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TVLine Shares Its 2015 Wish Liste

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Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called TVLine Shares Its 2015 Wish Liste | TVLine
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
That USA Network — which has so much in flux at the moment, given
\' TBD status and what feels like a half-dozen new shows in assorted stages of development — takes steps toward a return to its July 2011 heyday, at which time it had successfully launched nine shows in a row.
resists the urge to reunite Callie and Arizona. If the couple\'s post-breakup episodes have proven anything, it\'s that these two characters are much more interesting apart than together.
the lead-in it deserves — though for some reason, we suspect that
(as charming as it is) paired with… well, who knows?… will do the trick.
\'s incoming mentor Scott Borchetta will be Enemy No. 1 to predictable song choices and arrangements. After Randy Jackson\'s utter failure to help Season 13\'s hopefuls deliver thrilling, unexpected performances, the bar for Borchetta isn\'t high. Here\'s a few helpful hints he can have for free: Ban "I Have Nothing," "I Don\'t Want to Miss a Thing" and "Against All Odds" (plus the other "usual suspects"). And if it sounds like Friday-night office karaoke or a Tuesday happy-hour bar performance in Tulsa, send the contestant back to the drawing board (even if it means you both have to pull all-nighters).
gets less crowded in the coming year. If you\'re not directly involved in Rayna, Juliette or Deacon\'s life, I\'m just not interested in knowing about your hopes, dreams and/or predilection for sleeping with hookers (too soon, Teddy?). Also, while I\'m at it, can we get a lot more Rayna-Juliette scenes and Laura Benanti as a series regular? Thanks, y\'all!
That Claude\'s plan to come between Bash and Kenna on
. Come on, we just lost Frary — don\'t take Kash away from us, too! (Not to mention, you know, the whole half-sibling thing. Gross.)
gives Archie Panjabi\'s Kalinda a satisfying yet appropriately ambiguous exit that leaves the door open for a return appearance. In other words, please don\'t kill her!
That Adam Pally\'s Peter Prentice is given a fitting farewell on
. After playing host to a revolving door of recurring characters who leave with no explanation, the Fox comedy owes its wackiest doctor a send-off as colorful as he is.
producers find a way to further mine Claire Danes and Rupert Friend\'s considerable chemistry in Season 5 without compromising the show\'s central counterterrorism conceit (yes, we\'re looking at YOU Season 3). I
to believe Carrie/Quinn can succeed where Carrie/Brody foundered, but I worry...
will wrap its run after this, its seventh season, thus affording the writers a chance to fashion a fitting send-off for Rick, Kate et al. (While I wouldn\'t begrudge the show a Season 8 if ABC so desires, ending it this May would seem quite satisfactory.)
doesn\'t feel the need to carry all (or even most) of its series regulars into Season 2. Part of the fun of ABC\'s new Thursday hit is the sense that anything can — and probably will — happen. So if Michaela winds up behind bars, Asher gets his head bashed in and Wes transfers to Harvard, we\'ll stick with the program. Well, as long as Fall 2015 brings us Viola Davis\' Annalise Keating, a roster of comely new law students and (let\'s keep it honest) Jack Falahee\'s rakish Connor Walsh.
gets a second season. Look: In the fall, I was dreading another comic-book series — but John and his band of magical misfits quickly made me care about what happens in the battle against the rising darkness. Plus, I get a very
-Season-1 vibe from the show — AKA won\'t it be cool to see how these characters battle such an amorphous-yet-terrifying enemy as the episodes progress? Here\'s hoping we get the chance.
when the series joins CBS\' lineup – team up for another epic crossover. We know the hours were grueling, the manpower required astounding and the budget probably blown, but this month\'s #Flarrow event was so successful on every level that we can\'t help but hope for a second go-around.
That John Mulaney finds a better vehicle for his immense talent. Although his struggling sitcom may not be the right fit for today\'s TV landscape, the comedian\'s hilarious timing is worthy of finding a new home. (Perhaps back behind
\'s Weekend Update desk, like so many predicted?)
creator Dan Harmon\'s efforts to get Donald Glover to return for the show\'s sixth and (likely) final season on Yahoo Screen prove successful. I need one final Troy-Abed fix before the Greendale Gang disbands for good.
\'s final season focuses squarely on the Raylan/Boyd showdown, with ample conflicted Ava sprinkled in, and in doing so step back from introducing any new Interloping Backwoods Clan of the Year. (Darryl Crowe, you will not be missed.)
gives a proper send-off to Alyssa Milano\'s Savi. Yes, the ABC sudser\'s biggest star has decided to exit now that production is moving from Los Angeles to Vancouver for Season 3. But Savi is such an integral part of the lives of Karen, April and especially her sister Joss that it would be needle-screeching-across-a-record jarring if Milano doesn\'t film at least a few scenes to tie up her character\'s myriad plot threads.
wraps its second season with a finale as intense and forward-looking as its Season 1 clincher. You set a very high bar last year, Abbie and Ichabod: Time to bust out Washington\'s Bible and work some mojo that\'ll ensure you top it.
\'s cancellation turns out to be an elaborate — not to mention incredibly early — April Fools\' joke.
gives us more scenes between Sarah and her sisters in Season 3. Cosima said it herself (and that girl\'s a genius): The clones are stronger together.
\'s series finale maintains the same realism we\'ve come to appreciate for six great seasons — and doesn\'t make us cry too much.
finds a way to return President Fitzgerald Grant to the silky smooth player that he was — and that Olivia deserved (despite being, you know, married and all) — versus the obsessive man scorned he has become.
stops relying so heavily on game-show and talk-show spoofs — and puts some real bite into its abysmal political sketches. You don\'t have to skewer Barack Obama or Mitch McConnell every time, either: One need not look further than
\'s "A Very Realistic Video Game" to see the kinds of scathing social satire that
survivor Karen Gillan and casts her as [Spoiler alert!] Claire\'s daughter, Brianna, in Season 2. Yes, I know I\'m getting ahead of myself — Season 1 doesn\'t even come back until April — but Gillan\'s got the range, she\'s got the American accent and she\'s got the red hair. Let\'s get this ball rolling, Ron Moore & Co.!
and its amazing stars Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell finally get some Emmy recognition come nomination time in July. Dear voters: Wake up and smell the superbly acted and written drama. It\'s exactly the kind of prestige show you love.
gets a second life beyond its current unaired-episodes-streaming-on-Hulu arrangement. The show — which was cancelled at ABC just as it began to find its creative voice — has only gotten funnier and sweeter in recent weeks. Here\'s hoping Hulu, or another digital platform, will give the comedy another chance to shine in a second season.
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