A kind of “Shark Tank” for supermarkets, the new “Supermarket Superstar” (Lifetime, 10 p.m.) has culinary hopefuls come forward with a dream of bringing their to help bring their goods to A&P by first appearing before a panel that includes Michael Chiarello of “Top Chef Masters” and the actual Mrs. Fields of Mrs. Fields Cookies. They’re a tough panel and the three initial bakers are resistant to advice. Stacy Keibler makes a good host, though.
One of the best network reality series is also one of the least-heralded. “Breaking Pointe” (The CW, 9 p.m.) combines high art with the ready-for-reality backstage drama of a Salt Lake City ballet company. As we return, they’re auditioning for a new production of “Cinderella.”
A new film on “POV” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) follows two Chinese citizens who use the Internet to become grassroots journalists, circumventing their government’s heavily censored, happy talk TV news. One, Zhou Shuguang is a young man who uses his blog in hopes of being a stary; the other, Zhang Shihe, is a retired businessman who happened to see the murder of a woman one day after going to the art museum and ended up being an online reporter. Both men get calls from others to report on issues state TV is ignoring, often traveling long distances to get them in Stephen Maing’s film “High Tech, Low Life.”
The guys are generally not as shrill as the women in the same situation, so the “The Men Tell All” edition of “The Bachelorette” (ABC, 8 p.m.) generally just serves to kill time until next week’s finale.
Mathew Modine, Maxim Roy and Ted Whittall star in “Cat. 8” (Reelz, 9 p.m.) a movie about a fireball hurtling toward Earth.
“Antiques Roadshow” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings) returns to the appraisals that it made in a 1998 stop in Hartford, to see how they actually fared.
Tom Beringer guest stars on a new “Major Crimes” (TNT, 9 p.m.).
The eight teams left on “Get Out Alive with Bear Grylls” (NBC, 9 p.m.) are dropped in a bay and have to swim to shore. It is (supposedly) real while “Siberia” (NBC, 10 p.m.) is (explicitly) not.
Seems like people can suddenly get in and out from “Under the Dome” (CBS, 10 p.m.).
ANgelo continues to fight for custody of his baby daughter on “Switched at Birth” (ABC Family, 8 p.m.).
April learns that her husband is alive on “Mistresses” (ABC, 10 p.m.).
Derek seems revenge for last week’s killing on “Teen Wolf” (MTV, 10 p.m.).
It’s Alexis vs. Gretchen on “The Real Housewives of Orange County” (Bravo, 9 p.m.).
Fred Astaire is featured on Turner Classic Movies with “The Gay Divorcee” (9 p.m.), “Top Hat” (11 p.m.), “Follow the Fleet” (1 a.m.) and “Swing Time” (4:45 a.m.). It all follows a 1979 interview with Astaire by Johnny Carson on the “Tonight” show, collected on “Carson on TCM” (8 p.m.) that also includes interviews with Mel Brooks, Dom Deluise, Bette Davis and Burt Reynolds.
Yankees at Texas (ESPN, 7 p.m.) gets a national audience.
Daytime Talk
Kelly & Michael: Octavia Spencer, Daniel Sunjata, cast of “Pippin.” The View: Lisa Kudrow, Natasha Lyonne, Curtis Fields. The Talk: Ricky Schroder, David Myers, Chi-Lan Lieu, Carnie Wilson. Ellen DeGeneres: Catherine Zeta-Jones, Nicholas Hoult, Sloane Stephens (rerun). Wendy Williams: Whiney Cummings, Joe (rerun).
Late Talk
David Letterman: Cate Blanchett, Aisha Tyler, Franz Ferdinand. Jay Leno: Gillian Anderson, Jim Rash & Nat Faxon, Kenny Chesney. Jimmy Kimmel: Kevin Bacon, Diane Kruger, the Bacon Brothers (rerun). Jimmy Fallon: Howie Mandel, Eliot Spitzer, Kings of Leon, Ronald Isley. Craig Ferguson: Tim Meadows, Sara Bareilles. Carson Daly: Dominic Monaghan, Regina Spektor (rerun). Tavis Smiley: Khaled Hosseini, Emeli Sande. John Oliver: Louis C.K. Stephen Colbert: Kjersten Gruys. Conan O’Brien: Bill Hader, Lake Bell, Jimmy Eat World. Chelsea Handler: Emile Hirsch, Nico Santos, Loni Love, Mo Mandel.