Six weeks into the new fall TV season, and I'm typing a sentence I never expected to write as a professional TV critic: ABC's Dr. Ken is one of the most successful new sitcoms on TV this fall.

And it managed that feat thanks to scenes like this one — featuring the wife of Ken Jeong's character, Dr. Ken Park, asking her husband to handle a problem with their credit card.

"I need you to actually take care of it," Allison Park says.

"Why wouldn't I?" says Jeong's Dr. Ken, indignantly.

"Because you didn't actually take care of our taxes or our mortgage payment or the life insurance," Allison adds.

"OK, the life insurance thing would have been a big deal had one of us died," Dr. Ken says. "But we didn't."

Dialogue like that is ample proof why Jeong's formulaic sitcom got some of the harshest reviews of any new network TV show this fall.

Still, ABC recently ordered a full season. The reason: Dr. Ken draws solid ratings on Fridays, when people don't watch as much television. And it's not the only new fall show panned by critics that's doing well.

Rosewood, Fox's drama about a crime-solving pathologist in Miami, also got a full season order from Fox. This success came despite criticism of the show for being too predictable, too unrealistic and too superficial.

Which proves something important about 2015's fall season: Even in the age of on-demand viewing, time slots still matter. Rosewood features an African-American and a Latina as co-leads. It airs right before Fox's successful black-centered drama Empire. ABC's Dr. Ken comes right after Tim Allen's solid comedy Last Man Standing. Both of these new shows benefit from audiences drawn to bigger, more established programs.

So far, the networks' new shows for the 2015-16 season haven't sparkled much. There's no Empire-level hit among them, and even a show that seemed like a sure thing, ABC's The Muppets, has struggled.

Another example of a new show attached to a big name that hasn't soared is Fox's TV continuation of the Tom Cruise movie Minority Report. It's struggled so much, the network cut back its episode order from 13 to 10.

This seems to be the new face of failure on network TV. Rather than cancel shows outright, networks cut back episode orders. This has also happened for Wesley Snipes' action drama on NBC, The Player, and Don Johnson's nighttime soap for ABC, Blood and Oil. I expect all those shows to vanish with the New Year.

Still there's one welcome trend amid all this mediocrity: CBS' Supergirl.

Though its ratings this week dipped a bit from its super-strong debut Oct. 26, Supergirl remains one of several new shows featuring a powerful female hero that have found success in the fall. NBC's Blindspot and ABC's Quantico are also in that club.

Supergirl, in particular, offers a comic book-inspired tale of a young woman finding her place in a challenging, often threatening world.

At a time when gender equality is a major subject in politics and business, it's a pleasure to see shows centered on smart, powerful women make a difference in network television.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

We are six weeks into network TV's new fall season, and it is becoming clear which new shows will survive and which won't. And the winners and losers are surprising NPR's TV critic Eric Deggans.

ERIC DEGGANS, BYLINE: This is something I never expected to say - ABC's "Dr. Ken" is one of the most successful new sitcoms on television, thanks to scenes like this.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "DR. KEN")

SUZY NAKAMURA: (As Allison Park) Well, the credit card company called. Someone's trying to use our card at a jewelry store.

KEN JEONG: (As Dr. Ken Park) Oh, no, no, no, I'll take care of it.

NAKAMURA: (As Allison Park) OK, but I need you to actually take care of it.

JEONG: (As Dr. Ken Park) Why wouldn't I?

NAKAMURA: (As Allison Park) Because you didn't actually take care of our taxes or our mortgage payment or the life insurance.

JEONG: (As Dr. Ken Park) OK, the life insurance thing would've been a big deal had one of us died, but we didn't.

(LAUGHTER)

DEGGANS: Kim Jeong's formulaic sitcom about a doctor and family man got some of the harshest reviews of any new network TV show this fall. Still, ABC ordered a full season. "Dr. Ken" draws solid ratings on Fridays when people don't watch as much television. And it's not the only new fall show panned by critics that's doing well.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "ROSEWOOD")

MORRIS CHESTNUT: (As Dr. Beaumont Rosewood Jr.) Dr. Beaumont Rosewood, Jr., considered by some to be the Beethoven of private pathologists.

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #1: (As character) Did you really just say that out loud?

DEGGANS: "Rosewood" is Fox's drama about a crime-solving pathologist in Miami and took hits for being too predictable and too superficial. And it also got picked up for a full season by Fox, which proves something important about the fall season - timeslots still matter. "Rosewood" features an African-American and a Latina as co-leads. It airs right before Fox's successful black-centered drama "Empire." ABC's "Dr. Ken" comes right after Tim Allen's solid comedy, "Last Man Standing." Both of these new shows benefit from audiences drawn to bigger, more established programs. Still, not all new TV shows connected to big names are doing well.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "MINORITY REPORT")

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #2: (As character) When we were 9, they started testing us. They called it the pre-crime program.

DEGGANS: Fox's TV continuation of the Tom Cruise movie "Minority Report" has floundered in the ratings. The network cut back its episode order from 13 to 10. This seems to be the new face of failure on network television. Rather than cancel shows outright, networks cut back episode orders, like Wesley Snipes' action drama for NBC, "The Player," and Don Johnson's nighttime soap for ABC, "Blood & Oil." Still, there's one welcome trend amidst all this mediocrity.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "SUPERGIRL")

MELISSA BENOIST: (As Kara Danvers) When people see that red cape, they expect to see a certain someone, someone they know, but this isn't his story. It's mine.

DEGGANS: CBS's "Supergirl" is one of several new shows featuring a strong female hero. And it's doing quite well. NBC's "Blindspot" and ABC's "Quantico" are also in that club. At a time when gender equality is a major subject in politics and business, it's a pleasure to see these shows succeed in network television. I'm Eric Deggans. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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