1) “A Capitol Fourth,” 8 p.m. Tuesday, PBS, rerunning at 9:30. Each year, this offers a rich tapestry of music, plus fireworks (shown here). This time, the fiery finish will include Charles Esten (“Nashville”) singing “Let Freedom Ring.” The night also has Chicago, Boyz II Men, Babyface, Belinda Carlisle, Renee Fleming and Maddie & Tae, plus Broadway — the cast of Neil Diamond’s “A Beautiful Noise” and a Tina Turner tribute from Adrienne Warren, who played her onstage.
2) “Fireworks Spectacular,” 8 p.m. Tuesday, NBC; highlights rerun from 10-11 p.m. While PBS celebrates in Washington, D.C., NBC does the same in New York. There, Macy’s plans to explode 60,000 shells, some going as high as 1,000 feet. The music will be from Bebe Rexja, Ja Rule, Ashanti, Jelly Roll and country’s Lainey Wilson. And five weeks before the 50th anniversary of hip hop, LL Cool J performs with DJ Z-Trip and the Roots.
3) Game night season-opener, Sunday, ABC. The final piece of ABC’s summer line-up is ready, with three no-rerun hours. At 8 p.m., “Prank Panel” makes an overprotective dad think his daughter has the world’s worst boyfriend. At 9, Steve Harvey’s “Celebrity Family Feud” includes Gayle King, actress Sophia Bush Hughes and the cast of “Yellowjackets.” At 10, “$100,000 Pyramid” has RuPaul, Loni Love and actors Lauren Lapkus and Steve Schirripa.
4) “SharkFest,” National Geographic Channel. The 36th “Shark Week” starts July 11 on Discovery, but striking first is the 11th “SharkFest.” It will last all month, with 18 hours of reruns each day, plus three (6-9 a.m.) of infomercials and three (8-11 p.m.) new hours. Some 8 p.m. hours will ask if shark attacks are affected by sound (today), weather (Wednesday), color (Thursday) or climate (Friday). At 9 p.m. today is a look at the return of great whites to Cape Cod.
5) “Young Sheldon,” 9 p.m. Wednesday and 8 p.m. Thursday, CBS. Even in summer reruns, this is a ratings success. And this week, it replays two of its best episodes – the ones that followed the birth of Mandy’s baby. On Wednesday, Mandy and Georgie struggle with parenting and Sheldon faces the failure of his database. Missy, as usual, is overlooked. She fumes; then, in the final minutes, she takes action, setting up the excellent episode that reruns Thursday.
6) “The Lincoln Lawyer,” Thursday, Netflix. The first season deftly mixed humor and drama: A frazzled lawyer, sometimes working out of his car, tackled one big case and lots of little ones, helped (or not) by his two ex-wives. Now a 10-part follow-up leads the streaming week. On Friday, Netflix has Adam Devine in the comedy movie, “The Outlaws”; Amazon Prime has Justina Machado in the offbeat gore of the eight-part, “The Horror of Dolores Roach.”
7) “Family Law” season-opener, 8 p.m. Friday, CW. We met Abby as a drunken lawyer; almost disbarred, she had to work for her father and her half-siblings. The result tended to be light and fairly entertaining. Now the second season begins: Abby helps a maybe-widow and her dad tries to broker peace between his girlfriend and his offspring. One daughter, Lucy, is mourning a break-up; another (Abby) has learned her ex-husband continued his affair.
8) “Moonshine” debut, 9 p.m. Friday, CW, and more. As reruns and reality pile up elsewhere, CW’s solution is to grab shows from overseas. Mondays have the British “The Rising” and the Australian “Barons”; Friday goes Canadian, with “Family Law” and this comedy-drama: Inheriting a share of her family’s resort, an architect returns home to Nova Scotia. Jennifer Finnegan stars, with her scheming husband played by real-life spouse Jonathan Silverman.
9) “Dawn,” 8 p.m. Saturday, Lifetime, rerunning at 10. Ever since scoring with “Flowers in the Attic,” Lifetime has savored the grim novels of V.C. Andrews. Now four movies (on consecutive Saturdays) tell of a teen (Brec Bassinger), suddenly encased in wealth and cruelty. Bassinger is subtly excellent (as she was in “Stargirl”), but she’s soon surrounded by characters who are overwritten and/or overacted. Donna Mills is especially inept as a venomous matriarch.
10) “Grantchester” season-opener, 9 p.m. Sunday, PBS. For a moment, Will is at peace. He’s a vicar, married to Bonnie, who is a widowed mom and an atheist. He’s also helping his friend Geordie solve crimes. This first one, a rich man’s death, is mostly complicated by Geordie’s stubborn new boss. It’s a so-so story until the final minutes. Then a sudden jolt changes everything; it propels next week’s terrific hour and four more good ones that follow.