LOS ANGELES – Eric McCormack and his wife spent a recent Thanksgiving night binge-watching "Will & Grace," the beloved 1990s sitcom – starring Eric McCormack.
"My son finally woke up, kind of rubbed his eyes, looked at the screen and said, 'You're just going to sit and watch yourself on television?' " he said.
With a highly anticipated reboot premiering Thursday, NBC bets McCormack isn't the only one nostalgic for "W&G."
"There's been a positive 'glass more than half-full' response from fans that made me think, 'Well, we have a place. We're not going to be fighting an uphill battle,' " McCormack said this summer, a day after the cast's first table read. "And I thought, 'Why not. Why would we not?' "
With two new seasons in the works, "W&G" is only the latest example of television executives hitting the recycling bin. "One Day at a Time," "Roots," "Twin Peaks," "24," "The X-Files," "Prison Break," "Gilmore Girls," "Full House," "Love Connection" and "The Gong Show" all returned in one form or another this past season. The trend continues in coming months with "Roseanne" reuniting over loose-meat sandwiches, "S.W.A.T." redeploying for action, "Dynasty" re-establishing its power base and "Lost in Space" once again searching for Earth. Just 21 months after throwing farewell parties, fans also will have the chance to select a new "American Idol." There's even buzz about reincarnating "Charmed" and developing "The Greatest American Hero" with a woman in the cape.
"We're creatively bankrupt," joked NBC Entertainment Chairman Robert Greenblatt before offering a more serious, practical response to questions about resurrecting "W&G" more than a decade after its supposed finale. "I think when you're putting on 30 to 40 original series a year, if there's a great old idea you bring back, I'm totally comfortable."
It's easy to gripe that writers should be spending more time generating original ideas, but it's a lot harder to successfully pitch, say, a new series about a high school chemistry teacher who morphs into a terrorizing drug dealer (the once-in-a-lifetime "Breaking Bad") than a tried-and-true formula that serves up nostalgia.
Refreshed reboots
You may not remember exact plot lines to "Dynasty," but the title alone is sure to register.