Only one new series of any kind on the Alphabet's schedule. It's almost like they don't care anymore. Well, at NBCU all of those shows that would've been on NBC, including the "Office" spinoff, are all on Peacock. Anyway, as listed by the Wrap, all times ET, that one new show in caps:
Mondays
8-11 p.m. — ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” (simulcast on the Worldwide Leader with the Manningcast on the Deuce)
Tuesdays
8-10 p.m. — “Dancing With the Stars” (simulcast on Disney+, moving after years on Monday night and we're in one cycle a year mode now)
10-11 p.m. — “High Potential”
Wednesdays
8-8:30 p.m. — “Shifting Gears”
8:30-9 p.m. — “Abbott Elementary
9-10 p.m. — “The Golden Bachelor” (no indication if any other "Bachelor" shows will air this season)
10-11 p.m. — “Shark Tank” (after years on Friday nights)
Thursdays
8-9 p.m. — “9-1-1”
9-10 p.m. — 9-1-1 NASHVILLE--The third chapter in the franchise, perhaps the most mainstream network TV that Ryan Murphy has ever come up with, is obviously set in Music City and will probably have a lot of appearances from country music stars, along with regulars Brad Paisley's wife Kimberly Williams-Paisley and LeAnn Rimes and I'm all about value. (Disney obviously didn't move "9-1-1 Lone Star" over to ABC, perhaps because star Rob Lowe is still hosting "The Floor" over on Fox.) It's 20th, Murphy's home once again because Netflix didn't work out.
10-11 p.m. — “Grey’s Anatomy”
Fridays
8-9 p.m. — “Celebrity Wheel of Fortune” (Sajak finally left, so Seacrest's taking over, although I suspect daughter Maggie will be replacing Vanna at the puzzle board in a few years.)
9-11 p.m. — “20/20” (two hours)
Saturdays
7:30 p.m. — College Football
Sundays
7-8 p.m. — “America’s Funniest Home Videos”
8 p.m. — “The Wonderful World of Disney” (once again, kids, you could watch all of these movies without commercials on Disney+)
CW's left, if anyone cares.