The sordid saga of Harvey Weinstein and the history of the Hollywood casting couch is told in Ursula Macfarlane’s documentary “Untouchable” (Hulu, streaming), which includes interviews with victims, journalists such as Ronan Farrow, and a lot of tense music.
Another documentary tonight looks at the work of a man who moved back home to southeast Ohio with his family and tries to make a go of a sustainable farming amid the corporate agriculture all round him. Shaena Mallett’s “Farmsteaders” makes its debut on “POV” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings).
Aimee Mann and Chance the Rapper contributed music for “Steven Universe: The Movie” (Cartoon Network, 8 p.m.), a musical version of the animated show by Rebecca Sugar, in which its star fights off aliens. Christine Ebersole and Patti LuPone are among those lending their voices.
Simon goes undercover as a reserve-duty soldier to get more information on “Our Boys” (HBO, 9 p.m.)
Dud plans a trip to Mexico on “Lodge 49” (AMC, 10 p.m.).
Obon, a festival to commemorate the dead, is marked on the new episode of “The Terror” (AMC, 9 p.m.).
It’s all about “Brady Bunch” recreation these days, so Barry Williams appears to help resurrect the old Brady station wagon on “Fast N’ Loud” (Discovery, 9 p.m.).
“Bachelor in Paradise” (ABC, 8 p.m.) is in the business of psychological torture, so they bring back Clay’s ex, Angela, to stir things up. And John Paul Jones has already gone off the deep end.
You may be annoyed by the Halloween candy being out, but here’s “Christmas: A Second Look Preview Special” (Hallmark, 10 p.m.).
Denise Richards stars as a mother who wants her daughter (Savannah May) to join the cheerleading squad at her new school in the new made-for-TV movie “The Scret Life of Cheerleaders” (Lifetime, 8 p.m.).
On “American Ninja Warrior” (NBC, 8 p.m.), finals continues in Las Vegas.
Alicia and Javi try to figure out what happened to their mother on “Grand Hotel” (ABC, 10 p.m.).
The weather gets bad on “Below Deck Mediterranean” (Bravo, 9 p.m.)
The top six perform on “So You Think You Can Dance” (Fox, 8 p.m.) and none of them are Sean Spicer.
On “The Family Chantel” (TLC, 10 p.m.), Chantel and Pedro try to bring their families together.
The end of the late comedian is explored, ghoulishly, in “Autopsy: The Last Hours of Garry Shandling” (Reelz, 9 p.m.).
Crime may be going down but crime series are going up. The newest one blames “Someone You Thought You Knew” (Investigation Discovery, 11 p.m.).
The Disney vaults are opened again on Turner Classic Movies for a variety of offerings, starting with “Fun and Fancy Free” (8 p.m.), a 1947 compendium that includes the cartoon “Mickey and the Beanstalk” and “Bongo,” about a circus bear, based on a Sinclair Lewis story. Jiminy Cricket narrates. Then comes the cartoon “Donald’s Tire Trouble” (9:30 a.m.), “The Love Bug” (9:39 p.m.), “The Happiest Millionaire” (11:45 p.m.), “The Art of Skiing” (2:45 a.m.), “Snowball Express” (2:55 a.m.), “The Hockey Champ” (4:45 a.m.) and “The Misadventures of Marlin Jones” (5:15 a.m.).
Earlier today are films set in the mountains: “Sequoia” (6:15 a.m.), “The Great Meadow” (7:30 a.m.), “The White Tower” (9:30 a.m.), “In Person” (11:15 a.m.), “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (12:45 p.m.), “The Inn of the Sixth Happiness” (3 p.m.) and “The Charge of the Light Brigade” (5:45 p.m.).
Baseball includes Texas at Yankees (ESPN, 1 p.m.), Houston at Milwaukee (ESPN, 1 p.m.), Houston at Milwaukee (ESPN, 4 p.m.) and Colorado at Dodgers (MLB, 8 p.m.).
College football has Notre Dame at Louisville (ESPN, 8 p.m.).
The Round of 16 continues at the U.S. Open (ESPN, 11 a.m.; ESPN2, 7 p.m.).
Auto racing has its U.S. Nationals (Fox, 1 p.m.).
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest: Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, David Dobrik, Lance Ulanoff. The View: Bill de Blasio, Charlene McCray (rerun). Ellen DeGeneres: Priyanka Chopra, Boy George & Culture Club (rerun). Wendy Williams: Jason Lee, Melissa Garcia (rerun). The Real: Mark-Paul Vosselaar, Lena Waithe (rerun).
Late Talk
All reruns: Stephen Colbert: Tiffany Haddish, Jared Harris, Smashing Pumpkins. Jimmy Kimmel: Shailene Woodley, Mike Epps, Garth Brooks. Jimmy Fallon: Will Ferrell, Lil Rel Howery, Natalie Merchant. Seth Meyers: Michael Che, Alison Bre, Torche, Nate Smith. James Corden: Renee Zellweger, Ben Kingsley, Oliver Tree. Carson Daly: DeWana Wise, Blackberry Smoke, Lili Mirojnick.