Santa Fe New Mexican

TV TOP PICKS

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7 a.m. on NBC 2018 French Open Tennis

Serena Williams made her return to Grand Slam tennis with this year’s French Open at Roland Garros Stadium in Paris. The question is whether she’ll be left standing when the women’s final is played today. Jelena Ostapenko won last year, earning her first Grand Slam title and becoming the first Latvian player to do so. Williams, who hasn’t competed in a Grand Slam event since the 2017 Australian open, has three French Open titles.

7 p.m. on NBC Taken

The mission is personal for Mills (Clive Standen) in the new episode “Carapace,” as he tries to save his cousin from members of an underworld syndicate. Kilroy (Adam Goldberg) finds himself in need of help when he’s blackmaile­d. Barry Flatman (Private Eyes) and Al Sapienza guest star. Jennifer Beals and Jessica Camacho also star.

7 p.m. on ABC The Crossing

What has turned into a relatively brief run for this drama concludes with a two-hour finale, combining the episodes “The Androcles Option” and “These Are the Names,” but viewers should be forewarned that not all of the questions may be answered, since production on the season was completed before the cancellati­on notice was issued. In any event, lawman Jude (Steve Zahn, pictured) is likely to remain confounded by the phenomenon that placed people from the future on his literal shores. Natalie Martinez, Sandrine Holt and Georgina Haig also star.

7 p.m. on HALL Movie: The Perfect Bride: Wedding Bells

Reprising their roles from the 2017 romantic comedy The Perfect Bride, Pascale Hutton and Kavan Smith return as Molly White, a successful entreprene­ur of “bridal boot camps,” and red-hot wedding photograph­er Nick Dyson. This new 2018 TV movie finds the couple very much in love and bound for the altar, but they’re haunted by old relationsh­ips that seemed just as perfect at the time yet turned out to be ... not.

7 p.m. on TLC I Want THAT Wedding

In this new nuptials-themed unscripted series, wedding consultant­s try to help struggling altar-bound couples get more clarity on their wedding budget by taking them to three weddings. The first offers the equivalent to what the bride wants to spend; the second, to what the groom has in mind; and the third finds a middle financial ground between the other two. The twist is, the couple won’t know which wedding is at which price point until the end of the experiment.

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