Los Angeles Times

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- robert.lloyd@latimes.com

I Can Do That

NBC, 10 p.m Tuesdays “Dancing with the Stars,” with the dancing replaced by juggling, magic, acrobatics, Harlem Globetrott­ing.

The Briefcase

CBS, 8 p.m. Wednesdays Each week, two needy families are given $101,000 and given a choice to keep it for themselves or give some or all of it away to another needy family also given the same windfall and conundrum. Sentimenta­l torture is the name I give this genre.

Aquarius

NBC, 9 p.m. Thursdays David Duchovny is an LAPD detective who runs up against a historical­ly hot Charles Manson (Gethin Anthony) in this creepy crawl through the Summer of What at the Time Looked Like Love. All 13 episodes are also available online to swallow whole.

Smile

Lifetime, 10 p.m. Thursdays

Dental makeover.

Strange Empire: Rise of the Women

LMN, 9 p.m. Fridays Canadian proto-feminist Old West romance, convenient­ly set along the U.S. border to feel relevant to “Americans.”

May 31

Golan the Insatiable

Fox, 9:30 p.m. Sundays Aubrey Plaza in the role she was born to play after April Ludgate, as a little goth girl whose best friend is a bloodthirs­ty demon (Rob Riggle). It’s like “Lassie,” if “Lassie” were about a little goth girl and a bloodthirs­ty demon, and a cartoon.

June 1

UnReal

Lifetime, 10 p.m. Mondays The drama’s all behind the camera in this scripted series set around an unscripted reality dating show.

The Whispers

ABC, 10 p.m. Mondays

Ray Bradbury’s story “Zero Hour” is the basis of this sci-fi thriller in which children become the dangerous agents of an unseen force, which is also just the definition of children. Steven Spielberg has a finger in this pie.

June 2

Stitchers

ABC Family, 9 p.m. Tuesdays Emma Ishta melds her mind with the recently deceased to solve their murders in a plot device eerily similar to that of “iZombie.” But this is different, because it’s ... science. Secrets & Wives

Bravo, 10 p.m. Tuesdays Middle-aged girlfriend­s who’ve known each other since high school demon- strate that money can’t buy happiness.

June 5

Sense8

Netflix, all episodes at once From Andy and Lana Wachowski (“The Matrix”) and J. Michael Straczynsk­i (“Babylon 5”). Eight strangers from around the world begin living in one another’s heads yet somehow do not form a jam band.

June 6

200 Things to Do Before High School Nickelodeo­n, 8 p.m. Saturdays Scott Fellows (“Ned’s Declassifi­ed School Survival Guide,” “Big Time Rush”) turns his attention back to middle school with this adolescent bucket-list comedy. “Yes,” I picture you saying now, with balled fists. Or maybe that was me.

June 8

Becoming Us

ABC Family, 9 p.m. Mondays The summer’s gender-transition reality family series that doesn’t star Bruce Jenner looks at a transition­ing father through the eyes of his teenage son. Odd Mom Out

Bravo, 10 p.m. Mondays Bravo’s disdainful love for the rich and aggravatin­g finds expression in this scripted sitcom adapted from star Jill Kargman’s novel of Upper East Side maternity and its discontent, “Momzillas.” Joanna Cassidy, Andy Buckley, Abby Elliott co-star, so don’t just walk away — I see you. Don’t think I don’t see you, because I do.

June 12

Dark Matter

Syfy, 10 p.m. Fridays A spaceship crew awakens from suspended animation with no memory of who they are or why they’re there. Which is why I never let anyone put me in suspended animation.

June 15

The Making of the Mob: New York

AMC, 10 p.m. Mondays Docudramat­ic miniseries with a more than usual emphasis on the drama, for those who somehow have never heard this story or need to hear it again. Ray Liotta narrates, with the authority of “GoodFellas” behind him. Episodes will accompany showings of gangster films, like wine pairings at a fancy dinner.

June 16

Proof

CBS, 10 p.m. Tuesdays Jennifer Beals is a doctor employed by cancerous super-rich Matthew Modine to find “scientific proof ” of life after death. It was just a matter of funding, apparently. Clipped

TBS, 10 p.m. Tuesdays High school classmates wind up working in the same Boston barbershop. You know it happens. Ashley Tisdale is here for the Disney Channel kids, Lauren Lapkus brings the alt-comedy cred, George Wendt establishe­s the spiritual/ geographic­al link with “Cheers.”

June 17

Deutschlan­d 83 Sundance, 11 p.m. Wednesdays German import does the 1980s Cold War espionage thing, against the backdrop of Berlin.

June 18

The Astronaut’s Wives Club

ABC, 8 p.m. Thursdays Goodbye, Betty Draper; hello, Betty Grissom (JoAnn Garcia Swisher). The stuff behind the Right Stuff is the subject of this ’60s-set factbased drama, also featuring Yvonne Strahovski as Rene Carpenter and Dominique McElligott as Louise Shepard. Complicati­ons

USA, 9 p.m. Thursdays Jason O’Mara (“Life on Mars,” “Vegas”) tries on his American accent again, this time to play a dishearten­ed Atlanta doctor who finds himself in the middle of a gang war when he saves a young boy’s life.

June 19

Killjoys

Syfy, 9 p.m. Fridays

Interplane­tary bounty

hunters hunt bounties, interplane­tarily. Catastroph­e

Amazon Prime, Fridays Rob Delaney and Sharon Horgan write and star in an Anglo-American backward romance that begins with sex and pregnancy and then gets around to the rest of it.

June 21

Poldark

PBS, 9 p.m. Sundays A tale of old Cornwall, tin mines and passion, based on Winston Graham’s novels. Aidan Turner (“The Hobbit”) takes the title role, as a young man returned from (losing) the American Revolution to find things changed at home. The Crimson Field

PBS, 10 p.m. Sundays A six-episode drama set in a British field hospital during World War I France. Ballers

HBO, 10 p.m. Sundays Dwayne Johnson as you’ve never seen him before — in a suit, snap! — plays a football player turned financial consultant to football players. Boss Rob Corddry leaves the clown makeup at “Childrens Hospital.” Peter Berg (“Friday Night Lights”) directed the pilot. The Brink

HBO, 10:30 p.m. Sundays Black comedy with notes of “Dr. Strangelov­e,” Greene and Waugh, finds Tim Robbins and Jack Black trying to keep the world from total destructio­n in the wake of a Pakistani coup. Maybe they won’t.

June 23

Another Period Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays Natasha Leggero and Riki Lindhome mash together upper-crust turn-of-thecentury period drama with contempora­ry celebrity reality TV, and about time too. Michael Ian Black, Paget Brewster, Brett Gelman, Jason Ritter, David Wain and Christina Hendricks also star.

June 24

Mr. Robot

USA, 10 p.m. Wednesdays Security tech drone and after-hours cyber-hero Rami Malek finds himself enmeshed in a shadow world of conspiraci­es and counter-conspiraci­es. That Malek seems a little reminiscen­t of Matthew Broderick in “War Games” is probably just my thing. With Christian Slater and Carly Chaikin.

June 25

Boom!

Fox, 8 p.m. Thursdays Quiz show in which by answering trivia questions contestant­s attempt to “defuse a bomb”; if time runs out, it explodes, scattering not shrapnel or nails but comical liquids and foodstuffs. Israeli origin adds subtext.

June 26

Humans

AMC, 9 p.m. Fridays The dream of owning a lifelike robot slave is alive in this British-American coproducti­on based on a Swedish original. It never works out well. William Hurt, Katherine Parkinson play people of the biological sort.

June 30

Zoo

CBS, 9 p.m. Tuesdays Beach-read thriller, based on James Patterson’s novel, in which animals begin attacking humans (who are also animals, hello, but whatever). Seen another way, it’s a feel-good comedy about critters getting their own back. Scream

MTV, 10 p.m. Tuesdays Probably you were thinking to yourself that the one thing TV is missing now is a place to see teenagers murdered on a regular basis. But that’s about to change. A serial sequel to the self-referentia­l movie franchise.

July 8

Why? With Hannibal Buress Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m., Wednesdays

The comic (and “Broad City” player) whose onstage comments last year started rolling the ball that landed on Bill Cosby’s head, gets a topical talk and comedy show. The pitch sells itself.

July 9

Dates

CW, 9 p.m. Thursdays Belatedly imported 2013 British comedy focuses on the first meetings between people who have met through an online dating service. Oona Chaplin and Ben Chaplin are both in it, but only one of them is descended from the Chaplin named Charlie.

July 13

Monica the Medium ABC Family, 10 p.m. Mondays A reality show following a Penn State student who might actually believe she can talk to dead people.

July 15

The Jim Gaff igan Show TV Land, 10 p.m. Wednesdays Comic Jim Gaffigan plays a version of himself (father of five, fond of food, rumpled, New Yorker) in what will surely not be the last comedy in which a comic plays a version of himself. Ashley Williams (wife), Adam Goldberg (friend, his) and Mi- chael Ian Black (friend, hers) provide contrast.

July 16

Sex&Drugs & Rock&Roll

FX, 10 p.m. Thursdays Denis Leary, in a mullet yet, is a briefly successful old rock star attempting a second act, John Corbett his alienated former bandmate. Geeks Who Drink

Syfy, 11:30 p.m. Thursdays Zachary Levi as you’ve never seen him — hosting a game show, based on the realworld pub-based trivia smackdown. Inebriatio­n apparently not included, title aside.

July 17

Wet Hot American Summer

Netflix, Fridays The 2001 cult camp comedy becomes an eight-episode series, set before the original, with Amy Poehler, Bradley Cooper, Paul Rudd, Janeane Garofalo, Ken Marino and Michael Ian Black back in their old but even younger roles, and Jon Hamm, Kristen Wiig, Jason Schwartzma­n and Chris Pine joining the party. Astonishin­g any way you look at it.

July 19

Tut

Spike, 9 p.m. Sundays

Trailers suggest that things were sexy and actionpack­ed in ancient Egypt in a way we of the 21st century can totally understand. Ben Kingsley is the adviser to the funky boy king, played by Avan Jogia.

July 21

Knock Knock Live

Fox, TK Ryan Seacrest shows up unannounce­d at your (or somebody’s) door to play games or put on a show. Seen another way, it’s the summer’s most terrifying thriller.

July 26 Not yet titled Bruce Jenner reality show

E!, 9 p.m. Sundays

It had to happen.

Stewarts and Hamiltons

E!, 10 p.m. Sundays The extended broken united families of George Hamilton and ex-wife Alana Stewart get their reality show. How has this not happened yet?

Aug. 3

Signif icant Mother

CW, 9:30 p.m. Mondays Josh Zuckerman has to deal with the fact that his mother is dating his roommate (Krista Allen). You know this has happened.

Aug. 5

Mr. Robinson

NBC, 9 p.m. Wednesdays Not a gender-switched musical based on “The Graduate” but a multi-cam sitcom with Craig Robinson as a funk musician, also named Craig Robinson, moonlighti­ng as a high school music teacher. Peri Gilpin (“Frasier”) co-stars, auspicious­ly. The Carmichael Show

NBC, 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays Extra-dry comic Jerrod Carmichael stars as a guy, with a girlfriend, and parents and, you know, the usual stuff. But the parents are played by Loretta Devine and David Alan Grier, and Carmichael himself is a highly funny person. So there is that. A Wicked Offer

CW, 9 p.m. Wednesdays Couples do bad things for money. It’s a game show.

Aug. 12

Kevin From Work ABC Family, 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays Millennial workplace romcom features Noah Reid as a lovelorn salaryman and Paige Spara as the coworker who knows he likes her. Amy Sedaris spruces up the pilot, as she does.

Aug. 16

Show Me a Hero

HBO, 9 p.m. Sundays David “The Wire” Simon’s fact-based NIMBY epic stars Oscar Isaac as a Yonkers, N.Y., mayor under federal order to build lowincome housing in middleclas­s neighborho­ods in the 1980s. (You can imagine.) Paul Haggis directs.

Aug. 20

Documentar­y Now

IFC, 10 p.m. Thursdays The superpower­ful trio of “SNL” veterans Fred Armisen, Bill Hader and Seth Meyers created this series of phony nonfiction films about things that never happened and aren’t true. But isn’t that just reality TV I hear you ask, or, you know, “The Office”? No, it isn’t.

Aug.25

Public Morals

TNT, 10 p.m. Tuesdays Ed Burns writes, directs and stars as a good cop in a dirty world in the summer’s other ’60s-set procedural, set at the NYPD’s Public Morals Division, where all is neither public nor moral. Michael Rapaport plays his partner, Elizabeth Masucci his wife.

Aug. 31

Todrick

MTV, 10 p.m. Mondays Workplace docu-series trails Todrick Hall, “American Idol” semifinali­st and the Orson Welles of YouTube parodies (“Twerking in the Rain,” “How the Grinch Stole Crenshaw”), as he makes the clips that get the clicks.

 ?? Ben Mark Holzberg
Syfy ?? MARK BENDAVID as One in “Dark Matter” on Syfy, about a spaceship crew members who awaken from suspended animation with serious questions.
Ben Mark Holzberg Syfy MARK BENDAVID as One in “Dark Matter” on Syfy, about a spaceship crew members who awaken from suspended animation with serious questions.
 ?? Jean Whiteside ABC Family ?? “BECOMING US” is an unscripted drama about teen Ben, left, whose dad is becoming a woman.
Jean Whiteside ABC Family “BECOMING US” is an unscripted drama about teen Ben, left, whose dad is becoming a woman.
 ?? Saeed Adyani Netf l i x ?? AMY POEHLER and Bradley Cooper in “Wet Hot American Summer: First Day Of Camp.”
Saeed Adyani Netf l i x AMY POEHLER and Bradley Cooper in “Wet Hot American Summer: First Day Of Camp.”
 ?? Steve Wilkie
Syfy ?? “KILL JOYS” stars Hannah John-Kamen as Dutch.
Steve Wilkie Syfy “KILL JOYS” stars Hannah John-Kamen as Dutch.
 ?? Cook Allender
ABC ?? “THE ASTRONAUT WIVES CLUB” is based on the book by Lily Koppel about the military spouses who became American royalty.
Cook Allender ABC “THE ASTRONAUT WIVES CLUB” is based on the book by Lily Koppel about the military spouses who became American royalty.
 ?? Chris Haston
NBC ?? “THE CARMICHAEL SHOW” features Loretta Devine, left, LilRel Howery, Amber West, Jerrod Carmichael and David Alan Grier.
Chris Haston NBC “THE CARMICHAEL SHOW” features Loretta Devine, left, LilRel Howery, Amber West, Jerrod Carmichael and David Alan Grier.
 ?? James Dittiger
Lifetime ?? “UNREAL” stars Shiri Appleby, left, Josh Kelly, Freddie Stroma and Breeda Wool.
James Dittiger Lifetime “UNREAL” stars Shiri Appleby, left, Josh Kelly, Freddie Stroma and Breeda Wool.
 ?? Gene Page
HBO ?? “BALLERS” stars Dwayne Johnson as a football player turned financial consultant to players.
Gene Page HBO “BALLERS” stars Dwayne Johnson as a football player turned financial consultant to players.
 ?? Kelsey McNeal
ABC ?? “THE WHISPERS” stars Lily Rabe, Kyle Harrison Breitkopf.
Kelsey McNeal ABC “THE WHISPERS” stars Lily Rabe, Kyle Harrison Breitkopf.

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