Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘So You Think You Can Dance’ returns

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

Once a fixture of summer TV, “So You Think You Can Dance” (9 p.m., Fox, TV-14) returns for its 18th season. A glance at the Fox schedule reveals that it has become the network where summer “replacemen­t” series air year-round.

Cat Deeley will return as overall host. “Dance,” a showcase of unknown dancing talent, has shuffled the formula a bit this season. Challenges will change on a weekly basis and reflect “real world” situations. So, expect to see participan­ts perform at a football halftime show, in a music video or in a dance competitio­n against reigning Broadway talent.

Dancer JoJo Siwa returns to the judging panel, alongside Allison Holker and Maksim Chmerkovsk­iy, with dancer and choreograp­her Comfort Fedoke guest judging during the auditions.

Proof that not even the most escapist variety/ reality/competitio­n TV fare can avoid the harsh realities of life arrived in the form of a rather radical and recent talent shuffle on “Dance.” Nigel Lythgoe, a longtime member of the “Dance” family, was recently dropped after Paula Abdul accused him of sexual assault back in the early days when he was producing “American Idol.” As of last week, Abdul has been joined by at least three other female accusers.

› Familiar faces and stars of other renovation­related series appear on season five of “Rock the Block” (9 p.m., HGTV, TV-PG), where they compete to see who can add the most value to seaside homes in Treasure Island, Florida.

Follow them as they unclog kitchen designs and open up floor plans, etc. Winners receive bragging rights over their fellow cable stars and the prospect of a street named in their honor. Egypt Sherrod and Mike Jackson of “Married to Real Estate” fame are the judges. Episodes also stream on Max every Monday night.

› “Barbie” may have been the most talkedabou­t movie of 2023, sparking conversati­ons about gender roles and stereotype­s. But its popularity was also met with some trepidatio­n and fears that a franchise crazy and highly imitative entertainm­ent industry would soon seize direct-to-screen projects for every trinket in the corporate toybox.

Netflix introduces the 2024 kids’ action-comedy series “Hot Wheels: Let’s Race.”

While “Barbie” was a satire aimed at adults old enough to get its tonguein-cheek humor, “Hot Wheels” is labeled by Netflix as a kids’ show. For decades there has been a debate about blending kids’ programmin­g with flagrant product placement. But those discussion­s and laws revolved around broadcast standards. YouTube and other streaming options are filled with series directly advertisin­g to young people and often consist of nothing but “influencer­s” telling the tots what to buy. It can’t be easy to be the parent of a child subjected to this consumer propaganda.

› A dozen amateur bakers compete to concoct sweet fantasies inspired by spring break vacation on “Spring Baking Championsh­ip” (8 p.m., Food). Now in its 10th season.

› Emma Watson and Dan Stevens star in the 2017 adaptation of the fairy tale “Beauty and the Beast” (9:45 p.m., TNT, TV-PG).

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