The home of reality shows, Bravo tries a stab at more scripted fare with “Imposters” (Bravo, 9 p.m.) in which Inbar Lavi plays a con woman who cheats successive husbands out of fortunes. The premise by the end of the first episode is two of them teaming up to track her down. Lavi has fun changing identities but there’s something a little lacking here, from writing to acting. Therefore, bring on “Ladies on London” (Bravo, 8 p.m.) in a new time slot, and “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” (Bravo, 9 p.m.).
Less raucous and more amiable than most of its sitcoms, “Detroiters” (Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m.) follows a couple of buddies who run a local ad agency that makes late night ads but are looking for something big. You may recognize Tim Robinson and especially Sam Richardson from their previous comedy roles (Richardson plays Johan’s hapless assistant Richard Splett on “Veep”). In the pilot they try to impress a Chrysler marketing chief played by Jason Sudeikis, who is producer of the series. They end up hitting him with a car. There’s a cool Detroit vibe about the whole thing, which was shot there, so that adds a lot of good will. It premieres after the ninth season premiere of “Tosh.0″ (Comedy Central, 10 p.m.).
Robinson also pops up as a caustic celebrity chef in the purposely goofy new special “Michael Bolton’s Big Sexy Valentine’s Day Special” (Netflix, streaming) in which the singer has found the perfect tone in making fun of his own persona and hanging around with cool people like Andy Samberg (playing a vengeful Kenny G), Fred Armisen as a chocolatier and Sarah Silverman and Randall Park as a singing duo with a randy song. The premise is a telethon to increase the number of babies conceived to take care of a excess of toys at the North Pole. Directed by Scott Aukerman and a guy from Lonely Island, it’s good, goofy fun.
Elsewhere, there’s a wedding on “This is Us” (NBC, 9 p.m.).
Nick freaks out about his book signing on “New Girl” (Fox, 8 p.m.).
Who else to mentor Kid Flash but “The Flash” (The CW, 8 p.m.)?
“DC’s Legends of Tomorrow” (The CW, 9 p.m.) travel to 1776 to give George Washington a hand. Will not hold up for history class credit.
“Bones” (Fox, 9 p.m.) goes to a lumberjack competition.
On “The Real O’Neals” (ABC, 9:30 p.m.) Eileen and Pat make a discovery about Clive.
A costume party goes viral on “Switched at Birth” (Freeform, 9 p.m.).
A criminal seeks vengeance on the firehouse on “Chicago Fire” (NBC, 10 p.m.).
Jessica’s sister goes to college on “Fresh Off the Boat” (ABC, 9 p.m.).
On “The Mick” (Fox, 8:30 p.m.), Alba dents the Bugatti.
Hackers are on the move on “NCIS: New Orleans” (CBS, 10 p.m.).
“NCIS” (CBS, 8 p.m.) works with the privately funded Sherlocks on a small town murder.
On “The Middle” (CBS, 8 p.m.), Frankie and Mike watch the neighbor’s baby.
Katie is happy about the prospect of moving from Westport on “American Housewife” (ABC, 8:30 p.m.).
The alphabetical 31 Days of Oscar on Turner Classic Movies skips a letter, going from D to F, providing the realization that there were no Oscar movies that started with E. It offers “Destination Tokyo” (7:45 a.m.), “The Dirty Dozen” (10:15 a.m.), “The Divorcee” (1 p.m.), “Doctor Zhivago” (2:30 p.m.), “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” (6 p.m.), “Dream Girls” (8 p.m.) and jumps right to “Fame” (10:30 p.m.), “Fanny” (1 a.m.) and “Far from the Madding Crowd” (3:30 a.m.).
Men’s college basketball includes Georgetown at Villanova (Fox Sports 1, 7 p.m.), Rhode Island at Massachusetts (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), LSU at Kentucky (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Florida at Georgia (ESPN2, 7 p.m.), Tulsa at Memphis (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Wake Forest at Notre Dame (ESPNews, 7 p.m.), Butler at Marquette (CBS Sports, 9 p.m.), Michigan State at Michigan (ESPN, 9 p.m.), Iowa State at Texas (ESPN2, 9 p.m.), Mississippi State at Auburn (ESPNU, 9 p.m.), Texas Tech at TCU (ESPNew3s, 9 p.m.) and San Diego State at San Jose State (CBS Sports, 11 p.m.).
Pro basketball has Orlando at Houston (NBA, 8 p.m.).
Hockey includes Los Angeles at Tampa Bay (NBC Sports, 7:30 p.m.).
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa: Archie Panjabi, Nick Viall, Mark Consuls. The Talk: Max Greenfield, Kevin Frazier. Harry Connick: Laurence Fishbone, Michael Symon, Lauren Ash. Ellen DeGeneres: Tracy Morgan, Vanessa Hudgens, Jon Dorenbos, Zara Larsson and Ty Dolla $ign. Wendy Williams: Tracee Ellis Ross. The Real: Keyshia Cole, Frence Montana, Natasha Eubanks, Remy Ma.
Late Talk
Stephen Colbert: John Oliver, Isabelle Huppert, the Avett Brothers. Jimmy Kimmel: Will Arnett, Gabrielle Union, Charli XCX, Dweezil Zappa. Jimmy Fallon: Ice Cube, Rosamund Pike, the Band Perry. Seth Meyers: Anderson Cooper, Reba McEntire. James Corden: Jamie Fox, Kirsten Dunst, Zoe Saldana (rerun). Carson Daly: The Sklar Brothers, Band of Skulls, Ryan Hurst. Trevor Noah: Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh. Conan O’Brien: JB Smoove, Sean Giambrone.