TVShowsFinder

Remembering the 2010s, ‘Midwife,’ ‘Company’ and More Finales, MTV Movie & TV Awards, the Coronation and Kentucky Derby

Breaking Bad - Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul)

Ursula Coyote/ AMC

The 2010s

SUNDAY: It’s a bit early to consider the previous decade a hotbed for nostalgia, but CNN’s “Decades” series takes us back to a time before COVID-19 and a simpler era when Netflix was still a place to get videos by mail. (That would change with the arrival of shows like House of Cards in 2013.) The two-hour opener covers “Peak TV,” an era seen as a new golden age of television, when streaming changed the way many watched their shows, turning marginal cult faves like Breaking Bad and Schitt’s Creek into award-winning hits. Future installments will cover flashpoints in marriage equality, the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter social movements and the presidencies of Barack Obama and Donald Trump.

BBC/PBS

Call the Midwife

SUNDAY: The 12th season of the popular period drama ends by celebrating the wedding of nurse Trixie Franklin (Helen George) to widowed father Sir Matthew Aylward (Olly Rix), shifting focus from East London to the more fashionable Chelsea neighborhood for the big event. How will her family from downscale Poplar, including brother Geoffrey (Christopher Harper), fit in? And will elderly Sister Monica Joan (the great Judy Parfitt) be fit to do her reading? A car crash further complicates the happy day. Also ending its first season on PBS: Marie Antoinette (10/9c), where war with England looms when Ben Franklin pays a visit, but Queen Marie (Emilia Schüle) retreats from politics and King Louis (Louis Cunningham) at Petit Trianon—where she finds distraction with Count Axel von Fersen (Martijn Lakemeier).

HBO

MTV Movie & TV Awards

SUNDAY: In solidarity with the writers’ strike, Drew Barrymore has pulled out of hosting this yearly pop-culture celebration from L.A.’s Barker Hanger. But the show apparently will still go on, without a host, as The White Lotus star Jennifer Coolidge is expected to accept the “Comedic Genius” award. Lotus is among the top nominees, alongside a diverse slate including The Last of Us, Stranger Things, Top Gun: Maverick and RuPaul’s Drag Race.

HBO

Succession

SUNDAY: The blistering final season of the Emmy-winning drama continues on Election Eve, with Shiv (Sarah Snook) and Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) hosting—and not since Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? has there been such a dysfunctional and combative couple welcoming people into their unhappy home. Among the attendees: media disruptor Lukas Mattson (Alexander Skarsgård), to the chagrin of brother CEOs Kendall (Jeremy Strong) and Roman (Kieran Culkin), who are still trying to find ways to sour the deal and stop Mattson from acquiring the family business. Since patriarch Logan Roy’s death, every episode has had extraordinarily high stakes, and this evening of harrowing horse trading is no exception.

Kailey Schwerman/SHOWTIME

Yellowjackets

SUNDAY: Someone call the midwife! Yes, those were labor pains teenage Shauna (Sophie Nélisse) was beginning to experience in the previous episode’s cliffhanger—making us wait two weeks to get to the moment we’ve been awaiting, and fearing, all season: Shauna’s childbirth under the most harrowing circumstances imaginable. In the present day, adult Shauna (Melanie Lynskey) and daughter Callie (Sarah Desjardins) are brought in for questioning, and a major epiphany, after the local cops discover their attempted cover-up ruse.

KING CHARLES’ CORONATION & KENTUCKY DERBY:

SEASON FINALES:

INSIDE WEEKEND TV:

Exit mobile version