All times Eastern. FRIDAY, March 26 The IrregularsDark eight-episode drama set in Victorian London follows a gang of troubled street teens solving crimes for the someone they know as Doctor Watson and his mysterious business partner, the elusive investigator Sherlock Holmes. Sound somewhat familiar? It’s based on the books about the Baker Street Irregulars gang by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who created the most famous literary detective of all time (Netflix). Cocktails and Tall Tales with Ina Garten and Melissa McCarthyThe Food Network host known as the Barefoot Contessa and her immensely funny actress guest have a virtual get-together and a couple of drinky-poos from their respective locales —Garten in East Hampton, N.Y., and McCartney outside Sydney, Australia—as they catch up with each other (Discovery+) SATURDAY, March 27TinaRevealing and intimate rock doc mixes vintage footage and new interviews to look at the life and career of musical icon Tina Turner and chart her improbable rise to early fame, her professional and personal struggles in her marriage to her musical partner Ike, and her even more improbable resurgence in the 1980s as a global superstar. (8 p.m., HBO, streaming on HBO Max). NAACP Image AwardsNetflix leads the film and TV nominations—with 48, including several for Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and Da 5 Bloods, both of which featured Chadwick Boseman, who died last year—and Beyoncé leads the music categories, with 25 nominations, in this annual ceremony honoring media that uplifts and informs the Black experience (8 p.m., BET). SUNDAY, March 28Movies for Grownups AwardsGeorge Clooney, who’ll receive the evening’s Career Achievement Award, will be among the honorees at tonight’s event—an annual presentation of AARP The Magazine focused on films for “the 50-plus audience”—which will also recognize talent from The United States vs. Billie Holiday, The Father and The Trial of the Chicago 7, among other movies. NBC News’ Today anchor Hoda Kotb will host (8 p.m., PBS). City on a HillKevin Bacon and Aldis Hodge return to their roles for season two of this hit cops-and-corruption drama, as a violence-plagued federal housing drama in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston provides the setting for their two characters to come out against each other in an all-out adversarial war (9 p.m., Showtime). MONDAY, March 29Race to the Center of the EarthNew competition series follows four teams in different regions of the world, pushing the limits of their minds and body as they race to get to equidistant destinations for the chance to win $1 million (National Geographic, 10 p.m.). Couples RetreatNew six-episode series celebrating Black love features three couples familiar to the network’s Love & Hip Hop franchise (Yandy Smith-Harris and Mendeecees Harris; Rasheeda and Kirk Frost; Ray J and Princess Love) as they embark three weeks of sessions with a relationship therapist, a psychic medium and a sexolgist to go deep on themselves and various personal issues (8 p.m., VH-1). TUESDAY, March 30Pooch PerfectEight-episode dog-grooming competition series hosted by Rebel Wilson pits 10 of the country’s best canine groomers and their assistants in a series of weekly “paw”-some challenges (8 p.m., ABC). Our Own EasterCelebrate today’s holiday with musical performances and sunrise-service traditions featuring gospel and R&B artists, including hosts BeBe and his niece, Deborah Joy Winans, and their guests, including CeCe Winans, Kirk Franklin and Travis Greene, and messages from faith leaders (9 p.m., Own). WEDNESDAY, March 31Extinction: The FactsExplore the crisis to end all crises, and its dire consequences for the human race, as Sir David Attenborough and the world’s leading scientists report on it means when a planet and a species run out of time—and everything else—and how we’re now at our own crucial turning point (8 p.m., PBS). K-Pop EvolutionLearn all about the music called K-Pop—a multi-million-dollar genre influenced by a combination of rock, jazz, electronic and hip-hop, mixed and mingled with traditional Korean roots—in this new docuseries featuring some of the format’s biggest stars and groups, including BTS, BlackPink and SEVENTEEN (YouTube). THURSDAY, April 1Law & Order: Organized CrimeNew procedural series (with Christopher Meloni, Dylan McDermott and Tamara Taylor) kicks off with a crossover “team-up” that includes Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay) from Law & Order: SVU (9 p.m. and 10 p.m., NBC). The MoodysDenis Leary and Elizabeth Perkins return for season two of the comedy series about the misadventures of a dysfunctional Chicago family (9 p.m., Fox). The United States of AlNew “buddy comedy” from Midas-touch sitcom producer Chuck Lorre (The Big Bang Theory, Two and a Half Men, Mom, Mike & Molly) stars Parker Young as a Marine combat veteran struggling to re-adjust to civilian life in Ohio, and Adhir Kalyan as the interpreter who served his unit in Afghanistan and has just arrived to start a new life in America (9:30 p.m., CBS). NEW ON DVD Princess Diana (Gal Gadot) is trying to play it cool in the era of excess, but mega-trouble comes calling in Wonder Woman 1984(Warner Bros. Home Entertainment), the sequel to the smash 2017 solo big-screen debut of the DC superhero. Chris Pine reprises his role as her WWI-era beau, Steve Trevor, and Kristin Wiig debuts as the formidable villainess Antiope. AT THE MOVIESGodzilla Vs. King Kong, the epic latest chapter in a monsterverse that will mark the first blowout movie matchup in 59 years to feature both the cinematic giants, also stars Alexander Skarsgård, Millie Bobby Brown, Rebecca Hall, Brian Tyree Henry and Kyle Chandler (also streaming on HBO Max). Bob Odenkirk stars in the action-thriller Nobody, about a mild-mannered family man pushed into acts of vengeance by an act of violence in his home.