America's sets: It will either blast off in the ratings or crash and burn immediately. PHOTO BY BOB D 'AM ICO/ABC CHAMPS, 9:30 p.m. Wednes- days, premiered Jan. 9, ABC (Channel 7 in Detroit): East Lansing native Timothy Busfield ("thirtysomething"), jock-turned- actor Ed Marinaro ("Sisters") and "Saturday Night Live" escapee Kevin Nealon lead the ensemble cast of this half-hour comedy cre- ated by Gary David Goldberg ("Brooklyn Bridge") and produced by the DreamWorks triumvirate of Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen. Busfield, as Tom McManus, is a man balancing two families: his own, with his law-student wife, Linda (Ashley Crow), and his ex- high school basketball team- mates now stuck in middle age. ABC thinks so much of "Champs" that it's tossing the popular "Coach" on a temporary shelf to make room. Opposite Page: Ken Campbell (seated on couch) stars in the male-bonding comedy "Local Heroes," to premiere on FOX at a later date. Top: Newcomers Ryan Hurst (left) and Ben Bode are "Campus Cops," Saturdays at 9:30 p.m. on USA Network. Above Right: Created by Gary David Goldberg and produced by DreamWorks' Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen, "Champs" airs Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. on ABC. Right: "Second Noah" mixes "Eight is Enough" with "Wild Kingdom" to produce this family drama which will premiere Monday, Feb. 5, at 8 p.m. on ABC. PHOTO BY TIMOTHY WHI TE/ABC Above: R&B sensation Brandy (right) stars as "Moesha," a 16-year-old growing up in L.A. Countess Vaughn (left) is also featured. "Moesha" premieres Tuesday, Jan. 23, at 8 p.m. on UPN (Channel 50). REMEMBER WENN, 9 p.m. Satur- days, premiered Jan. 13, American Movie Clas- sics: The first original, live-action series on vin- tage cable movie net- work AMC features Patti LuPone (a Tony Award winner for Evita) as Grace Cavendish, the musical diva at a fic- tional 1930s Pittsburgh radio station where the entertainment is as ex- citing off the air as on. PRIME TIME COUNTRY, 9 p.m. weeknights, premiered Jan. 15, The Nashville Network: With the departure of TNN talk-show stalwarts Crook and Chase this month over creative conflicts, it falls to onetime "Dukes of Haz- zard" star Tom Wopat (most re- cently seen as an -ex-husband of "Cybill") to host a revamped, 90- minute, five-nights-a-week ca- blecast of music, information and chat from Nashville. A country singer in his own right, the for- mer Luke Duke will quite likely croon an occasional tune himself. SAVANNAH, 8 p.m. Sundays, premieres Jan. 21, The- WB (Channel 20 in Detroit): Aaron Spelling refuses to give up on the prime-time soap opera, bless his heart. This time, according to the network releases, the mega-pro- ducer is placing three provoca- tive Southern women "against the backdrop of pure wealth, ro- mance, power and scancial." Sounds like "Dynasty" with an accent. MOESHA, 8 p.m. Tuesdays, premieres Jan. 23; UPN (Chan- nel 50 in Detroit): Brandy, the 16- year-old R&B singing sensation, plays — what else? — a hip; 16- year-old girl, coping with the pressures of growing up in L.A. in the '90s and with her father's new wife (Sheryl Lee Ralph of Dreamgirls). MINOR ADJUSTMENTS, 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays, premieres Jan. 23, UPN: Copying the move of fellow .fledgling network The WB, which snapped up "Sister, Sister" after it was canceled by ABC and gained a measure of success, UPN is adding this gently amusing contedy following is brief run on NBC, star- ring stand-up comic Rondell Sheridan as a family man and child psychologist who often reverts to childhood himself. WORLD'S FUN- NIEST VIDEOS, 8 p.m. Thursdays, pre- mieres Feb. 1, ABC: Just can't get enough of those embarrassing, injury-inflicting home movies on TV, can you? Well, whether you can or not, here comes another repackaged batch of lowbrow laughs, from the people who gave you "Ameri- ca's Funniest Home Videos." BEFORE THEY WERE STARS, 8:30 p.m. Thursdays, pre- mieres Feb. 1, ABC: A TV LINE-UP page 70