Monthly Archives: June 2023

The Entertainment Forecast

June 30 – July 6, 2023

‘Tough as Nails’ goes north, 4th of July TV specials & where serial killers hide their murderous misdeeds

Meet the competitors for this season’s ‘Tough as Nails.’

FRIDAY, June 30
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan
John Krasinski returns to the role of the scrappy super sleuth in the fourth and final season of the action-packed drama series (Prime Video).

Nimona
A knight in a futuristic medieval world is framed for a crime he didn’t commit, and a mischievous shape-shifting teen helps him in this animated fantasy series with voices of Riz Ahmed and Chloë Grace Martinez (Netflix).

SATURDAY, July 1
Buried in the Backyard
Where do serial killers hide their victims? Many times, it’s where they never anticipate their misdeeds will be discovered…or uncovered. Season two of the true-crime docuseries returns tonight. Bring your shovel! (8 p.m., Oxygen).

Brandi Carlile: In the Canyon Haze—Live From Laurel Canyon
Well, the title just about says it all. Not all you have to do is watch and listen as the former lead singer of the Go-Gos performs songs that shaped her life in this homage to the vibrant Hollywood Hills music scene (8 p.m., HBO).

SUNDAY, July 2
Tough as Nails
Who’s got what it takes to tough it out on this hit primetime competition that also a salute to the working class? Phil Keoghan returns as host for the new season, this time staged in Canada (8 p.m., CBS).

MONDAY, July 3
A Story of Bones
Documentary (above) about the discovery in Africa of an unmarked mass burial ground of an estimated 9,000 formerly enslaved people (check local listings, PBS).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Revisit a “golden age” of TV in this flashback to the year color came to television in a major way—the watershed moment in which all three major networks broadcast every show on primetime “in living color.” Primetime 1966-1967 (McFarland) is an affectionate, wide-ranging look at the wide spectrum of shows that aired that momentous year, including classic programs about superheroes, sci-fi, spies, World War II, sitcoms and cops.

TUESDAY, July 4
A Capitol Fourth
For the 43rd year, the grounds of the U.S. Capitol will ring with the patriotic sounds of the 4th of July in this primetime special (8 p.m., PBS).

The Fourth in America
Fireworks and music are on tap in this Independence Day celebration, featuring performances by Alanis Morrisette, Darius Rucker, Demi Lovato, Duran Duran, Flo Rida, Sheryl Crow, the Zac Brown Band and more (7 p.m., CNN).

WEDNESDAY, July 5
Human Footprint
No, we’re not talking tracking mud into your house. But in another way, well, yeah. This new docuseries explores the many ways humans have left our “marks” on our planet, including putting into motion the global mechanics of climate change (9 p.m., PBS).

CMA Fest: 50 Years of Fan Fair
New original documentary tells the story of Nashville’s long-running country music festival, with archival performances and commentary from Vince Gill, Luke Bryan, Dolly Parton, Lainey Wilson, Carrie Underwood and dozens of other stars who’ve performed at the event originally known as Fan Fair, so named because of its former “home” at the state fairgrounds (Hulu).

THURSDAY, July 6
Call Her King
A judge (Naturi Naughton from Power Book II: Ghost) who has just sentenced a man (Jason Mitchell) to death suddenly finds herself a hostage when his brother hijacks her courtroom in this gripping original movie drama. Think Die Hard in a courthouse (BET+).

The Lincoln Lawyer
Season two begins of the streaming spinoff about a lawyer (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) who runs his Los Angeles practice from the back seat of his Lincoln (Netflix).

Shawn White: The Last Run
Four-part documentary spotlights the life and career of the three-time Olympic gold medalist and an icon of snowboarding and skateboarding (Max).

The Entertainment Forecast

June 23 -June 29, 2023

A ‘Jaws’ marathon, a “new” national anthem & Idris Idra gets hijacked!

You may need a bigger boat (!) to watch the original Jaws and all its sequels!

FRIDAY, June 23
World’s Best
Hip-hop musical comedy adventure flick about a 12-year-old genius mathematician who discovers a surprising new talent as a rapping superstar (Disney+).

Cinammon
Original network film stars Hailey Kilgore (above) as a small-town gas attendant whose life is rocked after a fatal crime. With Damon Wayans and 1970s icon Pam Grier (Tubi).

SATURDAY, June 24
Keyshia Cole: This is My Story
The Grammy-nominated singer/songwriter makes her acting debut portraying herself in this biopic about her life and career, which started in Oakland, Calif., and led her singing backup for M.C. Hammer, releasing five albums and starring in two TV reality series (8 p.m., Lifetime).

SUNDAY, June 25
Jaws Marathon
Time to get back in the water with the most a marathon of the iconic shark flick of all time and its sharp-toothed spawn, Jaws 2, Jaws 3 and Jaws the Revenge (begins 8;45 a.m., TNT). 

Mini Reni
Joanna Gaines (above) and her team downsize their scale and budgets to renovate three rooms in an outdated home in one week and for under $15,000 (9 p.m., Magnolia).

MONDAY, June 26
After Sherman
Filmmaker Jon-Sesrie Goff returns to the coastal South Carolina land his family purchased after emancipation in this exploration of Black experience, trauma and wisdom (check local listings, PBS).

Cannes Confidential
Six-part international crime series, shot on location in France, stars Lucie Lucas and Jamie Bamber about a no-nonsense detective and a charming conman (Acorn TV).

TUESDAY, June 27
Happiness for Beginners
Ellie Kempler (from The Office and The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt) stars in this new series (above) as a newly divorced woman who joins a back-country survival hike on the Appalachian Trail with a group of oddball strangers in hopes of learning how to live—and love—again (Netflix).

Casa Susanna
This PBS-produced documentary is about an underground 1960s network in the Catskills region of New York state for transgender women and cross-dressing men (9 p.m., PBS).

BRING IT HOME

Find out about the inspiring life and astonishing career of one of the greatest boxers of all time in Big George Foreman (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment), a drama about his journey from an impoverished childhood to the title of world heavyweight champion, and then into the pulpit. Khris Davis (Judas and the Black Messiah) plays Foreman.

The hit horror franchise moves out of the woods and into the ‘hoods in Evil Dead Rise (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment), a terrifying tale of two estranged sisters (Lily Sullivan and Alyssa Sutherland) whose urban family reunion is undermined by flesh-eating demons.

WEDNESDAY, June 28
Anthem
What would happen if Grammy-winning producer and a film composer took a journey across America to create a “new” national anthem, one as if it had been written today? Find out in this probing documentary that rei-magines “The Star Spangled Banner” for a modern era (Hulu).

Hijack
Idris Elba is one unhappy air passenger in this new thriller series (above) about the passengers on a hijacked international airplane flight and people on the ground working to avert a disaster (Apple TV+).

THURSDAY, June 29
Secret Chef
It sounds nuts, but here it is: Ten contestants from all walks of life are isolated in an underground kitchen labyrinth connected by a series of conveyor belts, where they perform various cooking challenges, guided by an animated “talking hat” on a retro TV screen. Yep (Hulu).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

When is a monster more than just a monster? That’s not a riddle, it’s the theme of Dark Dreams 2.0 (McFarland), in which author Charles Derry unpacks the real-world fears, tears and terrors that have shaped the evolution of horror movies for more than half a century—from anxieties over the atomic bomb to the Cold War, sexual liberation and other fear factors that have fueled the work of filmmakers Alfred Hitchcock, Brian de Palma, George Romero and many others.

Generation Gap
Kelly Ripa returns for season two of this game show (below) in which teams of older adults and their grandkids compete by answering pop-culture questions (9 p.m., ABC).

Forever Young

Harrison Ford returns for one final ‘Raiders’ romp, with an extra dose of movie magic

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
Starring Harrison Ford, Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Mads Mikkelsen
Directed by James Mangold
PG-13

In theaters Friday, June 30, 2023

More than 40 years ago, we sat on the edge of our seats watching Indiana Jones outrun a big rolling boulder, the bravura opening of Raiders of the Lost Ark that became an iconic representation for a new, blockbuster action-adventure movie template.

There aren’t any giant, bowling-ball booby traps in Dial of Destiny, the fifth film in the Indiana Jones canon, but Indy is still running—all over the globe, still hunting for historical treasure, still afraid of snakes, still dodging bullets and still fighting Nazis.

This time, it’s the late 1960s, some 20 years after the events of Raiders. Neil Armstrong has just walked on the moon, America has won the space race, and there’s a scramble to locate the missing half of a doodad called the Antikythera, a dial-like “computing” device found in wreckage of an ancient sunken ship off the coast of Greece. What’s so special about it? Well, during World War II, Nazisbelieved it could forecast rips in the fabric of time, openings that would allow someone to change the way history unfolds. A dial of destiny, indeed, if only they can find the missing part…

And changing the course of history probably isn’t a good idea, especially when Nazis are involved.

Harrison Ford, just about to turn 81, makes what is intended to be his final appearance as the college professor turned rip-roaring archeologist swashbuckler. He’s helped along in the rip-roar department by some high-tech movie magic that convincingly de-ages his character with “deep-fake” cinematic wizardry, for flashback scenes in which he looks, well, like he looked in Raiders of the Lost Ark. Forget Botox—movie magic is the way to go.

Phoebe Walker-Bridge, of Fleabag TV fame, adds some new spice and sass as Helena Shaw, the now-grown daughter of Indy’s late friend and colleague (Toby Jones).  Mads Mikkelsen proves once again he can be a dandy bad guy; I’m still smarting from remembering what a ballbuster he was with Daniel Craig in Casino Royale more than 15 years ago. Antonio Banderas has a brief role as a Greek undersea diver, one of Indy’s old friends, about as crusty as the barnacles on his boat. There are a couple of other returning characters—major and minor, and one is a real doozie—and a lot of movie callbacks to things that happened in previous adventures.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge plays Helena Shaw.

It’s a full-fledged new Indy adventure, for sure, but also a look-back tribute—a closing-chapter monument to Indiana Jones, and Harrison Ford, as one of moviedom’s most recognizable screen heroes, taking on bad guys in a dusty fedora, with a trusty bullwhip.

This is the first Indy flick not directed by Steven Spielberg or produced by George Lucas. Instead, the reins have been handed over to James Mangold, who has certainly proven he knows he’s doing, with a directorial resume that includes 3:10 to Yuma, Identity, Ford v. Ferrari, Walk the Line and a pair of Wolverine X-Men films. It’s hard to follow Spielberg (duh!), but Mangold keeps the pace moving briskly and with stylish confidence, though often at a frantic pace with nearly nonstop, all-over-the-place action that becomes a chaotic wash of blurry, noisy CGI.

Indy fights on top of a train speeding through the Swiss Alps, gallops at full speed on a hijacked police horse into a New York City subway tunnel, tangles with a nest of icky eels at the bottom of the Aegean Sea, jumps out of airplane, and races through the narrow streets of Morocco on a ramshackle tuk-tuk. Things rarely sit still, and as soon as they do, they’re off and running again.

The movie picks up even more momentum toward the end, when it almost jumps the shark in a loopy battlefield sequence that veers into the realm of nearly comedic impossibility. (At one point, I wondered if Bill and Ted’s time-traveling pay-phone booth might have landed just offscreen, with Abe Lincoln, Billy the Kid and Socrates aboard.) But no matter what the movie throws at him, and at its audience, Ford is gung-ho and all-in, even if Indy admits the years, and the mileage, have taken their toll.

As the Indiana Jones films do, the Dial of Destiny gives “real history” a rowdy, rollicking, what-if spin. Here, it’s a former Nazi scientist who’s been helping America launch its space program (yes, that really happened) and an artifact that truly does exist (and is on display today in museum in Athens). But what if that Nazi wasn’t so former, and what if his intention was to use that hunk of antiquity to go back and have another crack at Dur Fuhrer’s plans to conquer the world?

And what if…well, what if we didn’t have Indiana Jones movies around anymore?

At one point, Indy tells some noisy hippie neighbors to turn down their loud music. The song they’re blaring is The Beatles’ “Magical Mystery Tour,” and it feels like a musical nod to the movie magic that brings Harrison Ford back for one final, blowout romp, letting us relive his younger years, recall his Indiana Jones exploits, reconnect him with a rush of his past adventures, and ultimately bid him a fond, sentimental farewell with a warmly nostalgic salute.

—Neil Pond

The Entertainment Forecast

June 16 – June 22

The time-traveling lovers of ‘Outlander,’ ‘Walking Dead’ bite into the Big Apple & Robert Downey Jr.’s auto obsession

FRIDAY, June 16
Outlander
The fan-favorite drama based on the historical-fiction novel series by Diana Gabaldon returns for season seven tonight (above), starring Catriona Balfe as a time-traveling WWII nurse who falls in love with a dashing Highland warrior (Sam Heughan) from another era (8 p.m., Starz).

Extraction 2
Chris Hemsworth is back in the slam-bam action franchise as Rake, a black ops mercenary tasked with another deadly mission—to rescue the family of a ruthless Soviet gangster (Netflix). 

The Righteous Gemstones
The profanely funny TV-evangelist family returns in this hell-aciously hilarious series starring Danny McBride, Edi Patterson, John Goodman and Adam Devine (HBO).

SATURDAY, June 17
John Early: Now More Than Ever
In his first comedy special, the comedian lays on the laughs in a spoof of rock documentaries, performs stand-up riffs and song covers from Britney Spears, Neil Young and more, and peels back the show-biz curtain on Spinal Tap-inspired backstage sketches (10 p.m., HBO).

Exposing Parchman
Documentary brings to light the dark history, deplorable conditions and distressing abuses at the Mississippi prison known as Parchman (8 p.m., A&E).

SUNDAY, June 18
Walking Dead: Dead City
It’s hard to fathom how a franchise built on anything dead can have so much life. Here’s the latest spinoff in the Walking Dead zombie-verse, starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Laurie Cohen as survivalists fighting the undead in the decaying urban setting of an apocalyptic Manhattan (9 p.m., AMC).

Beachside Brawl
Cooks from the East and West meet on the sand to determine which ones—and which side of the country—does coastal food the best. Celebrity chef and restauranteur Antonia Lafosa hosts the new competition (10 p.m., Food Network).

MONDAY, June 19
Juneteenth: A Global Celebration of Freedom
Live concert event from the Greek Theater in Los Angeles, timed to the federal holiday commentating the official end of slavery in America, features an array of Black artists and performers (8 p.m., CNN and OWN).  

The Great American Recipe
Season two of the eight-part cooking competition (above)—with judges Leah Cohen, Graham Elliott, Tiffany Derry and Alejandra Ramos—celebrates the multiculturalism that makes American food unique and iconic (9 p.m., PBS)

TUESDAY, June 20
Mama Bears
Documentary about mothers of gay, trans and gender-fluid children, who fearlessly advocate for their kids (10 p.m., PBS).

WEDNESDAY, June 21
LA Fire & Rescue
New docuseries examines the inner workings of the Los Angeles County Fire Department as it works to protect the citizens and the property of an area containing 4 million residents and 59 different municipalities (NBC).

Secret Invasion
In the latest Avengers franchise flick (which is skipping theatrical release to go straight to streaming), Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) leads a mission to save the Earth from extermination by a sneaky group of extraterrestrial shape-shifters. All in a day’s work in the world of Marvel (Disney+).

THURSDAY, June 22

The Bear
Get ready to roll up your sleeves and return to kitchen for season two of this acclaimed drama (above) about restaurant workers in Chicago trying to turn a greasy spoon into a golden goose (Hulu).

Downey’s Dream Cars
New streaming docuseries on Discovery’s new Max platform follows actor Robert Downey Jr., his passion for classic cars and his work to combat climate change by retro-fitting them to make them “cleaner” and more fuel efficient (Max).

Back to the Future

Two lives connect with ancient mystical undertones in this love story that’s so much more than a love story

Teo Yoo and Greta Lee play childhood besties who meet again, years later, in ‘Past Lives.’

Past Lives
Starring Greta Lee, Teo Yoo and John Magaro
Directed by Celine Song
Rated PG-13

In wide release Friday, June 23

A little Korean girl and a little Korean boy are schoolmates who grow up together, move apart and finally reunite many, many years later in this tender, emotionally resonant slice of life relationship drama that slices into life choices and the unseen, mystical and mysterious ties that bind.

Moon-Seung-ah leaves Korea with her family and changes her name to Nora, eventually working as a playwright in New York City, fixing her eyes on a Nobel Prize, a Pulitzer, maybe even a Tony. Hae Sung stays behind in Seoul, where he puts in his mandatory time in military service, then settles into adult life as an unlucky-in-love engineer.  

Celine Song, herself a playwright who immigrated as a child with her family from Korea to Toronto, now makes her bracingly confident, immensely impressive debut as a film director in this wonderfully nuanced, decades-spanning saga of connected, intersecting lives and a mojo referred to Korean culture as In-Yun, a force of destiny that brings people together in ways that transcend time, reaching deep even into their previous lives.

The movie is full of soft textures Song uses to help tell the story, subtle visual enhancements to the existential epic—a soggy New York skyline, a glowing silent sunrise, gentle breezes stirring window curtains, reflections in a puddle. It’s as if the characters are, indeed, players in a larger drama, a force of nature writ large in the elemental world around them.  

Greta Lee (from the TV series The Morning Show) is magnificent as grownup Nora, who settles into married life in the East Village life with a writer (John Magaro) she meets at a creative residency retreat. (The marriage, to an American, helped fast-track her immigration card, we learn.) When Hae Sung (Teo Yoo) comes to the Big Apple for a visit, the two Korean “kids” find themselves face-to-face, now as grownups, for the first time in 24 years. And the ol’ In-Yun fires up once again.

This isn’t a yarn of torrid passion, galloping emotion or clashing romantic rivalry. It’s not even really a conventional love story; it’s deeper and more profound than that. There are far more chaste hugs than kisses (of which I counted exactly one). There are no heroes, no villains. But you’ll find your own heart filling, swelling and yearning in this thought-provoking, full-of-feels tale about the choices we make, the choices that make us, what we did, what we didn’t do, and what we might have done. It’s about the yin and yang of everything that ultimately becomes the life we lead, where we end up, who we end up with, and who we turn out to be.

And what is love, anyway? “It’s complicated,” Hae Sung says at one point. It is, indeed.

During one scene, when Nora is workshopping a play she’s written, an actor reads her dialogue for a scene about crossing, passing from one thing into another, like walking over a bridge—or immigrating across an ocean. Some crossings, the actor says, cost more than others; you might get something you desire by making the crossing, but you’ll desire, even more, something you left behind. And “some crossings,” she says, “you pay for your entire life.” It’s certainly no coincidence that Nora and Hae Sung’s stateside reunion brings them underneath the towering Brooklyn Bridge, a large, looming representation of time and distance for them both.

John Magaro plays Nora’s American husband, Arthur.

Nora thinks about what she gained, the price she’s paid, when she moved away and made herself over in a new, Westernized world. She loves her husband, Arthur, who accepts the improbable, epic story of which he’s clearly become a part, but he frets that he might be fated to be on the outside looking in on a relationship that’s deeper than he can fathom. Hae Sung wonders if he will keep intersecting with his childhood friend, and perhaps his true eternal soulmate, in the future.

What does your future hold? Who have you met in the past, in memories that somehow keep coming back to the present? Is coincidence predestined? What price have you paid for the crossings, the changes you’ve made in your life? Who do you love? Past Lives will make you think—and perhaps make you realize that life, in all its rewards and even disappointments, can be so much bigger, and richer, than we can even imagine.

—Neil Pond

Zipping & Zapping

DC’s fleet-footed superhero finally gets his own flick, but another actor nearly steals the show

The Flash
Starring Ezra Miller, Michael Keaton, Ben Affleck & Sasha Calle
Directed by Andy Muschietti
PG-13

In theaters Friday, July 16

For a movie about the speediest superhero ever, The Flash took its slow, sweet time getting here.

Discussion about a standalone movie for the popular DC Comics character began in the 1980s but stalled and dead-ended many times over the decades, with various directors, writers and actors becoming attached and then detached. Finally, Ezra Miller (from The Perks of Being a Wallflower) was cast, making ramp-up appearances in a handful of interconnected, big-screen “DC Extended Universe” romps, including The Justice League, Suicide Squad and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.

Now the fleet-footed, red-suited dasher finally gets his own full-blown flick. How fast is the Flash, the alter ego of the guy named Barry Allen? Well, he runs so freaking fast, some crazy, far-out things can happen. And even when he’s not running, he’s moving fast—he can make the molecules in his body vibrate at such unimaginable velocity, they maneuver around other molecules and then rearrange, letting him pass through solid objects. He’s so fast, he’s faster than time; and he finds out that when you outrun the speed of light, time-traveling can be a real head trip.

When the Flash goes back in time, it unhinges nearly everything, affecting the present and the future—you know, the old Butterfly Effect. He encounters an alternative version of himself and multiple incarnations of Batman (hello, Michael Keaton, Ben Affleck and another well-known actor whose cameo I won’t spoil). There’s the return of a nasty supervillain bent on humanity’s annihilation; Superman’s cousin (Sasha Calle), Supergirl, gets in on the action; Wonder Woman (Gal Godot) also shows up. And yet another DC superhero splashes around in the after-credits coda. There’s a swirling time-loop metaverse carousel, in which just about everyone in the DC pantheon show ups; who’s your favorite Superman? And Barry is surprised to learn his Butterfly Effect even means that someone other than Michael J. Fox has become Marty McFly in Back to the Future.   

The Flash is a jubilantly overcrowded, hyper-bloated superhero sci-fi carnival ride that gives a flip, fun, wildly inventive spin to the ol’ comicdom nostalgia wheel. It’s got a boatload of superstar cameos, overlapping timelines and a gleefully bombastic smorgasbord blowout of boom-boom-y, bang-bangy CGI spectacle. At the screening I attended, in a jam-packed theater where every seat was occupied, three giddy fanboys directly in front of me were so amped by things they were seeing, I thought they might pee their pants. Heck, they probably did.

There are some genuinely bravo sequences, like the dazzling 15-minute opener in which the Flash zip-zaps around saving babies tumbling out the window in a high-rise hospital catastrophe. (A “baby shower,” get it?) Director Andy Muschetti (whose other films include the psychological horror tale Mama, with Jessica Chastain, and two It scare fests) inventively depicts the mind-warping speed at which Flash can zoom, superheating the air around him with what looks like a kajillion volts of sizzling electricity. There are plenty of knowing nods, in-jokes and callbacks for diehard DC fans. One of the side effects of timeline tweaking and metaverse hopping is how a character (like Michael Shannon’s megalomaniacal General Zod) can be dispatched or destroyed in a previous movie, but fully alive and creating more comic-book havoc in another. (Don’t try to overthink it; it’s a thing.) And I particularly liked a comedic moment when Batman gets tangled in Wonder Woman’s Lasso of Truth.

The plot swirls around twenty-something Barry trying to prevent the death of his mother (a wonderful Maribel Verdú), which happened when he was a child, causing the wrongful incarceration of his father (Ron Livingston, a few miles on down the road from Office Space). It also involves a trip to icy Siberia, where Clark Kent/Superman is supposedly being held prisoner by terrorists. And pasta plays a key role, in a pivotal (recurring) event as well as a scene in which it’s used to explain how time itself is flexible, not linear, and can bend, overlap and interloop, like wiggly spaghetti noodles in bowl.

Ironically in a movie called The Flash, about the Flash, and with Ezra Miller pulling double duty (as two versions of the character), it’s someone else that damn near steals the show. Fans whooped as Michael Keaton dons the Dark Knight’s cloak for the first time since 1992 and swoops in to become an essential part of the story. I must say, it’s supercool to see the Batmobile, the Batplane and the Batcycle roaring into action out of the ol’ Batcave again. And Sasha Collie (who got her start on TV’s The Young and the Restless) gives a fine, fierce—and memorably strong—performance as a broody, totally kick-ass Supergirl.   

There’s also a bit of heart and a pithy mantra about how some problems can’t be solved, even by time-traveling superheroes. “The scars we have make us who we are,” Batman tells the Flash. “Don’t relive your past; live your life.”

Speaking of problems and scars, Ezra Miller has a few, including relatively recent arrests for disorderly conduct and assault. The actor—who identifies as nonbinary and uses gender-neutral pronouns—has also admitted to mental health issues, been charged with harassment and accused of grooming. As good as Miller has been in supporting roles as the Flash, and now with his own movie, there’s been some buzz that DC might not want him—oops, I mean them—for future projects.

So, the Flash might be super speedy, but it might not be fast enough, or go far enough, to outdistance Miller’s troubled past—which might become the one thing that can catch up with a superhero who can outrun just about anything.

FUN FACT: In Steven Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can, Leonardo DiCaprio’s crafty teenage forger and impersonator cheekily uses the pseudonym of Barry Miller—because if anyone can keep ahead of the FBI agent (Tom Hanks) always hot on his trail, it would be the Flash. 

—Neil Pond

The Entertainment Forecast

June 9 – June 15

Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, Big Apple murders & British working-class chaps disrobing…again!

Jesse Garcia stars in ‘Flamin’ Hot,’ the true story of a popular snack.

FRIDAY, June 19
Flamin’ Hot have art
How hot are flamin’ Hot Cheetos? Hot enough that this movie dramatizes the inspiring story of the spicy snack’s founder, a Frito Lay janitor who channeled his Mexican American heritage to upend the food business with a fiery new treat (Hulu).

I Am Legend
Watch (or re-watch) Will Smith as the only living New Yorker who’s not a monster-fied mutant in this latest film adaptation of the Richard Matheson apocalyptic sci-fi thriller, previously made into a pair of other movies starring Charlton Heston (1974) and Vincent Price (1964). It’s the second part of a double “Friday Night Vibes” double feature with Avengers: End Game (7 p.m., TBS)

SATURDAY, June 10
New York Homicide
Catering to TV viewer’s seemingly insatiable appetite for true crime, season two of this docuseries continues its examination of some of the most troubling murders in the Big Apple (9 p.m., Oxygen).

Build It Forward
Designer Taniya Nayak teams with builder Shane Duffy to surprise outstanding community leaders with home renovations in season two of this series inspired by an outreach program by Lowe’s (6 p.m., HGTV).

SUNDAY, June 11
The Tony Awards
Overture, curtains, lights, this is it, the night of nights. You might remember that as the memorable theme to Bugs Bunny cartoons. But, sorry Bugs, your loony tune won’t be among the showtunes, performances and projects honored tonight at this 76th annual awards event, honoring Broadway’s best and hosted by Ariana Dubose (8 p.m., CBS).

MONDAY, June 12
Hey Yahoo!
Actor Tom Cavanaugh hosts this new game show in which contestants try to correctly fill in the blanks for what people are seeking on Yahoo Search (8 p.m., GSN).

TUESDAY, June 13
Amy Schumer: Emergency Contact
New stand-up special is the third for Schumer (right), the hilariously uncensored Emmy-winning Tony and Golden Globe-nominated actor, filmed on stage at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles (Netflix).

Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta
They’re women, they’re friends, and they’re all involved with Hot ‘Lanta’s hip hop scene. The so-fly docuseries returns tonight with more real-life drama and original castmates—including Spice, Bambi, Rasheeda and Bambi—as well as a trio of newcomers (8 p.m., MTV).

WEDNESDAY, June 14
Our Planet II
The acclaimed nature-documentary series returns to unravel the mysteries of migration with more compelling stories of animals “on the move” across the globe (Netflix).

The Full Monty
New original series follows the same characters from the 1997 movie, now older but living in working-class England, and thinking about putting their saucy strip show on the road again (Hulu).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Religion has always given outliers a bad name, or worse. Pagans (Thames & Hudson) takes a respectful new look at this culture that predates Christianity, looking closely at its objects, artwork, rituals and myths, with eye-opening insights into pagan magic, superstition and the afterlife.

How might you have lived through a doomsday asteroid, being eaten by dinosaurs, the civilization-destroying eruption of Mt. Pompei, or the 1906 San Francisco earthquake? Science and tech writer Cody Cassidy tells you about all those scenarios, and more, in How to Survive History (Penguin), a witty and retro-practical guide to outwitting history’s greatest calamities.

THURSDAY, June 15

Look Into My Eyes
Four-part limited series unfurls the bizarre story of Dr. George Kennedy, whose career as a high school principal (and hypnotist) was derailed after the suspicions deaths of three teenage students (Sundance and AMC+).

60 Days In
Volunteers in North Carolina go undercover into a county detention center to help bring positive changes to the system (9 p.m., A&E).

The Top 5 Eat-ertainment Experiences in Gatlinburg

Come for the mountains, stay for the munchies, the music…and the mermaids! (And respect the bears!)

Blake Shelton performs at Ole Red Gatlinburg.

Some 14 million visitors trek each year to the Great Smoky Mountains—and most of them funnel through Gatlinburg, the bustling tourism hamlet in Tennessee’s southeast corner that’s become the primary gateway to the most-visited national park in America.

And many of those visitors spend time or even drop anchor in Gatlinburg, surrounded on three sides by the natural wonders of the park and filled to the brim with things to see, hear, do…and eat.

Some people just enjoy the scenery—or the distilleries offering moonshine tastings. Others shop for souvenirs and memorabilia, play minigolf, hike, bike or camp, or drive into the Smokies. But everybody eats something, sometime—or a lot of times, which is most of the time in Gatlinburg. In a place with so much to do and see, wouldn’t it be perfect to do and see and eat all in one place? Here are the top “eat-ertainment” experiences you should have on your to-do menu if you’re headed to this unique resort town just under 10 miles away from where superstar Dolly Parton was born and raised.  

Ole Red

As country fans know, this restaurant and live-music venue is themed around the song “Ol’ Red,” the 2001 hit for Blake Shelton. Owned and operated by Ryman Hospitality Properties, it’s part of a growing Ole Red venture branded with Shelton, with other locations in Nashville, Orlando and Tishomingo, Okla., near the entertainer’s home. Gatlinburg’s Ole Red, a double-tiered honky-tonk, offers a “taste” of its superstar namesake with nearly continuous live entertainment, signature drinks, and a full menu of hearty (though perhaps not quite heart-healthy!) appetizers and main courses for lunch or dinner.

There’s a gift shop with all sorts of Blake Shelton merch and other Gatlinburg swag.

And Ole Red is the only place in town with an upside-down tractor hanging from the ceiling. What color? Red, of course.

It’s the top choice in Gatlinburg for hearing live music day or night on a full-scale stage tricked out with a truckload of high-tech AV, while diving into barnyard-sized food and hydrating with Mason Jars full of creative beverages, and perhaps even doing a little boot scootin’ on the dance floor. Sometimes Shelton himself even drops by or calls in to Facetime on the giant screen above the stage, much to the delight everyone who just happen to be there.

On my most recent visit, I noshed on Redneck Nachos (tortilla chips, taco meat, red onions, jalapenos and avocado cream) and a massive platter of Junk Yard Fries (garnished with onion straws, fried jalapenos, pulled pork and garlic parmesan topping), and washed it all down with a Hillbilly Breeze (coconut rum, orange liqueur, tequila and orange juice). There was no room after that for any of the signature main course items, like the Hell Right Burger (with a beef patty, a hot dog and an egg), the Grilled Bacon Wrapped Meatloaf or the Kiss My Grilled Chicken Sammich (with peach jam and barbecue sauce on a potato bun).

I’m a sucker for fruity desserts, so I was sorely tempted by—but resisted—the Mountain Berry Crisp, which incorporates strawberries, blueberries and blackberries into a honey cornbread crumble, topped with ice cream. But that would have hit the bullseye in my sweet spot.

On stage, Louisiana-born singer-songwriter Sara Collins sat with her guitar and performed a sweet selection of ‘70s mellow rock and country-classic covers, interwoven with originals from her new album Roots (to be released June 30). A regular at Ole Red’s, she’s a former contestant on The Voice (season 18) who relocated with her family to the Gatlinburg area four years ago, when she was still in high school. After her midday set, she told me she loves playing Ole Red, but it takes a bit of stage-banter recalibration from all the local gigs at bars and festivals she played back home in Baton Rouge.

“You never know where people are from,” she says, referencing how Gatlinburg draws visitors from across America, and even internationally. “You can’t make jokes about the ‘local’ sports teams.” (Earlier in the day, I’d met a family from Israel, saw a group of women wearing burkas crossing a busy street and shared some morning doughnuts with a vlogger, Sean Hussey, who relocated to Gatlinburg from Rhode Island more than a decade ago and now makes videos as “The Gatlinburg Hussey.”) At Ole Red, Collins avoided sports chitchat but instead cautioned diners to keep their vehicles locked during their visit, because bears that wander into town—with some frequency—have learned how to open unlocked car doors in search of food.

When it launched its Gatlinburg location in 2019, Ole Red was in a league of its own as the only entertainment spot in town with a bona fide superstar connection; the hitmaking, 10-million-selling Shelton was a double-digit CMA Awards winner, and he’d been a coach on TV’s The Voice since the show launched in 2011. (He recently announced he’ll be leaving after 23 seasons to spend more time with Stefani, whom he married in 2021, and her three young sons.)

But now there’s another country-star venue on the Gatlinburg horizon. Jason Aldean—also a country hitmaker, and also Shelton’s good buddy—is readying a new venue that will bear his name just up the street. With six bars on two levels, it will be the second in his expanding entertainment franchise, after the original operation in downtown Nashville. But Ole Red’s Chrisy Lambert, the food and hospitality manager, isn’t fazed by the competition. “It’s going to be a totally different kind of place, with a rooftop bar,” instead of a single larger enclosed showroom like Ole Red, where the music and the munching can go on year-round, rain or shine.

With a red tractor overhead.

Ripley’s Aquarium

It’s already a world-class aqua experience, with sea critters of every shape and size, a glass-bottom boat ride and the world’s longest underwater viewing tunnel. And Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies is the only place in Gatlinburg where you can get something to eat…and then consume it just feet (or even inches!) away from creatures that would probably love to sink their teeth into whatever you’re chewing. You can watch sharks and stingrays swim overhead after you pick up your items from the Feeding Frenzy snack and concession area, with a refreshingly diverse menu that includes burgers (including a veggie option), hotdogs, grilled cheese, chicken fingers, a hummus snack cup, veggie sticks and salad, and more. And it’s the only place in Gatlinburg where—if you get there early enough in the day—you can have breakfast with a mermaid!

Anakeesta

One of Gatlinburg’s newest attractions, this sprawling mountaintop theme park (which opened in 2017) takes its name from a Cherokee Indian word meaning “high ground,” which is also the term given to a geological layer of rock that permeates the Smoky Mountains. It offers activities for all ages, including a zipline, mountain coaster, a catwalk through the hillside canopy of trees, an elaborate play area for kids (or grownups), a 60-foot-tall viewing tower, and a dazzling nighttime display called Astra Lumina. While you’re gaping at the breathtaking eagle’s-eye views of the surrounding scenery, you can snack on ice cream, pies, brownies and other treats, shop for souvenirs or sit down at the Cliff Top restaurant for a full-course meal of barbecue, catfish or burgers. And watch out for bears—they like visiting Anakeesta, too, especially overnight when the area is otherwise closed. (It was, after all, built into what was formerly their exclusive habitat.) When I was there, the Astra Lumina experience was temporarily inoperable; a mama bear and her cubs were blocking one of the walking paths, and park workers were respectfully giving them the right of way. On another visit, the chairlift (which transports visitors up and down the mountain) and the mountain coaster were paused because a black bear was spotted foraging in the area. It’s no surprise one of the areas of Anakeesta is called Black Bear Village.

Fannie Farkle’s

One of Gatlinburg’s oldest attractions on its main-drag “parkway” has been around for more than 40 years. It’s a bustling little amusement center, with loads of arcade games and a small-town “carnival” theme. But its main event is always what’s cookin’ through the front windows as you stroll past. It’s the home of the famous Ogle Dog (named for one of Gatlinburg’s first settler families), foot-long cornmeal weenie feasts that are cooked up street-level, right in front of your eyes. And it’s not an official walk through Gatlinburg unless you’re in range to smell the storefront grill sizzling with onions and peppers, the aromatic garnish for the cheesesteaks and sausage subs. Named for its founder, a former burlesque dancer, Fannie Farkle’s even has small mini-tables lining its outside wall, for standing and snacking on some of the town’s most distinctive dishes.

Ober Mountain

Until just recently, this longstanding alpine hub of activities (it opened in 1972, as transport up to winter skiing) was called Ober Gatlinburg. It’s been renamed in a wave of recent updates, but it’s still the only “tram ride” in town, lifting up to 120 passengers at a time high onto Mount Harrison, where there’s a mountain coaster, an alpine slide, downhill mountain biking, water tubing and snow tubing (in season), a year-round ice-skating rink, souvenir mall and a wildlife-habitat encounter offering up-close visits with bears, otters, foxes, falcons, wildcats and other rescued mountain critters. Then you can take a chairlift even further up the mountain, where the views are spectacular, the air is clean and crystal-clear, and the sounds of a live bluegrass band set the scene May through November. Ober’s restaurant and lounge were closed for renovation when I was there, but snacks elsewhere were plentiful—sandwiches from the Sidewalk Café (overlooking the ice-skating rink), sweets at the Fudge Shop and a selection of coffee and other beverages brewing at the Ski Mountain Grind House. And it’s the only place in town where you can eat, then watch North American river otters gulp down buckets of cut-up fish parts…otherwise unavailable at Ober, um, unless you’re an otter.

The Entertainment Forecast

Friday, June 2 – Thursday, June 9

Ah-nold gets real, Shatner returns to space & dark Duggar Family secrets

The ‘Terminator’ star gets real in his new Netflix series.

FRIDAY, June 2
Searching for Soul Food
The term “soul food” means different things to different people in different places. Celebrity chef Alisha Reynolds travels the world to experience this time-honored ethnic cuisine and its various regional and international incarnations (Apple TV+)

Shooting Stars
Hoops fans will want to watch this original film, a dramatization of how LeBron James grew up to become a peerless basketball superstar (Peacock).

Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets
Limited docuseries (below) exposes the dark secrets of abuse behind America’s infamous TV family (remember their reality show, 19 Kids and Counting?) and the radical, cult-like church in the background (Prime Video).

NOW HEAR THIS

Air is this year’s movie for people who say they don’t like sports movies, a feel-good flick that feels like a mashup of vibes from Jerry McGuire and Moneyball. The soundtrack is etched with deep-dish ‘80s grooves from Dire Straits, Violent Femmes, Mike & The Mechanics, Bruce Springsteen, Run-D.M.C, Squeeze and more, all woven into director-actor Ben Affleck’s true-story tale of how a third-tier shoe company launched the business of superstar sports marketing by lacing up a deal with basketball phenom Michael Jordan.

SATURDAY, June 3
TLC Forever
Don’t go chasin’ waterfalls…. Instead, watch this two-hour documentary about the Atlanta-based female group (below) that led the way with their music, message and style in the 1990s, going on to sell more 85 million records (8 p.m., Lifetime and A&E).

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Jessica Lange: An Adventurer’s Heart (University Press of Kentucky) is author Anthony Uzarowski’s new deep-dive biography of the award-winning actress, covering her early years in Minnesota, her carefully guarded private life, and her fruitful partnership with playwright/actor Sam Shepard, which became one of Hollywood’s most tumultuous secretive relationships.

Ever since Moneyball, we’ve been much more savvy about how much the information age has shaped pro sports. In Game of Edges (W.W. Norton), author Bruce Schoenfeld goes even deeper for a fascinating inside look at how data analysis, tech and commercial considerations continue to reform the landscape of baseball, soccer, football, basketball and even gaming. 

You know that filmmaking brothers Joel and Ethan Coen have made some classic films, including Raising Arizona, O Brother, Where Art Thou and The Big Lebowski. Find out in The Coen Brothers and American Roots Music (McFarland) just how important the musical soundtracks have always been to their cinematic work.

SUNDAY, June 3
The Lazarus Project
New drama series follows a recruit (Paapa Essiedu) in an organization that has harnessed the ability to turn back time whenever the world is on the precipice of extinction (9 p.m., TNT).

MONDAY, June 4
The Eric Andre Show
Season six of the cult-fave grownup sketch series begins, and its slate of upcoming guest stars is pretty impressive—Natasha Lyonne, Jon Hamm, Raven-Symone, Cypress Hill, Lil Yachty and many more (midnight, Adult Swim).

TUESDAY, June 5
Stars on Mars
Star Trek icon William Shatner hosts this space-y reality competition (below) in which “celebronauts”—including Lance Armstrong, Natasha Leggero, Marshawn Lynch and Rhonda Rousey—don spacesuits and embark on a mission to see who’s got the right stuff to colonize the Red Planet (8 p.m., Fox).

Cruel Summer
Season two of the hit anthology series follows intense teenage friendships in an idyllic Pacific Northwest waterfront community (9 p.m., Freeform).

WEDNESDAY, June 6
The Luckiest Guy in the World
New two-part “30 For 30” sports doc covers the life and times of basketball Hall of Famer Bill Walton, known as “The Big Redhead” (8 p.m., ESPN).

Destination: European Nights
Five-part docuseries follows CBS sports analyst Gillem Balague through months of travel across Europe covering the UEFA Champions League and catching the continent-wide buzz of the world’s most prestigious annual soccer tournament (Paramount+).

THURSDAY, June 8
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
It’ll be sunny tonight for fans of this acclaimed comedy series, which has become the longest-running live-action sitcom in TV history as it begins its landmark 16th season with stars Danny Devito, Charlie Day, Kaitlin Olson and Rob McElhenney (10 p.m., FX).

Arnold
Yes, that Arnold—the Terminator, the former gov of California, the muscle man who became a movie icon. New docuseries pulls back the curtain on the fascinating story of Arnold Schwarzenegger (Netflix).

Based on a True Story
Inspired by a real event, this dark-comedy thriller (above) set in L.A. follows a realtor, a plumber and a former tennis star whose lives unexpectedly collide in a true-crime caper. Starring Kaley Cuoco, Chris Messina and Tom Bateman (Peacock).

Hailey’s On It!
Auli’I Cravalho stars in this animated comedy-adventure about a teenager on a mission to complete her ambitious list of tasks to save with world. With supporting voices by Julie Bowen, Jo Koy and Al Yankovic (8 p.m., Disney Channel).