What’s on TV This Week: Celine Dion and the Stanley Cup Finals

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For those who still enjoy a cable subscription, here is a selection of cable and network TV shows, movies and specials that broadcast this week, June 10 — 16. Details and times are subject to change.

THE STANLEY CUP FINALS GAME 2 8 p.m. on ABC. Hockey season is ending with a championship between not just two teams but two countries: the Edmonton Oilers (Canada) and the Florida Panthers (U.S.). The last time the Oilers won the silver cup was in 1990, three years before the Panthers’s team was even formed. The Panthers have never won the cup but were in the finals in last year. Either way, one of the teams will celly in the barn after a gino, eh?

SIX SCHIZOPHRENIC BROTHERS 8 p.m. on Discovery. Based on the 2020 nonfiction book “Hidden Valley Road” by Robert Kolker, this documentary series follows the Galvin family, whose six of the 12 siblings developed schizophrenia. Over four episodes, this documentary details the family life, casting it as a case study of how the psychotic disorder runs in families.

THE REAL HOUSEWIVES OF DUBAI 8 p.m. on Bravo. The reality network’s first international iteration of the Housewives franchise is back for a second season. Taking place in Dubai, this series ups the stakes, and the drama, of course, with fights and parties taking place on private islands and private planes. With Nina Ali not returning for a second season, though, we won’t get to hear as many tales about the Burj Khalifa.

CELINE’S STORY: AN NBC NEWS SPECIAL WITH HODA KOTB 10 p.m. on NBC. In a 2022 Instagram post, the Canadian singer revealed she had been diagnosed with stiff person syndrome, a rare neurological disorder that causes muscle stiffness, painful muscle spasms and slurred speech. Because of this, Dion canceled the rest of her 2023 tour and made her first post-diagnosis public appearance at the 2024 Grammy Awards. Now, she gives an in-depth interview, revealing she almost died amid this diagnostic process.

GHOST ADVENTURES 10 p.m. on Discovery. It’s always spooky season if you’re Zak Bagans, the host of this long-running paranormal reality show. On the finale of this season, Bagans and the crew head to Nevada to find a Wild West town were a courthouse is haunted by an injustice that occurred there, and where the Manson family once camped out.

PATTI STANGER: THE MATCHMAKER 8 p.m. on The CW. Patti Stanger first made her name starring in and producing Bravo’s “The Millionaire Matchmaker,” but after a hiatus away from television, she has come back with another matchmaking show, now wrapping up its first season. With the help of Nick Viall of “The Bachelor” fame, the two help clients conquer their fears, unpack emotional baggage and put themselves out there in the dating scene.

THE BIG BAKEOVER 8 p.m. on The CW. You might recognize Nancy Birtwhistle from the fifth season of “The Great British Bake-Off” where she took home the winner’s prize (a bouquet of flowers and a branded cake stand). But now, shes traveling around to independently owned bakeries to lend her business and baking advice to help them succeed.

SUMMER OLYMPIC TRIALS, SWIMMING 8 p.m. on NBC. The 2024 Paris Olympics are right around the corner, starting July 26. You can pregame with the swimming trials that determine which swimmers will be packing their bags and headed to France. Held at the Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianpolis, swimmers will have eight days to compete in different specialty rounds.

THE TONY AWARDS 8 p.m. on CBS. This year, 12 Broadway shows opened nine days before the deadline for nominations, but as they say, that’s showbiz, baby! The biggest night to celebrate the theater is airing live from Lincoln Center in Manhattan. “Hell’s Kitchen” and “Stereophonic” have the most nominations, with 13 each, and Daniel Radcliffe, Jeremy Strong, Rachel McAdams and Sarah Paulson are among the stars for awards. Ariana DeBose returns as host, for the third year in a row.

HOUSE OF THE DRAGON 9 p.m. on HBO. “Game of Thrones” has been off the air since 2019, but in 2022 HBO took a gamble with a spin-off the wildly popular show, and they were successful — the show averaged 29 million viewers across platforms in the first season. Now, as it returns for a second, the actor Tom Glynn-Carney told The New York Times that it starts with everything hitting the fan.



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