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On newsstands May 28, 2015

Summer Preview 2015: The Best New and Returning Shows

Summer is here and we’ve got you covered with our guide to the season’s best new and returning shows. Included in the package are:

  • The Whispers puts a dark spin on imaginary friends, thanks to Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Television, premiering Monday, June 1, 10/9c, ABC.
  • Hannibal is on the run, chowing his way through Florence, when Season 3 premieres, Thursday, June 4, 10/9c, NBC.
  • The Astronaut Wives Club, based on Lily Koppel’s bestseller about the women married to NASA’s first astronauts, premieres Thursday, June 18, 8/7c, ABC.
  • Killjoys, a new sci-fi jaunt with a trio of intergalactic bounty hunters who don’t take themselves too seriously, premieres Friday, June 19, 9/8c, Syfy.
  • Mr. Robot, aka Christian Slater, leads an underground society of hackers in a new drama premiering Wednesday, June 24, 10/9c, USA.
  • Zoo brings to life James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge’s bestseller about a worldwide animal attack, premiering Tuesday, June 30, 9/8c, CBS.
  • Scream, inspired by the Wes Craven horror film of the same name, premieres Tuesday, June 30, 10/9c, MTV.
  • Ray Donovan is back to business for a third season of dark drama, premiering Sunday, July 12, 9/8c, Showtime.
  • Masters of Sex returns for Season 3, picking up with pioneering sex researchers William Masters and Virginia Johnson in 1965, premiering Sunday, July 12, 10/9c, Showtime.
  • Mr. Robinson puts the spotlight on The Office‘s Craig Robinson in a new sitcom about a struggling Chicago musician-turned-substitute-teacher, premiering Wednesday, August 5, 9/8c, NBC.

For scoop on these shows, and dozens of others, pick up the new issue of TV Guide Magazine, on sale now.

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:
  • An early look at what to expect from the fall TV season
  • The summer’s top streaming shows, including Sense8, Orange is the New Black, and Difficult People
  • Your first look at Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No, coming this summer
  • Plus: Devious Maids, Pretty Little Liars, Aquarius, the Women’s World Cup, and more
On Newsstands December 18, 2014

The Year in Cheers & Jeers

Here are some highlights from our annual look at the best and worst of the year in television…

Cheers to Academy Awards host Ellen DeGeneres for putting Hollywood royalty at ease while entertaining viewers at home. Whether ordering pizza for the famished audience or getting the stars to pose for a selfie that broke Twitter, Ellen stole the show. Cheers aren’t enough. Give her an Honorary Oscar.

Jeers to Extant for not living up to the out-of-this-world hype. Halle Berry’s first starring vehicle on TV was met with great fanfare this summer. But her series—in which she plays an astronaut who discovers she’s pregnant after an extended solo mission—failed to launch. Bizarre elements like a robot child further muddled the concept, and the buzz quickly crashed down to Earth. Let’s hope Season 2’s takeoff is less turbulent.

Cheers to great, fully realized LGBT characters on Orange Is the New Black (with Laverne Cox), Transparent, How to Get Away With Murder, Shameless, Gotham, Glee, Faking It, Looking…and so many others. Finally, TV has caught on that not everyone is straight, white, or stereotypical.

Cheers to The Walking Dead’s Carol (Melissa McBride), who has evolved from domestic-abuse victim to warrior goddess of the zombie apocalypse. She single-handedly rescued her tribe from the Terminus compound while hewing to a survive-at-all-costs code. Between her and the record ratings, Dead is more alive than ever.

Jeers to TV’s infatuation with rom-coms. The gimmicky Manhattan Love Story was the fall’s first cancellation, and tepid A to Z barely made it to “C” before fading. We understand the desire to create the next How I Met Your Mother, but these series also have to earn our love. Originality would be a start.

Cheers to the “glimmer twins” of figure-skating commentary, fashionista scene-stealers Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir. Though broadcasting on the smaller NBCSN network, the pair received raves for their barbed banter at the Winter Olympics, which earned them a promotion to NBC’s A team after they worked their stylish magic at the Oscars and Kentucky Derby, too. Here’s looking at you, because how could we not?

Cheers to the bonnie of a treat that is Outlander. Lush, lusty, and perfectly cast with Sam Heughan and Caitriona Balfe as star-crossed soul mates, the lavish, faithful adaptation of Diana Gabaldon’s time-traveling book series was the hottest Saturday night date we’ve had in centuries.

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:
  • The best of 2014 in soaps
  • Doctor Who‘s Christmas special
  • Your guide to the winter TV for kids
  • Previewing the college football playoffs