Best-bets for May 27: brilliant start to final hours

1) “Brilliant Minds” return, 8 p.m., NBC. When we last saw Dr. Oliver Wolf, he was obsessing over saving Sofia, a friend of his dad. Then came a shell-shock: Does she really exist? We saw her, but was that just his perspective? Now others try to untangle the mystery … while handling a tough case (shown here) at the hospital. It’s a strong start to the show’s final six episodes. Read more…

Best-bets for May 26: fun with a non-cocaine Bear

1) “Bear Grylls is Running Wild,” 9 p.m., Fox. Elizabeth Banks is an actress and game-show host, but she was also the director of the successful movie, “Cocaine Bear.” Now she’s with Bear (Grylls, not Cocaine), heading into the frigid wilderness. (They’re shown here.) They try to navigate the crevasses of a melting glacier, then kayak to the site of a cold extraction. Read more…

Best-bets for May 25: music and Memorial Day films

1) “American Music Awards,” 8-11 p.m. ET, CBS. Queen Latifah hosts a night stuffed with music. Performing will be Karol G (shown here) and Billy Idol (both getting special honors), country’s Keith Urban and Riley Green and more, including Teddy Swims, Teyana Taylor, Sombr, Twenty One Pilots, Katseye, Pussycat Dolls, BTS, New Kids on the Block and Hootie & The Blowfish. Read more…

Best-bets for May 24: Memorial music, movies, more

1) “National Memorial Day Concert,” 8 p.m., PBS, rerunning at 9:30. Building toward the country’s 250th birthday on July 4, this recalls the soldiers who got us here; one segment (with Noah Wyle) goes back to 1776. Music is from country’s Alan Jackson (shown here), Mickey Guyton and Jamey Johnson, plus Blessing Offor, Laura Osnes and the National Symphony. Read more…

Brooke faces the big questions — murder, technology and Canadian niceness

It’s time to probe two of life’s persistent stereotypes:
A) Older folks have trouble keeping up with modern times; and B) Canadians are really, really nice.
Our guides (via a Zoom interview) are Brooke Shields, 60, and Amalia Williamson, 31. They star in “You’re Killing Me” (shown here), the “cozy mystery” series that streams new episodes Mondays at www.acorn.tv. Read more…

Josh Johnson brings fresh approaches to comedy

It’s great to have new ideas, Josh Johnson says … except sometimes it’s not.
“Sometimes, something hasn’t been done before because it’s a bad idea,” Johnson, who has a new HBO special, said in a video press conference.
“Things like peanut-butter-and pickle sandwiches: No one’s done that before, because it’s a bad idea.”
He’s impressed critics with good ideas — both in his comedy and in the way he presents it. Now his “Josh Johnson: Symphony” special (debuting at 8 p.m. Friday and 10:10 p.m. Saturday, May 22-23, and also on HBO Max) offers a fresh approach, including the way he uses music. Read more…

Best-bets for May 23: Schitty fun and busy Bond

1) “Schitt’s Creek,” 11 a.m. ro midnight, Pop. Here’s the show that lifted Pop out of obscurity (briefly). Created by Dan Levy and his father Eugene (who’s shown here with Catherine O’Hara), it had lots of quiet character humor. In its sixth and final season, it dominated the Emmys; then Pop sagged. Now here are the first two “Creek” seasons; the second two are on Sunday, the final ones Monday. Read more…

Best-bets for May 22: finales, cowboys & a hot Doll

1) “An Evening With Nicole Scherzinger,” 9 p.m., PBS. Amid the glamour of Royal Albert Hall, Scherzinger (shown here at a previous event) has poor stage patter, but awesome vocals. She glides from Broadway to rock, re-visiting hers past in theater (“Sunset Boulevard”) and with the Pussycat Dolls, convincingly asking: “Don’t Cha Wish Your Girlfriend Was Hot Like Me?” Read more…

Old master revives young monster?

A very old comedian will be working on “Very Young Frankenstein.”
Mel Brooks –who turns 100 on June 28 — is one of the producers of the comedy, which will be on FX and Hulu.
The show is from the people behind FX’s “What We Do in the Shadows,” the vampire comedy that drew four Emmy nominations for best comedy series. Taika Waititi, co-creator of “Shadows,” directed the pilot film, which stars Zach Galifianakis, Dolly Wells and Spencer House.
This is based on Brooks’ 1974 “Young Frankenstein” (shown here) which the American Film Institute puts at No. 13 on its list of all-time funniest movies. (Brooks’ “Blazing Saddles” and “The Producers” are No. 6 and 11.) Read more…

Best-bets for May 21: A great late-night era ends

1) Stephen Colbert farewell, 11:35 p.m., CBS. A great CBS tradition — late-night wit, with 22 years of David Letterman and 11 of Colbert (shown here) — skids to an end. CBS says the show was losing money; others say the change was made to appease Donald Trump. Either way, a once-great network is diminished … but not until it has a big-deal farewell. Read more…