Public television kicks off Asian Pacific American Heritage Month with a profile of Amy Tan, the author of “The Joy Luck Club,” on a new “American Masters” (PBS, 9 p.m., check local listings). “Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir” is the last completed film from director James Redford, the son of Robert Redford, who died of cancer last year at 58.
It comes after the first of a series of celebrity episodes of “Antiques Roadshow” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings) looking at the treasures of Jay Leno, S. Epath Merkerson, Nancy Kerrigan, Jason Reynolds and Dottie Pepper.
The extent of the abuse in the cult is revealed on the finale of “Pray, Obey, Kill” (HBO, 9 p.m.).
“Race to the Center of the Earth” (National Geographic, 10 p.m.) has its final push.
You can watch another NBA game, Golden State at New Orleans (ESPN, 7:45 p.m.), as usual, or you could watch a different version of Golden State at New Orleans (ESPN2, 7:45 p.m.) as presented by the Marvel comic book world, with completely different scoring rules. No such option for the late game, Denver at Lakers (ESPN, 10:05 p.m.).
Paul rekindles an old friendship on “Breeders” (FX, 10 p.m.).
“Black Lightning” (CW, 9 p.m.) sends Gambi an SOS.