FIRST LOOK/ ON TV

FIRST LOOK
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ON TELEVISION (THURSDAY 6/25/26)
NETFLIX: Avatar: The Last Airbender (Premiere)
SUNDANCE: NOW: The A-Z Killer (Premiere)
TUBI: Substitute Teacher (Premiere)
YOU TUBE: BattleBots Pro League (Premiere)

Relationships between local network affiliates and the major broadcast networks are showing serious strain. In FCC filings submitted June 22, the approximately 700 stations in question argued that ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox have effectively become their competitors — both through the networks’ own digital properties and through the streaming platforms operated by their parent companies.
· The stations described a financial squeeze driven by escalating affiliation fees, eroding exclusivity protections, and contract terms they characterized as heavily skewed against local operators, all of which they said drains money away from local broadcasting while enriching national streaming operations.
· The affiliates further charged that the networks have negotiated virtual pay-TV arrangements — covering services such as YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV — that disproportionately benefit the networks themselves at the local stations’ expense.
· The Takeaway: The affiliate revolt signals a structural reckoning for the broadcast model. As streaming continues to absorb the audience and revenue that once flowed through local stations, the century-old network-affiliate relationship is buckling under economics it was never designed to handle. 
(Source: Cynopsis)

The European Commission is poised to approve Paramount’s $111 billion takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery, according to a report in the Financial Times, clearing one of the final major regulatory hurdles for the transaction. The U.S. Justice Department approved the deal last week.
· To address antitrust concerns in Europe, Paramount has offered to divest its film distribution joint venture with Universal Pictures, a move aimed in part at easing concerns from European theater operators, according to Reuters.
· The transaction remains under review by regulators in the U.K.
· The merger still faces opposition in the U.S., with California, New York and several other states reportedly preparing a lawsuit to block the deal, reports Reuters.
· Takeaway: While Paramount appears close to securing approval from major international regulators, the biggest threat to the merger may now come from state-level legal challenges in the U.S.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Bravo says it has hit pause on “Ladies of London: The New Reign” after just one season. The show originally ran from 2014–17 before being revived this past March — but that comeback didn’t stick. Don’t count it out entirely, though. While “pause” is usually code for “cancellation,” Bravo typically doesn’t kill its shows for good, and “Ladies” itself is proof: it already came back once.
(Source: Cynopsis)

“Dutton Ranch” is coming back for a second season. No surprise there: the Taylor Sheridan drama debuted May 15 as the biggest original series launch in Paramount+history.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Prime Video has renewed “Invincible” for a sixth season, announced at the Annecy animation festival. Season five — which adds Jack Quaid of “The Boys” to the voice cast — is set to launch next year.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Netflix also made noise at Annecy, announcing its animated “Ghostbusters: Night Shift” — produced with Sony Pictures Animation — will debut in 2027. It’s not the first time the franchise has gone animated: “The Real Ghostbusters” ran on ABC from 1986–91, followed by the syndicated “Extreme Ghostbusters” in 1997.
(Source: Cynopsis)

NBC shared its Fall 2026 premieres schedule, starting Thursday, September 17 at 8 p.m. with the series debut of “The Traitors: New Blood.” Additional series premieres include “Line of Fire” on Monday, September 21 at 10 p.m., and “Newlyweds” on Friday, October 22 at 8:30 p.m. The “Chicago” franchise takes over Wednesdays starting October 7, with “Law & Order: SVU” and “Law & Order” kicking off the next night at 9 p.m. and 10 p.m.
(Source: Cynopsis)

FX spinoff “The Drop: A Snowfall Saga,” a drama from Malcolm Spellman and producers of FX’s “Snowfall,” premieres Tuesday, September 8 at 9 p.m. on FX and Hulu. One new episode of the eight-episode series will be available weekly following the premiere.
(Source: Cynopsis)

“President Curtis” drops Sunday, July 26 at 11:30 p.m. on Adult Swim, riding the coattails of the “Rick and Morty” season finale. The new series is set in the “Rick and Morty” universe.
(Source: Cynopsis)

“Average Joe” is back for Season 2 on Wednesday, August 19 on Paramount+. The dark comedy drama originally aired on BET+, but is relocating following that streamer’s shutdown.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Also returning for a second run is TNT fantasy-adventure series “The Librarians: The Next Chapter,” on Sunday, August 2 at 9 p.m. 
(Source: Cynopsis)

“My Life With the Walter Boys” hits Netflix for Season 3 on Thursday, August 6. The run will consist of ten episodes.
(Source: Cynopsis)

ID’s “People Magazine Investigates: The University of Cosmic Intelligence Cult” premieres Tuesday, July 14 at 9 p.m. The show examines the still-active University of Cosmic Intelligence cult that was started by an aspiring rapper during the COVID-19 pandemic to encourage community and empowerment.
(Source: Cynopsis)

FOX Nation has enlisted former Navy SEAL sniper Jack Carr to host Jack Carr Investigates: Carlos the Jackal, examining the life of the terrorist who evaded capture for decades while carrying out attacks. The three-parter kicks off Monday, June 29. 
(Source: Cynopsis)

“The Great Food Truck Race” returns to Food Network on Sunday, July 26 at 9 p.m. This season, four savory trucks face off against four sweet-focused teams as host Tyler Florence leads the competition from Nashville to the Great Smoky Mountains. New this season: weekly taste redemption battles between the bottom two teams.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Teen variety show “Rabbit Hole” debuts Monday, July 13 on Disney+ and Hulu.
(Source: Cynopsis)

HBO Max gave a straight-to-series order for ten episodes of “Adventure Time: Bubble Gum and Marceline.” The animated spinoff, drawn from the “Adventure Time” franchise, will be led by returning showrunner and executive producer Adam Muto.
(Source: Cynopsis)

“Ray Gunn” premieres Friday, December 18 on Netflix. The animated movie set in an alternate future focuses on a private eye drawn into a murder case involving aliens.
(Source: Cynopsis)

The audience for the FIFA Men’s World Cup is averaging 5.7 million average minute viewers on FOX, FS1 and Tubi, according to Nielsen Big Data + Panel and Adobe Analytics, up 116% from the 2022 event in Qatar. The most-viewed match so far was the U.S./Australia, which attracted 20.7 million viewers.
(Source: Cynopsis)

On the Spanish-language front, that June 18 World Cup match brought a record-setting 14 million viewers to Telemundo, making it the most watched soccer match ever in Spanish-language history. 
(Source: Cynopsis)

During Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first press conference last week, CNBC had a 50% spike in viewership and ranked #4 in all of cable among P25-54. The business news net averaged 334,000 P2+ viewers and 81,000 among P25-54, up 50% and 21% versus the prior-4-Wednesday average.
(Source: Cynopsis)

Last weekend’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Race on The CW delivered 1,161,000 Total Viewers, up 4% compared to last year’s same weekend race.
(Source: Cynopsis)