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Published: May 22, 2009 3:00 a.m.

CW turns to vampires, models

DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press
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The CW

Sara Paxton plays Raina in “The Beautiful Life.”

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Fall schedule
Monday

8 p.m. – “Gossip Girl”

9 p.m. – “One Tree Hill”

Tuesday

8 p.m. – “90210”

9 p.m. – “Melrose Place”

Wednesday

8 p.m. – “America’s Next Top Model”

9 p.m. – “The Beautiful Life”

Thursday

8 p.m. – “The Vampire Diaries”

9 p.m. – “Supernatural”

Friday

8 p.m. – “Smallville”

9 p.m. – “Top Model” rerun

NEW YORK – The CW network is keeping a laser focus on teenage girls and young women with an abbreviated fall lineup that features vampires, tormented models and 1990s flashbacks.

The small network hopes that niche appeal is the key to survival in a tough market. The CW will stop programming Sunday nights and has cast aside all comedy in favor of scripted dramas with female appeal and “America’s Next Top Model.”

“Privileged,” “Everybody Hates Chris” and “The Game” have ended, The CW said Thursday.

The CW will launch a Thursday night show based on the book series, “The Vampire Diaries.” Two vampire brothers – one good, sexy and brooding, the other bad, sexy and brooding – compete for the attention of a high school girl.

“As everyone knows, chicks dig the vampires,” said actor Stefan Salvatore, who plays the good one.

After The CW saw modest success with a “Beverly Hills, 90210” remake this season, the network will add a new version of “Melrose Place” featuring Ashlee Simpson-Wentz. Both series will air Tuesday nights. Laura Leighton and Thomas Calabro of the original series are back on the street.

Ashton Kutcher, who has been busy making reality shows, will be executive producer of a new drama, “The Beautiful Life.” Two young models – one male, sexy and brooding, the other female, sexy and brooding – stick together to help each other navigate a sleazy industry.

It will directly follow the 13th edition of “America’s Next Top Model,” this one for prospective models 5-foot-6 and shorter.

The CW also ordered a midseason series, “Parental Discretion Advised,” about a girl who bounces around foster homes and makes contact with her birth parents.

The network has stopped developing comedies after a couple – “Everybody Hates Chris” and “Aliens in America” – couldn’t match critical buzz with commercial success.