0/5

US Fall premiere dates

These dates give you a hint as to the earliest possible date for US shows on Australian screens.

2015-06-30_2120

US networks have been busy confirming returning dates for their Fall shows.

This list via Entertainment Weekly will give you an indication as to their earliest likely return on Australian schedules.

Wednesday, Sept. 14
Blindspot

Sunday, Sept. 18
68th Emmy Awards
Case Closed

Monday, Sept. 19
The Big Bang Theory
Gotham
Kevin Can Wait
Lucifer
The Good Place

Tuesday, Sept. 20
NCIS
Brooklyn Nine-Nine
New Girl
Bull
Scream Queens
Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
NCIS: New Orleans
This Is Us

Wednesday, Sept. 21
The Goldbergs
Survivor
Lethal Weapon
Speechless
Modern Family
Law & Order: SVU
Empire
Black-ish
Designated Survivor
Chicago P.D.

Thursday, Sept. 22
Grey’s Anatomy
Superstore
Rosewood
Notorious
Chicago Med
Pitch
How to Get Away With Murder
The Blacklist

Friday, Sept. 23
Last Man Standing
Caught on Camera With Nick Cannon
MacGyver
Hell’s Kitchen
Dr. Ken
Shark Tank
Hawaii Five-0
Dateline NBC
The Exorcist
Blue Bloods

Saturday, Sept. 24
48 Hours

Sunday, Sept. 25
Bob’s Burgers
Once Upon a Time
The Simpsons
Son of Zorn
Secrets and Lies
Family Guy
The Last Man on Earth
Quantico

Monday, Sept. 26
Presidential Debate

Wednesday, Sept. 28
Criminal Minds
Code Black

Sunday, Oct. 2
NCIS: Los Angeles
Madam Secretary
Elementary

Monday, Oct. 3
Scorpion
Conviction
Timeless

Tuesday, Oct. 4
The Flash
No Tomorrow

Wednesday, Oct. 5
Arrow
Frequency

Monday, Oct. 10
Supergirl
No Tomorrow
2 Broke Girls

Tuesday, Oct. 11
The Middle
American Housewife
Fresh Off The Boat
The Real O’Neals
Chicago Fire

Thursday, Oct. 13
DC’s Legends of Tomorrow
Supernatural

Monday, Oct. 17
Jane the Virgin
The Odd Couple

Friday, Oct. 21
The Vampire Diaries
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Monday, Oct. 24
Man With a Plan

Thursday, Oct. 27
The Great Indoors
Mom
Life in Pieces
Pure Genius

10 Responses

  1. Deckard3 wrote “Also I think it’s fair to say there’s a lot who watch these shows by other means.” very true that. As we don’t watch any reality programming only drama and comedy. As of last week commercial TV is a thing of the past for us, our library is now so extensive from DVD product that we can rely solely on DVD’s (waiting time is not a problem) and Netflix. Trusting austam takes us off their flawed ratings list. And it’s a fond farewell to TV Tonight, no whinging ‘moonserf’ any more. Keep up the good work David 😀

  2. If it wasn’t for “Have You Been Paying Attention” having a round dedicated to ‘Madam Secretary’ I wouldn’t know the show exists. Nobody else is talking about this show anywhere.

  3. Meanwhile the Aussie networks are reluctant to tell you what’s on next week.

    I do think even if they can’t fast track shows if they at least gave viewers an indication of when they’re actually starting viewers would be willing to wait. It’s the lack of information which drives people to acquire content via other methods.

    1. Yes that is true. But also on the other hand it’s very handy to have an easily readable list like this annually. I actually look forward to it… So thank you again David.

    2. It’s still important to those of us who use Hulu for streaming.
      I think there is still plenty of people watching U.S. shows just not those who are in ratings houses.
      Also I think it’s fair to say there’s a lot who watch these shows by other means.

      1. Absolutely. I am happy to pay for a Hulu subscription so I can get most of the shows I want within a day of them airing in the US and in HD. The NBC app also has the blacklist for free with ads within a day of airing.

    3. Why is that? I go searching for US and UK schedule dates myself because it is important to me. The shows are still watched by Australians, just not on FTA.

Leave a Reply