Showtime premieres a new show about a romance in the 1950s. The Bravo reality show is back with a new cast.
With network, cable and streaming, the modern television landscape is a vast one. Here are some of the shows, specials and movies coming to TV this week, Oct. 23 – 29. Details and times are subject to change.
Monday
THE NOTEBOOK (2004) 8 p.m. on E! If the line “I wrote 365 letters, I wrote you every day for a year,” delivered by Noah (Ryan Gosling) to Allie (Rachel McAdams) as they stand in the pouring rain, doesn’t bring tears to your eyes I don’t know what will. This film, based on the Nicholas Sparks novel, follows them as they meet, fall in love, are separated by Allie’s family and reunited, there is a simultaneous story playing out of an older man reading their story to his wife, who has Alzheimer’s. Come for Gosling’s charm and McAdams’s cute southern accent and stay for the heartbreaking (but also kind of happy) ending.
30 COINS 10 p.m. on HBO. This Spanish language show, which is back for a second season, is all things spooky, supernatural and gory. The story of this season follows Father Vergara (Eduard Fernández), an exorcist, as he is exiled to the remote Spanish town of Pedraza. The problem? He is in possession of one of the 30 pieces of silver that Judas was paid to betray Jesus and is part of a dark conspiracy that wreaks havoc on the town.
Tuesday
HELP! I’M IN A SECRET RELATIONSHIP 9 p.m. on MTV. I like to think of this show as a sequel to another of MTV’s reality shows. On “Catfish: The TV Show,” the hosts try to figure out if people in online relationships are really who they say they are. On this show, the hosts, Travis Mills and Rahne Jones, investigate whether people are keeping their relationships secret and trying to do some sneaky stuff on the side.
WINTER HOUSE 9 p.m. on Bravo. I’m in luck. I have another reason to talk about my favorite Bravo show again, because what would happen if I didn’t mention “Below Deck” every couple weeks? “Winter House” is a reality show that sends stars from different Bravo franchises, a.k.a. Bravolebrities, to a house in Steamboat Springs, CO to hang out. The new season features five previous “Below Deck” yachties as well as alums from “Vanderpump Rules,” “Summer House” and “Family Karma.”
Wednesday
REPAIRING THE WORLD: STORIES FROM THE TREE OF LIFE 7 p.m. on PBS (check local listings). Just over five years ago, 11 people were slain at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh after a gunman entered shouting antisemitic slurs. This documentary covers the days and months that followed as the filmmaker Patricia O’Neill spoke to survivors, their family and members of the community.
Thursday
EVERYONE ELSE BURNS 9:30 p.m. on The CW. Before airing here, this show originally came out in the U.K. and is chock-full of that deadpan British humor. The story follows a puritanical Christian family focused on preparing for Armageddon and trying to avoid the eternal damnation that comes from falling prey to modern-day temptations.
Friday
FRANKENSTEIN (1931) & THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935) starting at 8 p.m. on TCM. This pair of movies might be among the quintessential stories in the horror landscape. The first film, “Frankenstein,” follows Dr. Henry Frankenstein as he tries to give life to patched-together parts of dead bodies. His creepy science experiment works and everything is fine and dandy until the monster escapes the lab and creates chaos. The follow-up film, “The Bride of Frankenstein,” takes place immediately after the close of the first film, with the monster on the run from the angry mob. He runs into Dr. Pretorius (Ernest Thesiger), Frankenstein’s former mentor, who wants to create a mate for the monster. Things don’t end well for Pretorius.
Saturday
JEEPERS CREEPERS (2001) 8 p.m. on AMC. This film follows the brother and sister Trish and Darry Jenner (Gina Philips and Justin Long) as their road trip home from college turns into a sinister and supernatural fight for their lives. This “cannier-than-average teen horror movie makes you shudder in its early scenes, then turns into a noisy carnival attraction once its designated monster finally materializes,” Stephen Holden wrote in his review for The New York Times.
Sunday
BILLIONS 8 p.m. on Showtime. This series about hedge funds and attorneys and high-stakes games (oh my!) is wrapping up this week after seven seasons. For the final season, Damian Lewis reprised his role as Bobby Axelrod to properly tie up all the loose ends of the series. This probably won’t be the last you hear about some of these characters, though — apparently there are spinoffs (aptly named “Millions” and “Trillions”) in the works.
FELLOW TRAVELERS 9 p.m. on Showtime. Thankfully, 2023 has given us lots of heartfelt queer media, including “Heartstopper” and “Red, White & Royal Blue”— and now we can add this new series to the roster of shows and movies that portray a diversity of experience beyond heterosexual relationships. The love story here begins between Hawkins Fuller (Matt Bomer) and Timothy Laughlin (Jonathan Bailey) in the 1950s at the peak of McCarthyism in Washington and spans decades, with political and cultural events like Vietnam War protests, disco hedonism and the AIDS crisis, as the backdrop.