Made the newest national holiday just this week, today’s Juneteenth is marked by Turner Classic Movies with a day of music-rich films with “Say Amen, Somebody —- The Good News Musical” (noon), pictured above, followed by “Shake! Otis at Monterey” (2 p.m.), “Jazz on a Summer’s Day” (2:30 p.m.), “Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser” (4:15 p.m.), “Jimi Hendrix” (6 p.m.), “Sparkle” (8 p.m.) and “Krush Groove” (10 p.m.).

A documentary on forced labor in post-Civil War America, “Slavery by Another Name” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings) is rerun, as are two documentaries on the Tulsa massacre, “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre” (History, 9 p.m.) and “Dreamland: The Burning of Black Wall Street” (CNN, 9 p.m.). 

The defiance of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Olympics is retold in the documentary “The Stand: How One Gesture Shook the World” (Sundance, 10 p.m.).

Other timely films today include ”12 Years a Slave” (Sundance, 7 p.m.), “Selma” (FXM, 8 and 10:40 p.m.), “Detroit” (AMC, 8 p.m.) and “Black Panther” (TBS, 8 p.m.).

Civil rights and Black Lives Matter are a couple of the movements covered in “Fight the Power: The Movements That Changed America” (History, 8 p.m.), that begins with the labor movement of the 1880s and includes women’s suffrage and gay rights.