U.S. Network Upfronts

International buyers will be heading off to the Hollywood studios in the coming days to screen the new series picked up by the broadcast networks. For a full recap of what’s coming to screens this fall, visit World Screen’s 2015-16 Fall Season Grid, featuring schedules for ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX and The CW; pop-up trailers; descriptions and credits for each new and returning show; and a listing of series by studio. Go here to see it.

ABC kept most of its fall schedule intact, with Monday’s pairing of Dancing with the Stars and Castle, Wednesday’s comedy lineup and Thursday’s Shonda Rhimes dramas all staying put. The network added The Muppets revival, which will be done in a documentary style, to lead its Tuesday night lineup, which also features the freshman drama Quantico. The other fall additions are Dr. Ken, scoring a Friday night lead-in from Last Man Standing, and the Sunday night dramas Oil and Of Kings and Prophets, a biblical epic. ABC has saved most of its new series for midseason, including The Catch, the latest thriller from Shondaland’s Shonda Rhimes and Betsy Beers, and Uncle Buck, with Mike Epps starring in the remake of the hit movie.

To start the season, CBS has The Big Bang Theory leading into the new family-based comedy Life in Pieces on Mondays. After Thursday Night Football is off the air, those shows will move to their regular Thursday time periods, while the new action-adventure drama Supergirl takes over the Monday 8 p.m. hour. Tuesday’s two-hour block of returning NCIS shows will provide a nice lead-in for Limitless, based on the feature film of the same name, the star of which, Bradley Cooper, serves as an executive producer and will hold a recurring role. The network confirmed the end of the long-running procedural CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, which will get a special two-hour series finale. Later in the season, CBS will introduce Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders, a spin-off series, as well as the film-based, buddy-cop drama Rush Hour.

The big news over at FOX included an all-new Tuesday lineup, with the comedies Grandfathered, starring John Stamos, and The Grinder, featuring Rob Lowe and Fred Savage, as well as the latest anthology series from Glee creators Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk and Ian Brennan, Scream Queens. Mondays will see Gotham leading into the new futuristic drama Minority Report, marking the first Steven Spielberg blockbuster to get a TV treatment. The highly anticipated new chapter of The X-Files will take over Gotham’s Monday 8 p.m. slot in late January.

NBC’s fall 2015-16 roster sees the new Greg Berlanti drama Blindspot following The Voice on Monday nights. Tuesday nights get two new shows: the medical drama Heartbreaker and the variety show Best Time Ever with Neil Patrick Harris. The much-buzzed-about Heroes sequel Heroes Reborn will be leading things off on Thursdays in the fall. Among the midseason additions are Coach, a revival of the 1990s comedy with original star Craig T. Nelson reprising his role; Hot & Bothered, starring Eva Longoria; and the Jennifer Lopez-led Shades of Blue. There’s also a new installment in Dick Wolf’s Chicago franchise, Chicago Med.

The only new show on The CW’s fall schedule is Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, which it is pairing on Monday nights with the returning hit Jane the Virgin. The network has made Tuesdays all about The Flash and iZombie, while Wednesdays see the coupling of Arrow and Supernatural and Thursdays The Vampire Diaries and The Originals. Reign was moved to Friday nights, giving a lead-in to the new cycle of America’s Next Top Model. New series coming to The CW midseason are Containment and DC’s Legends of Tomorrow.