But it's looking like that won't be the case for "Common Law," the first season of which ran from May 11 to August 10 of this year. Deadline reports that the series is "is not likely to continue," and that some of the key crew members have already moved on. The show, which features Michael Ealy and Warren Kole as LAPD detectives who are assigned to couples counseling due to their inability to get along, was the lowest-rated of USA's current scripted series. It was nice to get to see the talented Ealy, who had a great small screen role in Showtime's 2005-2006 series "Sleeper Cell," back in a regular role, but he seems headed for better things.
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Deadline list the odds of mediator drama "Fairly Legal" and sports therapy series "Necessary Roughness" at 50/50, while the high profile miniseries "Political Animals" is unlikely to return thanks to its ratings. But not to fear -- USA announced its development slate at the upfronts in May, and among the offerings are a program about a lawyer who becomes a public defender and "quickly realizes that the system is more screwed up than her own crazy personal life," a dot-com entrepreneur who's happy to head to Silicon Valley until his "colorful, blunt and unrefined extended family arrives to 'offer their support'" and MIT pranksters who "reunite amidst the upstairs and downstairs of New York society." The formula lives!
1 Comment
P Dan | October 30, 2012 8:09 PM
Bitterly disappointed at cancellation of Common Law. It was a great family show...intelligent, funny while serious...great entertainment. Can I at least get the DVD?