miracle-workersDaniel Radcliffe’s character risks all in an attempt to save Earth and all of mankind on the series finale of “Miracle Workers” (TBS, 10:30 p.m.), Simon Rich’s allegory starring Steve Buscemi as a bored God who wants to destroy the world.

“Nate Bargatze: The Tennessee Kid” (Netflix, streaming) is a comedy special actually filmed in Duluth, Ga., touching on college football, cheap weddings, air travel and chocolate milk.

The concluding half of “Women, War and Peace” (PBS, 9 and 10 p.m.) looks at the women in the Palestinian struggle for freedom in the 1987 uprising and later, the all-female Bangladeshi police.

John Frankel visits Austria to explore skiing’s most harrowing race, the Hahnenkamm downhill, on a new “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” (HBO, 10 p.m.).

“This is Us” (NBC, 9 p.m.) looks back on the history of Beth and Randall.

Couples reunite on the final bonfire of “Temptation Island” (USA, 10 p.m).

On “American Housewife” (ABC, 8 p.m.), Greg becomes friends with a new member of the Westport Historical Guild.

Gael’s art show opens on “Good Trouble” (Freeform, 8 p.m.).

The remaining 18 cooks on “MasterChef Junior” (Fox, 8 p.m.) have to debone a fish.

It’s game night on “My Big Fat Fabulous Life” (TLC, 8 p.m.).

A nuclear sub goes silent on “NCIS” (CBS, 8 p.m.).

On “The Kids are Alright” (ABC, 8:30 p.m.), Tommy enters a contest to appear on “The Partridge Family.”

Don deals with his father’s failing health on “American Soul” (BET, 9 p.m.).

On “Blackish” (ABC, 9 p.m.), Kyra’s estranged father wants to bring Kyra home to Houston.

Pride loses his job as Special Agent in Charge of the Southeast and goes back to running “NCIS: New Orleans” (CBS, 10 p.m.).

“The Rookie” (ABC, 10 p.m.) deals with an earthquake.

Sarah uncovers more of Katie’s secret on “The Village” (NBC, 10 p.m.).

“Drag Me Down the Aisle” (TLC, 9 p.m.) is back on, with an episode called “Say Yass to the Dress.”

A serial killer leaves a ghoulish mark on his victims on “FBI” (CBS, 9 p.m.).

More spinning and quiz questions on both “Mental Samurai” (Fox, 9 p.m.) and “Ellen’s Game of Games” (NBC, 8 p.m.).

On “Roswell, New Mexico” (CW, 9 p.m.), Isobel tries to remember what happened the night Rosa died.

Juliette turns 21 and has thus probably outgrown “Siesta Key” (MTV, 9 p.m.), for which there is an aftershow at 10.

“The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” (Bravo, 9 p.m.) shop for a wedding gift for Denise.

The kids don’t necessarily want to meet their half sister on “Splitting Up Together” (ABC, 9:30 p.m.).

Bryson and Ari help David get his house in order on “Boomerang” (BET, 10 p.m.).

On “Mexican Dynasties” (Bravo, 10 p.m.) Jenny and Elan move to their own place.

The monthlong Tuesday night salute to Fredric March wraps up with “Inherit the Wind” (8 p.m.), “Middle of the Night” (10:15 p.m.), “Executive Suite” (12:30 a.m.), “Seven Days in May” (2:30 a.m.) and “The Young Doctors” (4:45 a.m.). The daytime movies on TCM are all set in boarding houses: “Madcap Ambrose” (6:45 a.m.), “The Adventures of a Rookie” (7:30 a.m.), “Jazz Heaven” (8:45 a.m.), “It All Came True” (10 a.m.), “Shadows on the Stairs” (12:15 p.m.), “Sunday Punch” (1:30 p.m.), “L’assassin Habite Au 21” (3 p.m.), “Stage Door” (4:30 p.m.) and “Million Dollar Baby” (6:15 p.m.).

NBA action has Houston at Milwaukee (TNT, 8 p.m.) and Washington at Lakers (TNT, 10:30 p.m.).

Hockey has Carolina at Washington (NBC, 7 p.m.).

Spring baseball has Cincinnati at Atlanta (MLB, 1 p.m.), Milwaukee vs. Toronto (MLB, 7 p.m.) and Angels at Dodgers (MLB, 10 p.m.).

The men’s basketball NIT quarterfinals have Wichita State at Indiana (ESPN, 7 p.m.) and Creighton at TCU (ESPN, 9 p.m.).

Soccer has Argentina at Morocco (beIN Sports, 3 p.m.) and Chile at U.S. (ESPN, 8 p.m.).

Men’s college lacrosse has Denver at Princeton (ESPNU, 6 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest: Christie Brinkley, Tony Hale, Max Frost, Lisa Rinna. The View: Elisabeth Hasselbeck. The Talk: Rob Lowe. Ellen DeGeneres: Idris Elba (rerun). Wendy Williams: Jemele Hill.

Late Talk

Stephen Colbert: Keri Russell, Martha Stewart, Conan O’Brien. Jimmy Kimmel: David Harbour, Science Bob Pflugfelder, Rodrigo y Gabriela. Jimmy Fallon: John Mulaney, Kevin Nealon, 2 Chainz with Marsha Ambrosius (rerun). Seth Meyers: Paul Giamatti, Jessica Walter, John Hickenlooper, Allison Miller (rerun). James Corden: Kobe Bryant, Cara Delevingne, Tom Walker. Carson Daly: Tom Green, Shaed, Lyric Lewis. Trevor Noah: Bobby Hall. Conan O’Brien: Matt LeBlanc, Gary Gulman (rerun).