You know you love your fall TV...
Katie Nemeth
Issue date: 9/25/08 Section: Lifestyles
Spotted: Wittenberg students anxiously anticipating the season premieres of their favorite television shows. It looks like fall will be bringing more than changing leaves and thick sweaters this semester…
Just one of the shows that Wittenberg students are scheduling their weeknights around is the CW's "Gossip Girl," returned to Mondays (Sept.1) for its second season. The show returned, despite low ratings last year, with this season promising to be even more scandalous, dripping with diamonds and drama.
Fans can expect to see Serena embracing her new, single life and possibly even a new love interest. Nate is also set to enter a love story involving an older, married woman later in the season. Fans will also take note of the continuation of Blair and Chuck's "love-hate relationship," despite her summer fling with Lord Marcus (Patrick Heusinger), according to Entertainment Weekly.
Monday nights (starting Sept. 22) are also when students can catch new episodes of CBS's girl-meets-geeks sitcom, "The Big Bang Theory," and "How I Met Your Mother," kicking off its fourth season.
ABC's Monday lineup is graced with new episodes of "Dancing with the Stars," showcasing the moves of celebrities ranging from reality TV star Kim Kardashian to 82-year-old actress Cloris Leachman. Starting Sept. 22, you can catch the new season at 8 p.m.
This fall, the CW welcomes "90210," a revamped version of the 90's "Beverly Hills: "90210," to primetime Tuesdays. The new series, which began Sept. 2, follows the story of a Kansas City family's transition to Beverly Hills when dad (Rob Estes) takes the position of principal at West Beverly High School. High school drama, as well as appearances by "90210" veterans Jennie Garth and Shannon Daughtry, may make the show worth checking out.
Tuesday nights will also be home to Fox's new series, "Fringe." Having premiered on Sept. 19 as a 95-minute pilot, the paranormal drama is an alluring mix of "X-Files"-meets-"Bones," according to Entertainment Weekly. Also returning on Fox will be "House" for its fifth season. After last season's huge cliffhanger, the creators and writers are hoping that playing up the flirtation between House (Hugh Laurie) and Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein) might break the impending growing pains that are facing a show in its fifth season.
Just one of the shows that Wittenberg students are scheduling their weeknights around is the CW's "Gossip Girl," returned to Mondays (Sept.1) for its second season. The show returned, despite low ratings last year, with this season promising to be even more scandalous, dripping with diamonds and drama.
Fans can expect to see Serena embracing her new, single life and possibly even a new love interest. Nate is also set to enter a love story involving an older, married woman later in the season. Fans will also take note of the continuation of Blair and Chuck's "love-hate relationship," despite her summer fling with Lord Marcus (Patrick Heusinger), according to Entertainment Weekly.
Monday nights (starting Sept. 22) are also when students can catch new episodes of CBS's girl-meets-geeks sitcom, "The Big Bang Theory," and "How I Met Your Mother," kicking off its fourth season.
ABC's Monday lineup is graced with new episodes of "Dancing with the Stars," showcasing the moves of celebrities ranging from reality TV star Kim Kardashian to 82-year-old actress Cloris Leachman. Starting Sept. 22, you can catch the new season at 8 p.m.
This fall, the CW welcomes "90210," a revamped version of the 90's "Beverly Hills: "90210," to primetime Tuesdays. The new series, which began Sept. 2, follows the story of a Kansas City family's transition to Beverly Hills when dad (Rob Estes) takes the position of principal at West Beverly High School. High school drama, as well as appearances by "90210" veterans Jennie Garth and Shannon Daughtry, may make the show worth checking out.
Tuesday nights will also be home to Fox's new series, "Fringe." Having premiered on Sept. 19 as a 95-minute pilot, the paranormal drama is an alluring mix of "X-Files"-meets-"Bones," according to Entertainment Weekly. Also returning on Fox will be "House" for its fifth season. After last season's huge cliffhanger, the creators and writers are hoping that playing up the flirtation between House (Hugh Laurie) and Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein) might break the impending growing pains that are facing a show in its fifth season.



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