Once a beloved miniseries starring Richard Chamberlain in 1980, the James Clavell historical novel “Shōgun” (FX, 10 p.m.) is now the basis of a more expansive 10-episode series, starring Hiroyuki Sanada, Anna Sawai, Cosmo Jarvis and Nestor Carbonell. “In my 20 years at FX, we’ve never undertaken an epic of this scale,” says FX chief Jon Landgraf told reporters at the TV Critics Association earlier this month. “It was a long-gestating labor of love, but we could not be happier creatively with the results.”
Richard Linklater is the first of three directors to examine the Lone Star state in a new three-documentary series “God Save Texas” (HBO, 10 p.m.). The other two run Wednesday.
A new documentary looks at how hip hop has been used in the criminal justice system, with prosecutors citing lyrics as evidence in criminal cases in “As We Speak: Rap Music on Trial” (Paramount+, streaming).
“Pathological: The Lies of Joran van der Sloot” (Peacock, streaming) is a true crime documentary that looks into the murderer of Natalee Holloway and Peruvian Stephany Flores.
The two day premiere of “The Voice” (NBC, 8 p.m.) continues with more auditions.
“The Rookie” (ABC, 9 p.m.) has his wedding to Bailey celebrated.
The first season finale comes for the quiz show “The Floor” (Fox, 8 p.m.).
“FBI” (CBS, 8 p.m.) looks into the death of a club owner; “FBI: International” (CBS, 9 p.m.) finds a dead mother at a sweet 16 party; and “FBI: Most Wanted” (CBS, 10 p.m.) deals with a woman murdered in a Brooklyn hotel room.
A corrections officer and an inmate go missing on “Crime Nation” (CW, 8 p.m.).
“Will Trent” (ABC, 8 p.m.) confronts James at the prison.
Career opportunities lead to complications for Malika on “Good Trouble” (Freeform, 9 p.m.).
The new series “Lost U-Boats of WWI” (History, 10 p.m.) explores the idea that Nazis designed subs to loot art and artifacts.
Zac is tricked into a dinner on “Zatima” (BET, 10 p.m.).
“Chopped” (Food, 8 p.m.) has contestants make a three course meal with mystery ingredients.
Jason spills about his parents on “Tyler Perry’s The Oval” (BET, 9 p.m.).
On “Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta” (MTV, 8 p.m.).Yandy and Mendeecees try to get the vote out in Kentucky.
Hiring a nanny is a problem on “Vanderpump Rules” (Bravo, 8 p.m.).
“The Good Doctor” (ABC, 10 p.m.) struggles to accommodate a new member of his surgical team.
Fallout of the failed farm sale comes to “Little People, Big World” (TLC, 8 p.m.).
Turner Classic Movies’ 31 Days of Oscar reaches the foreign language film category with “A Woman in the Dunes” (6 a.m.), “The Shop on Main Street” (8:30 a.m.), “The Firemen’s Ball” (10:45 a.m.), “The Virgin Spring” (noon). “The Last Metro” (1:45 p.m.), “Mon Oncle” (4 p.m.), “Au Revor, Les Enfants” (6 p.m.), “8 1/2” (8 p.m.), “Babette’s Feast” (10:30 p.m.), “Indochine” (12:30 a.m.), “Sundays and Cybèle” (3:15 a.m.) and “Closely Watched Trains” (5:15 a.m.).
Basketball includes Philadelphia at Boston (TNT, 7:30 p.m.) and Houston at Oklahoma City (TNT, 10 p.m.).
Hockey has Buffalo at Florida (Hulu, 7 p.m.) and Dallas at Colorado (Hulu, 9:30 p.m.).
Men’s college basketball has Georgetown at Villanova (Fox Sports 1, 6:30 p.m.), Cincinnati at Houston (ESPN2, 7 p.m.), Kentucky at Mississippi State (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Davidson at Dayton (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), Virginia Tech at Syracuse (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Wisconsin at Indiana (Peacock, 7 p.m.), NC State at Florida State (ESPN2, 9 p.m.), Texas at Texas Tech (ESPN, 9 p.m.), UNLV at Wyoming (CBS Sports, 9 p.m.), Nevada at Colorado State (Fox Sports 1, 10:30 p.m.) and San Jose State at San Diego State (CBS Sports, 11 p.m.).
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos: Sheryl Lee Ralph. The View: Kara Swisher. The Talk: Tony Danza, Noomi Rapace. Drew Barrymore: Christina Aguilera. Kelly Rowland: Danai Gurira, Babyface, Dan + Shay. Jennifer Hudson: Karen Pittman. Tamron Hall: Linsey Davis.
Late Talk
Stephen Colbert: Josh Brolin, Amanda Gorman, Jan Vogler. Jimmy Kimmel: Jennifer Hudson, David Cross, dhruv. Jimmy Fallon: Sydney Sweeney, Joe Manganiello, Jason Reynolds, Muni Long. Seth Meyers: Chance the Rapper, Margaret Qualley, Emilio Vitolo, Fred Armisen. Taylor Tomlinson: Caitlin Peluffo, Dulce Sloan, Jenny Zigrino.