Best-bets for April 20: love, “Idol” and revolution

1) “Sullivan’s Crossing” season-opener, 8 p.m., CW. Last season seemed to be ending cheerily. With her dad leaving, Dr. Maggie Sullivan would run his resort, start a clinic and be with Cal. Then Liam showed up, saying he’s her husband. (he’s shown here, right, with Maggie and Cal in the center.) Now more complications (personal and medical) pile up, in a show that manages to remain mostly sunny and likable Read more…

It’s been a four-year plunge into family fantasy

Surveying the twisty history of “The Way Home,” Andie MacDowell offered an understatement.
“This was a reach for Hallmark,” she said.
And then some. The show — starting its fourth and final season on the Hallmark Channel — has time-travel and a magic pond. Hallmark doesn’t even have a card for that.
But here “Way Home” (shown here) is, at 9 p.m. Sundays, starting April 19.This season, it even has Del (MacDowell) jump back a century, to the 1920s. Read more…

Best-bets for April 19: modern scheme, long-ago strife

1) “The Audacity,” 9 p.m., AMC, rerunning at 10:20. As the opener ended last week, Duncan (Billy Magnussen, right) grasped at a scheme. His tech company was crumbling, but he had caught his therapist using her clients (including Zach Galifianakis, left) to fuel insider-training. Now he wants her to feed tips to him — if he can find her. Meanwhile, their teens struggle. It’s a brilliant episode, deftly blending satire and drama. Read more…

Week’s top-10 for April 20: finales, opener, Earth Day

1) “Matlock” season-finale, 9-11 p.m. Thursday, CBS. It may be a long time before we see some more new episodes: “Matlock” is this year’s first CBS drama to wrap its season … and it won’t be on the fall schedule, waiting until mid-season. For now, Matty and colleagues (shown here) are close to nailing Senior, until a hurdle appears. Also, they have two new cases in court. Read more…

Best-bets for April 18: glory of basketball and nature

1) Basketball, 8:30 p.m. ET, ABC, with pre-game at 8. It’s opening day of the pro playoffs. Amazon Prime — which aired the “play-in” portion this week — has games at 1, 3:30 and 6. Then ABC has Kevin Durant’s Rockets (shown here) and LeBron James’ Lakers, which finished 5th and 4th in the 15-team Western Conference. On Sunday, games will be on ABC in the afternoon, NBC at night. Read more…

CBS’ fall line-up: Some familiar shows must wait

Some familiar CBS shows will be on the shelf this fall.
When the new season starts, don’t look for “Matlock” … or “Ghosts” (shown here) … or “NCIS: Sydney.” All will be waiting for mid-season spots.
For that matter, don’t expect “DMV” or “Watson”; they’ve been canceled.
Replacing them, for now, will be shows from familiar sources: A comedy from the “Ghosts” producers, a lawyer show from the “Elsbeth” producers, another “NCIS” show and the return of “Harlan Coben’s Final Twist,” which had a brief run this winter. Read more…

TV is ready for a big, busy Earth Day

Each year, a few TV networks remind us that Earth Day is still important.
There is, after all, still an Earth; there is a day (April 22) to celebrate it. And there are gifted filmmakers, with high-tech equipment.
So nature shows will abound that day on broadcast (PBS), cable (National Geographic, Nat Geo Wild, Animal Planet) and streaming (everyone).
Here are details. We’ll start with one advance marathon (April 18) and end with a few post-Earth Day shows, plus streamers that are available any time. Other than that, however, everything is on Wednesday, April 22: Read more…

Best-bets for April 17: music masters, movie miser

1) “Now Hear This,” 9 p.m., PBS. This beautifully crafted show — with violinist Scott Yoo (shown here in a previous episode) as host and sometimes-performer — finds fresh ways to visit music masters. Last week was Brahms and European elegance; now it’s Scott Joplin and mid-America. We hear dazzling bits of ragtime piano and much more — including a 12-piece orchestra in Pennsylvania and a Black-themed opera in Chicago. Read more…

“Doc”: Personal and medical crises blend beautifully

All season, “Doc” has been piling up high-stakes, life-and-death stories.
But in its season-finale (shown here) — 8-10 p.m. Tuesday, April 14, on Fox — it manages to top that. Personal and medical issues interlock neatly.
That’s always at the core of this show. It started with a potent personal story about Dr. Amy Larson (Molly Parker), then thrust her into hospital crises.
Now that peaks. The less you know about the specific plot, the better; instead, here’s some background. Read more…