BIG & RICH, CHRIS SOULES, KAITLYN, BRITT, WHITNEY, JADE“Deadwood” is never coming back to HBO, but there is this: “The Bachelor” (ABC, 8 p.m.) is going to Deadwood — the original town in South Dakota, where the bachelorettes have to listen to the duo Big and Rich. Al Swearengen would be better.

The final installment of the three part “A Path Appears” on “Independent Lens” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) has New York Times columnist and author Nick Kristof accompany Regina Hall  to the work of the Women’s Resource Center and Men Stopping VIoence in Atlanta. Also, Mia Farrow and her son Ronan joining him at Shining Hope for Communities in Nairobi at an organization that fights sexual abuse in girls there.

After last night’s striking premiere, “Better Call Saul” (FX, 10 p.m.) lands in its regular time and day, with a new episode that may remind some of the early “Breaking Bad” with its sudden pang of menace and a showdown in the unforgiving New Mexico desert. Last night’s premiere, which set records for the network, repeats at 8:45 p.m.

It’s already down to the final three on “The Celebrity Apprentice” (NBC, 8 p.m.) and because Donald Trump makes the decisions the final three has Geraldo Rivera, Leeza Gibbons and Vivica A. Fox. First there’s an hour overview of the season then they get to their final task in Orlando, apparently selling time shares.

Before it was a band, The Lemonheads was the name of a candy, explored tonight on the revived “Unwrapped 2.0” (Cooking, 10 p.m.) with Alfonso Ribeiro.

She caught it: April celebrates being in remission on “Chasing Life” (ABC Family, 9 p.m).

Gordon goes after a biology teacher harvesting glands of his victims on “Gotham” (Fox, 8 p.m.).

An Iowa couple looks for new digs in Zambia on “House Hunters International” (HGTV, 8:30 p.m.).

“Castle” (ABC, 10 p.m.) goes after his nemesis Dr. Kelly Nieman.

Thomas Jefferson pops up on “Sleepy Hollow” (Fox, 9 p.m.).

The death of one of the participants in “Friends to Lovers?” (Bravo, 10 p.m.) doesn’t seem to have changed the reality show’s schedule.

No program is scheduled to discuss the musical winners in Sunday’s Grammy Awards, but “Fashion Police” (E!, 9 p.m.) pull up to address what people wore.

Somehwere between “My Weight is Killing Me” (TLC, 8 p.m.) and “My Big Fat Fabulous Life” (TLC, 10 p.m.). In between is “My 600 Pound Life” (TLC, 9 p.m.).

They try to build a better ambulance on “Top Gear” (BBC America, 8:30 p.m.).

Sunday’s debut of part one of the six-chapter documentary “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” (HBO, 9 p.m.) repeats tonight. It’s also available free to non subscribers online if you want to get a taste of it.

It comes between two 2013 movies I liked: “The Way Way Back” (HBO, 7:15 p.m.) and “Her” (HBO, 10 p.m.).

Oscar bait in the mid-1940s is on Turner Classic Movies tonight with “The Best Years of Our Lives” (8 p.m.), “The Story of G.I. Joe” (11 p.m.), “Laura” (1 a.m.), “Mildred Pierce” (3 a.m.) and “The Harvey Girls” (5 a.m.).

Men’s college hoops tonight include Duke at Florida State (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Oklahoma State at Baylor (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Boston University at Lafayette (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), Iowa State at Oklahoma (ESPN, 9 p.m.) and Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech (ESPNU, 9 p.m.). Women’s games include South Carolina at Connecticut (ESPN2, 8 p.m.).

Pro basketball includes Clippers at Dallas (NBA, 8:30 p.m.). Hockey has Arizona at Chicago (NBC Sports, 8:30 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly & Michael: Samuel L. Jackson, Christina Perri. The View: Ashley Graham, Spike Lee, Victor Rasuk. The Talk: Chi-Lan Lieu, Elvis Duran. Ellen DeGeneres: Ryan Seacrest, Ed Sheeran. Wendy Williams: Patti Stanger, Robert Verdi, Bevy Smith, Katrina Szish. Meredith Vieira: Common, Felicity Jones, Prince Lorenzo Borghese. Queen Latifah: Jaclyn Smith.

Late Talk

David Letterman: Steve Carell, Adam Silver, Dr. Cornel West. Jimmy Fallon: Jamie Dorman, Hannah Davis, Sheppard. Jimmy Kimmel: Bill O’Reilly, Kelly Osbourne, Morris Day and HAIM. Seth Meyers: Bobby Moynihan, Eugene Levy, Daniel Levy, the Bots. Late Late Show: T.J. Miller, Robert Glasper, Wayne Brady. Carson Daly: David Cross, Tijuana Panthers, Morten Tyldum. Tavis Smiley: Joyce Carol Oates. Jon Stewart: Patricia Arquette. Conan O’Brien: Timothy Olyphant, Rebecca Frankel, Punch Brothers.