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TV Top Picks This Week

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Don’t Miss: “Dancing With the Stars: Athletes” — Over the years, sports stars have performed impressive­ly in the ballroom, so why not do a special all-athletes edition? We’re expecting the competitiv­e juices to flow as former standouts such as Tonya Harding and Kareem AbdulJabba­r do their best to keep up with recent Olympians Adam Rippon, Mirai Nagasu, Chris Mazdzer and Jamie Anderson, among others. They’ll all have to get up to speed quickly because this will be an abbreviate­d four-week season. (8 p.m. Monday, ABC). Other bets: Sunday: Another gripping season of “Homeland” comes to a close. Can Carrie and Saul get out of it alive? Our money is on them. (9 p.m., Showtime). Sunday: Forget the royal wedding. As “Good Witch” returns for Season 4, Sam is busy trying to find the perfect, spell-binding engagement ring for Cassie. (9 p.m., Hallmark Channel).

Monday: The documentar­y “For Our Lives: Parkland” follows student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., through the aftermath of the mass shooting that claimed the lives of their friends, classmates and teachers. (10 p.m., Freeform). Monday: On the Season 6 premiere of “Elementary,” Holmes confronts a medical diagnosis that threatens both his career and sobriety. Also, he’s hired by a reformed party girl heiress to find her missing partner in a years-old sex tape that just leaked online. (10 p.m., CBS). Tuesday: The latest installmen­t of “Frontline” examines the humanitari­an and economic crisis in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, and looks at how the federal response, Wall Street and years of neglect have left the island struggling to survive. (10 p.m., PBS).

Season 3 of “Colony” begins six months after the Bowmans escaped from the Los Angeles bloc in the wake of an alien invasion. Now, Will and Katie struggle to rebuild their family in the world beyond the walls. Good luck with that. (10 p.m., USA). Thursday: There’s drama brewing on “The Big Bang Theory.” When Sheldon learns that his mother won’t attend his wedding unless he invites his brother, Georgie, he and Leonard travel to Texas to end a family feud. (8 p.m., CBS). FRIDAY: Cultural appropriat­ion. Sex and gender norms. Fake news. Salty grits. The acclaimed satire “Dear White People” returns to cover all this and more. (Netflix).

Saturday: Crank up the volume on your TV and bust some moves in your living room. Bon Jovi, The Cars, Dire Straits, The Moody Blues, Nina Simone and Sister Rosetta Tharpe are the honored artists at the “2018 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony.”

(8 p.m., HBO).

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