

New Amsterdam debuts Tuesday, September 25, at 10 pm Eastern on NBC. But the details ring true, and the second episode improves on the first, which is always a good sign. Goodwin is a no-nonsense reformer who takes over New Amsterdam Hospital and immediately starts ruffling feathers and making big changes - but he’s also got a big secret, one he’s only comfortable really sharing with Sharpe.Īgain, nothing new here, and Eggold isn’t close to the level of Agyeman’s performance. If there’s going to be something different about New Amsterdam, it will be thanks to the show’s central two characters, Dr. Nobody is trying to reinvent the wheel, but maybe the wheel doesn’t need to be reinvented.

#Inbetween land review series#
New Amsterdam, like This Is Us, is more interested in making you cry than anything else, and both series are busy, bustling shows with lots of characters who are wildly varied in terms of how compelling they are. But even more specifically, the series feels like it’s riffing on Fox’s medical drama The Resident, now in its second season, which is too minor of a show to rip off.īut where The Resident and its doctors who care so much that they won’t stop trying to save lives!! are aggro in an irritating way, New Amsterdam takes some of that show’s ideas and pulls back on them just enough to become a fitting series to air right after NBC’s mega-hit This Is Us. On the one hand, I had - it’s hard to break new ground in the medical drama genre in the post- The Good Doctor, post- Grey’s Anatomy, post- ER, post- St. I kept watching New Amsterdam, NBC’s new medical drama set in a public hospital that doesn’t turn away patients, thinking I had seen much of it before.

New Amsterdam is a thoroughly conventional hospital drama. Todd VanDerWerffįBI debuts Tuesday, September 25, at 9 pm Eastern on CBS. But it’s highly competent TV, and that counts for something in this day and age. Whether you enjoy FBI will depend heavily on how happy you are to consume stories as un-skeptical of law enforcement as this one, or on how much seeing Wolf’s signature font in the closing credits will fill you with happy memories of long, wintry Saturdays watching episode after episode of vintage Law & Order.īut as always, the show is brilliantly cast (putting Missy Peregrym at the FBI’s center suggests Wolf has found his new Mariska Hargitay), perfectly paced, and solidly constructed. (This is the first series Wolf has produced for a network other than NBC since a 2003 reboot of Dragnet for ABC.)
#Inbetween land review how to#
The point is: Dick Wolf knows how to make an iron-clad procedural, even if his premise is as vague as, “Here are some FBI agents.” And now that Wolf has joined forces with CBS - a network that never met a crime-solving drama it couldn’t turn into a big hit - to make a show about those very FBI agents, it’s not hard to imagine the two could make beautiful, bloody corpses together. One spinoff, Law & Order: SVU, has now run almost as long as the original - 434 episodes to the original’s 456 (it should catch up in May of 2019).Īnd then there’s the Chicago franchise, spun off of Chicago Fire it now encompasses four shows, three of which are still running. The first was Law & Order, which launched five spinoffs (as well as a recently announced sixth, Law & Order: Hate Crimes).
#Inbetween land review tv#
TV super-producer Dick Wolf has launched two franchises that completely took over NBC. Inbetween.) CBS’s FBI is a great reminder that Dick Wolf knows what he’s doing - if you like that sort of thing

(A note: We’ve only given ratings to shows where we feel we’ve seen enough episodes to judge how successful they will be long-term, which for right now is just Mr. We’ll be back later in the week with thoughts on shows debuting between Thursday and Sunday. Inbetween, and ABC’s A Million Little Things. Read on for thoughts on CBS’s FBI, NBC’s New Amsterdam, FX’s Mr. (It’s rare-to-impossible for broadcast networks, especially, to send out many episodes to critics beyond the first couple.) But there’s something inside all of these shows worth checking out, especially if you’re a particular fan of their genres. But we’ve watched all of them - and everything else that’s around - and we’re highlighting the ones we think are the most interesting.įew of these shows are great, and we often have limited information on whether they’ll get better. And some of them are quirky little half-hour dramas imported from Australia. Some of these releases are among the most high-profile shows their networks have on offer, including NBC’s big bet at finding the next ER. The next two weeks are some of the busiest on the TV calendar, with nearly two dozen new series debuting across broadcast, cable, and streaming networks.
