Writers Daveed Diggs and and Rafael Casal return to their hometown of Oakland, Calif., and the subject of their 2018 film of the same name for the new series “Blindspotting” (Starz, 9 p.m.), which is reconceived as the story of a woman who has to move in with her mother in law with her son, after her boyfriend is arrested. Jasmine Cephas Jones is quite a force in the lead, but Helen Hunt is a hoot. And the show can turn to include spoken word poetry to unexpected dance moves.
The trope of a much-put-upon sitcom wife is upended in the new “Kevin Can F@# Himself” (AMC+, streaming) In which Annie Murphy, who earned so much good will in “Schitt’s Creek” plays a woman stuck in the worst kind of sitcom life that even has a laugh track. She schemes a way to escape from all of it as the series turns darker. It doesn’t immediately work, but it may improve. It premieres on regular AMC next week.
Canceled by Netflix after a single season in 2019, the clever and colorful “Tuca & Bertie” (Cartoon Network, 11:30 p.m.) resurfaces on cable, with voice talents Tiffany Haddish, Ali Wong and Steven Yeun all returning.
The 145th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show (Fox, 7:30 p.m.) has group judging, with a live preshow at 7. Earlier are some preliminary activities (Fox Sports 2, 1 p.m.).
“Fear the Walking Dead” (AMC, 9 p.m.) reaches its season finale.
Candace Cameron Bure stars in a new “Aurora Teagarden Mysteries: Till Death Do Us Part” (Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, 8 p.m.) set just before Aurora’s wedding, when a body is discovered. Niall Matter and Marilu Henner also star.