SuperTuesdaySuper Tuesday (ABC, 8 p.m.; CBS, 9 p.m.; NBC, 10 p.m.) has arrived, with Democratic Presidential primaries in 14 states, with 1,300 delegates up for grabs and the race tightened considerably. Broadcast networks will spend more time on this than for anything so far in this election cycle (though each starting at a different time). Cable news networks of course will reporting on results all night and covering it all day.

Ignoring Super Tuesday for superheroes is a new episode of “The Flash” (CW, 8 p.m.) with the return of Kid Flash.

The young comic gets her own full length standup comedy special with “Taylor Tomlinson: Quarter-Life Crisis” (Netflix, streaming).

“Empire” (Fox, 9 p.m.) returns for its final 10 episodes, with the Lyons facing a loss.

The new series “Master Distiller” (Discovery, 10 p.m.) is the latest to highlight the kind of brash  lawbreakers as “Moonshiners” (Discovery, 9 p.m.). In this case, the moonshiners goes up against the  legal distillers in a competition. Revenuers must not be watching.

Fred Armisen guest stars as a medieval rock star in “Miracle Workers: Dark Ages” (TBS, 10:30 p.m.).

Whitney gets a business proposition on “My Big Fat Fabulous Life” (TLC, 8 p.m.).

On the first of two episodes of “Siesta Key” (MTV, 8 p.m.), Alex’s crew heads to Georgia for the Fourth of July.

Nadine’s father comes to town for her birthday on “The Resident” (Fox, 8 p.m.).

“I Am Jazz” (TLC, 9 p.m.) prepares for a drag show.

One contestant has a new obstacle on “The Biggest Loser” (USA, 9 p.m.).

On “Project Blue Book” (History, 10 p.m.), Hyena and Quinn head to a Utah ranch to investigate something strange.

The wedding approaches on “Vanderpump Rules” (Bravo, 9 p.m.).

Turner Classic Movies’ just ended 31 Days of Oscar eclipsed Black History Month, so they make up for it with a day of the Black Experience on Film, as chosen by the African American Film Critics Association, with the documentaries “Freedom on My Mind” (8 p.m.), “Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment” (10 p.m.) and “You Got to Move” (1:30 a.m.) as well as “Say Amen Somebody.. the Good News Musical” (11:30 p.m.), “I Am Somebody” (3:15 a.m.) and “Before Stonewall” (4 a.m.).

Earlier, they salute Jean Harlow, born this day in 1911 with “Bombshell” (8 a.m.), “Red-Headed Woman” (9:45 a.m.), “The Beast of the City” (11:15 a.m.), “Libeled Lady” (12:45 p.m.), “Wife vs. Secretary” (2:45 p.m.), “Red Dust” (4:30 p.m.) and “Saratoga” (6 p.m.).

NBA action includes Brooklyn at Boston (TNT, 7:30 pm.) and Philadelphia at Lakers (TNT, 10 p.m.). Hockey has Boston at Tampa Bay (NBC, 7:30 p.m.).

in spring baseball, it’s Boston vs. Yankees (ESPN, 1 p.m.).

Men’s college hoops includes Michigan State at Penn State (ESPN, 7 pm.), Syracuse at Boston College (ESPN2, 7 p.m.), Cincinnati at South Florida (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Ohio at Akron (CBS Sports, 7:30 p.m.), Marquette at DePaul (Fox Sports 1, 8 p.m.), Tennessee at Kentucky (ESPN, 9 p.m.), West Virginia at Iowa State (ESPNU, 9 p.m.) and Texas at Oklahoma (ESPN2, 9 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest: James Taylor, Sabrina Carpenter. The View: Dan Abrams. The Talk: Steven Weber, Brie and Nikki Bella. Ellen DeGeneres: Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Khalid, Justin Bieber. Kelly Clarkson: Jimmie Johnson, Leslie Odom Jr. Tamron Hall: Nev Schulman, Kamie Crawford (rerun). Wendy Williams: Corey Feldman. The Real: Julissa Bermudez.

Late Talk

Stephen Colbert: Anthony Mackie, Susan Glasser. Jimmy Kimmel: Ben Affleck, Justina Machado, Victoria Monet. Jimmy Fallon: Kevin Bacon, Tan France, Taylor Tomlinson. Seth Meyers: John Oliver, Elizabeth Debicki, Jenny Offill, Glen Sobel. James Corden: Martin Freeman, Pete Holmes, Bad Bunny. Lilly Singh: Erin Moriarty. Trevor Noah: David Plouffe. David Spade: Zainab Johnson, Randy Sklar, Jason Sklar. Conan O’Brien: Joel McHale.