STATION 19 - ÒAshes, AshesÓ - The 118 and Tommy are presented with the Medal of Valor for their work on the cruise ship rescue. Meanwhile, Hen and Karen encounter an unforeseen hurdle in their foster care journey, while EddieÕs emotional affair develops further. THURSDAY, MAY 23 (8:00-9:00 p.m. EDT) on ABC. (Disney/Chris Haston) BORIS KODJOE, CHRISTY MEYERS, AZIE TESFAI

Best-bets for May 30: “Station 19” goes out blazing

1) “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19” finales, 9 and 10 p.m., ABC. Last week, the Station 19 crew fought a wildfire roaring toward Seattle. Now the “Grey’s” doctors face an overload of burn and smoke victims; then the firefighters and paramedics continue their struggle (shown here). That wraps the seventh and final season for “Station 19”; “Grey’s” will be back for its 21at. Read more…

1) “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19” finales, 9 and 10 p.m., ABC. Last week, the Station 19 crew fought a wildfire roaring toward Seattle. Now the “Grey’s” doctors face an overload of burn and smoke victims; then the firefighters and paramedics continue their struggle (shown here). That wraps the seventh and final season for “Station 19”; “Grey’s” will be back for its 21at.

2) “9-1-1” season-finale, 10 p.m., ABC. It’s been a perilous little season for Bobby and Athena. That started with them on a luxury liner that was sinking; now their home has burned. As tonight begins, his fate is uncertain and she’s trying to find the truth. And yes, the show will be back in the fall.

3) “Ghosts,” 8-10 p.m., CBS. Here’s a joy ride through some of the season’s key episodes: The season-opener, trying to figure which ghost was zoomed to the next world … The second episode, with Sasappis entering dreams … The fourth (and best), mixing Halloween and the arrival of Pete’s wife … And the eighth, in which we learned the ghosts were wrong in that first one.

4) “Elsbeth,” 10 p.m., CBS. Reruns of this fun show will stay at 10 p.m. today, then move up to 9 next Thursday. In this one, a well-liked plastic surgeon has been killed; Elsbeth’s suspicions turn to his boss, played by Gina Gershon.

5) “The Front Page” (1974), 8 p.m. ET (1974), Turner Classic Movies. Fresh from Chicago’s hard-scrabble newspapera, Ben Hecht and Charles MacArtur filled a play with colorful characters and torrid dialog. It reached Broadway three tiimes and became this fun film with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. A 1931 version ia at 10 p.m., with loose adaptations at midnight (1940) and 2 a.m. (1988).
— Mike Hughes, TV America

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