NBC is ending its linear run of Peacock’s “The Paper” sooner than anticipated. As an alternative, beginning on Jan. 5, NBC will air episodes of its freshman comedy “Stumble” within the Monday at 8:30 p.m. ET time slot — the place broadcast-friendly variations of “The Paper” have been airing since Nov. 10.
New episodes of “Stumble” will proceed to air on Fridays at 8:30 p.m., behind “Glad’s Place.” However NBC execs hope to present “Stumble” some further publicity by inserting repeats, beginning with the present’s pilot episode, on Mondays behind “St. Denis Medical.”
Which means “The Paper” received’t fairly get a full 10-episode run on Mondays, however NBC plans to air the remaining three episodes on Saturday, Jan. 3. That present, in fact, has been accessible on Peacock since Sept. 4 — the place viewers can already catch all the Season 1 run. And an possibility for Season 2 of “The Paper” was already picked up, which implies the present will return with extra episodes in 2026 on the streamer.
NBC execs hope so as to add extra momentum to “Stumble,” which can air within the extra Monday slot via Feb. 2 (except an NBA recreation on Jan. 19). That Monday 8:30 p.m. slot will ultimately be taken over by new comedy “The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins,” which premieres with an hour-long episode on Feb. 23 at 8 p.m. ET, earlier than settling into 8:30 p.m. the next week, on March 2.
“Stumble” was created by Jeff Astrof and Liz Astrof, and is ready within the aggressive world of junior faculty cheer squads. The sequence stars Jenn Lyon, in addition to Taran Killam, Ryan Pinkston, Jarrett Austin Brown, Anissa Borrego, Arianna Davis, Taylor Dunbar and Georgie Murphy, whereas Kristin Chenoweth is billed as a recurring visitor star. Different visitor stars in Season 1 embrace Jeff Hiller, Ashlie Atkinson and Dascha Polanco.
The Astrofs are government producers, together with Dana Honor and Monica Aldama (from Netflix’s “Cheer”). Jeff Blitz is director/EP. Common TV is the studio behind the only digicam comedy, which has been picked up for 13 episodes in Season 1.
Selection TV critic Aramide Tinubu gave the present a thumb’s up, calling it “a hysterical mockumentary concerning the high-stakes area of junior faculty cheerleading. For viewers who adored the ‘Cheer’ docuseries and Aldama’s no-nonsense method to teaching, this light-hearted twist on that world introduces a solid of wildly colourful characters and a girl decided to win, regardless of the associated fee.”

















































