113weddingsFor a documentary filmmaker who began making wedding videos as a way to keep afloat, it seems natural (and economical!) that Doug Block would reuse some of that footage in a work where he goes back to see what has happened to those couples since their big day. This is not particularly a new idea, in print at least. The New York Times did it Sunday, checking in on couples it had featured.

For the most part, the couples who agreed to take part in “113 Weddings” (HBO, 8 p.m.) have survived (why would failed ones agree to participate?). Almost all of them have had compelling trials, though, with sick children or healthy ones that kept them up at nights. And one of his first jobs has a split that seems all too common. The title is misleading; though he shot that many weddings, he only gets a fraction of them to talk.

A more satisfying documentary comes on “POV” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) with Grace Lee’s film about the Detroit activist (and unrelated) Grace Lee Boggs. an elderly Chinese woman who has been a part of the city’s African-American community.

 “Under the Dome” (CBS, 10 p.m.) may have been a perfectly silly show, but it also helped kickstart the idea of a viable summer network scripted series, inspiring a handful of sci-fi copycats this season. As we begin season two, the town is still under a dome and you’d think by now they’d be freaked out by the greenhouse effect.

The knock-out round of 16 continues with France vs. Nigeria (ESPN, noon) and Germany vs. Algeria (ESPN, 4 p.m.).

The letdown was palpable on “24: Live Another Day” (Fox, 8 p.m.) as the main crisis was averted. Now we’re supposed to focus on a very small case of an inter-agency death and coverup?

Harry Connick Jr. goes to Israel on a new “Operation Change” (OWN, 10 p.m.).

It’s down to six as “The Bachelorette” (ABC, 8 p.m.) visits Brussels; by the end of the two hours Andi will have her final four.

The versatile Eli Wallach, who died last week at 98, gets a speedy 11-hour day-long salute on Turner Classic Movies with “Kisses for the President” (9 a.m.), “Act One” (11 a.m.), “How the West Was Won” (1 p.m.), “The Misfits” (3:45 p.m.) and “Baby Doll” (6 p.m.).

Tonight, the films feature music of Quincy Jones – “The Pawnbroker” (TCM, 8 p.m.), “In the Heat of the Night” (10:15 p.m.), “The Slender Thread” (12:15 a.m.), “$” (TCM, 2 a.m.) and “The Italian Job” (TCM, 4:15 a.m.).

The remaining cooks on “MasterChef” (Fox, 8 p.m.) make a dish using canned foods.

The new Harry Potter attraction in Orlando gets a second prime time special, “Harry Potter: The Making of Diagon Alley” (NBC, 8 p.m.).

Baseball tonight includes Tampa Bay at Yankees (ESPN, 7 p.m.).

In tennis, early round play continues in Wimbledon (ESPN, 7 am.; ESPN2, 8 a.m.; ESPNews, 11:30 a.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly & Michael: Toni Collette, Chris Byrne. The View: Frank Luntz. The Talk: Dean Norris, Curtis Stone, Marie Osmond. Ellen DeGeneres: Adam Levine (rerun). Wendy Williams: Joe Manganiello.

Late Talk

David Letterman: Louis C.K., Amy Sedaris, cast of “Rocky” (rerun). Jimmy Fallon: Ricky Gervais, Ansel Elgort, Miranda Lambert (rerun). Jimmy Kimmel: Melissa McCarthy, Marc Maron, Royksopp & Robyn. Seth Meyers: Daniel Radcliffe, Jessica St. Clair, Lennon Parham, Twenty One Pilots (rerun). Craig Ferguson: Ricky Gervais, Lauren Cohan (rerun). Carson Daly: Bear McCreary, Air Review (rerun). Tavis Smiley: Ron Capps, Arturo Sandoval. Jon Stewart: Christopher Walken (rerun). Stephen Colbert: Esther Perel (rerun). Arsenio Hall: Mike E. Winfield, R. Kelly (rerun). Conan O’Brien: John C. Reilly, Pete Holmes, the Haden Triplets (rerun). Chelsea Handler: Eric Bana, Moshe Kasher, Heather McDonald, Julian McCullough.