After taking a year off due to the pandemic, “The Austin City Limits Hall of Fame” (PBS, 11 p.m., check local listings) returned with a stellar roster inducting Wilco, Lucinda Williams and the flashily-dressed Alejandro Escovedo, pictured above. The October event also featured performances by Jason Isbell, Margo Price, John Doe, Sheila E., Lenny Kaye, Michelle Zauner of Japanese Breakfast, Rosanne Cash, Bill Callahan, Terry Allen and Alex Ruiz. It gets its TV debut tonight.

Another band, Johnnyswim, comprised of husband and wife Amanda Sudano and Abner Ramirez, get their own reality show “The Johnnyswim Show” (Magnolia, 7 p.m.), on the network that takes the place of DIY.

A third season starts on three different streaming services on “A Discovery of Witches” (AMC+, Shudder, Sundance Now, streaming). 

The mother-daughter dynamic is explored through six pairs at a three-week retreat on the new “Like Mother, Like Daughter?” (Discovery+, streaming).

The true crime “BTK: Confession of a Serial Killer” (A&E, 9 p.m.) begins a two-night run, using the words of the serial killer Dennis Rader from correspondence he had with psychologist and author Katherine Ramsland. 

“Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard” (HBO, 8 p.m.), with Salma Hayek, Ryan Reynolds and Samuel L. Jackson, makes its premium cable debut, as does “The Dry” (Showtime, 8 p.m.) with Eric Band, BeBe Bettencourt and Genevieve O’Reilly. 

The made-for-TV romance “Wedding Veil 1: Something Old” (Hallmark, 8 p.m.) is the first of a trilogy about college friends who use magical items to find true love. Lacey Chabert, Autumn Reiser and Alison Sweeney star. (I think I guess the titles of the subsequent films).