Forest Whitaker plays an esteemed judge whose sudden death sets his law professor son (Grantham Coleman) on a dark path in the new 10-episode “Emperor of Ocean Park” (MGM, 10 p.m.), based on Stephen L. Carter’s novel of the same name.

The new series “In the Eye of the Storm” (Discovery Channel, 10 p.m.) looks at megastorms caught by eyewitnesses. 

The previously streaming-only Sylvester Stallone series “Tulsa King” (CBS, 8 p.m.), in which he plays a New York mobster transferred to Oklahoma, migrates to broadcast TV — a move that gained “Yellowstone” increased popularity. 

“Campaign 2024: Republican National Convention Preview” (CSPAN, 2 p.m.), like everything else in American politics, will now very likely be quite different than what was originally planned, since the events of Saturday.

It’s a big sports day with Novak Djokovic vs. Carlos Alcaraz in the men’s final this morning at Wimbledon (ESPN, 9 a.m.).

Later, it’s Spain vs. England (Fox, 3 p.m.) in the UEFA Euro 2024 final and Argentina vs. Colombia (Fox, 8 p.m.) in prime time. 

The variant “Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing” (Discovery, 8 p.m.) returns for a second season of being tested over a 45-day period. 

“Professor T” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings) becomes a suspect when a rival colleague is murdered at a conference. 

KFC is named as one of “The Foods that Built America” (History, 9 p.m.).

“D.I. Ray” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) becomes the target of a deadly threat. 

Alpha meets the bishop on “Grantchester” (PBS, 9 p.m., check local listings). 

Excavating a memory is hard work on “Orphan Black: Echoes” (AMC, BBC America, 10 p.m.). 

“Carnival Eats” (Cooking, 9 p.m.) goes to Florida’s Space Coast for the Key Lime Pie Festival. 

Behavior on “House of the Dragon” (HBO, 9 p.m.) is starting look more normal. 

Roman moves his family to a place of safety on “Hotel Cocaine” (MGM, 9 p.m.). 

A 7,000-year-old skeleton buried with gold treasure is of interest to the duo “Hunting Atlantis” (Travel, 8 pm.). 

“Milf Manor” (TLC, 10 p.m.) is surprised by the sudden departure of Barby and Chris. 

Aircraft is converted into firefighting machines on “How Did They Fix That?” (Smithsonian, 9 p.m.).

“Secrets of the Zoo: Down Under” (Nat Geo Wild, 9 p.m.) deals with a cheetah that has slowed down.

Bruce Lee gets the spotlight on “The Icons That Built America” (History, 10 p.m.). 

Turner Classic Movies has a couple of Burt Lancaster crime dramas from 1949 tonight, “The Killers” (8 p.m.) and “Criss Cross” (10 p.m.). The silent movie at 12 o’clock is “Tell It to the Marines” (midnight), followed by two from Portuguese director Pedro Costa, “Ossos” (2 a.m.) and “Colossal Youth” (3:45 a.m.). 

WNBA action has Phoenix at Connecticut (ABC, 1 p.m.), Las Vegas at Washington (CBS Sports, 3 p.m.) and Indiana at Minnesota (ESPN, 1 p.m.). 

Motor sports includes the Hy-Vee One Step 250 (NBC, 3:30 p.m.) and The Great American Getaway 400 (USA, 2:30 p.m.). 

NBA summer league games have Cleveland vs. Milwaukee (NBA, 3:30 p.m.), Minnesota vs. Indiana (NBA, 5:30 p.m.), Houston vs. Washington (ESPN2, 6 p.m.), Orlando vs. New Orleans (NBA, 7:30 p.m.), San Antonio vs. Atlanta (ESPN2, 8 p.m.), Denver vs. Toronto (NBA, 9:30 p.m.) and Chicago vs. Golden State (ESPN2, 10 p.m.). 

Sunday Talk

(Schedules may all change since the events of Saturday) ABC: Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, former White House Chief of Staff Ron Klein. CBS: Sen. Tom Cotton, Reps. Dean Phillips and Ro Khanna. NBC: Sens. Lindsey Graham, Chris Coons and Bernie Sanders. CNN: Sens. Ron Johnson and John Fetterman.