Erroll Flynn, Douglas Fairbanks, Russell Crowe, Kevin Costner and Sean Connery have all played the heroic outlaw of Sherwood Forest. Newcomer Jack Patten is the latest actor to play “Robin Hood” (MGM+, streaming) in a new 10-episode series that also features Lauren McQueen as Maid Marian, Sean Bean as Sheriff of Nottingham and Connie Nielsen as Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine.
Rachel Sennott wrote, produced and stars in the new comedy “I Love LA” (HBO, 10:45 p.m.) about a group of friends in their 20s who reunite. The cast includes Jordan Firstman, Josh Hutcherson, OdessaA’zion and True Whitaker. Among the guest stars are Leighton Meester and Elijah Wood.
It follows the fourth episode of “The Chair Company” (HBO, 10:10 p.m.), which has quickly become HBO’s most popular comedy in a while, and on which Ron develops a new theory.
Sunday Night Football has Seattle at Washington (NBC, 8:15 p.m.). Earlier games include Minnesota at Detroit (Fox, 1 p.m.), Indianapolis at Pittsburgh (CBS, 1 p.m.) and Kansas City at Buffalo (CBS, 4:25 p.m.).
Norah O’Donnell interviews Donald Trump tonight on “60 Minutes” (CBS, 7:30 p.m.). It will be interesting if she will lives up to established CBS standards and challenge any falsehoods, or fall in line under the newly installed right leaning editor there.
Her husband has been out on the political stump in advance of Election Day but “Michelle Obama: The Style, the Power, the Look – A Conversation with Robin Roberts” (ABC, 8 p.m., she has different things to talk about.
The second episode of “IT: Welcome to Derry” (HBO, 9 p.m.), which has been streaming on HBO Max since Halloween, now plays in the regular premium cable slot as well.
“Harry Potter: Wizards of Baking” (Food, 8 p.m.) returns for a second season
Also back for a new season is the bad weather compendium “In the Eye of the Storm” (Discovery, 10 p.m.), which begin with a series of tornados that emerged across the South in March this year.
“World’s Sweetest Candy Shops” (Food, 10 p.m.) looks at holiday preparations from a store in Times Square in Sweden and at Cadbury headquarters in England.
A nurse is murdered and an arsonist disappears on Halloween night on “Tracker” (CBS, 8:30 pm.).
“The Simpsons” (Fox, 8 p.m.) try to find out of Bart will remain bad all his life.
Deliria is trying to become the new goddess of “Krapopolis” (Fox, 9 p.m.).
“A Newport Christmas” (Hallmark, 8 p.m.) is the latest new original holiday romance that will keep rolling out for the next eight weeks.. Ginna Claire Mason stars as a Newport socialite who travels from 1905 to 2025 after wishing on a comet.
Louise gets loopy after dental surgery on “Bob’s Burgers” (Fox, 9:30 p.m.).
“Universal Basic Guys” (Fox, 8:30 p.m.) dig a well in order to avoid water bills.
Singers travel to Dallas on “The Road” (CBS, 9:30 p.m.).
“Maigret” (PBS, 9 p.m., check local listings) deals the the stabbing death of a student.
Arrests and convictions are made but police are still searching for “The Gold” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings).
“The Real Housewives of Potomac” (Bravo, 8 p.m.) spend their first night in Nevis.
A black mamba is found inside a mattress on the first of two episode of “Snakes in the City” (Nat Geo Wild, 9 p.m.).
“Wardens of the North” (Animal Planet, 9 p.m.) patrol elk hunters.
New information comes to light on “Talamasca: The Secret Order” (AMC, 9 p.m.).
“The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper” (CNN, 8 p.m.) looks at homelessness and housing shortages in New York City.
Wisconsin is the destination for “Tony Shalhoub Breaking Bread” (CNN, 9 p.m.).
“New Orleans: Soul of a City” (CNN, 10 p.m.) ends its season with a look at the Superdome, from Hurricane Katrina to the 2010 Super Bowl win.
Previewing Tuesday’s election is the special “The Blueprint with Jen Psaki: Decision 2025” (MSNBC, 9 p.m.).
“Sister Wives” (TLC, 10 p.m.) move on; Kody wasn’t such a katch.
A wolverine is has flight jitters on the first of two episodes of “Ice Airport Alaska” (Smithsonian, 8 p.m.).
On “The Guest” (Showtime, 9 p.m.), Fran offers Ria a promotion.
Turner Classic Movies pays tribute all day to Robert Redford, who died Sept. 16 at 89, with “A Bridge Too Far” (6 a.m.), “Barefoot in the Park” (9 a.m.), “Downhill Racer” (11 a.m.), “The Candidate” (1 p.m.), “All the President’s Men” (3 p.m.), “The Sting” (5:30 p.m.), “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” (8 p.m.), “The Way We Were” (10 p.m.), “A River Runs Through It” (12:15 a.m.), “The Hot Rock” (2:30 a.m.) and “War Hunt” (4:30 a.m.).
Hockey has Tampa Bay at Utah (NHL, 3:30 p.m.) and Calgary at Philadelphia (NHL, 7 p.m.).
Auto racing includes the NASCAR Cup Series Championship (NBC, 3 p.m.) and the NHRA Nevada Nationals (Fox Sports 1, 5 p.m.).
Today is the running of the New York Marathon (ESPN2, 9 a.m.).
There’s one more task in baseball: The 2025 Rawlings Gold Glove Awards Show (ESPN, 8:30 p.m.).
Men’s free skate is the event at the ISU Skate Canada (NBC, noon).
Women’s college volleyball includes Princeton at Brown (ESPNU, noon), Kentucky at Texas (ESPN, 1 p.m.) and Texas A&M at Tennessee (ESPN2, 3 p.m.).
Sunday Talk
ABC: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Sens. Tim Kaine and Ed Markey, New Jersey gubernatorial candidates Mikie Sherrill and Jack Ciattarelli. CBS: Duffy, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, Sen. Mark Warner, Rep. Dan Crenshaw, USAA president Juan Andrade. NBC: California Gov. Gavin Newsom. CNN: Treasury Secretary Scot Bessent, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries and Buddy Carter, Sen. Jon Fetterman, former New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, Biden advisor Ashley Allison, Republican strategist Kristin Davison. Fox: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Rep. Mike Johnson, Sen. Tim Scott.
