The first Sunday Night Football of the season comes with Chicago at Rams (NBC, 8:20 p.m.). Earlier NFL games include Chargers at Washington (CBS, 1 p.m.), Philadelphia at Atlanta (Fox, 1 p.m.), Cleveland at Kansas City (CBS, 4:25 p.m.) and Green Bay vs. New Orleans (Fox, 4:25 p.m.).
“Desert One” (History, 8 p.m.) is a documentary about the Iran hostage crisis, from filmmaker Barbara Kopple.
A “CNN Special Report” (CNN, 9 p.m.) looks at “America’s Longest War: What Went Wrong in Afghanistan,” hosted by Jake Tapper.
The Romanovs and the Russian Revolution is the topic on the season finale of “Lucy Worsley’s Royal Myths & Secrets” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings).
Highlights of the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games (NBC, 1:30 p.m.) are reviewed.
“Fantasy Island” (Fox, 8:30 p.m.), airing on a special night, features “Melrose Place” stars Daphne Zuniga, Josie Bissett and Laura Leighton as a trio of girlfriends who come to the island to mark their 50th birthdays.
A second season comes for the post-finale reunion program “90 Days: Bares All” (Discovery+, streaming).
“Celebrity Family Feud” (ABC, 8 p.m.) draws Fran Drescher, Charles Shaugnessy, James Decker and Chris Bosh.
Glimpses of the new costumes and a gander of the oddball avatar competition are seen for the first time on “The ‘Masked Singer’ & ‘Alter Ego’ Sneak Peek” (Fox, 8 p.m.).
“Guilt” (PBS, 9 p.m., check local listings) has its series final in a pair of back-to-back episodes.
With the Cookout alliance having made history on “Big Brother” (CBS, 8 p.m.), and a Black winner guaranteed to be crowned winner; there is a little more imploding of the group to occur. But first, a new head of household has to be named.
Daryl and Dog are captured by Reapers on “The Walking Dead” (AMC, 9 p.m.). Then they discuss it afterwards on “Talking Dead” (AMC, 10 p.m.).
Prince arrives in the wake of a scandal on “Billions” (Showtime, 9 p.m.).
“To Tell the Truth” (ABC, 10 p.m.) welcomes J.B. Smoove, Brad Garrett and D’Arcy Corden.
Queer community is tough to come by during the pandemic, Abby find on “Work in Progress” (Showtime, 11 p.m.).
“60 Minutes” (CBS, 7:30 p.m.) returns for its 54th (!) season.
An intern gets obsessed with his project manager after a one night stand on the made for TV thriller “Psycho Intern” (Lifetime, 8 p.m.) starring Emmanuelle Vaugier and Madison Smith.
Jennie Nguyen joins the cast of “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” (Bravo, 9 p.m.) which has its premiere tonight.
Rochelle Aytes plays a reporter who stumbles on a story while on vacation in the made-for-TV thriller “Redemptions in Cherry Springs” (Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, 8 p.m.).
On “Chapelwaite” (Epix, 10 p.m.), Charles may be going over the edge mentally.
Raq may be the one behind the bad street crack on “Power Book III: Raising Kanan” (Starz, 8 p.m.).
“To Tell the Truth” (ABC, 10 p.m.) welcomes J.B. Smoove, Brad Garrett and D’Arcy Corden.
Paul Robeson is featured on Turner Classic Movies tonight, in “Show Boat” (8 p.m.), “Sanders of the River” (10:15 p.m.) and “Big Fella” (11:45 p.m.). They are followed by the silent “Mare Nostrum” (1:15 a.m.) and Krzystof Kielowski’s “Blind Chance” (3:15 am.).
Baseball includes Boston at White Sox (TBS, 2 p.m.), San Diego at Dodgers (MLB, 5 p.m.) and Yankees at Mets (ESPN, 8 p.m.).
The U.S. Open (ESPN, 1 p.m.) women’s doubles final is followed by the men’s final at 4.
WNBA action has Washington at Chicago (ABC, 7 p.m.), Indiana at Minnesota (NBA, 7 p.m.) and Seattle at Los Angeles (MLB, 9 p.m.).
Motor sports include the Italian Grand Prix (ESPN2, 9 a.m.), Reading Nationals (Fox Sports 1, 2 p.m.), the Grand Prix of Portland (NBC, 3 p.m.) and the Monterey Sports Car Championship (NBC Sports, 4 p.m.).
Sunday Talk
ABC: Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, Sen. Joe Manchin, Sen. Bernie Sanders. CBS: Former FDA administratorScott Gottlieb, GOP chair Ronna McDaniel, Rep. Liz Cheney, former deputy director of the CIA Michael Morell. NBC: Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Manchin, Doris Kearns Goodwin. CNN: Murthy, Manchin, Sen. Bernie Sanders. Fox News: Superme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts.