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) George Strait: $3,413,816; $123.27.

v (2) Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: $1,478,686; $97.32.

v (3) Cher: $1,136,751; $90.18.

v (4) Journey/Steve Miller Band: $803,514; $60.53.

v (5) Cirque du Soleil — “Michael Jackson: The Immortal”: $701,493; $92.38.

“Under the Dome” (10 p.m., CBS): “Under the Dome,” last summer’s big spooky-kooky hit, returns with an episode penned by none other than Stephen King, whose 2009 novel started the whole thing. He’s promising “some scary, mind-blowing stuff.”

TV listing, B6

DVD RELEASES

Movies available Tuesday on DVD and through digital providers include:

“Afflicted” (R): Starring Baya Rehaz and Derek Lee

“The Lunchbox” (PG): Starring Irrfan Khan and Nimrat Kaur

“The Unknown Known” (PG-13): Starring Kenn Medeiros and Errol Morris

LIVE MUSIC ON TV

Performances on shows this week include:

R. Kelly: Tonight on “Arsenio Hall Show” (Fox)

Royskopp and Robyn: Tonight on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (ABC)

American Authors: Tuesday on “Conan” (TBS)

Trey Songz: Tuesday on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (ABC)

Robin Thicke: Wednesday on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (ABC)

Goo Goo Dolls: Wednesday on “Conan” (TBS)

Sia: Thursday on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (ABC)

Jason Derulo: Friday on “Good Morning America” (ABC)

Ed Sheeran: Friday on “Today Show” (NBC)

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

TV pilot producers are abandoning LA

LOS ANGELES

Los Angeles, once the king of TV pilots, is rapidly losing its domain to New York and other rivals. The LA region’s share of pilot production dropped to a historic low in the most recent season, as producers took their business to the Big Apple and other cities offering stronger tax breaks and rebates, according to a new report.

Among 203 pilots produced in the 12 months ended in May, only 44 percent (90 pilots) were filmed in the LA region, down from 52 percent the previous season and 82 percent from the 2006-07 pilot season.

The rest mainly filmed in New York, Atlanta and the Canadian cities Vancouver and Toronto, an annual survey released last week by FilmL.A. Inc. concluded.

The decline has been especially sharp in TV dramas — New York surpassed LA for the first time in filming one-hour TV drama pilots. The Big Apple drew 24 TV drama pilots versus 19 in LA.

One reason is that California’s film and TV tax credit program excludes pilots and new network dramas.

Lawmakers are reviewing a bill that would bolster funding and allow more projects to qualify.