In the realm of cult documentary series, add the three-episode “The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping” (Netflix, streaming) to the sub-section of them that expose the rise of abusive “tough love” sites that also included last year’s “Hell Camp: Teen Nightmare.” This one was made by Katherine Kubler, who herself was kidnapped at 15 and taken to the remote Academy at Ivy Ridge in upstate New York for 18 months. She returns to the crumbling, long-closed campus with some fellow former inmates which amazingly still held all of its incriminating files and security footage showing abuse. 

It makes for a messier-than-usual expose, but one with some youthful energy and righteousness that only occasionally gives way to talking head authorities, shining light on the darkness of these unaccredited hellsites sold to parents as places to help troubled teens. 

The documentary “A Revolution on Canvas” (HBO, 9 p.m.) follows the artist Nicky Nodjoumi as he flees Iran in 1980 due to his controversial paintings at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. 

It may not be living up to its name in a year when the eventual nominees seem already set, but Super Tuesday (CNN, MSNBC, 7 p.m.; CBS, ABC, NBC, 10 p.m.) still has primary results from eight states — Florida, South Carolina, Virginia, Texas, North Carolina, California, Colorado and New York. 

“Good Trouble” (Freeform, 9 p.m.), the sequel to “The Fosters,” ends its run after five seasons with a 90-minute episodes. 

The well received “Shogun” (FX, 10 p.m.) gets a second episode. 

“The Cleaning Lady” (Fox, 8 p.m.) returns for its third season with newcomers Kate del Castillo, Santiago Cabrera and Clayton Cardenas. 

It’s accompanied by the second season premiere of the police procedural “Alert: Missing Persons Unit” (Fox, 9 p.m.) with Scott Chan and Dania Ramirez.

“Will Trent” (ABC, 8 p.m.) questions a suspicious pastor about a string of deaths. 

The Pinewood Derby conflicts with a father-daughter dance on “Extended Family” (NBCm 8:30 p.m.). 

“The Voice” (NBC, 9 p.m.) continues auditions. 

Real life bounty hunters from across the country are followed in the new series “Bail Jumpers” (Investigation Discovery, 10 p.m.). 

“The Good Doctor” (ABC, 10 p.m.) is tested by more questions from Charlie.

Zach is left to parent when Tori goes on a girls’ trip on “Little People, Big World” (NBC, 9 p.m.). 

“Fixer to Fabulous” (HGTV, 8 p.m.) has its season finale.

Dan finds his way into a Navy poker game during Fleet Week on “Night Court” (NBC, 8 p.m.). 

“The Rookie” (ABC, 9 p.m.) has his honeymoon turn into an active crime scene. 

The story of the Idaho woman convicted of killing her kids is told on “Crime Nation” (CW, 8 p.m.). 

On “Tyler Perry’s The Oval” (BET, 9 p.m.) chaos ensues at the White House as the lost are found. 

Childhood trauma causes relationship issues on “Zatima” (BET, 10 p.m.). 

“Chopped” (Food, 8 p.m.) celebrates Chinese cuisine.

Sandoval tries to reconnect with Scheana on “Vanderpump Rules” (Bravo, 8 p.m.).

Turner Classic Movies’ 31 Days of Oscar stays with best picture nominees and winners, with “The Racket” (6:30 a.m.), “A Tale of Two Cities” (8 a.m.), “The Nun’s Story” (10:15 a.m.), “Anchors Aweigh” (1 p.m.), “Battleground” (3:30 p.m.), “Citizen Kane” (5:45 p.m.), “In the Heat of the Night” (8 p.m.), “Platoon” (10 p.m.), “No Country for Old Men” (12:15 a.m.), “Midnight Cowboy” (2:30 a.m.) and “All the King’s Men” (4:30 a.m.). 

Basketball includes Boston at Cleveland (TNT, 7:30 p.m.) and Phoenix at Denver (TNT, 10 p.m.). 

Hockey includes St. Louis at New York (Hulu, 7:30 p.m.).

Men’s college basketball includes Alabama at Florida (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Purdue at Illinois (Peacock, 7 p.m.), Virginia Tech at Louisville (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Syracuse at Clemson (ESPN2, 7 p.m.), Providence at Georgetown (Fox Sports 1, 7 p.m.), Ohio at Buffalo (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), Kansas State at Kansas (ESPN, 9 p.m.), Dayton at Saint Louis (CBS Sports, 9 p.m.), Florida State at Pittsburgh (ESPN2, 9 p.m.), St. John’s at DePaul (Fox Sports 1, 9 p.m.), San Diego State at UNLV (CBS Sports, 11 p.m.) and Nevada at Boise State (Fox Sports 1, 11 p.m.). 

Daytime Talk

Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos: Eugene Levy, Denise Richards. The View: RuPaul, Linsey Davis. The Talk: Beth Behrs. Drew Barrymore: Erin Moriarty, Phil Rosenthal. Kelly Clarkson: Lainey Wilson, Hoda Kotb. Jennifer Hudson: Ziggy Marley, Brandon McMillan. Tamron Hall: Miranda Lambert, Coleman Proctor. 

Late Talk

Stephen Colbert: Sen. Bernie Sanders, Bleachers. Jimmy Kimmel: Eugene Levy, Anna Sawal, the Kid Laroi (rerun). Jimmy Fallon: Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb, Rhett & Link, Don Toliver. Seth Meyers: Joel McHale, Kyle Kinase, Adrian Young. Taylor Tomlinson: Esther Povitsky, Haley Joel Osment, Steph Tolev. Daily Show: Yuval Noah Harari.