The new three-part documentary “Navajo Police: Class 57” (HBO, 9 p.m.) follows 28 recruits in a 28 week program to cover the vast Navajo tribal reservation. The first two episodes air tonight; it concludes tomorrow.
Indigenous people take center stage in helping guide the return of bison populations in the conclusion of Ken Burn’s two part documentary “The American Buffalo” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings).
The new documentary “The Devil on Trial” (Netflix, streaming) explores the legal defense of demonic possession, or whether “the devil made me do it” defense actually works.
“Tyler Perry’s The Oval” (BET, 9 p.m.) begins its fifth season, with Hunter in a dangerous position.
Not as glamorous as “Playboy After Dark” is the new after show “Street Outlaws vs. the World: After Hours” (Discovery, 10 p.m.).
“FBI True” (CBS, 10:25 p.m.) revisits the Golden State Killer era.
It premiered on Paramount+ last week, but now people without that streaming service get to see the first two episodes of the revived sitcom “Fraiser” (CBS, 9:15 p.m.), which is not as bad as it could have been.
There are also a couple of episodes tonight of “Welcome to Wrexham” (FX, 10 p.m.).
“The Voice” (NBC, 9 p.m.) begins battle rounds after culling the field of last night’s auditions at 8.
Blu and Felicia are up for nomination by the secret head of household, Jag, on “Big Brother” (CBS, 8 p.m.). Today’s the veto competition. But it’s odd the episode takes 75 minutes.
A scientist on “The Swarm” (CW, 9 p.m.) warms of a global threat to drinking water supplies.
“Found” (NBC, 10 p.m.) goes looking for a missing widower.
A season finale comes for the home renovation series “Good Bones” (HGTV, 9 p.m.).
“Dancing with the Stars” (ABC, 8 p.m.) has its Disney night, a week after Tyson Beckford was booted.
Game shows tonight include “Name that Tune” (Fox, 8 p.m.) and “Press Your Luck” (ABC, 10 p.m.).
“My Big Fat Fabulous Life” (TLC, 9 p.m.) has a family dance-off.
Loni Love stars in that most unusual thing — a new original movie on MTV — with the comedy thriller “Binged to Death” (MTV, 9 p.m.), about an obsessive woman and her friend who kidnap reality stars and force them into torturous games.
“Welcome to Plathville” (TLC, 10 p.m.) is already celebrating Christmas.
An olive branch has thorns on “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” (Bravo, 9 p.m.).
The first of two episodes of “Celebrity Squares” (VH1, 8 p.m.) has Tiffany Haddish in center square.
Creepy movies on Turner Classic Movies tonight feature Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, with “A Woman’s Face” (8 p.m.), “Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte” (10 p.m.). Then comes normal creepy films with “Poltergeist” (12:30 a.m.), “The Blob” (2:30 a.m.), “Village of the Damned” (4:15 a.m.) and “Children of the Damned” (5:45 a.m.).
During the day are films of badly handled inheritances, with “Bonnie Scotland” (6 a.m.), “The Hardys Ride High” (7:30 a.m.), “Million Dollar Baby” (9 a.m.), “Speak Easily” (11 a.m.), “Thieves Fall Out” (12:30 p.m.), “My Dear Miss Aldrich” (2 p.m.), “Sweepstakes Winner” (3:30 p.m.), “Just This Once” (4:45 p.m.) and “Mail Order Bride” (6:30 p.m.).
Game 2 of the American League Championship Series has Arizona at Philadelphia (TBS, 8 p.m.).
Hockey has Tampa Bay at Buffalo (ESPN, 7:30 p.m.) and Colorado at Seattle (ESPN, 10 p.m.).
College football has Middle Tennessee at Liberty (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), Western Kentucky at Jacksonville State (ESPNU, 7:30 p.m.) and Southern Miss at South Alabama (ESPN2, 7:30 p.m.).
Preseason basketball has Knicks at Boston (NBA, 7:30 p.m.) and Denver at Clippers (ESPN2, 10:30 p.m.).
Soccer includes U.S. vs. Ghana (TNT, 8:30 p.m.) in an international friendly in Nashville.
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos: Mark Cuban, A Great Big World. The View: Mark Cuban, Barbara Corcoran, Kevin O’Leary, Daymond John, Robert Herjavec, Lori Greiner, John Grisham. The Talk: Damon Wayan’s Jr., Stephen A. Smith. Kelly Clarkson: Billy Porter, Eric Nam, Nick Offerman. Jennifer Hudson: Ms. Pat. Tamron Hall: Nicole Avant, Bethann Hardison, Raymond Braun.
Late Talk
Stephen Colbert: Rachel Maddow, Caroline Polachek. Jimmy Kimmel: Simu Liu, Myke Towers. Jimmy Fallon: Paris Hilton, Jared Freid. Seth Meyers: Josh Gad, Ayesha Nurdaja.