Year: 2023

Best-bets for Oct. 30: It’s a ghastly holiday eve

1) “Ghosts,” 8 and 8:30 p.m., CBS. This likable show finally returns – but only for one night and two reruns. These are the Halloween ones, both excellent, from the first two seasons: Neighborhood kids plan to vandalize the place; the ghosts try to help. Then a séance accidentally brings someone from Hetty’s past (shown here). After that, be patient: Tentative plans have reruns returning Nov. 16, alongside the original, British version of the show. Read more…

She went from village hall to Sting/hip hop impact

Like many small-town kids, Kate Prince dabbled in dance and music.
In a village hall in England, she tried ballet and tap and modern dance. In her family’s garage, she played an electric keyboard, mastering a Sting song at 11.
“‘Every Breath You Take’ is the first song I learned to play fairly well,” she said, in a Zoom press conference with Sting.
Lots of kids might try such things, but Prince never let up. Now, 38 years later, PBS has “Message in a Bottle” (shownhere) her dance piece done to the music of Sting. That’s 9 p.m. Nov. 3 on “Great Performances,” which a week earlier (Oct. 27) has a more-traditional dance concert by the New York City Ballet. Read more…

Best-bets for Oct. 29: “Billions” ends, but “Simpsons” are eternal

1) “The Simpsons,” 7 and 8 p.m., Fox. Most years, this is the night for a new “Treehouse of Horrors” (an example is shown here),with witty and/or gruesome tales. But this year’s episode – two OK stories and then a gem – is delayed until next week. Instead, we get reruns of last year’s “Treehouse” (including a charming anime tale) and “Bob’s Burgers” (ominous orchard trip) at 7 and 7:30. Then a new “Simpsons” has a “documentary” about Mr. Burns and a young woman’s start-up scheme. Read more…

Week’s top-10 for Oct. 30: Halloween, Earth and baseball

1) “The Simpsons,” 8 p.m. Sunday, Fox. Once a year, “Simpsons” offers a “Treehouse of Horror,” with three tales that are sometimes witty, sometimes gory, always odd and imaginative. The first 32, plus a special, rerun Tuesday from 7:30 a.m. to midnight; No. 33 reran last Sunday and No. 34 (shown here) debuts Sunday (Nov. 5). Its first two tales are fairly good (and quite gory), but the third one is the real gem, offering a world in which everyone has Homer-ic habits. Read more…

Best-bets for Oct. 28: “SNL” and a sports overload

1) “Saturday Night Live,” 11:29 p.m., NBC. After starting the season with high-profile hosts (Pete Davidson and Bad Bunny), “SNL” goes the opposite way. Nate Bargatze (shown here), 44, is a good-natured comedian once described in an Atlantic article as “the nicest man in stand-up.” He hosts, with the Foo Fighters as music guests. The season’s first “SNL” was so-so (despite Davidson), but the second had sharp sketches, three of them mainly in Spanish. Read more…

Best-bets for Oct. 27: baseball or ballet

1) World Series begins, 8:03 p.m. ET, Fox, with pre-game at 7. Baseball finally gets the spotlight, with the Texas Rangers (shown here) hosting the Arizona Diamondbacks. That repeats Saturday, moves to Arizona on Monday through Wednesday, then (if needed) returns to Texas on Nov. 3-4. Todayt, its competition includes college football (Florida Atlantic-Charlotte, 7:30 ET, ESPN2) and a terrific baseball movie (“A League of Their Own,” 1992, 1 and 10 p.m., E).
Read more…

Beat-bets for Oct. 26: transplanted drama and comedies

1) “Transplant,” 9 p.m., NBC. Dr. Bashir Hamed is used to obstacles. After helping rebels in Syria, he reached Canada with his sister. Now his friends face steep trouble, both back home and at the hospital where he works. This hour is stuffed with physical and emotional pain. Bash finds frustration (his boss bars him from surgery) and joy: He finally has a love interest — Mags (they’re shown here), an intense doctor who is his opposite in many ways. Read more…

Best-bets for Oct. 25: a mixed night for new dramas

1) “Sullivan’s Crossing,” 8 p.m., CW. This drama is sometimes as gentle and peaceful as its Nova Scotia setting. Last week, however, ended with a jolt: Two college guys were with a teen girl, when one accidentally shot Frank; they grabbed the girl and ran. That story wraps up now, leaving more room for the main plot, which is fairly good: A big-city surgeon, facing legal troubles, has retreated to the campgrounds where her father and Cal (Chad Michael Murray) and others cling to secrets. Read more…

Switching to Spanish, “SNL” soars

In the 953 “Saturday Night Live” episodes, the hosts have ranged afar.
They’ve gone from 7-year-old Drew Barrymore to 88-year-old Betty White. They’ve included actors, singers, comedians and Elon Musk, plus presidential candidates, a president’s son, a presidential spokesman and Miskell Spillman, 80, who said she needed one more thrill in life; she would have another 14 years to savor it.
Despite all the differences, most had a common thread – the English language. That sort of changed Saturday (Oct. 21), with Bad Bunny (shown here with Pedro Pascal) as host. Read more…

Best-bets for Oct. 24: emotional dancing, native innovation

1) “Dancing With the Stars,” 8-10 p.m., ABC and Disney+. We can expect a night of strong emotion. As a tribute to Len Goodman, the long-time judge who died in April at 78, the pro dancers perform to “Moon River.” Then contestants choose songs from key years in their lives. That ranges from recent (songs by Billie Eilish and Ed Sheeran) to Barry Williams (shown here), 69, dancing to “Born to be Wild,” which came out in 1968, just before he joined the Brady Bunch. Read more…