TV Top Picks This Week
Don’t Miss: “Fargo” — The snow-capped crime anthology makes a welcome return. For Season 3, the story is set in 2010 and centers on two brothers — both wonderfully played by Ewan McGregor. One is a handsome real estate mogul. The other is a balding, pot-bellied parole officer. Their sibling rivalry will send them down a very dangerous path. The cast also includes Carrie Coon, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and David Thewlis.
10 p.m. Wednesday, FX.
Other bets
Sunday: “Stayin’ Alive: A Grammy Salute to the Music of he Bee Gees” is a special that celebrates the vast music catalog of the brotherly trio. Performers include, among others, Celine Dion, Nick Jonas, Tori Kelly, Little Big Town, Demi Lovato, Pentatonix, Ed Sheeran, Keith Urban, John Legend and Stevie Wonder.
8 p.m., CBS.
Monday: In the season finale of “24: Legacy,” Rebecca’s deal to save Donovan doesn’t go as planned. Meanwhile, CTU must rely on Carter to go out into the field and facilitate an important exchange.
8 p.m., Fox.
Tuesday: “LA. Burning: The Riots 25 Years Later” is a special that recalls the infamous 1992 uprising and reexamines the life-changing events through the eyes of those who experienced it firsthand.
9 p.m., A&E.
Wednesday: A powerful new installment of “Nova” joins an archeological excavation in the Lithuanian city of Vilnius, once known as “Jerusalem of the North.” Unearthed is a 100-foot escape tunnel used by Holocaust survivors during WWII. 9 p.m., PBS. music tied to pivotal moments in history. Part 1 examines the era following the assassination of Martin Luther King.
10 p.m., CNN.
Friday: On a special edition of “20/20,” Diane Sawyer catches up with Caitlyn Jenner two years after their groundbreaking primetime interview. The former Olympian discusses how her life has gone since making her gender transition. 10 p.m., ABC.
Saturday: Oprah Winfrey and Rose Byrne star in “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.” Based on the bestselling nonfiction book of the same name, it’s a film that recounts how the unauthorized harvesting of a black woman’s cancerous cells in 1951 led to major medical breakthroughs and changed countless lives.
8 p.m., HBO.