Between streaming and cable, viewers have a seemingly endless variety of things to watch. Here is a selection of TV shows and specials that are airing or streaming this week, June 15-21. Details and times are subject to change.
Pop culture, a summer surprise and football cheerleading.
Cue AC/DC’s “Thunderstruck” and find your favorite vest and the smallest pair of shorts you own because “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” is back for a third season. The documentary series follows the 2025-26 cheerleading squad as they go through the audition process, training camp and the games themselves. Viewers have gotten to know the senior director Kelli Finglass and the head choreographer Judy Trammell over the last two years, and they are back in their command posts. All seven episodes will air together. Begins streaming Tuesday on Netflix.
Did you think that after the three-part reunion of “Summer House” the Scamanda drama would be behind us? If you did, it turns out that you were wrong. “Summer House: The Aftermath” is set to feature three conversations between the show’s castmates (Lindsay Hubbard and Amanda Batula; Kyle Cooke and West Wilson; Ciara Miller and Meija Moreno) as they try to further dissect the situation. Tuesday at 8 p.m. on Bravo.
Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers are back with their “Las Culturistas Culture Awards” to hand out critical titles like “eternal lesbian of the pop culture mind,” “the god must have spent a little more time on you award for divinity” and “y’all know I am Canada down award for y’all know it’s Canada down.” The show was filmed at the end of May with audience members including Paige DeSorbo, Jeff Goldblum and François Arnaud. Airing Wednesday on Bravo and Peacock at 9 p.m.
Wrongly imprisoned man and undercover spies.
The new series “I Will Find You,” based on Harlan Coben’s 2023 novel of the same name, is not the first adaptation of his work. In fact, there are already nine others, including “Missing You,” “Fool Me Once” and “Run Away.” (He also has another in the works, “The Woods.”) “I Will Find You” one follows a father (Sam Worthington) who is serving prison time for murdering his son. But he didn’t do it. And when he finds out that his son may still be alive, he breaks out of prison to try to uncover the truth, reunite with his son and clear his name. Britt Lower, Milo Ventimiglia and Logan Browning round out the cast. Begins streaming Thursday on Netflix.
In the first season of “The Agency,” a show about a C.I.A. agent who returns to normal life in London after being undercover, Brandon Colby (Michael Fassbender) made some disloyal choices, and in the second season he has to face the consequences. Now that character dynamics have been established, things are just going to get trickier. The season’s 10 episodes air together. Begins streaming Sunday on Paramount+.
Family secrets and securing a legacy.
How does an old-Hollywood drama with intergenerational secrets and illustrious scandals sound to you? In the second season of “Sugar,” the private investigator John Sugar (Colin Farrell) is hired by the Siegel family to find Olivia (Sydney Chandler), the granddaughter of a Hollywood producer. Of course, as Sugar looks into the disappearance, he also stumbles upon other tangled webs of information about the family while trying to keep his own cards close to the vest. Begins streaming Friday on Apple TV.
The “Game of Thrones” spinoff “House of the Dragon” is back for its third and penultimate season, covering the events in George R.R. Martin’s book “Fire & Blood.” At a SXSW London event, the showrunner and co-creator Ryan Condal promised viewers that the tensions in Season 2 would boil over in a very satisfying way in Season 3, noting that Battle of the Gullet sequence, which will set the tone for the rest of this season, “is unlike anything that’s ever been done in television before.” Emma D’Arcy, Matt Smith, Olivia Cooke and Tom Glynn-Carney are returning as the main cast. Each of the season’s eight episodes will air weekly. Sunday at 9 p.m. on HBO.