Of the mommy bloggers who have put their family life on YouTube for viewers and profit, one couple that got the biggest audience were Mike and James Stauffer of Ohio, who chronicled how they grew their family like a live pregnancy test reveal or updates on miscarriages. When they decided to adopt a child from China, the boy they named Huxley was at first a star, and then strangely disappeared from the videos. Their explanation caused a huge backlash, and now, a three-episode documentary series, “An Update on Our Family” (HBO, 9 p.m.) that looks at the morality of exploiting one’s family for likes.

The Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry’s wife, hosts her own age series “With Love, Meghan” (Netflix, streaming) in which the former Maghan Markle puts on a Martha Stewart hat, dishing out advice on beauty and manners with occasional guests like Roy Choi, Mindy Kaling, Alice Waters, and assorted other chefs. It’s her first series television gig since “Suits.” 

From Italy comes “Public Disorder” (Netflix, streaming), a drama about a leadership vacuum in the Rome police department. 

“A Real Bug’s Life” (Disney+, streaming) returns for a new season, looking at actual insects the way the Pixar movie created fake ones. Awkwafina narrates.

A second season also starts for “Love Island All Stars” (Peacock, streaming), in which singles who know the drill try to pair up again, this time in South Africa. That they are the stars from UK ought to make it more entertaining.

Laci Mosley takes her podcast to TV in the new series “Scam Goddess” (Freeform, 10 p.m.) in which she tries to expose religious scammers and Ponzi schemes worldwide. 

President Biden’s Farewell Address (ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, PBS, CSPAN, 8 p.m.) bumps broadcast shows about 15 minutes. 

A shortened “Chicago Med” (NBC, 8:15 p.m.) faces conjoined twins; “Chicago Fire” (NBC, 9 p.m.) responds to a crisis at a community center; and “Chicago P.D.” (NBC, 10 p.m.) has an investigation involving an unidentified young girl. 

A fourth season starts for “Murder Under the Friday Night Lights” (Investigation Discovery, 9 p.m.), which proves there may be more murders surrounding high school football games than we previously thought. 

“Abbott Elementary” (ABC, 8:50 p.m.) gets a new custodian.

Hitler strikes back at Allied forces in Belgium in late 1944 on “Liberation: D-Day to Berlin” (Smithsonian, 8 p.m.). 

“Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test” (Fox, 8:15 p.m.) includes carrying 500 pounds of supplies up a steep mountain. 

Last week’s premiere of “Shifting Gears” (ABC, 8:20 p.m.), the Tim Allen sitcom, didn’t do so badly, drawing about 6.1 million viewers.

Melissa Peterman, Neil deGrasse Tyson and Jackie Tohn play “Celebrity Jeopardy!” (ABC, 9:22 p.m.).

Alert the affiliates: “What Would You Do?” (ABC, 10:22 p.m.) runs all the say to 11:20 p.m.

Drew Carey gets three times as much air time as Joe Biden for “The Price is Right at Night” (CBS, 8:30 p.m.), followed by “Raid the Cage” (CBS, 9:30 p.m.). 

“Inside the NFL” (CW, 9 p.m.) talks playoffs. 

Danni has a panic attack on “Tyler Petty’s Sistas” (BET, 9 p.m.). 

“Ozark Law” (A&E, 10 p.m.) watches over the Aquapalooza Music Festival. 

Kenny teams with a luxury builder on “Sold on SLC” (Bravo, 9:30 p.m.). 

“The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” (Bravo, 8 p.m.) wrap up their time in Mexico. 

Nate Burleson joins SpongeBob SquarePants, Sandy Cheeks and other characters to relive their alternate football coverage over the weekend on “Bikini Bottom Breakdown: NFL Wild Card” (Nickelodeon, 8 p.m.). 

Commercial pilots share their stories on “UFOs: Investigating the Unknown” (National Geographic, 9 p.m.). 

A new two night look at the early work of Alfred Hitchcock on Turner Classic Movies is kicked off by a new documentary “Becoming Hitchcock: The Legacy of Blackmail” (8 and 11 p.m.), intermixed with the silent version of “Blackmail” (9:15 p.m.) and the sound version of “Blackmail” (12:15 a.m.) as well as “Murder” (2 a.m.) and “The Skin Game” (4 a.m.). The series concludes next Wednesday. 

During the day, TCM has adaptations of Tennessee Williams works with “Baby Doll” (7:15 a.m.), “Period of Adjustment” (9:15 a.m.), “The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone” (11:15 a.m.), “The Night of the Iguana” (1:15  p.m.), “A Streetcar Named Desire” (3:45 p.m.) and “Sweet Bird of Youth” (6 p.m.). 

NBA action has Knicks at Philadelphia (ESPN, 7 p.m.) and Golden State at Minnesota (ESPN, 9:35 p.m.). 

Hockey has Carolina at Buffalo (TNT, truTV, 6 p.m.) and Edmonton at Minnesota (TNT, truTV, 8:30 p.m.).

College basketball includes Stanford at Wake Forest (ESPNews, 6:30 p.m.), Kansas at Iowa State (ESPN2, 7 p.m.), NC State at Virginia Tech (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), George Mason at Dayton (CBS Sports, 7 p.m.), Seton Hall at Butler (Fox Sports 1, 7 p.m.), Pittsburgh at Florida State (ESPNU, 9 p.m.), Rhode Island at Loyola Chicago (CBS Sports, 9 p.m.), and Utah State at UNLV (CBS Sports, 11 p.m.). 

Women’s games include Seton Hall at Marquette (Fox Sports 1, 9 p.m.) and Penn State at UCLA (Peacock, 9:30 p.m.). 

There is second round action in tennis’ Australian Open (ESPN2, 9 p.m.). 

Daytime Talk

Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos: Jennifer Lopez, Gwendoline Christie, Tiffany Aliche. The View: Denis Leary. Kelly Clarkson: Brooke Shields, Lee Jung-jae, Lee Byong-hun, Sofi Tukker. Drew Barrymore: Mary J. Blige,  Harris Dickinson. Jennifer Hudson: Chris Perfetti. 

Late Talk

Stephen Colbert: Adam Scott, Janet Yellen. Jimmy Kimmel: Tim Allen, Maggie Rose. Jimmy Fallon: Savannah Guthrie, Craig Melvin, Sam Heughan, Lucy Dacus. Seth Meyers: Ben Stiller, Pauline Chalamet. Taylor Tomlinson: Anna Seregina, Greta Titelman, Will Miles (rerun). Daily Show: ALOK.