FIRST LOOK
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ON TELEVISION (THURSDAY 6/18/26)
BRITBOX: Trigger Point (Premiere)
NETFLIX: Baki-Dou: The Invisible Samurai (Premiere)
NETFLIX: Harlan Coben’s I Will Find You (Premiere)
PEACOCK: The Capture (Premiere)
YOUTUBE: Sidemen Presents: Side Menu (Premiere)
Close your eyes and think of England? Former Google executive and new BBCDirector-General Matt Brittin announced on Wednesday that the organization will be cutting 550 roles across the News, Nations and Content divisions by 2028. This is being done in an effort to cut back on £500 million ($670 million) of spending over the next three years.
· Radio seems to be hit the hardest so far. Several BBC News audio programs have already been cancelled, including Radio 4’s “The World Tonight.”
· On the TV side, the BBC’s goal is to reduce original TV programming by 100 to 150 hours in hopes of saving a minimum of £100 million ($134 million) by the end of the 2027-28 fiscal year.
· The BBC’s television budget will also be slashed by 15% annually, according to an email sent to employees.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Big in Asia. TV industry insiders met at APOS 2026 in Bali this week to share their ambitions for Asian expansion.
· In his opening address, Media Partners Asia CEO Vivek Couto stated that the Asia-Pacific (APAC) screen economy is projected to grow from $179 billion this year to $200 billion by 2031 – and that gains will come primarily from retail media and commerce rather than traditional advertising and subscription revenue.
· Additionally, the premium streaming market for Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+ and HBO Max will be worth $10 billion in APAC by the end of 2026.
· Executives from Netflix, Prime Video and Disney also shared their plans to drive APAC growth by focusing on locally-produced content and fandom communities, particularly those tied to anime and K-pop.
· This messaging is in line with what we heard during this year’s Upfronts, when numerous media companies framed fandom as central to TV growth.
(Source: Cynopsis)
!No me diga! Latin immigrant representation on TV has plummeted in recent years, according to the fourth annual report by Define American and USC’s Norman Lear Center.
· In 2020, Latin Americans made up 50% of immigrant characters on the small screen. Now, it’s more like 23% – despite the fact that they make up 45% of the immigrant population in the US.
· When it comes to immigrant stories overall, broadcast and cable TV are also lagging compared to streaming services, which account for 57% of all immigrant characters.
· Black immigrant representation is also expected to drop now that the CBS series “Bob Hearts Abishola” is over.
· The trend could reflect anxieties over the rise of anti-immigrant (and especially anti-Hispanic) rhetoric in US political discourse since the 2024 election.
(Source: Cynopsis)
See you in court. John Lowe, a writer for the CBS “Matlock” reboot, filed a hostile work environment lawsuit on Wednesday claiming he was fired for raising concerns about inappropriate comments allegedly made by showrunner Jennie Snyder Urman and executive producers Nicki Renna and Jeffrey Lieber. According to Lowe, producers frequently made disparaging, racist remarks against Black cast and crew members, including himself.
(Source: Cynopsis)
If you’ve ever gotten lost at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City, you’ll appreciate the new trailer for “The Westies,” a crime drama starring JK Simmons. The show, which hits MGM+ on July 12, follows a struggle between Irish and Italian mob families during the construction of the Javits Center in 1980s Hell’s Kitchen.
(Source: Cynopsis)
The fifteenth season of “King of the Hill” – the second since the show was revived after 15 years off the air – premieres on Hulu and Disney+ on July 20.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Disney announced that the fourth and final season of “The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder” will premiere on July 29. However, the show will be followed by a stop-motion holiday special, “A Proud Family Wizmas,” later this year on Disney+.
(Source: Cynopsis)
BET is reviving its “ComicView” comedian spotlight series. The new iteration, “ComicView: Rooftop Series,” will be hosted by Chris “CP” Powell and begin airing on June 30.
(Source: Cynopsis)
A new season of “Married At First Sight” returns to Peacock on July 12. Season 20 will take place in Seattle and represents a “bold new chapter” for the franchise, according to the press materials.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Season 6 of “The Reveal,” the home makeover show by DIY influencer Kylie Katich, begins June 26 on The Design Network.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Season 3 of “The Pitt” began filming this week. HBO’s behind-the-scenes tweetof character badges also confirms that Dr. Victoria Javadi (Shabana Azeez) and Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) will be returning to the show, but that Dr. Samira Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) won’t be.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Hulu is developing a new series with “Abbott Elementary” star Janelle James and “Happy Endings” creator David Caspe called “Rock City.” The show (which may not actually have James as its star) would follow a woman who inherits her father’s beachfront bar and grill in the Virgin Islands.
(Source: Cynopsis)
“One Night in Idaho: The College Murders“ will return to Prime Video for a three-episode second season. Season 2 will focus on the law enforcement officers who worked the case, as well as the aftermath of suspect Bryan Kohberger’s shocking guilty plea deal.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Vice Studios is developing a scripted TV series with Pulitzer Prize-winning sports journalist Pablo Torre. Although details are still vague, the show is said to be about sports ownership and extreme wealth.
(Source: Cynopsis)
Tony Dokoupil of “CBS Evening News” (and “Whiskey Fridays”) fame will co-host the network’s America 250 fireworks special on July 4 alongside “Entertainment Tonight” host Nischelle Turner. The broadcast will feature performances by The Goo Goo Dolls, Zac Brown Band and Jon Batiste.
(Source: Cynopsis)
At the same time, NBC will air “The 50th Macy’s 4th of July Fireworks special,” featuring performances by Post Malone, Salt-N-Pepa and Blake Shelton, along with a fireworks and laser show over the Brooklyn Bridge.
(Source: Cynopsis)
PBS will begin its July 4th programming earlier with several new America 250-themed specials, starting June 26 with “Firing Line: America at 250 – Pursuing a More Perfect Union.”
(Source: Cynopsis)
It may not have been the NBA Playoffs or the World Cup, but the 2026 Stanley Cup Finalon ABC performed better than expected in the ratings, too. According to ESPN, the event averaged 5.2 million viewers across six games, making it the most watched Stanley Cup final since 2019.
(Source: Cynopsis)
CNBC achieved its highest-rated day in five years during the network’s SpaceX IPO coverage on June 12, according to its parent company Versant. It was the third most-watched cable network, behind only ESPN and Fox News.
(Source: Cynopsis)