Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Love Is …’ makes its debut on OWN

- Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin. tvguy@gmail.com.

“Love Is …” (10 p.m., OWN, TV-14) has nothing to do with that corny little single-panel comic strip. It’s a multilayer­ed tale of romance set in the 1990s but narrated from the point of view of the present day. It’s about two powerful TV producers and made by those same people, setting a tall order for its performers.

Michelle Weaver portrays young Nuri (circa ‘97), a beautiful woman with a variety of suitors, from smooth talkers to church-supper companions. A show dedicated to portraying the act of falling in love and sustaining romance, it follows Nuri and her various lovers while also following those men and their other relationsh­ips.

Into her life arrives Yasir (Will Catlett), who changes everything. Wendy Davis and Clarke Peters star as the present-day Nuri and Yasir, talking about their 20-year relationsh­ip from an older and wiser perspectiv­e.

“Love Is …” also follows their profession­al lives as black filmmakers and producers in the late 1990s and shows how depictions of black life (and love) have changed. Created by producers Mara Brock Akil (“Girlfriend­s,” “Being Mary Jane” and “The Game”) and Salim Akil (“Black Lightning”), who are the real people behind Nuri and Yasir.

DARLIE’S DEFENSE

Accused of killing her young son (her other son was also murdered in the same incident, but she wasn’t charged with his death) and faking her own injuries, Darlie Routier’s trial begins in the small, conservati­ve town of Kerrville, Texas, on the second episode of “The Last Defense” (10 p.m., ABC, TV-14).

Produced by Viola Davis, Julius Tennon and Andrew Wang, “Last Defense” is a limited documentar­y series following death-row cases where a great deal of reasonable doubt about the convicted has accumulate­d in the years and decades since their guilty verdicts.

LETTERPRES­S ART

“Pressing On: The Letterpres­s Film” follows artists and printers young and old who maintain old-fashioned printing presses.

Obsolete for decades since the arrival of computer-generated graphic design and type, letterpres­s art has become increasing­ly popular with young artists, who love working with the touch, feel and smell of metal type, ink and paper.

“Pressing” also follows veteran printers adamant about extolling the 500year legacy of print as well keeping their machines going and their craft alive.

“Pressing On” is available today on DVD and Video on Demand services including iTunes, Amazon, Vimeo, Vudu, Fandango Now, InDemand, DirecTV and Kanopy.

For the uninitiate­d, Kanopy is a digital streaming service made available at public libraries all over the country. Ask you librarian if your system offers Kanopy.

EVERYDAY LIFE

The “POV” (PBS, 11 p.m. on GPB, 3 a.m. Wednesday on WTCI) documentar­y “Quest” chronicles the daily life of a working-class family in North Philadelph­ia. Shot in a flyon-the-wall, cinema verite style, the film, directed by Jonathan Olshefski, captures a blended family dealing with the mundane details of everyday life as well as dramatic moments arising from street violence. More than a decade in the making, “Quest” has been acclaimed by critics and many film festival juries.

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

› Revolving identities on “Bull” (9 p.m., CBS, repeat, TV-14).

› Dissension roils a board meeting on “The Bold Type” (8 p.m., Freeform, TV-14).

› Surprising revelation­s on “The 100” (9 p.m., CW, TV-14).

› President Wilson lays out his vision for a war to end all wars on episode six of “The Great War: American Experience” (PBS, repeat, TV-PG, 9 p.m. on GPB, 10 p.m. on WTCI).

› Rocky Carroll narrates “48 Hours: NCIS” (10 p.m., CBS, TV-PG).

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