
and World’s Funniest Animals at 9 - along with its Sunday unscripted slate ( Legends of the Hidden Temple at 8, Killer Camp at 9) and an all-DC Wednesday with Legends of Tomorrow (8 p.m.) and Batwoman (9 p.m.). The CW also unveils its first ever Saturday schedule - Whose Line Is It Anyway at 8 p.m. Shark Tank (8 p.m., ABC) and Nancy Drew (9 p.m., The CW) both open their seasons on Friday. Thursday Night Football makes its Fox debut for the season at 8 p.m. The Equalizer leads off a block of premieres on CBS Sunday, with NCIS: Los Angeles (9 p.m.) and the brief network run of SEAL Team (10 p.m.) before it jumps to Paramount+ rounding out the night.ĬBS also rolls out most of its Thursday lineup with Young Sheldon (8 p.m.), United States of Al (8:30 p.m.), an hour-long premiere of new comedy Ghosts (9 p.m.) and Bull (10 p.m.). Of course, that doesn’t last (because then what’s the show?), and she’s pulled back in at the behest of Marcus (Tory Kittles).


The second season opens with McCall (Latifah) considering ending her vigilante career.
#Where to watch the equalizer update#
After a successful first run, the Queen Latfiah-led update of the 1980s drama begins its second season at 8 p.m. The post-Super Bowl premiere of The Equalizer was the most watched show (excluding sports) on network TV last season. This Week in TV: 'The Shrink Next Door,' 'Tiger King 2,' 'Adele: One Night Only' It would be next to impossible to watch everything, but let THR point the way to worthy options for the coming week.

7 and 13 also brings the start of baseball’s division series, a series revival of a beloved horror franchise and a host of streaming premieres from the serious ( Dopesick) to the twisty ( One of Us Is Lying) to, uh, whatever Sexy Beasts is.īelow is The Hollywood Reporter‘s rundown of premieres, returns and specials over the next seven days. A second wave of broadcast premieres hits in the coming week as CBS rolls out a couple more nights of its regular fall schedule and The CW joins the fray.
