UPDATED: NBC has cancelled Whitney.

And Guys With Kids.

And Up All Night.

And 1600 Penn.

And Go On.

And The New Normal.

That’s give half-hour comedies axed in 24 hours. And those are in addition to 30 Rock and The Office, which are having their final seasons this year. And let’s not forget Animal Practice, the network’s previously cancelled comedy this season. And there still could be more carnage to come.

What has survived? NBC renewed Parks & Recreation for a sixth season and Community for a fifth. Parks is NBC’s best-performing show on Thursday night’s after The Office, though it has an average adults 18-49 rating that’s less than one third of CBS’ Thursday leader The Big Bang Theory (2.0 vs. 6.2).

NBC announced earlier that it will partly restock its lineup with a few new comedies. Highlights include Sean Hayes in Sean Saves the World, about a guy who must figure out how to parent his 14-year-old daughter, and a TV series version of the 2002 film About a Boy, starring David Walton as a bachelor whose primary goal in life is avoiding any kind of responsibility until he meets a geeky young boy.

But NBC will have a tough time regaining its former legendary Thursday night comedy dominance. CBS made serious inroads into the evening with Big Bang and Two and a Half Men frequently ruling the 8 p.m. hour. Recently CBS experimented with putting repeats of other comedies into the 9 p.m. hour, raising the possibility of a full-scale two-hour comedy invasion into the evening next fall.