TV

Crawford, Stamos and Lowe heat up TV this week

1. Quantico

Sunday, 10 p.m., ABC

Series premiere. The lives of seven FBI recruits are followed in flashbacks between the future (the aftermath of a terrorist attack on Grand Central station) and the present (a 20-week training course at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va.). When one recruit, Alex Parrish (Priyanka Chopra), learns that she’s been framed for the attack, she has to run for her life while trying to figure out which of her former classmates is the real terrorist before they strike again.

2. Grandfathered

Tuesday, 8 p.m., Fox

Series premiere. Successful restaurateur and committed bachelor Jimmy Martino (John Stamos) is forced to change his selfish lifestyle overnight when he finds out that he has an adult son, Gerald (Josh Peck), and a baby granddaughter. The new blended family affects both men’s love lives, as Gerald tries to win the affection of his baby’s mother (Christina Milian) and Jimmy debates rekindling a romance with Gerald’s mother (Paget Brewster).

3. Blood & Oil

Sunday, 9 p.m., ABC

Series premiere. Young, working-class entrepreneur Billy Lefever (Chace Crawford) and his new wife, Cody (Rebecca Rittenhouse), move from small-town Florida to North Dakota, hoping to cash in on the oil boom. Along the way, Billy crosses paths with oil baron Hap Briggs (Don Johnson) and his son, Wick (Scott Michael Foster), who have different agendas when it comes to the family legacy. Amber Valletta co-stars as Hap’s sophisticated wife, Carla.

4. Dr. Ken

Friday, 8:30 p.m., ABC

Series premiere. Ken Jeong — who worked as a physician before hitting it big as an actor in films including “The Hangover” — stars in this semi-autobiographical comedy as Dr. Ken Park, a general practitioner with a lousy bedside manner. His crankiness also extends to his home life, where he’s constantly second-guessing his psychotherapist wife (Suzy Nakamura), their highly intelligent 9-year-old son, Dave (Albert Tsai), and their 16-year-old daughter, Molly (Krista Marie Yu).

5. Code Black

Wednesday, 10 p.m., CBS

Series premiere. At Angels Memorial Hospital — which has the busiest, most notorious hospital ER in the nation — the staggering influx of patients can overwhelm the limited resources available to the doctors and nurses treating them, creating a condition known as Code Black. Controlling the chaos is Dr. Leanne Rorish (Marcia Gay Harden), who manages four new first-year residents with the help of seen-it-all senior nurse Jesse Sallander (Luis Guzmán) — whose “cowboy” approach to emergency medicine clashes with by-the-book Dr. Neal Hudson (Raza Jaffrey).

6. The Grinder

Tuesday, 8:30 p.m., Fox

Series premiere. After eight seasons playing the title role on the hit legal drama “The Grinder,” Dean Sanderson Jr. (Rob Lowe) decides to move back to his hometown of Boise, Idaho, where his brother Stewart (Fred Savage) is poised to take over the family law firm. Convinced his acting experience makes him qualified to contribute in the courtroom, Dean starts inserting himself into every aspect of his brother’s life — much to the amusement of Stewart’s wife (Mary Elizabeth Ellis) and their lawyer father (William Devane).

7. The Blacklist

Thursday, 9 p.m., NBC

Season premiere. In the third season, FBI Agent Liz Keen (Megan Boone) is now a fugitive and on the run with criminal mastermind Red Reddington (James Spader), as Agent Donald Ressler (Diego Klattenhoff) leads a task force on a massive manhunt for the on-the-lam pair.

8. I’ll Have What Phil’s Having

Monday, 10 p.m., PBS

Series premiere. Phil Rosenthal — the creator of “Everybody Loves Raymond” and a food enthusiast — explores culinary capitals of the world and dines on regional specialties, all while humorously pushing the boundaries of his nonadventurous palate. The six-episode series sees him travel from Hong Kong to Barcelona, from Paris to Tokyo, and from a three-star Michelin restaurant in an Italian palazzo to an LA bakery that trains former gang members.