Year: 2023

Best-bets for Dec.27: honoring show-biz greats

1) “Kennedy Center Honors,” 8-10:30 p.m., CBS. Here’s how to stir a stately Washington, D.C. crowd. This opens with Gloria Estefan’s “Get On Your Feet” and closes with Ariana DeBose singing “Staying Alive.” In between, a Clark Sisters gospel tune has Queen Latifah (shown here in a previous event) leaping to her feet. She’s an honoree, with Dionne Warwick, Billy Crystal, Renee Fleming and Barry Gibb. Even if you tend to skip rap or classical, you’ll like this blend of music and memories.
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Best-bets for Dec. 26: rerun time for comedies, Aussies

1) “NCIS: Sydney,” 8-11 p.m., CBS. As the strikes took hold, CBS grabbed some shows from other countries. The British “Ghosts” has been so-so, but this Australian series is fairly good; now it’s first three episodes rerun. A nasty case forces Americans and Aussies to work together. Naturally, both units are led by telegenic folks(shown here) who dislike each other … but dislike their bosses even more. The result is predictable, but in a good way. Read more…

Best-bets for Dec. 25: Christmas fun … and “Midwife” crises

1) “Call the Midwife” Christmas special, 8-9:30 p.m., PBS. British shows have a tradition of special episodes that air on Christmas Day. That can be clumsy for some shows, but this one — filled with earnest nuns, midwives and others, including a doctor – fits perfectly. There are life-and-death issues here, especially when a snowstorm hits. But there’s also fun: Trixie’s brother takes over the Christmas pageant and Reggie (shown here in a previous Christmas episode) insists on being an angel.
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When does the season start? Here’s an update

For TV viewers, the long wait is now ending … slowly. Networks are getting their post-strike seasons in place.
NBC is doing it quite quickly — two comedies (“Extended Family” and “Night Court,” shown here) on Dec. 23, the return of “Transplant” on Dec. 28, then an “America’s Got Talent” spin-off and the “Magnum” finale the next week.
CBS is in less of a hurry; it will start almost everything in the week after it airs the Feb. 11 Super Bowl. Others are in between, with arrivals ranging from early January to mid-March.
Here’s an updated, chronological list, followed by an alphabetical one. Read more…

Best-bets for Dec. 24: merry marathons

1) Marathons. On Christmas Eve, TV likes to repeat itself. The delightful “A Christmas Story” (1983, shown here) starts at 8 p.m. on TBS and 9 on TNT; it re-starts every two hours, for 24 hours. The clever “Love, Actually” (2003), merely runs twice, at 6 and 9 p.m. on BBC America. “It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946) runs from 8-11 p.m. on NBC – then all day Monday on E. The oddest one? Great American Family has a yule log, from 5 p.m. ET today to noon Monday. Read more…

“Maestro” captures the depth of a complicated human

When “Patton” arrived in 1970, filmgoers were fascinated.
Here was the rare movie biography that captured someone’s real depth. There were parts of Gen. George Patton we could love or hate, envy or pity. He was – like many people, especially those at the top – a complicated human being.
“Patton” was rewarded with seven Academy Awards, including best picture, screenplay (co-written by Francis Coppola) and actor. Now the same thing might happen to “Maestro,” which arrived Wednesday on Netflix, after a brief run in theaters. Read more…

Best-bets for Dec. 23: At last, new comedies arrive

1) “Extended Family” debut, about 8 p.m. (after football), NBC. For one night, the post-strike TV season begins. This show has Jon Cryer navigating a life with his ex-wife (Abigail Spencer, they’re shown here), their two kids and her boyfriend (Donald Faison). There are the situation-comedy traditions, including a flailing dad and a dead fish. Still, this is fairly funny … and it’s good to finally have a new sitcom. Read more…

Cryer’s back in his lane, playing a divorced dad

By now, Jon Cryer should be expert on divorce, with all its potential for comedy or drama.
Like many people, he’s a child of divorce and an adult who divorced. Unlike most, he has a mother who wrote a musical partly about divorce. Also, he spent a dozen years playing a divorced dad on CBS.
Now he’s back and in full comedy mode. “Extended Family” (shown here) debuts at about 8 p.m. Saturday (Dec. 23), after football, on NBC, becoming the first show in TV’s staggered, post-strike comeback..That opener reruns at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, with new episodes starting a week later.
This is a tale of a modern-day, amicable splits. Jim (Cryer, right) and Julia (Abigail Spencer) alternate weeks at their home, allowing their daughter and son to stay put. Read more…

Best-bets for Dec. 22: Holiday brings warmth and Grinch

1) “A Home For the Holidays,” 8 p.m., CBS. Each year, this offers a warm finale to a crowded season of new Christmas specials. It’s the 25th year for “Home,” which has profiles of adoptions, alongside passionate music. This time Katharine McPhee (shown here in aprevious event) hosts and performs with her husbannd, David Foster. Also performing are Pentatonix, Gavin DeGraw, CeCe Winans and Lauren Daigle. Read more…

Week’s top-10 for Dec. 25: Big times for Christmas and Eve

1) “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve,” 8-10 p.m. and 10:30 to 2:13 a.m. Sunday, ABC. Dick Clark’s clever scheme – live coverage at Times Square (shown here), a taped party in Los Angeles – has turned into a global event. Ryan Seacrest and Rita Ora will be at the Square, cutting to music in Korea (NewJeans), Puerto Rico (Ivy Queen), Las Vegas (Post Malone) and Californis, with Janelle Monae, Ludacris, Bebe Rexha, Green Day, Coco Jones, Nile Rodgers & Chic and more. Read more…