Stevie Wonder: Songs In The Key Of Life - An All-Star GRAMMY SaluteThe latest Grammy practice seems to be: Once you have all those stars gathered for your overlong annual event, why not make them stick around another night for a second TV special. Seems like a plan, and just as they did last year with the Beatles, CBS is doing again with “Stevie Wonder: Songs in the Key of Life — An All-Star Grammy Salute” (CBS, 9 p.m.). Not surprisingly, it uses a lot of the people who were around for the awards ceremony, including Beyonce, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, Ed Sheeran, Ariana Grande and John Legend as well as Janelle Monae and Andrea Bocelli. It’d be great if they stuck to “Songs in the Key of Life,” but they’ll probably be tempted to play songs from throughout his 50 year career. If Usher’s performance at the Grammys of “If It’s Magic,” with Wonder himself on harmonica, was any indication, this ought to be a gratifying evening.

Thomas Allen Harris’ documentary on photographers of African-American culture, “Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People” makes its Black History Month premiere on “Independent Lens” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings).

Reality seasons are coming to a close this sweeps season. It’s between Leeza Gibbons and Geraldo Rivera for the finale of “The Celebrity Apprentice” (NBC, 8 p.m.). The final challenge is a tie in to the network’s owner as well — doing an ad for the Universal Orlando Resort. And much as Trump likes statuesque women, he’ll almost certainly pick Rivera, given his penchant for off-putting bullies.

After three hours Sunday, here’s an additional two hours of “The Bachelor” (ABC, 8 p.m.) involving hometown visits to the final four contestants — none of whom live in Iowa.

The short-season finale of “State of Affairs” (NBC, 10 p.m.), Katherine Heigl quits the CIA so she can go off and kill a terrorist target. Because killing a target was never the part of the job description of a CIA briefer.

The Joker may emerge during a circus attack on “Gotham” (Fox, 8 p.m.) which now features the always watchable Morena Baccarin.

Monday’s best show has quickly become “Better Call Saul” (AMC, 10 p.m.), with Bob Odenkirk’s title character already dealing with a seedy crowd.

Letters written by then-Lt. John F. Kennedy to the mother of a sailor killed on his PT boat are subject of tonight’s “Strange Inheritance” (Fox Business Network, 9 p.m.).

The role of farmers and African-American landowners in the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act are noted in the two part documentary “Mississippi Inferno” (Smithsonian, 8 p.m.).

The Best Picture award winners and nominees from 1958-59, representing a wide variety of film, are on Turner Classic Movies with “Anatomy of a Murder” (8p.m.), “Pillow Talk” (11 p.m.), “Gigi” (1 a.m.), “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” (3 a.m.) and “The Brothers Karamazov” (5 a.m.).

Men’s college hoops tonight include Pittsburgh at Virginia (ESPN, 7 p.m.), Seton Hall at Villanova (Fox Sports 1, 7 p.m.), Clemson at Georgia Tech (ESPNU, 7 p.m.), Kansas at West Virginia (ESPN, 9 p.m.), Butler at Creighton (Fox Sports 1, 9 p.m.), and Hampton at Morgan State (ESPNU, 9 p.m.).

Women’s games include Maryland at Michigan State (ESPN2, 7 p.m.).

Hockey has Rangers at Islanders (NHL, 7 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly & Michael: William H. Macy, Rainn Wilson. The View: Terrence Howard, Louis Gossett Jr., Stacy London and Michelle Williams. The Talk: Connie Britton, Shaun WHite, Richard Blais. Ellen DeGeneres: Kristen Bell. Wendy Williams: Diana Madison. Meredith Vieira: Vivica A. Fox, Marcus Samuelsson, Rocsi Diaz. Queen Latifah: Tim Conway, Faith Evans, Michaela Conlin.

Late Talk

David Letterman: Matthew Perry, Adam Scott, Kishi Bashi. Jimmy Fallon: Edward Norton, Craig Robinson, Chris Brown. Jimmy Kimmel: Benedict Cumberbatch, Stana Katic, Chris Soules, Aloe Blacc and Blackstreet. Seth Meyers: Angie Harmon, Two Gallants. Late Late Show: Weird Al Yankovic, Natasha Leggero, Maz Jobrani, Thomas Lennon. Carson Daly: Chris Hayes, Holy Wave, Helen Hong. Tavis Smiley: Al-jen Poo, Sharon Isbin. Jon Stewart: Julianne Moore (rerun). Conan O’Brien: Jason Bateman, Andy Cohen, Cold War Kids (rerun).