The curators of the Universal Hip Hop Museum — a group that includes LL Cool J, Ice T and Yo-Yo, are on the lookout for “Hip Hop Treasures” (A&E, 10 p.m.) for their new Bronx museum, in this new series that falls on the day after the 50th anniversary of hip-hop. 

Anthony Anderson and Cedric the Entertainer decide to open their own barbecue joint, an enterprise covered in the new series “Kings of BBQ” (A&E, 9 p.m.). 

“The Wild Sides” (BBC America, 8 p.m.) finds that desperately needed rains arrive, but also cause floods. 

Another full night of “Ms. Marvel” (ABC, 8 p.m.), with three episodes that have migrated from Disney+. 

Bakers face the finals on “Baking It” (NBC, 8 p.m.) and a winner is presumably chosen.

A 150year0old has a bad experience at school in the made-for-TV thriller “Abducted by My Teacher: The Elizabeth Thomas Story” (Lifetime, 8 p.m.), based on a true story. It’s followed by a news special on the actual case, “Beyond the Headlines” (Lifetime, 10 p.m.), hosted by another kidnapping survivor, Elizabeth Smart. 

A research student and a park designer spend time together in South Africa in 4the made-for-TV “A Safari Romance” (Hallmark, 8 p.m.) starring Brittany Bristow and Andrew Walker.