Foyles WarHe reigned for years on public television, and though PBS seems more packed than usual with British drama, the only way to see the final three episodes of 1940s intelligence offer Christopher Foyle of “Foyle’s War” (Acorn TV, streaming) apparently is online, where new episodes will run the following three weeks.

Michael Kitchen and Honeysuckle Weeks star in the capers, first shown in the UK last month and available stateside today. The story picks up  in 1946 with John Mahoney as an American oil tycoon in cahoots with spies. Mondays are also the time to catch new seasons of the raunchy comedy “Peep Show” (Acorn TV, streaming) with David Mitchell and Robert Webb, at the same site each Monday, beginning today.

They haven’t been able to travel too far on “The Bachelor” (ABC, 8 p.m.) quite yet; they only get as far as Santa Fe.

Eight kids age 10 to 13 compete in the “Kids Baking Championship” (Food, 8 p.m.) hosted by Duff Goldman and Valerie Bertinelli.

The second of the three part “A Path Appears” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) Nick Kristof travels to West Virginia with Jennifer Garner, Haiti with Alfre Woodard and Colombia with Eva Longoria to examine gender inequality and poverty.

To mark today’s holiday, the 1993 Bill Murray comedy “Groundhog Day” (AMC, 10 a.m., 12:30, 3 and 5:30 p.m.) plays over and over and over.

They should show that Jeff Bridges Super Bowl commercial when they play “The Big Lebowski” (IFC, 8 p.m.). He was wearing a similar sweater.

“Swamp People” (History, 9 p.m.) returns for a sixth, generally history lesson-free season.

They freely mix history and myth from different centuries on “Sleepy Hollow” (Fox, 9 p.m.) and tonight’s episode includes someone connected to the Salem witch trials.

A terrorist escapes in West Virginia on “State of Affairs” (NBC, 10 p.m.).

An anthrax infection may originate from food trucks on “NCIS: Los Angeles” (CBS, 10 p.m.).

Alfonso Ribeiro, Carlton of “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” and lately a participant in “Dancing with the Stars” is new host of “Unwrapped 2.0” (Cooking, 10 p.m.), a reboot of the Food Network series starting Mark Summers about the making of candy and other snacks.

“The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon” (NBC, 11:35 p.m.), having played a a post Super Bowl edition Sunday in Phoenix, pushes west for a week’s worth of shows in Los Angeles. His first guests are Michael Keaton and Gwen Stefani.

Turner Classic Movies turns to winners and nominees from 1931-33 with “Little Women” (8 p.m.), “42nd Street” (10 p.m.), “The Public Enemy” (11:45 p.m.), “Grand Hotel” (1:30 a.m.), “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” (3:30 a.m.) and “The Champ” (5:30 a.m.).

Men’s college hoops include Virginia at North Carolina (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Morgan State at Coppin State (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), American at Holy Cross (CBS Sports Network, 7:30 p.m.), Iowa State at Kansas (ESPN, 9 p.m.) and Alabama A&M at Texas Southern (ESPNU, 9 p.m.). Among women’s games, it’s Louisville at Duke (ESPN2, 7 p.m.).

Pro basketball includes Atlanta at New Orleans (NBA, 8 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly & Michael: Jeff Bridges, Busy Philipps, Diana Krall. The View: Jeff Bridges, Christela Alonzo. The Talk: Amanda Peet, Lance Bass, Jet Tila. Ellen DeGeneres: Viola Davis. Wendy Williams: Delaina Dion. Meredith Vieira: Mel B., Shay Mitchell, Tom Arnold. Queen Latifah: Simon Helberg, Elisabeth Rohm, David & Leeman.

Late Talk

David Letterman: Jack Hanna, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings. Jimmy Fallon: Michael Keaton, Gwen Stefani. Jimmy Kimmel: Weezer, ZZ Top. Seth Meyers: John Oliver, Mike Greenberg & Mike Golic, Kid Ink featuring Elle Varner. Late Late Show: Marion Cotillard, Dame Edna, Sean Hayes. Carson Daly: Marion Cotillard, Alt-J, Danielle Panabaker. Tavis Smiley: Jessica Neuwirth, Marcus Roberts. Jon Stewart: Martin Short. Conan O’Brien: Bob Costas, Eddie Redmayne, Seinabo Sey.