The coronavirus may have caused Daniel Craig’s next 007 caper “No Time to Die” to be bumped from April to a November release (at a reported cost of $30 to $40 million), but the actor will still host a new “Saturday Night Live” (NBC, 11:30 p.m.) for the second time. Musical guest the Weeknd is back for the third time.
“Yesterday” (HBO, 8 p.m.), Danny Boyle’s movie about a world without the Beatles, makes its premium cable debut.
In the new series “Critter Fixers: Country Vets” (Nat Geo Wild, 10 p.m.), two lifelong friends operate a rural veterinary service deep in Georgia. One big aspect of their operation is mentoring other African-Americans who want to get into the field.
They’ve already run through all seven continents, one by one. So tonight’s “Seven Worlds, One Planet” (BBC America, 9 p.m.) provides a behind-the-scenes look of how it was all shot.
In the made for TV “My Nightmare Landlord” (Lifetime, 8 p.m.) is sort of self-explanatory. Caroline Harris stars. Then in “Baby Monitor Murders” (Lifetime, 10 p.m.), a babysitter overhears a homicide over the nursery listening device.
Patrick Mahomet, Chadwick Boseman, Trae Young, Roddy Ricch, Tiffany caddish are among the guests on the third season opener of “The Shop” (HBO, 10 p.m.).
Quasi-celebrities embark on a two week process to repair their relationships on the new “Love Goals” (OWN, 9 p.m.). Among them is Spinderella of Salt N’ Pepa.
Prime time sports has NBA’s Philadelphia at Golden State (ABC, 8:30 p.m.) and
William Shatner wonders whether people can predict the future on “The UnXplained” (History, 10 p.m.).
Singer Johnny Orlando goes undercover as a geography teacher on the reality show “The Substitute” (Nickelodeon, 9 p.m.).
Randy visits the Cake Boss on “Say Yes to the Dress America” (TLC, 8 p.m.).
Turner Classic Movies has a couple of movies out of Cambridge and Harvard Law: “The Paper Chase” (8 p.m.) and “Love Story” (10 p.m.). The noir at midnight is “Ride the Pink Horse” (midnight). It’s followed by two Miss Marple tales starring Margaret Rutherford, “Murder, She Said” (3 a.m.) and “Murder Most Foul” (4:30 a.m.).
Hockey has Tampa Bay at Boston (NHL, 7 p.m.) and Columbus at Edmonton (NHL, 10 p.m.).
Spring baseball includes Houston vs. St. Louis (MLB, 1 p.m.).
Men’s college hoops includes Villanova at Georgetown (Fox, noon), Auburn at Tennessee (ESPN2, noon), Wisconsin at Indiana (ESPN, noon), Kentucky at Florida (CBS, 1 p.m.), Kansas at Texas Tech (ESPN, 2 p.m.), Georgia at LSU (ESPN2, 2 p.m.), Seton Hall at Creighton (Fox, 2:30 p.m.), UCLA at Southern California (CBS, 3:15 p.m.), Drake vs. Bradley (CBS Sports, 3:30 p.m.), Louisville at Virginia (ESPN, 4 p.m.), Oklahoma State at Texas (ESPN2, 4 p.m), Boston College at Floridia State (NBC Sports, 4:30 p.m.), North Carolina at Duke (ESPN, 6 p.m.), Oklahoma at TCU (ESPN2, 6 p.m.), DePaul at Providence (Fox Sports 1, 6:30 p.m.), Temple at Cincinnati (CBS Sports, 8 p.m.), Butler at Xavier (Fox Sports 1, 8:30 p.m.), San Francisco vs. Pacific (ESPN2, 10 p.m.), Washington at Arizona (ESPN, 10 p.m.) and Stanford at Oregon (Fox Sports 1, 11 p.m.).
Women’s games include Saint Louis at Dayton (CBS Sports, 11 a.m.), Florida State vs. Louisville (ESPNU, noon), Providence vs. DePaul (Fox Sports 2, 1 p.m.), North Carolina Wilmington at Delaware (NBC Sports, 1 p.m.), Fordham at vs. VCU (CBS Sports, 1:30 p.m.), Boston College vs. N.C. State (ESPNU, 2:30 p.m.), Seton Hall vs. Butler (Fox Sports 2, 3:30 p.m.), Arkansas vs. South Carolina (ESPNU, 5 p.m.), Villanova vs. Marquette (Fox Sports 2, 7 p.m.), Kentucky vs. Mississippi State (ESPNU, 7:30 p.m.) and Creighton at St. John’s (Fox Sports 2, 9:30 p.m.).
Golf has third round play in the Arnold Palmer Invitational (Golf, 12:30 p.m.; NBC, 2:30 p.m.).
XFL action has Seattle at Houston (ABC, 2 p.m.) and New York at Dallas (Fox, 5 p.m.).
America’s Cup gymnastics has the women’s all-around (NBC, 12:30 p.m.) and men’s all-around (NBC Sports, 5 p.m.).
Father John Misty and the Black Angels play a 2017 episode of “Austin City Limits” (PBS, 11 p.m., check local listings).