Nina Tassler, the CBS Entertainment chief who was first to meet with the TV Critics Association when sessions formally began Wednesday in Beverly Hills, began by saying “it was a terrific year for us.”

But later, she seemed to be admiring the sudden departure of her ABC counterpart Steve McPherson this week. as far
as Steve goes, I said, “Damn it, he got out 
of doing press tour. I think that was his whole motivation.”

She may not have been kidding.

In her own job, she added, “stability is a good thing.” But she also said, “we’re restless and 
motivated, and, as I like to say, paranoid. And as we
turn the page to a new season, we’re continuing to mix
up all different resources for what inspires 
our hit shows.”

She pointed out the different roads several of the new CBS shows took to their place on the fall schedule.

One new comedy “$#@! My Dad Says” is what she calls “the first show ever based on a Twitter feed.

“ ‘The
Defenders’ was originally a reality series in 
development at Fox about two real-life Vegas 
attorneys. It was pitched to us as a reality series,
and we didn’t quite see it that way. We loved the
 characters but used it as an inspiration to develop a 
scripted drama.”

And for the remade “Hawaii Five-0,” Tassler says, “we tapped into our 
library of remakes to develop a reboot of the series.”

Even the new, untitled women’s daytime talk show “came from Sara Gilbert, inspired
by a mommy group she had in her living room.”

What she called “great diversity in resource source material
for our new shows” grew out of successes CBS had this past season, “when our
 freshman hits were a spin-off, a character drama 
inspired by recent tabloid headlines, and a reality 
format from across the pond that hadn’t even aired 
yet when we bought it.”

That would be: “NCIS: L.A.,” “The Good Wife” and “Undercover Boss.”

“You just never know where your
next hit is going to come from, and as the world gets 
smaller and online and social media gets bigger, the
pool of potential ideas and source material is going to
expand dramatically. It’s an exciting time to be a
creative executive in TV.”