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Baseball and the Pete Rose Scandal, ‘Presumed Innocent’ Finale, Wayne Brady and Family, ‘Time Bandits’

A two-part HBO documentary explores the baseball legend and downfall of Cincinnati Reds superstar Pete Rose. The Apple TV+ courtroom drama Presumed Innocent delivers its Season 1 verdict. Wayne Brady presents his blended family in a new reality series. Apple TV+ launches a fantasy inspired by Terry Gilliam’s 1981 Time Bandits.

HBO

Charlie Hustle & The Matter of Pete Rose

Was there ever a baseball superstar as scrappy — and as flawed — as Pete Rose, the hometown hero of the Cincinnati Reds? (Disclosure: I grew up in the shadow of the Big Red Machine during the team’s 1970s heyday.) “He should be one of the most exalted athletes in history,” laments sports broadcaster Al Michaels during a colorful four-part documentary airing over two nights (concluding Thursday) that depicts Rose’s triumphant and combative rise and devastating fall when Major League Baseball banned him for life from the sport after it was revealed that he bet on games while managing the Reds. “He was an entertainer … and a consummate liar,” says Sports Illustrated’s Larry Keith. Rose sits for new and candid interviews, having finally confessed his sins, though still arguing for reinstatement in his 80s.

Apple TV+

Presumed Innocent

The legal melodrama based on Scott Turow’s career-making bestseller closes its case in the Season 1 finale, titled “The Verdict.” The streamer didn’t make the episode available for preview, so it’s unknown if the book and movie’s infamous twist remains intact. (David E. Kelley also chose to keep the disappointing finale of his HBO series The Undoing under wraps. Let’s hope this is more satisfying.) The last time we saw prosecutor-turned-defendant Rusty Sabich (Jake Gyllenhaal), it wasn’t looking good after he became his own lawyer in court — ignoring that old “fool as a client” truism — and then took the stand, much to his chagrin. “Dare I ask what now?” his wife Barbara (Ruth Negga) wonders. We’re about to find out. Regardless of the outcome, the show will return for a second season. Also ending its first season on Apple TV+: Eva Longoria’s Land of Women.

Disney/Matt Sayles

Wayne Brady: The Family Remix

While not quite The Brady Bunch, game-show host and recent Broadway star (in The Wiz) Wayne Brady’s blended family has the makings of a real-life sitcom. Brady welcomes reality-TV cameras to capture the interpersonal and business dynamics of his relationship with his ex-wife, best friend and business partner Mandie Taketa, also co-parents of their 21-year-old daughter Maile. Their production company is also a family affair, with Mandie’s life partner Jason Fordham in charge of post-production and cinematography on their projects, while he and Mandie raise their young son Sundance-Isamu. Here’s the story…

Apple TV+

Time Bandits

Inspired by Terry Gilliam’s 1981 cult fantasy, the whimsical new Time Bandits (from What We Do in the Shadows’ Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi with The Inbetweeners’ Iain Morris) stars Friends’ Lisa Kudrow as wacky Penelope, leader of a band of time-tripping outlaws. We make their acquaintance when they stumble into the bedroom of 11-year-old history nerd Kevin (Kal-El Tuck) through a “time egress” portal that allows Kevin to see history first-hand. Their misadventures take them to Stonehenge, the Trojan Horse, the Harlem Renaissance, the Ice Age and other marvels of the past — always with tongue firmly in cheek.

Alex Livesey / Getty Images

Summer Olympics

The Opening Ceremonies aren’t until Friday, but Paris Olympics action begins early with soccer and rugby matches. The U.S. men’s soccer team returns to the Olympics for the first time since 2008, facing host nation France. Live coverage includes Copa America winner Argentina vs. Morocco at 9 a.m. ET and European Cup winner Spain taking on Uzbekistan at 5 p.m. ET. Coverage of the U.S. men’s rugby team battling defending Olympics champ Fiji begins at 2:30 p.m. ET (all games also streaming on Peacock).

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