As popular as it is worldwide, the Eurovision Song Contest never got to American network TV, or even cable. Someone could just bring that competition here (and may still). Until then, the domestic adaptation, “American Song Contest” (NBC, 8 p.m.) is a weird one: A competition among states with one new original song from one solo act or band from every state, plus the District of Columbia, competing. As if a song from Delaware will be different from the one from Maryland. Anyway, Snoop Dogg and Kelly Clarkson host.
Three indigenous women fight to vindicate and honor dead and missing victims in Indian Country in the documentary “Bring Her Home” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings).
The lavish, generally entertaining period potboiler “The Gilded Age” (HBO, 9 p.m.) ends its first season with Mrs. Russell’s party casting a shadow over everything, including Marian’s plans for elopement.
“The Good Karma Hospital” (AcornTV, streaming), the British medical drama set at a South India hospital returns for a fourth season.
The renovation show about hotel restoration, “Inn the Works” (Magnolia, 9 p.m.), makes its cable debut.
The four-day Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings for Ketanji Brown Jackson (CNN, C-SPAN, MSNBC, 11 a.m.) begin with opening statements in the Judiciary Committee.
“American Idol” (ABC, 8 p.m.) ends its auditions with the last ticket to Hollywood.