If this year’s TV mid-season has anything going for it, it’s quantity. I’m not sure I’ve seen a more crowded field of new series and special presentations in January and February (and continuing on into March and April). Here’s my attempt to at least make some sense of the coming flood, which abates a bit during the Sochi Olympics.
I’ve included short reviews of some shows I’ve already watched (Fox’s “Rake,” starring Greg Kinnear and the CW’s “The 100,” about post-apocalyptic teens, are among the best so far), as well as dates for some annual events — the Golden Globes, the Super Bowl and Oscar night.
Tuesday, Jan. 7
• “Intelligence” (CBS at 9 p.m.; moves to its regular time at 10 p.m. Mondays on Jan. 13): “Lost’s” Josh Holloway returns to series TV in this espionage drama as Gabriel, an intelligence agent who is the first human to have a supercomputer implanted in his brain. He can mentally sort through heaps of data with a wink-blink of his pretty eyes. “CSI’s” Marg Helgenberger stars as his boss at a clandestine government cybersecurity agency; Meghan Ory plays a tough Secret Service agent assigned to protect Gabriel from an array of foreign bad guys who want the billion-dollar science project inside his head. Complicating things is Gabriel’s heartsick obsession with his wife, who turned out to be a terrorist.
So there you have it. Holloway is pretty much his usual simmering self, as is Helgenberger. The technology in the show displays the very latest in what-the-…?, as far as TV’s hyperactive imagination goes. (If we’d had the Internet in 1974, this is what “The Six Million Dollar Man” might’ve looked like.) On the whole, “Intelligence” trafficks in the usual request to suspend your disbelief and then some, but it’s also mildly intriguing — especially in the idea that its macho lead character is also treated as a vulnerable prize who needs to be protected at all costs. Grade: C+
• “Killer Women” (ABC at 10 p.m.): The show’s title and advertising seemed to suggest something much saucier and violent, but this lady-cop drama (co-produced by “Modern Family’s” Sofia Vergara) is a fairly straightforward and briskly perfunctory affair about a gutsy Texas Ranger named Molly (Tricia Helfer), who chases after criminals while trying to put her own life back together. She wants a divorce from her politician husband, and she’s having secret trysts with a handsome DEA agent. (“Dangerously handsome,” the press release insists. Hmm, if you say so.)
Like all shows filmed and set in Texas, “Killer Women” is cooked through with too much urban-cow girl chic, but Helfer (“Battlestar Galactica”) ably carries off the assignment and keeps the momentum going. Grade: B-
• “American Experience: The Poisoner’s Handbook” (PBS, check local listings): A documentary about Charles Norris, who in 1918 became New York’s first official medical examiner and developed forensic techniques that sent otherwise-elusive criminals to the electric chair.
• “Being Mary Jane” (BET at 10 p.m.): New series based on the TV movie starring Gabrielle Union as a busy news anchor who juggles family and work.
• “Escaping the Prophet” (TLC at 10 p.m.): This six-part docu-series follows former Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints member Flora Jessop as she helps others break away from Warren Jeffs’ strict religious community.
Wednesday, Jan. 8
• “The 40th Annual People’s Choice Awards” (CBS at 9 p.m.): Favorite movie, music and TV performances, as selected by those who voted online.
• “Chasing Shackleton” (PBS, check local listings): Adventure-seekers follow the treacherous 1914 Antarctic journey of Sir Ernest Shackleton and his crew. A three-part docu-series.
• “Chicago P.D.” (NBC at 10 p.m.): Creator Dick Wolf (“Law and Order”) spins off “Chicago Fire” into a drama about an intelligence unit that investigates the Windy City’s biggest crimes, contrasted with the work of the uniformed beat officers in the same precinct.
Thursday, Jan. 9
• “The Spoils of Babylon”(IFC at 10 p.m.): Tobey Maguire stars in this comedy spoof of those sprawling, 1970s miniseries based on tawdry bestselling novels about the rich and powerful — in this case, “The Spoils of Babylon,” written by one Eric Johnrosh (Will Ferrell), who exhumes the film reels of the never-aired series (the networks deemed it “too long”).
So that’s the set-up. The cast includes a whole lot of familiar faces — Kristen Wiig, Molly Shannon, Michael Sheen, Tim Robbins, Haley Joel Osment, Val Kilmer, David Spade. Though I admire the show’s commitment to form in satirizing an entire genre, something about “Babylon’s” shtick wears thin. Part of the joke is that “The Spoils of Babylon” was utterly unwatchable, and that’s why the network never showed it; it seems they achieved that goal a little too well. Grade: D
Friday, Jan. 10
• “Enlisted” (Fox at 9:30 p.m.): It’s a comedy about three Army brothers (Geoff Stults, Chris Lowell, Parker Young) stationed at a rear-detachment base in Florida. “Enlisted” was originally scheduled to premiere in November; in The Post’s fall season guide, yours truly negatively compared the show to old “Beetle Bailey” comic strips and gave it a C+. But having seen some more episodes, I think they’ve charmed their way up to at least a Grade B-.
• “Helix” (Syfy at 10 p.m.): A team of researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention travels to the Arctic and finds something that could wipe out all of us. Billy Campbell (“The Killing”; “Once and Again”) stars in this drama/thriller.
Sunday, Jan. 12
• “The 71st Annual Golden Globe Awards” (NBC at 8 p.m.): Tina Fey and Amy Poehler return to host this loosey-goosey night of film and TV honors.
• “True Detective” (HBO at 9 p.m.): Highly touted eight-episode crime drama stars Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey as Louisiana detectives investigating a macabre murder that has obsessed them for nearly two decades. The narrative hopscotches around from 2012 to 1995 to 2002.
Monday, Jan. 13
• “Chozen” (FX at 10:30 p.m.): An animated comedy about a gay white rapper (voiced by “SNL’s” Bobby Moynihan) who goes by the name Chozen, fresh out of prison and now seeking another chance at fame.
• “Don’t Trust Andrew Mayne” (A&E at 10 p.m.): In this goofy reality show, a magician uses his talent to assist people seeking revenge on others.
• “Bitten” (Syfy at 10 p.m.): Based on Kelley Armstrong’s novels, in which a young woman leaves behind her werewolf pack (and the man who turned her) for a new life.
Tuesday, Jan. 14
• “American Experience: 1964” (PBS, check local listings): Documentary (based on Jon Margolis’ “The Last Innocent Year)” explores a pivotal 12 months in American politics and culture.
• “Friday Night Tykes” (Esquire at 9 p.m.): A 10-part docu-series about the super-serious world of the Texas Youth Football Association, where the players are 8- and 9-year-old boys.
• “Building Wild” (National Geographic Channel at 9 p.m.): Two home-building experts tackle jobs from clients who want to build cabins in challenging locations.
Wednesday, Jan. 15
• “Crazy Hearts: Nashville” (A&E at 11 p.m.): Reality series follows a group of musicians trying to make it in country music. Moves to its regular at 10 p.m. Thursday slot on Jan. 16.
Thursday, Jan. 16
• “Under the Gunn” (Lifetime at 9 p.m.): Tim Gunn calls in former “Project Runway” winners to provide guidance to young designers in a new fashion competition.
• “SWV Reunited” (WEtv at 10 p.m.): The ’90s R&B trio get its act together (after a tense breakup 15 years ago) in hopes of a comeback. Or maybe just getting a reality series will suffice?
Friday, Jan. 17
• “The Square” (Netflix): From the filmmaker of “StartUp.com” and “The Control Room,” a documentary about Cairo’s Tahrir Square during the Arab Spring uprising.
• “The Diamond Collar” (OWN at 10 p.m.): Reality series about James “Head” Guiliani, a former associate of Mafia man John Gotti who now runs a dog-grooming parlor in Brooklyn.
Saturday, Jan. 18
• “June in January” (Hallmark at 7 p.m.): In this new movie, a busy bride-to-be (Brooke D’Orsay) has her ideal June wedding all planned out, but her husband is transferred and she has to move her special day to January.
• “Flowers in the Attic” (Lifetime at 8 p.m.): A new movie version of V.C. Andrews’ popular mystery/horror novel, starring Heather Graham, Ellen Burstyn and Kiernan Shipka (“Mad Men’s” Sally Draper).
• “My Gal Sunday” (Hallmark Movie Channel at 9 p.m.): Adventures of husband-wife crime solvers (Rachel Blanchard and Cameron Mathison), based on short stories by Mary Higgins Clark.
• “HitRECord on TV” (Pivot at 10 p.m.): Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt brings his online project to TV, in which Web users collaborate on short films around an assigned theme.
Sunday, Jan. 19
• ” RichKids of Beverly Hills”(E! at 10 p.m.): This docu-series follows a clique of fancy kids who gain Internet notoriety by promoting their every action and thought on social media. You can only hope one of them is named Ja’mie, but probably not.
• “Looking” (HBO at 10:30 p.m.): A new dramedy about three gay men in San Francisco who are at different stages of life and emotional issues.
Monday, Jan. 20
• “The Powerpuff Girls: Dance Pantsed” (Cartoon Network at 7:30 p.m.): Fifteen years after their debut, the heroic Powerpuff Girls return with a new special and a new computer-generated animation style. Original characters and voices return to do battle with Mojo Jojo; Ringo Starr provides the voice of Townsville’s “flamboyant mathematician.”
• “Klondike” (Discovery at 9 p.m.): Richard Madden (Robb Stark from “Game of Thrones”) stars as one of two adventurers who head for the Yukon in 1890 during the gold rush. It’s Discovery’s first original miniseries drama.
Tuesday, Jan. 21
• “American Masters: Salinger” (PBS, check local listings): Television premiere of Shane Salerno’s 2013 documentary about the reclusive author, with 15 minutes of new material. (That might not be such great news: “While some of the stories are interesting, the film is much longer than it needs to be,” The Post’s Stephanie Merry said in her review when the film played in theaters.)
Wednesday, Jan. 22
• “Broad City” (Comedy Central at 10:30 p.m.): Upright Citizens Brigade alums Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer bring their critically acclaimed online series to Comedy Central.
• “The Wahlburgers” (A&E at 10:30 p.m.): Brothers Mark and Donnie Wahlberg head back to Boston to join forces with their brother Paul and open a hamburger restaurant.
Thursday, Jan. 23
• “Rake” (Fox at 9 p.m.): Greg Kinnear happily and believably sinks his pearly whites into this amiably sharp drama (based on a hit Australian series) about a criminal defense attorney who finds trouble everywhere: He’s up to his ears in gambling and IRS debts, drinks too much, lives in a ratty apartment above a restaurant and is hopelessly in love with the prostitute he pays for conversation and backgammon. His therapist is also his ex-wife.
“Rake” is easily one of the more confident network dramas to come our way of late. It’s a procedural (in an episode shared with critics last year, Kinnear’s character — Keegan Deane — defends a cannibal against murder charges), but it’s just unorthodox enough to make me eager to see more. Grade: B+
Friday, Jan. 24
• “Mitt” (Netflix): Straight off the bill at the Sundance Film Festival, this documentary follows the unsuccessful 2012 Romney presidential campaign and tries to get into the mind and personality of the man himself.
Saturday, Jan. 25
• “Black Sails” (Starz at 9 p.m.): At first glance, this is a sprawling, big-budget pirate drama series that somehow manages to feel too cheap. “Black Sails” follows several bands of Caribbean pirates in 1715, “the golden age of pirating.” When the British Navy starts to crack down on these legendary criminals, pirate Capt. Flint (Toby Stephens) allies with the daughter of New Providence Island’s crime kingpin to chase after the ultimate treasure.
There’s a whole lot else going on in the first episode, with too many indistinguishable characters; at times “Black Sails” feels like it wants to be taken seriously as a complicated, premium cable drama (a la “Game of Thrones”). At other times, it feels more like cheesier, more niche material (a la “Spartacus”). I’ll watch a few more episodes, but walking the plank is tempting. Grade: C-
• “Lizzie Borden Took an Ax” (Lifetime at 8 p.m.): Christina Ricci stars in this made-for-TV movie as the infamous woman charged with ax-murdering her parents in 1892.
Sunday, Jan. 26
• “The 56th Annual Grammy Awards” (CBS at 8 p.m.): LL Cool J returns to host the music industry’s biggest awards night.
Wednesday, Jan. 29
• “Hawking” (PBS, check local listings): A new one-hour documentary about the famed physicist.
• “Fleming: The Man Who Would Be Bond” (BBC America at 10 p.m.): Four-part miniseries drama about the real-life inspiration for the 007 character — a sophisticated maverick whose life was upended by World War II.
Saturday, Feb. 1
• “Oscar” (TCM at 8 p.m.): A documentary about the Academy Awards.
Sunday, Feb. 2
• “Super Bowl LXVIII” (Fox): Lots of Roman numerals, a Bruno Mars halftime show, the spendy Madison Avenue commercials and — oh, right — a professional football championship game. And don’t forget “Puppy Bowl” (Animal Planet at 3 p.m.) and, for some reason, “Kitten Bowl” (Hallmark at noon).
Tuesday, Feb. 4
• “American Experience: The Amish — Shunned” (PBS, check local listings): Documentary explores the worlds of women and men who found themselves banished from their Amish communities.
Thursday, Feb. 6
• “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno” (NBC at 11:35): Jay says goodbye.
Friday, Feb. 7 to Sunday, Feb. 23
• “XXII Olympic Winter Games” (NBC): In Sochi, Russia. Will it be as grim as some people expect it to be?
Sunday, Feb. 9
• “The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to the Beatles” (CBS at 8 p.m.): All-star concert will commemorate 50 years (exactly) since the Fab Four appeared on Ed Sullivan’s show.
Monday, Feb. 17
• “Star Crossed” (CW at 8 p.m.): Two Baton Rouge teens experience some angsty, sci-fi themed “Romeo and Juliet”-type issues because the boy (Matt Lanter) belongs to an alien race of refugees called the Atrians and the girl (Aimee Teegarden) is the daughter of the commander tasked with keeping the aliens in line.
As part of an integration effort, the gorgeous Atrian teens (who come with their own natural neck and face tattoos) are bused in every day to a local high school, where they try to fit in. One imagines the screenplay being written in purple ink and very loopy handwriting, intercepted by the English teacher wearing the “Battlestar Galactica” T-shirt. Grade: C+
Monday, Feb. 24
• “The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon” (NBC at 11:35): The affable host reboots his late-night talk show, now from New York instead of Burbank, Calif. (And the Roots are sticking with him.)
• “Late Night With Seth Meyers” (NBC at 12:35): And after that, the “Saturday Night Live” writer and “Weekend Update” anchor takes over Fallon’s old spot.
Wednesday, Feb. 26
• “Mixology” (ABC at 9:30 p.m.): This new comedy is set in a bar called the Mix, where 10 single people have random encounters and conversations in their unending quest for love. If I understand the concept correctly, the entire season (however long it lasts) takes place on a single night.
Saturday, March 1
• “The 2014 Independent Spirit Awards” (IFC at 10 p.m.): The casual, Oscar-eve awards show for the cool movies that cool people liked. Hosted by Patton Oswalt.
Sunday, March 2
• “The 86th Annual Academy Awards” (ABC at 8 p.m.): It’s Oscar night! Get ahold of yourselves!
Thursday, March 6
• “Sirens” (USA at 10 p.m.): Denis Leary co-produces this comedy about three EMTs in Chicago.
Sunday, March 9
• “Resurrection” (ABC at 9 p.m.): The residents of Arcadia, Mo., react to the fact that a young boy who died 32 years ago has returned — unchanged — from the dead.
Tuesday, March 11
• “Mind Games” (ABC at 10 p.m.) Steve Zahn and Christian Slater star as Clark and Ross Edwards, two brothers who run an agency that helps clients fix their problems through psychological manipulation and influence. (Zahn plays the goofy, genius one.)
Wednesday, March 19
• “The 100” (CW at 9 p.m.): A refreshingly taut and well-executed futuristic sci-fi series about a group of 100 jailed juvenile delinquents who are banished from an orbiting space-station colony and sent to live on Earth — 97 years after a nuclear apocalypse.
They’ve barely crash-landed when things get pretty “Lord of the Flies,” but a determined young woman (Eliza Taylor) tries her best to stick to the group’s real mission: Locate a mountain bunker and determine whether or not the rest of the humans on the dying space station above can join them on land. What they discover — along with mutant deer — is that Earth is not as depopulated as they were led to believe.
I realize that sounds like a lot to chew on, but “The 100” does an excellent job of launching a CW-style take on bigger-budgeted adventure series like “Lost” or “Revolution,” with a little “Hunger Games” thrown in. But unlike “Terra Nova” and “Revolution,” it’s got characters you can care about. Maybe I’ve been too eager for an addictive sci-fi series that doesn’t feel instantly dumb, but I raced through the first episodes of “The 100” with pleasure. Grade: A-
Tuesday, March 25
• “Story of the Jews” (PBS, check local listings): Author Simon Schama explores Jewish culture and history in this five-part documentary series.
Monday, March 31
• “Friends With Better Lives” (CBS at 9 p.m.): A sitcom about six pals, premiering after the one-hour “How I Met Your Mother” series finale. Takes over the 8:30 p.m. slot on April 7.
Sunday, April 6
• “The 49th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards” (CBS at 8 p.m.): Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan will return as hosts.
Tuesday, April 15
• “The Address” (PBS, check local listings): Ken Burns’ film about a small boys school in Vermont where the students memorize, practice and recite the Gettysburg Address.