The top 5 concert tours ranked by average box-office gross per city. Includes the average ticket


The top 5 concert tours ranked by average box-office gross per city. Includes the average ticket price for shows in North America. The previous week’s ranking is in parentheses. The list is based on data provided to the trade publication Pollstar by concert promoters and venue managers.

v(1) Bon Jovi: $1,888,822; $94.25

v(2) George Strait/Reba/Lee Ann Womack: $1,559,894; $86.12

v(4) James Taylor/Carole King: $1,154,803; $82.76

v(3) Taylor Swift: $1,139,736; $61.46

v(5) Jay-Z: $1,068,615; $83.49

“Huge” (9 p.m., ABC Family): “Huge” is a funny and provocative new drama about seven teens at a weight-loss camp. The first episode introduces us to Willamina (Nikki Blonsky), whose sardonic nature and rebelliousness makes her a menace to some and a revolutionary to others. Hayley Hasselhoff and Zander Eckhouse also star.

“Kevorkian” (9 p.m., HBO): If you were fascinated by the recent biographical drama starring Al Pacino as Dr. Jack Kevorkian, (”You Don’t Know Jack”) you might want to check out “Kevorkian,” a new documentary that delves deeper into the controversial career and legal hassles of its subject.

TV Listings, B6

DVD releases

Available Tuesday on DVD and through digital providers:

“The Crazies” (R, 101 minutes): Director Breck Eisner’s remake of George Romero’s 1973 classic nods to contemporary anti- government sentiment, but its military villains are as faceless as the virus that turns the residents of Ogden Marsh into blood-spattered psychopaths — and substantially less scary.

Timothy Olyphant plays Sheriff David Dutton, the first to connect a series of shocking local deaths with a downed military plane in the nearby swamp.

Contains bloody violence and obscenity.

“The White Ribbon” (R, 144 minutes): With its austere black-and-white cinematography and meticulously composed frames, the film lunges hungrily for serious art-film credibility. Set in a small northern German town on the cusp of World War I, writer-director Michael Haneke’s macabre story features a community torn apart by class resentment, mutual suspicion and lies that come to the fore when a series of mysterious violent crimes occur.

With its lurking sense of doom and moral fatalism, this grim fairy tale doesn’t presage World War I so much as World War II, seeking to locate the seeds of fascism in a generation infected by religious hypocrisy and authoritarian abuses of power.

Contains disturbing content involving violence and sexuality. In German with subtitles.

“Creation” (PG-13, 108 minutes): On-screen titles announce that the film’s subject, Charles Darwin (Paul Bettany), was responsible for the biggest single idea in the history of thought: the theory of natural selection.

Director Jon Amiel makes an admirable stab at overcoming the staid, episodic conventions of the typical biopic, staging Darwin’s mental and physical breakdown with startling moments of magical realism.

Contains intense thematic material.