Next week, an unlikely crimefighting duo forms during a turbulent time in European history and a team of experts comes together to help baby boomers fight clutter. Take a look below at all we’ve got coming up!

The Legacy List with Matt Paxton – Monday, January 20 at 9 PM

Host Matt Paxton, from the A&E series Hoarders, is joined by a team of experts in military memorabilia, fashion collectibles, and pop culture trinkets and antiques, to help baby boomers downsize their living spaces and settle estates.

A Great American Tapestry: The Many Strands of Mountain Music – Wednesday, January 22 at 8 PM

The mountains of the American South gave birth to a musical legacy that evolved through the influences of the Scots-Irish, African American and indigenous traditions. Learn how this melting pot changed music history and the world.

Vienna Blood – Sunday, January 19 at 10 PM

1900s Vienna: a hotbed of philosophy, science and art, where cultures and ideas are espoused in the city’s grand cafes and opera houses. Yet beneath the genteel glamour, nationalism and anti-Semitism are on the rise. Max Liebermann, a brilliant young English-born Jewish student of Sigmund Freud, and  Detective Inspector Oskar Rheinhardt, become an unlikely detective duo, called on to solve Vienna’s most baffling cases.

WYSIWYG: EMBEDDED VIDEO

No Passport Required: Los Angeles – Monday, January 20 at 10 PM

Explore the large and thriving Armenian community in Los Angeles with Chef Marcus Samuelsson as he learns about their history, shares their traditional cuisine, and meets chefs who are taking it to the next level.

Independent Lens: Accept the Call – Monday, January 20 at 11 PM

Yusuf Abdurahman, who left Somalia as a refugee 25 years ago, has his worst fear realized when his son is arrested in an FBI counterterrorism sting. Follow Yusuf as he strives to understand why his child would leave America and attempt to join ISIS.

Secrets of the Dead: Bombing Auschwitz – Tuesday, January 21 at 9 PM

Join historians, survivors and experts as they consider one of the great moral dilemmas of the 20th century. Should the Allies have risked killing Auschwitz prisoners and bombed the camp to stop future atrocities?