Lucky us, Rachel Bilson is back on TV in this cuddly medical drama from Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage. Think Northern Exposure in the South, with thusly more opportunities for sweaty CW hotties to take their shirts off.
A modern Hitchcock movie of sorts, Sarah Michelle Gellar stars as two screwed-up twin sisters. One's a recovering junkie, one's a conniving mean girl, and both twins are simultaneously dangerous and in danger. Confused yet?
This show is The Vampire Diaries but with witches in Washington state, and it stars Life Unexpected babe Britt Robertson and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles guy Thomas Dekker, and that's all you really need to know about that. (It's gonna be soooo good.)
Materialistic, work-obsessed surgeon Patrick Wilson is rehumanized by visits from his idealistic, and dead, ex-wife (Jennifer Ehle). TV mom Julie Benz (Dexter, No Ordinary Family) plays his offbeat sister, the single mother of a teenage son.
Etiquette columnist Carlson (David Hornsby) hires uncouth Bert Lansing (Kevin Dillon) as his life coach. Hilarity ensues. (See also: Man Up on ABC.)
A presumed-dead CIA agent (Jim Caviezel) works with a mysterious billionaire (Lost's Michael Emerson) to ID people about to be involved in violent crimes—and stop them before they do the dirty deeds. Taraji P. Henson costars in this Alias meets Burn Notice meets The Dark Knight in the crime thriller brought to you by J.J. Abrams (Alias) and Jonathan Nolan (The Dark Knight).
Sassy streetwise Max (Kat Dennings) and trust fund princess Caroline (Beth Behrs) become unlikely BFFs while serving up laughs as waitresses at a greasy spoon diner.
Carrie Wells (Poppy Montgomery) is back at work, reunited with ex-BF and partner Al Burns (Dylan Walsh) as an NYPD homicide detective with a flawless memory—about everything except for the details surrounding her sister's murder.
Formerly The Bitch in Apartment 23, Gossip Girl alums Krysten Ritter and Dreama Walker star in this witty single-camera comedy about "a female odd couple." Dawson's Creek's James van der Beek plays her snarky friend...James van der Beek.
Eye candy overload! Minka Kelly (Friday Night Lights), Annie Ilonzeh and Rachael Taylor star as beautiful detectives with un-angelic pasts.
Despite the glaring fact that Kristin Chenoweth is obviously not the same age as Leslie Bibb, this colorful soap about a reformed bitch's move back to Dallas (where she reconnects with her high school friends) looks fantastic.
Buzz Lightyear Tim Allen returns to television as a man's man father who has an all-female household and is forced to become more of a hands-on parent after his wife (Nancy Travis) goes back to work.
Three immature guys (Christopher Moynihan, Mather Zickel and Dan Fogler) try to figure out what it means to be masculine in today's society. Teri Polo and Amanda Detmer are their mature and feminine sidekicks.
Ashley Judd returns to television (anybody else remember her as Swoosie Kurtz's daughter from the first season of NBC's Sisters?) as an ex-CIA agent whose son goes missing in Europe.
Eddie Kitsis and Adam Horowitz of Lost executive producer fame scripted this drama about Snow White (Big Love's Ginnifer Goodwin) and an Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla) made real. Jennifer Morrison (House) and Robert Carlyle costar.
Tommy Schlamme (formerly of The West Wing) is behind this look at the rise of transcontinential and intercontinental commercial air travel in the 1960s. Whoo, transportation drama! Fabulous actress Christina Ricci stars.
Cutie Emily VanCamp moves back to the Hamptons to put the hurt on the people who ruined her family years before.
This series initially appears to be about the disappearance of a beloved Steve Irwin-type TV explorer (Bruce Greenwood), but quickly twists into a Blair Witch Project-Anaconda hybrid, as horrible things start happening on a tropical riverboat when his family organizes a search party for him deep in the Amazon.
This series about a team of professional crisis managers is the latest ABC drama from Shonda Rhimes; it features a prestige cast that includes Kerry Washington, Henry Ian Cusick, Columbus Short and Tony Goldwyn.
A single father and his daughter move to the surburbs because the dad (Six Feet Under's Jeremy Sisto) doesn't want his 16-year-old girl (Jane Levy) getting in trouble with boys in the big city. Naturally, she finds ways to get in trouble with boys anyway...
Remember Bosom Buddies? This is so much worse. Two unemployed guys (Ben Koldyke and Amaury Nolasco) dress up as female pharmaceutical reps because that's apparently the only job they can get.
Squee! Bad Robots J.J. Abrams and Liz Sarnoff put together this show for us starring many, many folks we love, including Sarah Jones, Jorge Garcia, Parminder Nagra and a perfectly cast Sam Neill. Can. Not. Wait.
Jonah Hill voices the title role of a genius multihyphenate 7-year-old who has to grapple with the harsh realities of...first grade!
Geoff Stults, Michael Clarke Duncan and Saffron Burrows star in this spinoff from Bones show runner Hart Hanson.