Chattanooga Times Free Press

Night of finales and ‘The Riot Report’ on PBS

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

“American Experience” (9 p.m., PBS, TV-14, check local listings) recalls “The Riot Report.” The summer of 1967 saw violent eruptions and riots in 25 cities across America. Whole neighborho­ods of Detroit and Newark, New Jersey, would burn to the ground and dozens of residents were killed as state police and Army National Guard units were deployed.

In the aftermath of the 1967 riots, the Johnson Administra­tion tapped Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner to lead a study of the root causes of the riots and racial unrest. It also pondered what might be done to prevent future uprisings.

The report, officially known as the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders but remembered as the Kerner Commission report, took an unvarnishe­d look at underlying conditions. It cataloged decades of discrimina­tion in urban policing, banking, credit and mortgage policies, and the exclusion of urban Black communitie­s from the electoral process.

It concluded with the harrowing phrase, “Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white — separate and unequal.”

Arguably, no government study had been as frank or as radical. Seeing it as political dynamite, President Johnson saw to it that the Kerner report was quietly shelved.

Despite official banishment, the report continues to resonate. It recalls a time when those in authority dared to ask the hard questions, even if they couldn’t abide the answers. And it stands in radical contrast to our own day when the very act of teaching “critical race theory” (the acknowledg­ment that racism is part of our past) has become tantamount to a criminal act.

› Paramount+ streams the MTV-produced documentar­y series “Lolla: The Story of Lollapaloo­za.”

Planned in 1991 as a farewell tour for Jane’s Addiction, the festival spawned a musical tradition that has endured for a generation. Over the years since, it has become known for its wide variety of acts from multiple genres on multiple stages, its roving nature and various iterations. Among its firsts is its insistence on emphasizin­g the art scene, offsetting its carbon footprint, presenting family-friendly acts and atmosphere and embracing the electronic dance music scene often more associated with European festivals.

› Say what you will about either the glut or the bounty of streaming programmin­g, it has offered American viewers a wealth of internatio­nal options. Viaplay, the streaming platform featuring the best of Scandinavi­an drama and comedy, streams the sixpart detective series “The Murderesse­s,” based on a Katarzyna Bonda’s bestsellin­g true crime book about a rookie police officer investigat­ing the fate of her missing father, an ex-cop surrounded by his own personal mysteries. Bonda ranks among Poland’s most popular writers.

SEASON FINALES

› The FBI springs a trap on “The Cleaning Lady” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14).

› “The Voice” (8 p.m., NBC) glances back at the final performanc­es before crowning a winner (9 p.m.).

› A terrorist nemesis returns on “FBI” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14).

› Killers and sexual predators seem to be in cahoots on “Will Trent” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-14).

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