February’s duet of Luke Combs and Tracy Chapman on her “Fast Car.” Lady Gaga’s 2016 David Bowie tribute. The Joe Strummer tribute with Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello and Dave Grohl from 2003. Prince’s first Grammy appearance in 1985. They are all among the highlights in the special “Grammy Greats: The Most Memorable Moments” (CBS, 8 p.m.), helping build anticipation for February’s next ceremony (also on CBS). Jimmy Jam joins Gayle King in hosting on what is otherwise light night of new entertainment on the last Sunday of the year.

Sunday Night Football has Atlanta at Washington (NBC, 8:15 p.m.). Earlier games include Dallas at Philadelphia (Fox, 1 p.m.), Jets at Buffalo (CBS, 1 p.m.) and Green Bay at Minnesota (Fox, 4:25 p.m.).

“Universal Basic Guys” (Fox, 8:30 p.m.) has its first season finale, as Mark becomes new business manager at a water ice shop. 

Marge and Smithers team up to become wine-forging Robin Hoods on “The Simpsons” (Fox, 8 p.m.). 

“Bob’s Burgers” (Fox, 9 p.m.) involves some float-building for the Bounty of the Bay Parade. 

There may not be many other new shows tonight but there’s a special offering a look at what’s coming up in the new year on “The Fox Winter Preview” (Fox, 9:30 p.m.). 

Richardson’s arrival catches Henry off guard on “The Agency” (Showtime, 9 p.m.).

“Dexter: Original Sin” (Showtime, 9 p.m.) targets a retired mob hitman. 

There’s a primetime broadcast showcase for both “Frozen” (ABC, 7 p.m.) and “Frozen II” (ABC, 8 p.m.). Elsewhere, “Home Alone” (Freeform, 6:45 p.m.) is followed by “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York” (Freeform, 9:15 p.m.). 

“60 Minutes” (CBS, 8 p.m.) chats with Pope Francis. 

The famous Watergate journalist duo joins Kara Swisher and Larry Wilmore in a discussion of the media, technology and democracy on “Bob Woodward & Carl Bernstein on Watergate & Journalism” (C-SPAN, 9 p.m.), from the LBJ Presidential Library in Auston, Texas.  

New York crack kingpin Clarence Preacher Heatley gets the spotlight on “Very Scary People” (Investigation Discovery, 9 p.m.). 

The girls of one of the “Sister Wives” (TLC, 10 p.m.) considers religions other than Mormonism.

A new season starts for “Home Town” (HGTV, 8 p.m.) with Ben and Erin Napier helping people find dream homes.

CBS News anchor Jericka Duncan hosts another look back on the year in “BET Year in Black 2024” (BET, 7 p.m.)

All three parts of “The Radical Story of Patty Hearst” (CNN, 8 p.m.) are rerun tonight 

Turner Classic Movies’ Sunday night treat this month has been pairing classic Carol Burnett sketches with the movies that inspired them. It wraps up tonight with “Mildred Pierce” (8 p.m.) and “Double Indemnity” (10:30 p.m.). The midnight silent film comes an hour late with “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” (1 a.m.) with Rudolph Valentino. It’s followed by two from Federico Fellini, “And the Ship Sails On” (3:30 a.m.) and “Ginger and Fred” (5:45 a.m.).

Hockey includes Dallas at Chicago (ESPN, 8:30 p.m.).

Men’s college basketball includes Buffalo at Temple (ESPNU, 3 p.m.).

Women’s games include South Florida at Rice (ESPN2, 1 p.m.).

The IIHF World Junior Hockey championships have Sweden vs. Switzerland (NHL, noon), Finland vs. U.S. (NHL, 2:30 p.m.), Slovakia vs. Czech Republic (NHL, 5 p.m.) and Germany vs. Canada (NHL, 7:30 p.m.).

Sunday Talk

ABC: Sen. Ben Cardin, Rep. Mike Lawler. CBS: David Rubenstein, Dr. Leana Wen, managing director of Bank of America Global Research Aditya Bhave. CNN: Sen. Andy Kim, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu. Fox: Sen. Eric Schmitt, Rep. Ro Khanna. 

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