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Returning: Young Sheldon
As The Block draws to a close, Young Sheldon is set for Tuesdays & Wednesdays.
- Published by David Knox
- on
- Filed under Programming
US sitcom Young Sheldon returns to Nine next week for its second season.
As The Block draws to a close (expected on Sunday Oct 28), the sitcom will air in double episodes on Tuesdays & Wednesdays.
The 7:30 episode on both days is first-run, the 8pm is a repeat.
“A High-Pitched Buzz and Training Wheels” 7:30pm Tuesday Oct 23
Sheldon dismantles the refrigerator to stop it from humming; he gets a paper route to pay for its repair.
“A Rival Prodigy and Sir Isaac Neutron” 7:30pm Wednesday Oct 24
Sheldon becomes jealous when Dr. Sturgis bonds with Paige, another 10-year-old genius; Mary invites Paige’s family over for a playdate.
These screened in the US in late September.
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7 Responses
Hey, David, why haven’t you mentioned that Ten have fast-tracked the 3rd season of This Is Us for Thursdays…..on Eleven?
See earlier note, awaiting TEN Publicity info.
I don’t understand why they want to qir a new YS ep followed by a repeat & then a new TBBT ep? (Unless they already want to change that one) surely it’d make more sense for them to air both shows new before adding these repeats they seem to feel necessary?
A week later they head into FFF so probably 1 a week. There is a week where they are filling in a few slots due to Block winding down. YS on 2 nights stretches accordingly.
Ah, thanks. That’ll make more sense then but still odd thing they’re doing for next week
Repeats already…..is there really no new content on the shelf……
Free to air needs a shake up and dare I say it….. 4 less multichannels, then they may have enough first run programs to air.
There should be licence requirements around how much content is new in ‘prime time’
If Free to Air wants to continue to die a slow death by screening repeats on main channels, cheap imported stuff on multi-channels plus the same twenty movies over & over again at weekends, like Four Weddings and a Funeral or Harry Potter movies, why should the government step in to tell them to change their business model? Local quotas are one thing, giving people jobs in the industry but clearly cheap filler works & is their chosen business model.
Sitcom repeats in Prime Time is nothing new, just ask TEN how many times they repeated MASH, Seinfield, The Nanny and The Simpsons during the 90s rather than find something new to put on