TV Link - Grant County Herald
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TV Link - Grant County Herald
ou uld y be, o w Who want to BIE M O Z a VIVOR 11 or SUR p + Killing Reagan NatGeo telepic recalls a dark fall before a presidential rise Find out how Nick Nolte digs out of his political Graves Time Travel Psychic Vampires & a Kitten! Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency folio Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 Victoria Justice stars in The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again Inside the remake of a cult classic Insider’s Review on the third Bridget Jones movie contents C What’s HOT this Week! YOURTVLINK TOP STORIES STAFF PICK 12-13 NatGeo’s “Killing Reagan” is based on the Bill O’Reilly book about the events leading up to the 1980 attempt on the life of the then-chief executive. George Dickie headed to Atlanta to watch the filming and speak to the movie’s stars: Tim Matheson (Ronald Reagan), Cynthia Nixon (Nancy Reagan) and Kyle S. More (John Hinckley). 3 A movie that defines “cult classic” gets a remake as Fox airs “The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again” Thursday. Two of the original film’s talents who have returned — co-star Tim Curry and producer Lou Adler — and the new version’s actors Ryan McCartan and Victoria Justice tell Jay Bobbin about restaging the offbeat saga of Brad, Janet and Dr. Frank-N-Furter. 14-15 This new limited series isn’t a literal translation of the cult British comic novel, but it’s the sort of thing its beloved author, Douglas Adams, would have loved with its breathlessly paced story of a self-styled gumshoe (Samuel Barnett, “History Boys”) who takes an oddball approach to solving mysteries. Barnett talks with John Crook about the challenges of keeping a character grounded in a fictional world of time travelers, holistic assassins and kitten-sharks. 17 Nick Nolte stars as a former U.S. president who has an epiphany and sets about righting all the wrongs his administration committed while he was in office in the new EPIX comedy series “Graves.” Nolte and Joshua Michael Stern discuss how the character of the Republican chief executive is actually of presidents from both sides of the political spectrum. CELEBRITY 4 From ‘Battlestar Galactica’ to ‘Lucifer,’ fantasy follows Tricia Helfer 5 A different kind of doctor this time: Hugh Laurie returns in ‘Chance’ 6 ‘Divorce’ Thomas Haden Church’s ‘61 Cheval Blanc might be peaking right now 8 ‘Odd Couple’ Why Lindsay Sloane Leikin embraces her neurotic character 9 British Baker and TV Personality Loraine Pascale REALITY 16 ‘Anthony Weiner’comes to Showtime as profile of controversial politician premieres SPORTS 18-19 NIck Bosa part of a family traditoin of football MOVIES 20-21 Theatrical Review, and Our top DVD releases IN EVERY ISSUE FOOD 7 ‘My Drunk Kitchen’ Hannah Hart cooks, drinks and is merry 22-23 Our top suggested programs to watch this week! Here’s where you can find us facebook/yourtvlink https://twitter.com/yourtvlink Visit YourTVLINK.com Page 2 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 22-23 All Halloween programming! CONTRIBUTING Staff Managing Editor: Michelle Wilson Writers: Jay Bobbin, George Dickie, John Crook, Dan Ladd Magazine Design: Nicolle Burton Quality: Chris Browne STORY Fox does the ‘Time Warp Again’ with new ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ Thursday on Fox By Jay Bobbin Thanks to a history-acknowledging conceit, a new version of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” won’t make you feel like you’re in a time warp. you really feel you can try anything. I remember quite a lot of the original film, as it was my first movie. It was fun, though, to do it again. I actually offered myself as Dr. von Scott (now played by veteran talent Ben Vereen), because I was already in a wheelchair (following a stroke several years ago). They thought the narrator was a better fit, and I enjoyed it a lot.” The original, stage-showinspired 1975 film has gotten a workout on cable lately, but Fox debuts a new version Thursday, Oct. 20. Not a live production but a movie, it doesn’t pretend the earlier rendering doesn’t exist, since – in a direct reference to the first picture’s cult-classic status – an audience is shown on screen watching the remake, and actively participating with such “Rocky Horror” essentials as water pistols, toilet paper and rice as it unspools. Pictured: Ryan McCartan The new “Rocky Horror” cast also includes Christina Milian, “American Idol” alum Adam Lambert, Annaleigh Ashford (“Masters of Sex”), Ivy Levan, Reeve Carney (“Penny Dreadful”) and Staz Nair (“Game of Thrones”). Justice recalls first seeing the original movie, conceived by Richard O’Brien (who also played Riff Raff, now Carney’s role) and Jim Sharman, “when I was in fifth grade. And then, I went to my first midnight showing when I was 15 ... with my mom, actually, and a couple of close friends of mine and their moms. And I just remember I’d never seen anything like it before in my life. The update includes a couple of vital returnees: producer Lou Adler and co-star Tim Curry, alias Dr. Frank-N-Furter the first time and now the tale’s narrating Criminologist. Laverne Cox (“Orange Is the New Black”) succeeds Curry as the offbeat scientist, with Ryan McCartan (“Liv and Maddie”) and Victoria Justice (“Victorious”) following Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as straitlaced couple Brad and Janet, stranded at a castle during a Transylvanian convention. “’Rocky Horror” always, in my particular case, had a mind of its own,“ Adler maintains. ”It sounds a little corny, but I waited for it – which is, basically, the fans – to tell us what we do next. We started doing this television idea quite a while ago, and I guess it just wasn’t the right time. Tim came along and validated it by wanting to be in it, and Kenny (Ortega, the remake’s director) came along and could direct it to take it to another place, always keeping the fans in mind. My son, Cisco Adler, produced the soundtrack. And what Kenny and I said in the beginning was, ‘Be true to the original, but make it contemporary.’ “ Curry says he “loved being there” for the new round’s filming: “Kenny runs a very not-easy set, but a set where “I loved the music and I loved the campiness,” notes Justice, “and just the color that the characters had and that the whole story had. It really is so unique. When I went to my first midnight showing, I remember wearing, like, fishnets and I had a red feather boa and red lipstick and I totally got into it. And it’s kind of just captivated me ever since then.” With the enduring legend of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” McCartan allows, “This whole thing was very tricky for us as actors. We had a full month’s rehearsal process ... not only to develop our characters, but also to make sure we were all on the same page about paying homage, rather than trying to trump or beat or best something that we all loved so much. There were a lot of beasts that we had to conquer.” Click or tap on icon for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 3 CELEBRITY Jay Bobbin’s Q&A Tricia Helfer of ‘Lucifer’ Monday on Fox Now as Charlotte on “Lucifer,” and previously in “Battlestar Galactica” and “Ascension,” you’ve built a reputation as a fantasy-drama staple. Have you always been a fan of the genre? I actually grew up without a television and saw very few movies, so I’m a little bit ignorant when it comes to a lot of pop culture and television shows and so forth. But growing up, what I did see were the “Star Treks” and “Star Wars.” Those were the ones that we would actually make the trek, the long trek to the movie theater to go see. I think it’s an exciting genre and a genre that you can have a lot of wonderment and “What if?” You can pose questions about humanity and about survival and everything like that, but also have fun doing it. So, you never saw television when you were young? I grew up on a farm, and we had to work. So, we were out fixing farm machinery and driving tractors ... although, they did get a TV when my older sister started dating and the thing to do was go to watch movies at people’s houses, so movie night could be at our house. How have you found being on “Lucifer” so far? Joining the cast has been an incredible experience – a wonderful cast and crew, and a really fun character. (Charlotte’s nature is) revealed very quickly in the episodes, and it certainly adds a comedic element. But also, it’s a challenge for me in the way of going, “OK, here’s my sons,” and looking them in the eye. There’s a lot of miscommunication between mother and sons, on both sides, and each parent has their own relationship with each child. My relationship with Amenadiel (played by DB Woodside) is different than my relationship with Lucifer (Tom Ellis), so finding that common ground and finding how to be their motherly figure with all that’s going on and in their thousands of years of history, it’s been a lot of fun. She’s a layered character. folio Page 4 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 Click on icon for more! CELEBRITY Jay Bobbin’s Q&A HughLaurie of ‘Chance’ Wednesday on Hulu How did you approach your role in “Chance” as a neuropsychiatrist who feels he’s failed at his profession? My father was a doctor, a general practitioner ... and I remember very clearly, at Christmas or at various times of the year, there would be gifts from grateful patients. Someone would knit him a pair of socks or there would be a bottle of wine (with a note such as,) “Dear Doctor: Thank you for lancing my boil,” or whatever it was. He did things and he made people’s lives better, and people expressed gratitude for that. In preparation for “Chance,” I spent some time with a neuropsychiatrist in London, and I asked him whether he kept in touch with patients, whether he got Christmas cards. And he said, “Absolutely not. Because the truth is, I don’t heal anybody. The best I can do is manage incredibly damaged people. My job is about trying to find the least bad option, and that’s the best I can hope for. And nobody leaves my office turning cartwheels, saying, ‘Thank God, I’m cured.’ It doesn’t happen.” Do you prefer the streaming-series model of fewer episodes per season than what broadcast television requires, which you know from “House”? Yes, I suppose so. I mean, it’s a pretty grueling undertaking trying to do 24. In fact, fewer and fewer people are actually doing it, certainly with a small cast. It’s possibly something you can contemplate when you’ve got a larger cast; you have more elements to shuffle around. But I was just intrigued by the notion of just telling a single story from A to Z in these 10 episodes. Generally speaking, the older form of television was about the central characters kind of remaining the same while the surrounding characters change, as opposed to film where central characters transform. But in this, we are doing something rather different, I think. We are seeing – or should be seeing, if we get it right – a genuine and rather profound transformation of a number of characters who are unrecognizable at the end from where they started. That’s more to do with (the content), I think, than the volume of what we are doing. Click on icon for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 5 CELEBRITY George Dickie’s Q&A Thomas Haden Church of ‘Divorce’ Sunday on HBO The snippets of wine information scattered throughout “Sideways” are quite accurate. Well, (director) Alexander Payne – and I’m putting this mildly – is a wine enthusiast. He did a short film when he was at UCLA called “The Passion of Martin,” which won a ton of awards, and he got a grant from Universal Pictures ... essentially a development deal, but he was a grad student at UCLA. With that development deal, they gave him like $100,000 to start developing things and screenplays and what not for Universal Pictures. And he told me it was like the first time he’d ever had any money ... . He immediately took ... $5,000 of that $100,000 to create his first wine cellar, like his first wine collection. Like, that was his priority in grad school was to become a wine connoisseur. Did he try to start a vineyard, too? No, no, no. I wouldn’t put it past him at all to be invested in a vineyard now. I would not at all put that past him. I think he loves wine just as much today as he did 25 years ago. ... He’s so smart and he’s so research-oriented, I wouldn’t put that past him for a minute. Click on icon for more! Page 6 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 Has he given you any wine? You know, he did give me and Paul Giamatti the ‘61 Cheval Blanc in the movie. He gave us both a ‘61 Cheval Blanc. Mine’s at the ranch. I hope it hasn’t gone bad. It might have. He gave it to us in like a really decorative beautiful box. ... I have a little bit of a wine collection, just over the years people have sent me wine, largely because of “Sideways,” like Andrew Murray and Sea Smoke ... . And I have a small collection in a closet that’s at my ranch. But I mean when people come and “Hey, you want to try a wine from ‘Sideways’?” they usually say yes. FOOD George Dickie’s What's for Dinner Hart has a good time drinking and cooking on ‘My Drunk Kitchen’ Hannah Hart, host of the YouTube hit “My Drunk Kitchen,” readily admits she’s not a chef, she’s not much of a drinker and the recipes she prepares on the show, well, they’re probably not hers. But that’s not the point of the series, which has taken upward of 9 million views since she made her first show on a lark in March 2011. The idea, the 29-year-old, comic, actress, author and web personality says, is to have fun in the kitchen and bring the viewer along for the ride. Click on icon for more! “In the house party of life, I always find myself in the kitchen,” Hart explains. “It’s the room I feel most comfortable in and I like being in the kitchen, especially if you’re at a house party and everybody is drinking and dancing and you want some quiet time and you just want to like talk to somebody and have a conversation without shouting. Usually in the kitchen is where you find it.” A typical “Drunk Kitchen” episode runs five to seven minutes and captures Hart in the kitchen of her Los Angeles-area apartment, preparing dishes ranging from crepes, beer brats and deviled eggs to sriracha chicken, eggplant parmesan and even a Thanksgiving turkey. She shoots the videos alone – no camera or lights people required – and her talk to the camera is pure improv. Each video, she says, usually takes one hour to shoot and four to edit. Occasionally a friend will stop by and Hart may press them into duty, on or off screen. There also will be the odd celebrity guest, which in the past have included Sarah Silverman, Mary-Louise Parker, Lance Bass, Jamie Oliver and, this past summer, Seth Rogen, with whom she did a sausage party to promote his movie “Sausage Party.” And then of course, there is the drinking. Hart admits an affinity for single malt scotch but on camera her beverage of choice is wine or a vodka soda. In her videos, Hart appears a bit tipsy and silly but certainly not out-of-control drunk. “I like to say about ‘My Drunk Kitchen’ I’m always exactly as drunk as I seem,” she says, “and so there are some episodes where I was like, ‘hotchy motchy!’ and there are some episodes where like I’m just having a good time. I’m a lightweight so it really doesn’t take much.” What book are you currently reading? “My answer is twofold. I just finished reading the final draft of my second book. I’m just going over it one more time. That’s called ‘Buffering: Unshared Tales of a Life Fully Loaded.’ That’s more of a memoir of my life and how it’s gotten to this point. ... But the other book I just finished reading is ‘10 Percent Happier’ by Dan Harris, which is just a great book.” What did you have for dinner last night? “To be honest, I think I just had bread and cheese.” What is your next project? “Currently, I’m working on ... a TV show for Food Network, and promoting my new book ‘Buffering’ later this fall.” When was your last vacation, where and why? “It’s hard to say ‘vacation.’ I took a weekend, I took four days and I went to Maui and I made a couple of videos while I was there. It was definitely amazing and awesome. But I just have a really hard time not making something, just because I love to create. But yeah, four days in Maui and it was the best.” October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 7 CELEBRITY George Dickie’s Celebrity ScooP Lindsay Sloane As an actress and a native New Yorker, Lindsay Sloane didn’t have too much of a problem dialing into the neurotic mind-set of her character Emily on CBS’ reboot of “The Odd Couple.” In fact, she embraced the role. “I’ve known Matthew (Perry, her co-star and the series’ executive producer) for years and he actually wrote this part for me, which I was so flattered,” the Long Islandborn, Southern California-raised Sloane says. “And then I read it and realized that Matthew thinks that I’m a crazy person. “But look, I think that the beauty of Emily is that she always kind of looks at the brighter side of life and I’m not necessarily that way all the time,” she continues. “And she’s crazy and neurotic but she is always positive and always hopeful and always kind of loving, which is something that I really admire about her.” “The Odd Couple,” which opens its third season Monday, Oct. 17, is just the latest in a long line of TV roles for the 39-year-old Sloane, who at 14 landed her first recurring role as Kevin’s unhinged love interest in “The Wonder Years,” then moved on to regular or recurring work in such series as “Sabrina, the Teenage Witch,” “Mr. Rhodes,” “That ‘70s Show,” “Grosse Pointe,” “Weeds” and “Playing House.” She’s worked regularly for the last 25 years and is proud she never had to take a job her heart wasn’t into. And she owes it all to “The Wonder Years.” “It really set the bar very high for when I started ...,” Sloane says. “But I really tried to maintain that I only do jobs that I love, whether it’s because someone is involved that I love or I love the character or I love the script. I really don’t ever want to be in a position in life where I have to take something just because I need to work or I’m desperate because of that. Because when you do experience something so perfect as ‘The Wonder Years,’ you live your life trying to strive for that the rest of your career.” Page 8 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 Click on icon for more! CELEBRITY CelebritY profile Lorraine Pascale - Born Nov. 17, 1972, in Hackney, East London, in the U.K., she was put up for adoption as a baby. - A highly successful fashion model in the ‘90s, she fronted campaigns for brands including Versace, Donna Karan, Katherine Hamnett and The Gap. She was the first British black model on the cover of American Elle and also worked regularly with Kate Moss, Christy Turlington and Naomi Campbell. - She appeared in a Haagen-Dazs commercial and starred as a Bond girl in Robbie Williams’s “Millennium” video. - In 1996, she gave birth to her daughter, Ella. - At the start of 2000, encouraged by the self-help book “What Color is Your Parachute?,” she experimented with careers. After exploring a few different fields, she decided to pursue her longterm passion for cooking. Lorraine Pascale is a former model, chef, best-selling author and TV personality who can currently be seen on Food Network’s “Worst Bakers in America.” - She enrolled in Leith’s Diploma of Food and Wine course, and learned about every aspect of food. Following that she went for a degree at University of West London (then called Thames Valley University) in culinary arts management – Patisserie. She graduated with a first class honors degree, summa cum laude. - Her break came when she was put in touch with Selfridges’ food director and commissioned to make 250 Christmas cakes. - In 2009 she started Ella’s Bakehouse, pioneering mojito cupcakes and even a limoncello one. - In 2011, she published her very successful first cookbook, “Baking Made Easy,” as well as a TV tie-in series with BBC television. She has since appeared on numerous BBC, Cooking Channel and Food Network shows. - This month, she joined Duff Goldman as a co-host of the new Food Network series “Worst Bakers in America.” In the show they start off with 12 of the worst bakers and put them through an intense baking boot camp, eliminating contestants until only one is left standing. - In addition to her TV series, she has authored six bestselling books and made a documentary, “Fostering & Me,” in which she looked at her own experience of being fostered as a child and the experiences of foster children. - Among her charitable works, including those to do with foster care, she is spearheading Sow and Grow, an initiative in the U.K. that aims to get children cultivating vegetables in pots and window boxes. Click or tap here for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 9 CELEBRITY “She kind of took me in under her wing. ... She was a very disciplined actress and it was great because she taught me to be on time. ... You know, it’s be on time and hit your marks, know your words and keep your mouth shut and you’ll go a long way. And it’s always been true.” – Lee Majors of “Ash vs. Evil Dead” on Starz, on his former “The Big Valley” co-star Barbara Stanwyck “I think my job is to be as flexible as I can with discovering new characters and new storylines, and it feels like an easy transition when you have good material. When you have material that is strong enough, where the character kind of ‘pings’ at you from the page, then it’s a matter of just inhabiting a world that’s already been formed for you. So it was a very welcome challenge.” — Hayley Atwell of “Conviction” on ABC, about tackling another series right after “Marvel’s Agent Carter” Page 10 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 “We’re always constantly evolving and growing and learning new things about ourselves … so that’s how I handle Cookie. Just because she’s a fictional character doesn’t mean she’s ‘got it.’ You know, she’s still growing.” – Taraji P. Henson of “Empire” on Fox c b l e e s CELEBRITY DVR Do you ever wonder what the Celebs DVR? we have the answers! Kyle Busch of the Hollywood Casino 400 on NBC “My wife and I, we like to watch ‘The Walking Dead.’ We’ve also got ‘Castle’ on there. We’ve got ‘The Blacklist’ on there. And the other one with Kevin Bacon, ‘The Following.’ ” Anthony Hopkins of “Westworld” on HBO “If there’s a film I want to see again ... I’ve got several DVRs. But ‘Spartacus’ (with) Kirk Douglas. I’ve got lists of them on two or three different televisions. I’ve got ‘The Threepenny Opera,’ which is a gem from 1931. I like old films.” Judith Light of “Transparent” on Amazon “I love my CNN, I really do. I’m a devotee, but sometimes, I just want to watch something like ‘House Hunters International’ or just watch people travel and go places. But there are things I’m determined to watch, like my darling Sarah Paulson doing ‘O.J.’ (‘The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story’).” William Hurt of “Goliath” on Amazon “Sometimes, I turn off all visual media, for long periods. I don’t want to be addicted to it, and I don’t want to be bombarded by it ... I want to consider it.” PLUS We want to know Who would you want to be, a ZOMBIE or SURVIVOR? Visit our facebook page and post your answer to facebook/yourtvlink Not on facebook? No problem! You can also email your answers to nburton@gracenote.com October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 11 STORY Sunday on National Geographic Channel Matheson, Nixon make a convincing first couple in NatGeo’s ‘Killing Reagan’ By George Dickie At first glance, Infinite Energy Center in suburban Atlanta would seem an unlikely filming location for a presidential debate scene. But turn the lights down in a conference room filled with production equipment and up on a podium sporting a presidential seal and no one would be any the wiser. It’s a hot early June afternoon in North Georgia, where a production crew is busy filming several scenes for National Geographic Channel’s “Killing Reagan.” The two-hour telepic, which premieres Sunday, Oct. 16, is based on the book by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard, that follows the events leading up to the 1981 attempt on the life of President Ronald Reagan by John Hinckley Jr. The movie actually breaks down into two stories. One is that of Reagan, played in the film by Tim Matheson (“The West Wing,” “Animal House”), the former California governor who rides voter disenchantment with a foundering economy to an easy victory over Jimmy Carter in the 1980 election. The other is Hinckley’s (Kyle S. More, “Murder in the First,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”), a mentally ill child of privilege looking for ways to impress the object of his obsession, “Taxi Driver” actress Jodie Foster. Their stories and lives converge on March 30, 1981, when Hinckley shoots Reagan and three others Continued on next page Page 12 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 STORY Continued from previous page outside a Washington, D.C., hotel, nearly taking the life the nation’s 40th chief executive. On this day, Matheson is at the podium filming a soliloquy delivered by Reagan during his famous Oct. 1980 debate with Carter, with Reagan’s actual words played to him through an earpiece. The 68-yearold actor is a stickler for detail, stopping the filming numerous times to get Reagan’s cadence, inflections and pauses down to a tee. Sporting a slicked shell of hair and a dark blue suit, he certainly looks and sounds the part. But he’s also very wary of coming off as someone doing a Reagan impression. “That’s the danger ...,” he says. “I think the trap is to try and do a mimic of the great speeches and things and not to find the rhythm and the inner thing because nobody’s looking at both of them. (Viewers are) going to be looking at whatever we do and they’re going to go, ‘Is that how it was?’ And then you go and look, ‘Oh, it’s a little slower. He didn’t quite say that word, he said this word.’ You know, I got a couple of words transposed.” “But I think the most important thing,” Matheson continues, “was to try and find the inner core of what his beliefs were because he had very strong principles about what he believes politically and personally and emotionally. So I was looking just for the inner sort of course that he was taking and then let the outside just take care of itself.” The attempt on Reagan’s life had a profound effect on his wife Nancy, played here by former “Sex and the City” co-star Cynthia Nixon. In the early days of his presidency, says the 50-year-old actress, Reagan was the subject of much criticism and Nancy felt that they were somewhat under siege and not safe, a belief further exacerbated by the shooting. “She worries that they aren’t being protected better,” Nixon says, “that they’re kind of under attack from all of these angles. And then of course, this thing happens where he is literally attacked and was almost killed, and I think at that point she will not take any chances. And that’s when she becomes – she’s very aggressive anyway in her guard-dog stance – but this makes her feel that there are all these Pictured: Cynthia Nixon people and I’m supposed to trust them but there are too many things being left to chance here and we’re not playing around. This can have very dire consequences.” Click on icon for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 13 STORY ‘Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency’ retains Douglas Adams’ spirit Pictured: Samuel Barnett (left) and Elijah Wood By John Crook A n eccentric detective with an unconventional style of solving cases drags a hapless failed musician into a world of time travel, holistic assassins, psychic vampires and a kitten that is also a hammerhead shark in “Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency,” a series adaptation of Douglas Adams’ novels premiering Saturday, Oct. 22, on BBC America. Actually, in this case, “adaptation” may be stretching the truth a little, so to address the kitten-shark in the room: Adams purists will discover that, apart from Dirk Gently (Samuel Barnett) himself, this new TV series from screenwriter Max Landis (“Chronicle”) features almost entirely new characters and story lines that take place in the Pacific Northwest. “This has really been a concern of mine, obviously, that for anyone who knows Douglas Adams’ work and is a fan of the books, they might be, um, surprised, put off even, by what has been done with them,” Barnett (“Penny Dreadful”) confesses. “For me, I adored the books when I read them, but then I read the scripts and realized, ‘You know what? Continued on next page Page 14 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 STORY Pictured: Samuel Barnett Continued from previous page The essence of Dirk is really there.’ What Max has done quite brilliantly, I think, is put a lot of ‘Easter eggs’ in all the episodes where, if you know the original, you’ll go, ‘Ah, that’s directly from the books.’ You get a sense of Dirk’s history with cases.” lose. The strong ensemble cast also includes Richard Schiff (“The West Wing”) as a detective whose missingperson investigation dovetails with Dirk’s case, and Miguel Sandoval (“Medium”) as the head of a busted CIA secret bureau, who may have a troubling history with Dirk. Moreover, Barnett adds, the third Dirk Gently novel, “The Salmon of Doubt,” which Adams left unfinished when he died at 49 in 2001, ends with the sleuth flying from his native England to America. Barnett, who burst onto the international acting scene about a decade ago in the hit stage play “The History Boys” and its subsequent film version, brings a manic boyishness to Dirk that bounces nicely off Wood’s Todd, whose wideeyed shock and horror are more than justified by the world “In my mind, the Dirk world that we have in the TV show is a into which he finds himself dragged. As the series unfolds sort of continuation of the end of the books,” the actor says. at a mostly madcap clip, these two splendid actors give the proceedings a heart and a sense that there are some “Also, Arvind Ethan David, who is an executive producer real emotional stakes in a wacky story that features four on this, had worked very closely with Douglas before he characters who call themselves The Rowdy 3 because, well, passed away, far too soon, and he had a very strong hand of course they would. in keeping this as authentic as possible and ensuring that it had integrity. I feel like Douglas would have loved this slightly updated version of what he had done for the books.” Season 1 comprises eight episodes, but Barnett says he’d happily play Dirk for several seasons. In addition to its BBC America presence in the United States, “Dirk Adams loyalists who give the show a chance are in for a Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency” also will be streamed in wild, breathlessly paced ride, as Barnett’s goofy, possibly international markets elsewhere later this year via Netflix. certifiable Dirk insinuates himself into the bleak existence of Todd Brotzman (Elijah Wood), a sad-sack Seattleite who is so depressed that he pretty much has nothing to Click on icon for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 15 STORY Documentary on ‘sexting’ politician Anthony Weiner makes Showtime debut By Jay Bobbin Three strikes, and you’re out. Not only are baseball players familiar with the phrase, so is Anthony Weiner now. The controversial New York politician’s “sexting” scandals have been the subjects of headlines and endless late-night-television jokes, and the first two of those situations are invoked by “Weiner,” the documentary movie that makes its Showtime debut Saturday, Oct. 22. After the film’s theatrical release last May, Weiner was caught in a third such scandal that prompted wife Huma Abedin – long a supporter of his, at least publicly, and a top assistant to current Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton -- to separate from him. Weiner’s communication with other women via racy cellphone messages factored into two political downfalls, his resignation from Congress in 2011 and his run for mayor of New York in 2013. “Weiner” producer-directors Josh Kriegman, a former Weiner aide, and Elyse Steinberg had generally unlimited access in making the film (which won the U.S. Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival) during the ultimately derailed 2013 campaign ... resulting in some clearly uncomfortable moments between Weiner and Abedin being shown. “I think a lot of people who see our film wonder, ‘Why did he agree to this? How does this even exist?,’ ” Steinberg reflects. “What you get to see is a real behind-the-scenes look at what it means for a marriage of two people to be at the center of a media firestorm. What does that feel like? What does that look like? And this question about why did Anthony agree, and why did he let us continue to film even after the scandal broke, is a question that we wondered about ourselves. And it’s a question that we included in the film, and directly asked Anthony. “And Anthony does give us an answer,” adds Steinberg, “when he says that he wanted to be viewed as the full person that he was. He didn’t regret letting us film. He wanted to be seen as more than just a punch line. And that was our intention with the film, to take somebody who had just been reduced to a caricature and offer a more nuanced and human look.” Having also had a behind-the-scenes perspective on Weiner earlier, Kriegman notes, “Some of these same qualities that made him so successful as a politician were the exact same parts of his personality that ultimately led to problems in other aspects of his life. He talks about being wired in a certain way to need attention and thriving in a world of superficial and transactional relationships. These are skills in the political arena, and they led to issues – obviously -- for him.” As for Abedin’s presence in the film, Steinberg says, “Our access was with Anthony. You get to see her, but not as much. What you do get to see is the ridicule and judgment that was placed upon her, just as much as it was placed upon him … in fact, sometimes even more. And I think one of the reasons that she wanted to do this film, and I can’t speak for her, is that she wanted a more complete story told than the one that was playing out in the tabloids and the headlines. You get to see a different side of her than the caricature that she became.” Indeed, Kriegman concludes, “A lot of what we get to see is filtered through sound bites and clips and tweets. And in this case, you get to really see just a more complete picture. For a lot of people, it’s the experience of realizing that some of the judgments and preconceptions that we have going in can be questioned. And that these people (in the public eye) are much more complicated and nuanced than we might think.” Click on icon for more! Page 16 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 STORY Bad president tries to make good in Epix’s entertaining ‘Graves’ By George Dickie Richard Graves is a man about to undergo a spiritual awakening. As portrayed by Nick Nolte (“48 HRS.,” “The Prince of Tides”) in the new Epix dramedy “Graves,” premiering Sunday, Oct. 16, he’s a former two-term president of the United States, 25 years removed from office, who tries pot one night, does an Internet search on “worst president” and finds his name prominently and frequently mentioned. Determined to right wrongs and clean up his legacy – which includes a badly tanking economy, two disastrous wars and the gutting of numerous federal programs – the Republican ex-chief executive goes off script, starts speaking his mind and following his newly reborn conscience, much to the dismay of his party and those around him. They include Margaret (Sela Ward, “Now and Again,” “Sisters”), his dutiful wife who’s in the process of launching her own bid for U.S. Senate; Isaiah (Skyler Astin, “Pitch Perfect”), his overeager assistant; Olivia (Helene Yorke, “Masters of Sex”), the Graves’ divorced hot mess of a daughter; Jeremy (Chris Lowell, “Veronica Mars”), his resentful son just back from duty in Afghanistan; Frankie (Ernie Hudson, “Ghostbusters”), the Graves family “fixer”; and Annie (Nia Vardalos, “My Big Fat Greek Wedding”), Margaret’s no-nonsense campaign manager. Acting as his muse is Samantha (Callie Hernandez, “Sin City: A Dame To Kill For), a free-spirited waitress who encourages the ex-commander-in-chief to break free from his former beliefs. The character of Richard Graves seems tailor-made for Nolte: a cursing, smoking, hard-drinking guy whose gruff exterior masks a sizeable streak of decency. But he’s also a man of many regrets, a trait to which Nolte found easy to connect. “I’m 75. I got a lot of regrets,” Nolte told a recent gathering of journalists in Beverly Hills, Calif. “So it doesn’t matter whether it’s president or not president or Republican or Democrat. It’s a man that is aching. He knows he’s going to die, and he’s looking back at his life, and some of the things he did earlier, he regrets the decisions of. There isn’t a president that doesn’t. But they don’t do anything about it because they’re in the public eye. We take license (with) satire and go into it.” The half-hour series features cameos by real-life politicians, including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Massachusetts Sen. Barney Frank and former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson. The natural assumption is that, because this is a Republican president realizing the error of his ways, this show will be a slam fest directed at Republicans. But creator/ showrunner Joshua Michael Stern insists that won’t be the case. “We ... went to a lot of pains to make sure that this character, you know, pretty much skewers both sides of the aisle, and through the whole series, you’ll see that ...,” he says. “But in the end, this is a family show, weirdly, and so ... it’s about a father and his wife and the children. So I don’t think when you see the totality of the show do you get that we’re actually hitting one side.” Click on icon for more! October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 17 SPORTS Buckeyes grooming another Bosa Story on next page Full Name: Nicholas Bosa Class: Freshman Born: Oct. 23, 1997 No.: 97 Birthplace: Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Position: Defensive end Height/Weight: 6-foot, 4-inches/265-pounds Honors & Achievements: Consensus five-star prospect nationally by ESPN, Rivals, 247Sports and Scout; top 10 overall prospect in his recruiting class Team: Ohio State Buckeyes Page 18 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 SPORTS By Dan Ladd If the name and number look familiar when a big, fast defensive end lines up for the Ohio State Buckeyes, it’s not déjà vu. What you’re seeing is true freshman Nick Bosa who is on his way to filling his older brother, Joey Bosa’s, shoes in Columbus. Nick and the Buckeyes visit Penn State Saturday, Oct. 22, on ABC. A top recruit out of St. Thomas Aquinas High School in Florida, the younger Bosa committed to Ohio State in 2015 while his brother – a two-time All-American and Big Ten defensive lineman of the year, and third pick in the 2016 NFL draft – was still with the team. Football is in the Bosa family blood. John Bosa, Nick and Joey’s father, played three seasons for the Miami Dolphins and their uncle, Erik Kumerow, was a Buckeye standout who also played for the Dolphins. Cheryl Kumerow Bosa, their mother, is an Ohio State alumni, too. NicholasBosa For Nick, that’s all history. He’s now on a team loaded with young talent that is already making headway and headlines. He recorded his first sack in his first game against Bowling Green and by Week 3 was part of a threeman rotation that kept pressure on Oklahoma quarterback Baker Mayfield in Ohio State’s route of the Sooners. Should the Buckeye’s continue to progress there’s no doubt Nick will play a role. For now, he and the Buc’s are part of the discussion of teams that could potentially qualify for the college football playoff. October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 19 MOVIES JAY BOBBIN's Theatrical movie review ‘Bridget Jones’ Our Take gives birth to a third movie Some characters – as personified by the actors known for playing them – are so beloved, movie producers feel confident going back to them after a long break. Harrison Ford certainly proved it with Han Solo recently, and even if Renee Zellweger isn’t on quite the same level as Bridget Jones, there’s enough remaining good will toward her in the role (even after the initial controversy over an American playing an Englishwoman) for it to be revived 12 years after the last round. Hugh Grant is absent from “Bridget Jones’s Baby,” but “Grey’s Anatomy” alum Patrick Dempsey turns up this time to pose a rivalry to Colin Firth, whose Mark Darcy continues to have romantic misadventures with Bridget. As might be deduced from the title, our heroine ends up “with child” ... but the question is which man’s child it is. Despite that dilemma, Zellweger continues to play cute as Bridget – and it still works, particularly for fans of the first two pictures. Frankly, anything other than a Pollyanna-like Bridget would be too sharp a turn at this point, and the series is a good vessel for the actress to use in getting back to major roles (of which she hasn’t had many lately). Pictured: Renee Zellweger Much else also is familiar about “Bridget Jones’s Baby,” which helps as well. “Bridget Jones’s Diary” director Sharon Maguire is back, as is original “Bridget” novelist Helen Fielding, who worked on the screenplay ... as did Emma Thompson, who also shows up on screen in her typically redoubtable way as a gynecologist pretty much devoid of humor. (Which, in this film, makes her all the more humorous.) Also, Jim Broadbent is back as Bridget’s father, and music star Ed Sheeran has an amusing cameo in a sequence built around the famed Glastonbury Festival. By the time the heroine is ready to give birth in “Bridget Jones’s Baby,” the tone is that of farce, with complications building on top of each other as all concerned try to get to the hospital. In any other movie, the sequence might be imply too much – but here, it seems suitable and appropriate, and it especially gives Zellweger and Firth the chance to put their comedic chops to a real test. Though it’s been a while since “Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason,” the nice result of “Bridget Jones’s Baby” is the proof that you can go home again, whether you’re the star of a franchise or an admiring audience member. Page 20 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 MOVIES JAY BOBBIN's DVD Digest Top Pick DVD “INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE” Twenty years later, aliens invade Earth again – now equipped with even more lethal technology – in director Roland Emmerich’s sequel to his sci-fi classic. A number of familiar faces from the original also are back, including Judd Hirsch and Jeff Goldblum as a father and son, and Bill Pullman as the now-former U.S. president return (Sela Ward’s character holds that office here). Will Smith is absent, but Jessie T. Usher plays his stepson, now a similar maverick pilot along with an ally portrayed by Liam Hemsworth. Brent Spiner also returns, as does Robert Loggia, in one of his final performances before his passing. DVD extras: theatrical trailer and TV spot; two “making-of” documentaries; audio commentary by Emmerich; deleted scenes; outtakes; art gallery. ››› (PG-13: P, V) (Also on Blu-ray and On Demand) Pictured: Bill Pullman upcoming DVD releases “LIGHTS OUT” (Oct. 25): A woman (Teresa Palmer) fears her younger brother is facing the same terror that made her question her sanity. (PG-13: AS, P, V) “BAD MOMS” (Nov. 1): Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell and Kathryn Hahn play said mothers, who decide to leave their responsibilities behind and cut loose. (R: AS, N, P) “NINE LIVES” (Nov. 1): After being transferred into the body of a cat, a billionaire (Kevin Spacey) tries to make amends to his neglected family. (PG: AS, P) Pictured: Teresa Palmer “BILLIONS: SEASON ONE” (Nov. 8): A federal attorney (Paul Giamatti) sets his sights on the hedge-fund king (Damian Lewis) who employs the lawyer’s wife (Maggie Siff). (Not rated: AS, N, P) “FINDING DORY” (Nov. 15): In the sequel to Disney-Pixar’s animated “Finding Nemo,” fish Dory (voice of Ellen DeGeneres) sets out to find her parents. (PG: AS) “GAME OF THRONES: THE COMPLETE SIXTH SEASON” (Nov. 15): The fate of Jon Snow (Kit Harington) is a major element of this most recent round of the hugely popular HBO series. (Not rated: AS, N, GV) Family Viewing Ratings AS Adult situations P Profanity V Violence N Nudity GV Graphic Violence October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 21 HALLOWEEN SHOWS SUNDAY October 16 8 p.m. on Fox The Simpsons An annual, seasonal tradition also marks the animated comedy’s 600th episode -- a stunning number for any series to reach -- as the animated “Treehouse of Horror XXVII” holds to form by placing the Simpsons in several scary-funny vignettes. A drought in Springfield prompts a “Hunger Games”-like competition; Lisa’s (voice of Yeardley Smith) imaginary best friend turns lethal; and Bart (voice of Nancy Cartwright) is clued into some unlikely spies. 9 p.m. on AMC The Walking Dead Fans of this hit horror series hardly need to be reminded how Season 6 ended -namely, with the villainous Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) making a lethal-looking swing with his baseball bat, Lucille -- but tonight’s special two-hour episode, “The Journey So Far,” provides a helpful bigpicture recap of how events reached this point, in advance of the Oct. 23 premiere of Season 7. 9 p.m. on Food Network Halloween Wars In a new episode called “Two-Faced,” the four remaining teams compete to create Halloween-themed displays that capture, as memorably as possible, the horror of a monster with two visages. Actress Carlson Young (MTV’s series adaptation of “Scream”) joins cake decorator Shinmin Li and horror icon Don Mancini on the judging panel to help decide which teams will move on to the next battle. Jonathan Bennett is the host. MONDAY October 17 7 p.m. on Syfy Cabin Fever: Patient Zero The third entry in a horror movie franchise that started with “Cabin Fever” in 2002, this 2014 release is actually a prequel to the other two films and establishes the origin of the flesh-eating virus that drives the story. This film starts in a remote island lab, where scientists are trying to find a vaccine for the virus by studying one of its carriers, an asymptomatic prisoner named Powell (Sean Astin). Jillian Murray, Currie Graham, Lydia Hearst and Mitch Ryan also star. 9 p.m. on Food Network Halloween Baking Championship Things are only getting spookier for the five remaining bakers as they must enter a “Haunted Circus” (also the title of this new episode), where they are tasked with creating a dozen scary clown cake pops. In the main heat, the bakers make frighteningly strange mash-up desserts. Carla Hall, Sandra Lee and Damiano Carrara are the judges; Jeff Dunham and his puppet sidekick Walter are the hosts. TUESDAY October 18 8 p.m. on Fox Brooklyn Nine-Nine An annual, seasonal competition is on again in the new episode “Halloween IV,” as the detectives vie to be the champ of the Halloween Heist contest. The stakes are upped -- and we don’t just mean in the vampire sense -- as the rivalry reaches a new level of intensity. Andy Samberg, Andre Braugher, Terry Crews, Melissa Fumero, Joe Lo Truglio, Chelsea Peretti and Stephanie Beatriz star. 9:01 p.m. on Fox Scream Queens The Green Meanie has struck again, prompting Munsch, Hester and Denise (Jamie Lee Curtis, Lea Michele, guest star Niecy Nash) to formulate a plan to find the murderer in the new episode “Halloween Blues.” Their idea is to throw a seasonal party at the hospital, echoing the site’s eerie history. Chanel (Emma Roberts) takes another approach by trying to communicate with the most recent victim. However, another killing is on the horizon. John Stamos also stars. WEDNESDY October 19 7 p.m. on Freeform R.L. Stine’s Monsterville: Cabinet of Souls When the Hall of Horrors show arrives in Danville, several high school friends can’t wait to get scared in this 2015 teen horror comedy directed by Peter DeLuise. As they make their way through this sinister carnival, however, they gradually discover the showman (Andrew Kavadas) and his company actually are trapping and feeding off the souls of lost young people. Dove Cameron (Disney’s “Descendants”) and Katherine McNamara (“Shadowhunters: The Mortal Instruments”) star. 8 p.m. on ABC It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown It simply wouldn’t be the Halloween season without this animated “Peanuts” classic, Page 22 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 marking its 50th anniversary. Linus stakes out a spot in the pumpkin patch, hoping to catch a glimpse of the Great Pumpkin. While he continues his annual vigil, Charlie Brown discovers stones in his trick-or-treat bag, Lucy becomes maternal and Snoopy gets moonstruck. Written by Charles M. Schulz, the special features the franchise’s familiar music by Vince Guaraldi. 8:30 p.m. on ABC Toy Story OF TERROR! It’s kid-friendly terror, of course, in this special featuring Woody, Buzz Lightyear and the beloved characters from the “Toy Story” movies. Here, they’re on a road trip and they stop at a motel -- where one of them disappears. As the other toys search for their comrade, they get caught up in a series of mysterious events. Tom Hanks and Tim Allen lead the voice cast again, with Joan Cusack, Don Rickles and Timothy Dalton among other franchise returnees. 9 p.m. on Syfy Ghost Hunters A woman whose home property lies adjacent to the former site of a cursed 1740s village begins to fret that evil entities may have migrated over from that dark spot to pose a threat to her family in the new episode “Dudley Dead Wright.” She hopes the TAPS team can put her fears to rest. Later, the paranormal investigators explore a local restaurant and a nearby house after the spirit of a little girl has been seen in both buildings. 10 p.m. on FX American Horror Story: 6 The writers and producers of the current Season 6 have been scrupulous about not giving away any secrets, but there’s one thing series creator Ryan Murphy revealed from the outset: Halfway through the season, there’s a major flip in the story. “Starting in episode 6, the show has a huge turn, and the thing that you think you’re watching is not what you’re watching,” Murphy says. That would be tonight’s episode, so: Brace yourself. 10 p.m. on Syfy Paranormal Witness Spouses Steve and Dawn Hess are camping in the Mojave Desert when their weekend is disrupted by bright lights in the night sky and what appear to be soldierlike figures parachuting to Earth. Left with only hazy memories of what actually continued on next page HALLOWEEN SHOWS happened, the couple consents to hypnotic regression to shed light on four lost hours in a harrowing episode called “The Mojave Encounter.” THURSDAY October 20 8 p.m. on Fox The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again One of screen history’s ultimate cult classics gets a do-over in this new version, which acknowledges the project’s past by including an on-screen audience to react along with at-home viewers. Ryan McCartan and Victoria Justice now play Brad and Janet, the straitlaced couple who undergo a big transformation upon becoming stranded with mad scientist Frank-N-Furter (Laverne Cox) and company. The original film’s Tim Curry narrates. Ben Vereen also stars. 9 p.m. on The CW Supernatural He may not have “Jessie’s Girl,” but Rick Springfield has something else -- the spirit of Lucifer -- in the new episode “Mamma Mia.” The singer-actor begins a guest arc as, of all things, a rock star ... but one whose otherworldly possession is discovered by Crowley (Mark A. Sheppard). Mary (guest star Samantha Smith) is determined to accompany Dean and Castiel (Jensen Ackles, Misha Collins) on a mission to rescue Sam (Jared Padalecki). FRIDAY October 21 8 p.m. on The CW The Vampire Diaries The eighth -- and final -- season of the series opens with “Hello, Brother,” resuming the saga months from where it left off, as Stefan (Paul Wesley) continues to seek Damon and Enzo (Ian Somerhalder, Michael Malarkey). Bonnie (Kat Graham) tries to maintain hope that the search will be successful. Caroline and Alaric (Candice King, Matt Davis) fear they and their family are in danger. Executive producers Julie Plec and Kevin Williamson wrote the script. 8 p.m. on TCM Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Arguably the ultimate story of split personality, the Robert Louis Stevenson classic gets another screen workout in this 1941 version starring Spencer Tracy in the title role -- er, roles. Scientist Henry Jekyll uses a series of potions on himself until they alter him completely, converting him into the murderous Hyde. Co-stars include Ingrid Bergman, Lana Turner, Peter Godfrey and C. Aubrey Smith. 8 p.m. on TLC Ghosts of Shepherdstown It’s been a year since a trio of ghost hunters traveled to this West Virginia community to find out why it has a reputation to some as the most haunted town in America. Out of a population of 1,750 people, it’s hard to find someone who hasn’t had some inexplicable experience, and the local police department keeps busy responding to 911 calls from panicked citizens. This new “Update Show” special sends a team back to touch base with locals and Police Chief Michael King to see whether the town is still a paranormal hotbed. 8:31 p.m. on ABC Dr. Ken It’s Halloween in the new episode “D.K.’s Korean Ghost Story,” as Allison (Suzy Nakamura) tries to figure out a way to put fun frights back into the occasion for Dave (Albert Tsai). She may get help from D.K. (Dana Lee), who relates a hair-raising tale -- with the family and co-workers bringing it to life by playing its various characters. Tisha Campbell-Martin, Krista Marie Yu, Jonathan Slavin and Dave Foley also star. 9:01 p.m. on Fox The Exorcist What the show’s title has implied is coming finally begins in the new “Chapter Five: Through My Most Grievous Fault,” as Father Tomas and Father Marcus (Alfonso Herrera, Ben Daniels) start the exorcism ... just as a huge storm hits Chicago. However, the demon proves to be braced for their effort to drive him out, demonstrated through the targeting of other members of the Rance family. Geena Davis, Alan Ruck, Brianne Howey and Hannah Kasulka also star. 9:01 p.m. on TLC A Haunting This popular series returns with new episodes starting with “Demon’s Lair,” which revolves around a family who had gotten used to a seemingly harmless ghost who haunted their home. Once the spirit starts menacing the children, however, the parents turn to Catholic Church clerics to help drive a demon from their residence. 10:02 p.m. on TLC Kindred Spirits That former dynamic duo from “Ghost Hunters,” Amy Bruni and Adam Berry, get their own gig in this new series that finds them traveling to help real families who are freaked out by apparently paranormal activity in their homes. In the series premiere, “Cabin in the Woods,” Amy and Adam head to Pennsylvania to help a family make sense of unexplainable happenings on their desolate property and find the spirit stalking them. SATURDAY October 22 9 p.m. on Hallmark Channel Good Witch: Secrets of Grey House After Cassie (Catherine Bell) welcomes popular fantasy author Jessica Carrington (Rebecca Marshall) and her editor (Jeff Roop) to Grey House, Jessica finds the place so charming she decides to hold the launch party for her next book in Middleton. While Mayor Martha Tinsdale (Catherine Disher) focuses all her energy on getting the town ready for that Halloween-themed event, Sam (James Denton) immerses himself in work to get over the trauma of losing a patient during surgery. Bailee Madison and Sarah Power also star. 9 p.m. on Syfy Shadows of the Dead It may be childish to be afraid of the dark, but in this new 2016 Halloween chiller, it also can improve the likelihood that you’ll survive your high-school years. That’s definitely the case for the teens at the center of this movie, who are being stalked with single-minded determination by an eerie creature that lives in the shadows and is picking them off one after another. Kennedy Tucker, Thomas Miguel Ruff, Taylor Jorgensen and Alexandra Page Chapman star. October 16 - 22, 2016 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote Page 23 FAVORITE SHOWS SUNDAY 10 p.m. on USA Eyewitness In the premiere of this new 10episode anthology series adapted from a Norwegian drama, closeted gay teens Philip and Lukas (Tyler Young, James Paxton) are sharing their first kiss when they witness a murder, but they don’t report it out of fear that it would lead to them being outed. Their deception snowballs once Philip’s foster mother, Sheriff Helen Torrance (Julianne Nicholson, “Law & Order: Criminal Intent”) takes the case. Gil Bellows also stars. Series Premiere New MONDAY 9 p.m. on CW Jane the Virgin Is Michael (Brett Dier) alive? After he was shot on his wedding night, that’s a major question as Season 3 of this seriocomic, telenovela-inspired series begins with “Chapter FortyFive.” Whichever way the answer falls, it’s guaranteed to give Jane (Gina Rodriguez) a lot to deal with, including the course of her dealings with Rafael (Justin Baldoni). Petra’s look-alike (both played by Yael Grobglas) complicates things. Jaime Camil and Andrea Navedo also star. Season Premiere New TUESDAY 8 p.m. on CW The Flash The new episode “Magenta” is named for an enemy (played by guest star Joey King, “Fargo”) with the ability to manipulate metal — making for a lot of potential makeshift weapons. Her arrival coincides with the return of the Earth-2 Wells and Jesse (Tom Cavanagh, guest star Violett Beane), who may require the help of Barry and Caitlin (Grant Gustin, Danielle Panabaker) ... whether the newly speedy Jesse knows it or not. Jesse L. Martin also stars. New WEDNESDAY 9 p.m. on ABC CBS NBC FOX PBS Presidential Debate With the election only a few weeks away, candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump engage — in multiple senses of that word — in the last of their three debates, as Chris Wallace of Fox News moderates at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas. This being the contenders’ final slated meeting before America votes, the stakes clearly are high. Multiple broadcast and cable networks will cover the event, scheduled to be staged as six 15-minute segments on single topics. New THURSDAY 9 p.m. on CMT CMT Artists of the Year 2016 Kelsea Ballerini will receive the Breakout Artist of the Year award during this 90-minute special originating from Schermerhorn Page 23 YOUR TV LINK Courtesy of Gracenote October 16 - 22, 2016 Symphony Center in Nashville, Tenn. Other top country artists to be honored include Carrie Underwood, Chris Stapleton, Florida Georgia Line, Luke Bryan and Thomas Rhett. New FRIDAY 9 p.m. on CW Crazy Ex-Girlfriend After establishing itself as one of television’s most unique series, what does Season 2 hold for the heavily musical show? The answer emerges starting with this first new episode, “Where Is Josh’s Friend.” Rebecca (Rachel Bloom) is sure Josh (Vincent Rodriguez III) loves her, and Paula (Donna Lynne Champlin) tries to get a grip on her interest in that supposed relationship. Marc Webb, of “(500) Days of Summer” fame, directed and co-wrote the tale. Season Premiere New SATURDAY 8 p.m. on LIFETIME Movie: Death of a Vegas Showgirl In this lurid but fact-based new 2016 melodrama, rising Las Vegas dancers Debbie Flores (Roselyn Sanchez, “Devious Maids”) and Jason “Blu” Griffith (Danso Gordon, “Hang Time”) fall in love, but their relationship spirals into obsession and reckless behavior. After Debbie disappears on the eve of a major debut, the subsequent investigation turns up shocking details about this relationship-gone-wrong. Sanchez also executive-produced this TV movie with her husband, Eric Winter (“Witches of East End”). Premiere