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

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— "The New Normal" (NBC, premieres Sept. 11). In a modern world where anything goes, Bryan and David are the model of stability. They are a committed, loving couple. But there's something missing from their relationship: They want a child. Fortunately, they meet Goldie, a single mother and struggling waitress who agrees to help them achieve their dream — she will carry their child — in exchange for their help in achieving hers: the financial means for her and her daughter to break from their difficult past. Starring Andrew Rannells ("Girls," ''The Book of Mormon") and Justin Bartha ("The Hangover") and created by no-holds-barred producer Ryan Murphy ("Nip/Tuck," ''Glee," ''American Horror Story"), "The New Normal" is edgy yet life-affirming: "A family is a family, and love is love," says Goldie (Georgia Gold). And if it gets a little preachy, it's refreshing for its boldness in taking a pro-social stand with a certainty that recalls the likes of "All in the Family" 40 years ago. There's even an Archie Bunker-esque point of view voiced by Goldie's snobby, narrow-minded mother (played by Ellen Barkin), who, arguing that she is racially tolerant, declares, "When they opened that Chipotle here, I was the first of my friends to go. And that is SPANISH food!" One other thing about "The New Normal": It's funny.

— "Vegas" (CBS, premieres Sept. 25). Period dramas didn't fare well last season. "The Playboy Club" and "Pan Am" flopped miserably. Now "Vegas" returns to that same early-1960s era, a time when Las Vegas still clings to a dual identity as a cowtown and a budding gambling empire. Conflict is inevitable as Las Vegas Sheriff Ralph Lamb, a fourth-generation rancher, clashes with Vincent Savino, a Chicago gangster who is staking his claim with his glamorous casino. Dennis Quaid and Michael Chiklis star in this saga, which promises not only to place them at odds with each other but, occasionally, to pit them jointly against a mutual opponent. A handsome show with a fine cast and a hearty story to tell, maybe "Vegas" will succeed in selling viewers on the past and bear out that old saying, "Three's the charm."

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