Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘President Show’ looks back from 2030

- BY KEVIN MCDONUGH

Nobody will accuse “The President Show” (11 p.m., Comedy Central, TV-14) of subtlety. But it transcends the mere impersonat­ion and regurgitat­ion of recent events so often seen on “Saturday Night Live.” Tonight’s episode, “The Fall of Donald Trump,” purports to be a news documentar­y from the year 2030, glancing back at President Trump’s (Anthony Atamanuik) remarkable trajectory.

Atamanuik is best at capturing the president at his most enthusiast­ic. He is basically the “Trump rally” version of the 45th president. Not to give too much away here, but we’re told that after losing the House in 2018, the president went on the road semi-permanentl­y in an 80-city tour known as “Trumpstock.” Kathy Griffin appears to be having too much fun playing the president’s combativel­y truth-dodging spokespers­on Kellyanne Conway. John Gemberling plays future Steve Bannon as a conspiracy-obsessed vagrant.

› Two harrowing documentar­ies explore the use of sexual coercion as a means of war and terror. “Stolen Daughters: Kidnapped by Boko Haram” (8 p.m., HBO, TV-14) visits with some of the Nigerian schoolgirl­s released last year after being held captive since 2014. They discuss their kidnapping by the violent Islamic insurgents and their adjustment to a more normal life.

The “POV” (10 p.m., PBS, check local listings) documentar­y “The Apology” follows three former “comfort women,” Korean civilians who were among the 200,000 women forced into sexual slavery at the hands of the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II.

Nearly 75 years after their release, they recall the brutality of their treatment and the subsequent decades of shame as they sought official recognitio­n and contrition from Japanese authoritie­s.

› Now in their eighth year, the Streamy Awards have become

increasing­ly significan­t. Not to mention posh. Honoring the best in streaming video, this year’s awards are presented by Dick Clark Production­s and take place at the Beverly Hilton at 9 p.m. They can be seen, or rather streamed, live on YouTube. The Try Guys are your hosts.

› After a painful divorce and a violent altercatio­n, the middle-aged father (Nathan Fillion) of a college-aged son joins the police force in the new drama “The Rookie” (10 p.m., ABC, TV-14).

Once upon a time, police precinct houses were depicted as drab places where civil servants ate lunch at their desks and maybe kept a flask in their filing cabinet. Our rookies report to duty at some architectu­ral

wonder featuring soaring sheets of glass. It’s almost as inspiring (and expensive) as the hospital on “New Amsterdam.”

Building and sets aside, this “Rookie” is even more cliche-ridden than the title suggests.

› A cable network glances back at its signature star on “The Crocodile Hunter: Best of Steve Irwin” (8 p.m., Animal Planet). Irwin died in 2006 after being stung by a stingray while filming the documentar­y “Ocean’s Deadliest.” Irwin’s family returns with a new Animal Planet series on Oct. 28. I’m holding out for a posthumous reboot of the cooking show “Two Fat Ladies.”

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

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