Fall 2026 premiere schedule, and if you’re a fan of scripted television, you may want to sit down before taking a look. Actually, scratch that. You’ll have plenty of time to sit down because there won’t be much scripted programming to watch. NBC’s lineup is packed with football, reality competitions, and unscripted…

  • 20 Years of Friday Night Lights: A Look Back on the Best Episodes

    20 years later, and Friday Night Lights has still left a mark on our hearts. Here are the six episodes that defined the show.

  • The Traitors: New Blood’s Episode Runtime Is Already Raising Red Flags

    The Traitors’ New Blood spinoff is getting a drastically reduced runtime. Let’s discuss why that’s a problem.

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Recent Comments