On TV this Monday: Freaks and Geeks heads to Hulu, Sean Bean boards Snowpiercer and AMC chronicles The Salisbury Poisonings. Here are 10 programs to keep on your radar; all times are Eastern.

Courtesy of Everett Collection
On TV this Monday: Freaks and Geeks heads to Hulu, Sean Bean boards Snowpiercer and AMC chronicles The Salisbury Poisonings. Here are 10 programs to keep on your radar; all times are Eastern.
The beloved one-season wonder — starring Linda Cardellini, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, Martin Starr, Busy Phillips, James Franco and John Francis Daley — is now available to stream, with its original soundtrack intact. (Should there be a revival?)
Athena fights to save herself and an agoraphobic woman after her house collapses in a mudslide. (Is there more to Buck’s COVID crush than meets the eye?)
Spencer and Billy are forced to adjust their style in order to earn the team’s trust; the new coach at Beverly comes as a surprise to Jordan. (Read premiere recap.)
Contestants play “Stink Tank,” “Mazed and Confused,” “Taj Mah-Wall” [groan] and the new game “Burst of Knowledge.”
Calvin is upset to learn that curmudgeonly neighbor Walter intends to sell his property to greedy developers.
When Abishola’s husband Tayo refuses to give her a divorce, Bob and Abishola grow disheartened about the prospect of marriage.
While on maternity leave, Lola attempts to participate remotely in Judge Brenner’s special training.
Season 2 premiere: A new threat rattles the train upon Mr. Wilford’s (Sean Bean) arrival; Melanie makes an irreversible decision. (Watch trailer; already renewed!)
Shaun meets Lea’s parents for the first time; the team treats a teenage gymnast. (Fall behind? Read Episode 7 recap.)
Basic cable premiere: The four-part limited series (which originally aired on BBC One and is already available on AMC+) dramatizes the 2018 Novichok poisonings; Anne-Marie Duff (Shameless), Rafe Spall (The War of the Worlds), MyAnna Buring (The Witcher), Annabel Scholey (The Split) and Johnny Harris (This Is England ‘86) star.
🌳 ON THIS DAY IN TV HISTORY 🌳
On Jan. 25, 1991, NBC’s Generations — the first American soap opera that featured an African American family at its core — signed off after a nearly two-year run. Some of its cast included Kristoff St. John, James Reynolds, Richard Roundtree, Lynn Hamilton and Debbi Morgan.