iTunes’ official music charts for the week ending Dec. 5:


iTunes’ official music charts for the week ending Dec. 5:

Top Songs:

v “It Will Rain”: Bruno Mars

v “We Found Love (feat. Calvin Harris)”: Rihanna

v “Sexy and I Know It”: LMFAO

v “Good Feeling”: Flo Rida

v “N***as in Paris”: Kanye West, JAY Z

Top Albums:

v “Christmas”: Michael Buble

v “Take Care”: Drake

v “21”: ADELE

v “Talk That Talk”: Rihanna

v “Mylo Xyloto”: Coldplay

“Pearl Harbor — 24 Hours After” (8 p.m., history): “Pearl Harbor: 24 Hours After” is a new two-hour documentary that takes an in-depth look at what happened in the critical hours after news of the Japanese assault in Hawaii reached President Franklin Roosevelt. It airs on the 70th anniversary of the attack.

“america’s next top model” (9 p.m., the cw): It’s time to crown the 17th season winner of “America’s Next Top Model” — but not before the finalists take on a runway challenge that includes flying and modeling underwater.

tv listings, B6

entertainment news

Credits will settle Ticketmaster suit

LOS ANGELES

Customers who purchased tickets through Ticketmaster are getting notices that tell them they’ll soon receive credits for fees they were charged over the past decade.

Emails are going to customers who are entitled to the credits as part of a class-action lawsuit filed in 2003 in Los Angeles. A pair of men sued over fees they were charged for purchasing tickets to Wilco and Bruce Springsteen concerts.

A judge in October approved a preliminary settlement that will give customers a $1.50 credit for up to 17 tickets they purchased between specific dates in October 1999 and 2011.

It also will give an additional credit for those who received tickets via UPS. The settlement will be finalized in May.

‘Frozen Planet’ to debut in March

NEW YORK

Discovery Channel’s documentary series “Frozen Planet” will premiere March 18 and will encompass seven episodes including a program on climate change hosted by David Attenborough. On that seventh episode, the famed British naturalist will investigate what rising temperatures will mean for the planet and life on it.

“Frozen Planet” is described as “the ultimate portrait of our Earth’s polar regions.” A co-production of Discovery Channel and BBC, it was four years in the making and comes from the team behind “Planet Earth,” the acclaimed series that aired on Discovery in 2007.

The “Frozen Planet” team filmed in every nation inside the Arctic and Antarctic Circles during 2,356 days in the field, 18 months at sea, more than six months on the sea ice and 134 hours beneath that ice, according to Discovery.