

Who will get to style the starlet's hair for the Golden Globes? Will the rollout of Jonathan's product line be a disaster? The frivolous fashionista in me wants to know. Still, despite an ego that dwarfs Donald Trump's and a loutish obsession with babes and frothy "babe hair," the antics of Antin and the dramatic staff at his two L.A. The Beverly Hills hairstylist actually allows the producers of this show to film his therapy sessions, where he weeps about not wanting to be "in the line of fire" all the time." Well, hmm, then maybe the second season of a reality show about every aspect of your life is a bad idea. Tuesdays, Bravo: Without question, Jonathan Antin is the most narcissistic person on television right now. Captain Sig and the various crew members on the boats are so much more personable than many reality-show types, and the process of capturing those wily crabs is more complicated - and suspenseful - than you might think. Well, it's surprisingly interesting as portrayed in this Discovery Channel series, which follows the literal ups and downs of several ships participating in the annual crab-catching marathon that takes place in the deadly waters off Alaska. Sunday (many other airings during the week), Discovery Channel: Crab fishing - you may think it's not the most exciting subject ever for a reality series.

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"Wildfire," rebroadcast of two-hour series premiere 7 p.m.If you don't catch this bone-dry comedy on WTTW, the most recent series and the 1996 original are out on DVD. Transplant "The Office" to a newsroom, add "The Larry Sanders Show's" merciless exposure of the follies of show-biz egos, and you've got "The Newsroom," where journalists spend meetings obsessing about perks, discussing their love lives or running betting pools predicting the time of death of a fellow employee's beloved pet. 11: If you've been one of the folks bemoaning the current state of television comedy, you should check out this Canadian import, a fake reality show about a ferociously self-absorbed TV-news producer and his disgruntled staff, which includes majorly clueless anchorman Jim Walcott (the square-jawed, divinely funny Peter Keleghan). BBC America is rerunning several of the classic "Prime Suspect" mini-series on Mondays this summer, and each one is a reminder of just how devastatingly good well-written, character-driven crime drama can be. Mondays, BBC America: Crime-drama fans in withdrawal due to the lack of fresh episodes of "The Shield" or any of the "Law & Orders" should not dream of missing this classic British drama, which stars Helen Mirren as Jane Tennison, a tough, complicated London cop in a police force that's not exactly welcoming to women. The Watcher has scoured the furthest reaches of the television schedule to find a bunch of worthy shows you may have missed:
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Sure, there have been plenty of splashy TV premieres in the last month (with "The Dead Zone," "Rescue Me" and "Beauty and the Geek" among the most watchable), but there's also plenty of other good, lower-profile stuff out there. J1:35 PM CDT: 7 shows you should be watching
