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From fall's TV crop, these 10 shows deserve a look

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— "Nashville" (ABC, premieres Oct. 10). Ideally, this show can find the perfect blend of family drama, show-biz shenanigans, music performances and good, old-fashioned soap opera. Happily, the pilot episode comes close to nailing it. Of course, "Nashville" from the outset can claim one huge asset: Connie Britton. As she has demonstrated on shows as different as "Friday Night Lights" and "American Horror Story," she radiates authenticity. Here she's pitch-perfect as Rayna James, a country music superstar whose popularity in the youth-obsessed marketplace has begun to evaporate after a long reign. All too ready to seize her throne is scheming up-and-comer Juliette Barnes (Hayden Panettiere), about whose singing Rayna sneers, "It sounds like feral cats." But theirs isn't the only power struggle. Rayna's happy home is threatened as her husband ponders running for mayor of Nashville, a move Rayna opposes. And she's got a past lover who's back in the picture. A touch of Southern gothic melodrama adds spice to "Nashville." But mostly it's a portrait of a woman anyone can relate to and, thanks to Britton's portrayal, embrace.

— "Mob Doctor" (Fox, premieres Sept. 17). In the pilot, Dr. Grace Devlin dashes around Chicago as if Red Bull were flowing through her veins. She's a top surgeon at Roosevelt Medical Center, but in between saving lives as part of her ordinary workday, she's obligated to make house calls to Southside mobsters for their on-the-job injuries, thanks to her deal with the mafia to pay off her brother's gambling debt with on-demand medical services. It keeps her on the run. But she isn't a victim of some Faustian pact, as it first appears. The narrative potential of "Mob Doctor" emerges from the viewer's growing realization that Grace relishes her dual identity and the power she wields in this brutal, male-dominated world of organized crime. Jordana Spiro glows as the increasingly compromised physician for whom the pledge to "do no harm" could become a dim memory. How far she falls, and whether she can ultimately save herself, are questions that could hook viewers from the first week.

— "666 Park Avenue" (ABC, premieres Sept. 30). Imagine a macabre variation on "The Love Boat" as a luxury apartment house where residents arrive with desires but end up losing their souls. "What I do is fulfill needs," says Gavin Doran, the building's mysterious owner, played by Terry O'Quinn. But the deposit he charges is far steeper than your ordinary Manhattan rental, and the lease can't be broken. Gavin works in cahoots with Olivia (Vanessa Williams), his bewitching wife, who together tempt and torment their building's captive tenants. "666 Park Avenue" is the address for creepy, devilish fun — for visitors in weekly doses, that is.


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