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‘Station Eleven,’ Return of ‘MacGruber,’ Christmas in the ‘Grey’-verse, Remembering Prince Philip

Even by Peak TV standards, this mid-December Thursday is remarkably overstuffed, especially in the ever-bustling streaming world. HBO Max launches an ambitious adaptation of the best-selling near-future fantasy Station Eleven. Peacock revives Saturday Night Live’s ridiculous action-hero parody MacGruber—and is also the home of a live-streamed Miss America competition on its 100th anniversary. Grey’s Anatomy and spinoff Station 19 ring out 2021 with holiday episodes. The British royal family remembers the late Prince Philip in a new discovery+ documentary.

HBO MAX

Station Eleven

Maybe this isn’t the best timing for a post-pandemic series to bow in a week when the U.S. crossed the 800,000-death COVID-19 milestone. Still, this intriguing and occasionally transcendent adaptation of Emily St. John Mandel’s post-apocalyptic novel suggests that hope, and art, survive in the wake of a devastating fictional flu. The sprawling story, spanning 20 years and multiple timelines, opens with a production of King Lear on the wintry night the world begins to end, but Hamlet is the main event 20 years later as we’re introduced to the Traveling Symphony, a ragtag performance troupe bringing culture to outposts of survivors, even as existential threats challenge their mission. (See the full review.)

John Golden Britt/Peacock

MacGruber

It doesn’t get much sillier than this. The Saturday Night Live running gag that became a 2010 cult movie is now an eight-part comedy series, reviving Will Forte’s berserk macho-madman hybrid of Rambo and MacGyver. Reunited with ex-wife Vicki St. Elmo (fellow Saturday Night Live veteran Kristen Wiig) and Dixon Piper (Ryan Phillipe), the volatile MacGruber is given a Dirty Dozen-style release from prison after 10 years to embark on a “suicide mission” that leads to a showdown with Brigadier Commander Enos Queeth (Billy Zane), a nemesis from his past. Laurence Fishburne and Sam Elliott are among the ridiculously overqualified cast trying to keep a straight face amid the overheated and raunchy mayhem.

ABC

Grey’s Anatomy

The broadcast highlight on a night of mostly repeats is the holiday-themed midseason finale of the long-running medical drama. Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) is still distracted by her Parkinson’s project in Minnesota, but back in Seattle, Link (Chris Carmack) is hoping for a family Christmas with Amelia (Caterina Scorsone) and little Scout, seemingly blind to the fact that his BFF Jo (Camilla Luddington) now views him in a new romantic light. On first-responder spinoff Station 19 (8/7c), the crew comes to grips with loss in their first Christmas since firehouse bro Dean’s (Okieriete Onaodowan) death in a gas explosion. Life, and love, go on, but it’s complicated.

Craig Blankenhorn / HBO Max

And Just Like That …

Now that the shock waves from that “big” tragic twist have settled, and Peleton has had its say, Carrie’s (Sarah Jessica Parker) world is further rocked when she learns of an unexpected bequest that makes her wonder what else she didn’t know about her husband. Thankfully, the mood lightens when the gang checks out Che’s (Sara Ramirez) raucous stand-up act, and Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) is particularly enchanted. Hmm, wonder where this is headed …

GETTY

Prince Philip: The Royal Family Remembers

A very personal tribute to the late Duke of Edinburgh was filmed throughout his centennial year, before and after his death in April, intended to celebrate his centennial but now serving as a documentary portrait told by those who knew him best. The special includes recollections from the Queen and Duke’s children, grandchildren, other members of the royal family and closest staff, enhanced by footage from the Queen’s private film collection.

(Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for ViacomCBS)

MTV Unplugged

Their farewell concert at Radio City Music Hall was a success on CBS, and this quieter acoustic rendering of songs from Love for Sale, the latest (and probably last) collaboration of Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, may introduce these standards to a new generation. Watching Bennett perform at 95, his Alzheimer’s temporarily fading as he grooves to the music, is something to behold.

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