North-Carolina-vs.-Syracuse-Final-Four-TopBet-Sportsbook-Odds-600x400Long before all your brackets collapsed, here’s the night you were looking for all those weeks ago: The Final Four, which isn’t on broadcast TV for some reason, but an array of cable channels: Villanova vs. Oklahoma (TBS, TNT, truTV, 6 p.m.) and  Syracuse vs. North Carolina (TBS, TNT, truTV,  8:30 p.m.).

Other sports in prime time: The Figure Skating World Championships (NBC, 9 p.m.) from Boston. Earlier, it’s pairs free skate on NBC Sports Network at 2 p.m.

Amy Schumer’s “Trainwreck” (HBO, 8 p.m.) makes its premiere on premium cable, where it might be as popular an offering as “Bridesmaids” has become. Also on tonight, Mae Whitman and Robbie Amell in the teen comedy “The Duff” (Showtime, 9 p.m.) and Ryan Reynolds with  Ben Kingsley in the thriller “Self/less” (Cinemax, 10 p.m.).

“Genders Fight Over Backyard Outbuildings” is probably not as clever a name for a new show about such things as the eventual “He Shed, She Shed” (FYI, 10 p.m.).

However, a show like “We Bought the Farm” (HGTV, 11 p.m.) may give you a completely wrong idea of its subject. It’s not about dying, it’s about actually buying a farm.

“Oprah: Where Are They Now?” (OWN, 10 p.m.) looks at the real life figures involved in the O.J. Simpson trial now that “The People vs. O.J. Simpson” concludes this week on FX.

The title “Scorned: Love Kills” (Investigation Discovery, 10 p.m.) tells you everything you need to know about the motivations in this true crime series.

Getting a prime time network showcase is Julia Roberts, Armie Hammer and Lily Collins star in the 2012 Snow White variation “Mirror Mirror” (ABC, 8 p.m.).

Cats aren’t getting any nicer. An eighth season starts for “My Cat from Hell” (Animal Planet, 8 p.m.).

No news is expected tonight. So “The Seventies” (CNN, 8 p.m.) will quite naturally transition to “The Eighties” (CNN, 9 p.m.).

 

In the made-for-TV “All Yours” (Hallmark, 9 p.m.) a busy single mom hires a male friend to be her nanny. You guess what happens next. Nicolette Sheridan and Dan Payne star.

A 2013 murder in Silver Spring is recounted on a new “48 Hours” (CBS, 10 p.m.). A 2010 killing of an aspiring Playboy model in Miami gets attention on “Dateline” (NBC, 8 p.m.).

Same week reruns come for “Rosewood” (Fox, 8 p.m.), “Rush Hour” (CBS, 8 p.m.) and “Lucifer” (Fox, 9 p.m.).

Westerns set in Wyoming are on Turner Classic Movies tonight with “Shane” (8 p.m.), “The Virginian” (10:15 p.m.) and “Wyoming” (midnight). Then comes a couple of key Blaxploitation films, “Abar, the First Black Superman” (TCM, 2 a.m.) followed by “Shaft in Africa” (TCM, 3:45 a.m.).

Pro basketball has Detroit at Chicago (NBA, 8 p.m.).

Hockey Night in Canada has Detroit at Toronto (NHL, 7 p.m.).

The season’s final spring training games include Boston at Toronto (MLB, 1 p.m.), San Francisco at Oakland (MLB, 4 p.m.) and Dodgers at Angels (MLB, 9 p.m.).

College baseball includes TCU at Wichita State (ESPNU, 2 p.m.) and Texas A&M at Florida (ESPNU, 7:30 p.m.).

In college softball, it’s Tennessee at Missouri (ESPNU, noon) and UCLA at Oregon (ESPNU, 10:30 p.m.).

There is also men’s college lacrosse with Denver at Georgetown (CBS Sports, 11 a.m.) and Notre Dame at Syracuse (ESPNU, 5 p.m.).

Jessica eats glass on a new “Party Over Here” (Fox, 11 p.m.).

A Beck performance from 2014 is rerun on “Austin City Limits” (PBS, 11 p.m.).

Peter Dinklage hosts a new “Saturday Night Live” (NBC, 11:30 p.m.) with Gwen Stefani as musical guest.