The top five concert tours, ranked by average box office gross per city. Includes the average


The top five 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: $1,518,974; $93.32.

v (2) Marc Anthony: $1,076,073; $82.66.

v (4) Depeche Mode: $961,747; $66.73.

v (3) Drake: $940,562; $80.16.

v (6) Michael Buble: $888,030; $84.22.

“The Voice” (9 p.m., NBC): They proved they could carry a tune. Now, on the season finale of “The Voice,” someone will carry away the top prize, which includes a lucrative record deal.

“How Sherlock Changed the World” (9 p.m., PBS): This compelling documentary takes Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous sleuth from fiction to reality and examines how he had a revolutionary impact on actual criminal investigations.

tv listings, b6

entertainment news

Sesame Street coming to Powers

YOUNGSTOWN

The all-new Sesame Street Live “Can’t Stop Singing” show will come to Powers Auditorium, 260 W. Federal St., March 12 for two performances: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.

Tickets for both performances go on sale at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the box office, by phone at 330-744-0264, and online at deyorpac.org.

All seats are $22. A limited number of Meet & Greet passes are available for an additional $25, with purchase of ticket. A special ticket price of $10 is available for school/day-care groups of 10 or more people for the 10:30 a.m. show (excluding Gold Circle and Sunny Seats).

Diet workshops begin in January

NORTH JACKSON

The Diet Doc of North Jackson, 261 S. Salem-Warren Road, will offer free weight-loss workshops at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 9, 16, 23 and 30.

Interested people can pick one of the days to attend in order to learn more about the program. For information, call 330-538-3481 or go to dietdocohio.com.

Detroit might sell art to pay its bills

DETROIT

Detroit may have to rely on the generosity of strangers to keep its impressive art collection that was amassed with taxpayer dollars in better times. The bankrupt city is expected to learn this week the value of roughly 2,800 of its pieces at the Detroit Institute of Arts when New York auction house Christie’s delivers its final report to Kevin Orr, the state-appointed emergency manager who runs the Motor City’s finances.

Christie’s said it will include recommendations for how Detroit might make money while maintaining ownership of some of its most valuable pieces — including Degas’ “Dancers in the Green Room,” Pissarro’s “The Path” and Renoir’s “Graziella.” But the city may have to sell off works many consider integral to the cultural soul of the city in order to help repay creditors, including retired public workers whose pensions could take a huge hit.