Coupled-starring-L-R-Alex-and-Talyah--e1462904566113For “Bachelor” fans who can’t wait until “Bachelor in Paradise,” here comes an almost identical tropical dating show. The new “Coupled” (Fox, 9 p.m.) features another crop of attractive, somewhat accomplished women to the Caribbean island of Anguilla. Then when a helicopter drops off a guy, they all squeal. What kind of dating ideas and romantic experience can we expect from this new show from fox? Stay tuned!

There is a kind of Tinder aspect to the women’s choice — if they like him, they pivot to the right (instead of swiping their phone); if not, they go left. Unlike the other dating show, the candidates can all bring their phone, and text each other.

“Survivor” producer Mark Burnett, who knows how to structure a reality show, is behind it. So it might actually be classier than “Temptation Island” or “I Wanna Marry Harry.” But probably now.

It’s accompanied by something new, the first broadcast special from the Fox News personality, “Megyn Kelly Presents” (Fox, 8 p.m.)  talking with Michael Douglas, Robert Shapiro, Laverne Cox and the candidate who put her name on front pages, Donald Trump.

It plays as Presidential Primary Results (CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, CSPAN, 8 p.m.) come in from Kentucky and Oregon.

The finales keep coming fast and furious. Tonight’s episode ending the 13th season of “NCIS” (CBS, 8 pm.) also means the last appearance of Michael Weatherly’s character. “NCIS: New Orleans” (CBS, 9 p.m.) also ends its season.

Later, it’s the season finale of both “Chicago Med” (NBC, 9 p.m.) and “Chicago Fire” (NBC, 10 p.m.), which will be be accompanied by another variant in the fall, “Chicago Law.”

“Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” (ABC, 9 p.m.) closes its third season with a two hour episode. It will also be back next year.

A cable series, “Faking It” (MTV, 10:30 p.m.) ends its run with its finale.

“The Night Manager” (AMC, 10 p.m.) is probably my favorite current non-HBO series.

A new series examining the pioneering record labels for hip-hop, “Inside the Label” (BET, 8 p.m.) focuses first on Uptown Records, home of Jodeci, Mary J. Blige and Diddy, who warrants his own special “The BET Life of Diddy” (BET, 7 p.m.).

The third season premiere of “Genealogy Roadshow” (PBS, 8 p.m., check local listings) heads to Albuquerque where a woman tries to connect to a Native American code talker and a woman questions her family connection to the Trinity Test, among other investigations.

One Republic and Alicia Keys perform amid the eliminations on semi-final results night on “The Voice” (NBC, 8 p.m.).

Eddie worries about perceptions of his non-Chinese girlfriend on “Fresh Off the Boat” (ABC, 9 p.m.).

Black Canary’s doppelgänger Black Siren is leading the invasion of meta-humans on “The Flash” (The CW, 8 p.m.).

Jimmy uses Pat’s badge for freebies on “The Real O’Neals” (ABC, 8:30 p.m.).

The one CW show to get canceled this season is “Containment” (The CW, 9 p.m.), still spreading its limited outbreak.

Weather is getting worse on “Deadliest Catch” (Discovery, 9 p.m.).

A pumpkin festival is the big thing on “Little People, Big World” (TLC, 9 p.m.).

An amateur archeologist looks for Cleopatra’s lost tomb on “Secrets of the Dead” (PBS, 9 p.m.).

Jenna signs up for her camp reunion on “Awkward” (MTV, 10 p.m.).

Kristen gets closer to finding her father on “Stitchers” (Freeform, 10 p.m.).

It’s not easy to wrangle a quintuplets shot on “Outdaughtered” (TLC, 10 p.m.).

They may be “The Last Alaskans” (Discovery, 10 p.m.), but we’re sure this won’t be the last Alaskan reality series.

The “Tour Group” (Bravo, 10 p.m.) reaches the Maldives.

Robert Osborne gets to pick the movies tonight on Turner Classic Movies. He chooses “Air Force” (8 p.m.), “The Fallen Sparrow” (10:15 p.m.), “Dangerous” (midnight), “Slightly Dangerous” (1:30 a.m.), “Are These Our Children?” (3:15 a.m.) and “The Sea Bat” (4:45 a.m.).

The Stanley Cup playoffs have San Jose at St. Louis (NBC Sports, 8 p.m.).

In the NBA playoffs, it’s Toronto at Cleveland (ESPN, 8:30 p.m.). It happens just after the NBA draft lottery (ESPN, 8 p.m.).

Baseball includes Tampa Bay at Toronto (MLB, 7 p.m.).

Daytime Talk

Kelly Ripa: Andy Samberg, Michael Weatherly, Jussie Smollett. The View: Ellie Kemper, Keegan-Michael Key. The Talk: Dominic Cooper, Kevin Frazier, Maddie & Tae, Jane Lynch. Ellen DeGeneres: Colin Farrell, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Bill Hader. Wendy Williams: Katie Couric, Johnny Wright. Meredith Vieira: Clinton Kelly.

Late Talk

Stephen Colbert: Anthony Anderson, Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Coldplay. Jimmy Kimmel: Ryan Gosling, Dave Salmoni, Flo Rida Georgia Line (rerun). Jimmy Fallon: Simon Cowell, Josh Gad, Anthony Bourdain, Mario Batali. Seth Meyers: Andy Samberg, Jorma Taccone, Akiva Schaffer, Greta Gerwig, Allison Miller. James Corden: Kate Beckinsale, Bill Hader, Catfish & the Battlement. Carson Daly: Moby, Goldlink, Shane Black. Tavis Smiley: W. Kamau Bell. Trevor Noah: Dahlia Lithwick. Larry Wilmore: Lewis Black. Conan O’Brien: Amanda Peet, Lamorne Morris, Ty Segall & the Muggers (rerun).

Casino Gambling Night

Online casino casino på nett and the $200,000 price he was awarded for the job on April 5 at the U.S. Senate chambers was the wrong thing to say. The U.S. Senate Ethics Committee said on Thursday that Rubio’s use of the word “piss” to describe his job offered no guidance to his team of colleagues with whom he had disagreements.

The U.S. House ethics committee said on July 25 — with a report of “discussion” — that in an effort to shield himself from wrongdoing, Rubio “is being inappropriately used to portray himself as a leader of the opposition party.” The White House later said it had no comment on that accusation. In March, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio asked House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., when they would discuss whether he would allow a Senate vote on a Rubio tax bill, which would provide a 1.2 percent flat tax to people in lower paychecks, and asked him how the plan would affect their lives.

But that effort fell mostly to the House Republicans, who wanted to limit the effect of a Rubio tax bill when Rubio’s tax plan would eliminate or significantly lower the rate for people under 55. At the end of the week, two Republicans — House Republican leader Paul Ryan and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi — spoke about the tax proposal and said the proposal was something both parties had been working on for months because of disagreements over tax issues.