Summer television has evolved from a rerun graveyard to the home of lively offerings, with enough choices to threaten your vacation plans — or at least DVR capacity.
That includes returning shows AMC’s “Halt and Catch Fire,” already under way on Sundays, along with NBC’s “Hannibal,” coming June 4; “Orange is the New Black,” Netflix, June 12; TNT’s “The Last Ship” and HBO’s “True Detective,” both June 21; “Under the Dome,” CBS, June 25, and “Masters of Sex” and “Ray Donovan,” Showtime, both back on July 12.
The newbies include a mix of scripted series, documentaries and a few reality-genre curveballs — like CBS’ “The Briefcase” (9 p.m. EDT Wednesdays) which tests families’ charitable instincts — just as in the old-fashioned TV season.
One of the higher-profile dramas is Netflix’s June 5 release “Sense8,” the first series from sibling filmmakers Andy and Lana Wachowski of “The Matrix” fame. The story: Eight people realize they’re mysteriously connected and must engage in a life-or-death fight that plays out, travelogue-style, in sundry locations worldwide.
Also upcoming are two transgender journey docuseries, one about a celebrity, Bruce Jenner (his as-yet untitled show debuts 9 p.m. EDT Sunday, July 26, on E!), and another focusing on an average American family in ABC Family’s “Becoming Us” (9 p.m. EDT Monday, June 8).
Here are four more small-screen choices to consider:
An armchair travel experience of a different kind than “Sense8” is offered by Discovery’s “Life Story,” a six-part natural history series debuting at 9 p.m. EDT Saturday, June 6. Narrated by David Attenborough, “Life Story” tracks animals as they go about their daily, often perilous routines in locations scattered across 29 countries. Want to see the mating dance of the astoundingly colorful Australian peacock jumping spider? Here’s your chance, and shot in ultra-high definition.
If you’d like to cast a chill over your summer, Investigation Discovery is obliging with “Serial Thriller,” its first scripted series and one it promises will “propel viewers” into a community “terrorized” by a serial murderer. The narrative approach is based on accounts from those involved and plays out at 10 p.m. EDT Sunday through Tuesday, June 7-9. Who is the killer? True-crime buffs may crack the case early on, the channel said, but others will have to stay tuned to figure it out.
ABC’s answer to post-”Mad Men” 1960s withdrawal is “The Astronaut Wives Club,” debuting at 8 p.m. EDT Thursday, June 18. The glossy series is based on Lily Koppel’s nonfiction book about Annie Glenn, Rene Carpenter and other women whose close ties helped them cope with their spouses’ hero status and its fallout. There was glamor (tea with the first lady!) but hardship and sacrifice as well. The ensemble cast of “astrowives” includes JoAnna Garcia Swisher, Yvonne Strahovski, and Dominique McElligott.
Denis Leary, who played a deeply flawed firefighter in FX’s “Rescue Me” returns to the channel as a deeply flawed musician in “Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll,” which he created. Leary’s Johnny Rock was the frontman of a 1990s New York band, The Heathens, that broke up the same day its eagerly awaited debut album was released (Johnny’s sexual hijinks were to blame). The hard-luck rocker dreams of a comeback but, for now, is standing in the shadows as songwriter for young singer Gigi (Elizabeth Gillies). The series, starting at 10 p.m. EDT Thursday, July 16, features John Corbett as Flash, Johnny’s former bandmate and cuckold.
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