At a time when there are betting parlors in most major league ballparks it may be time to reconsider the legacy of baseball’s all-time hit leader, currently shut out of the Hall of Fame for betting. He admits it in the new four-part documentary “Charlie Hustle & the Matter of Pete Rose” (HBO, 9 p.m.).
Opening ceremonies aren’t for a couple of days, but The Paris Olympics begins with some events in rugby (USA, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.) and soccer, whose matches include Argentina vs. Morocco (USA, 9 a.m.), Egypt vs. Dominican Republic (USA, 12:30 p.m.) and U.S. vs. France (USA, 3 p.m.), with lots of coverage repeated into the evening.
In what might be one of those historical speeches (a la LBJ 1968), Joe Biden will give his Presidential Address (ABC, NBC, CBS, PBS, CNN, CSPAN, MSNBC, 8 p.m.) explaining his reason for dropping out of his re-election bid. (It will likely bump the rest of the primetime broadcast schedule accordingly).
Wayne Brady can do anything, the saying goes. That apparently includes his home life, where he declares in the domestic reality series that he’s pansexual, living in an odd configuration with his daughter, his ex-wife and her new boyfriend on “Wayne Brady: The Family Remix” (Freeform, 10 p.m.).
Comedian Chris Redd joins some mechanics to customize cars in the new series “Resurrected Rides” (Netflix, streaming).
The two-hour finale of “Gordon Ramsay’s Food Stars” (Fox, 9 p.m.) has the five finalists make a mass-market product for grocery stores before a $250,000 winner is named.
“The Real CSI: Miami” (CBS, 10 p.m.) looks into the 2018 case of a Florida man who made his suicide look like a murder.
The new three-episode documentary series “Sea Change: Bounty in the Gulf of Maine” (PBS, 10 p.m., check local listings) looks at the gradual warming of the New England body of water.
There is some suspicion about some new arrivals to “The Ark” (Syfy, 10 p.m.).
“Big Brother” (CBS, 9 p.m.) holds its first power of veto competition of the season — when the field of those nominated for eviction has grown to three.
Nicole Byer, Sasheer Zamata, John Stamos and Dave Coulier play “Who Wants to be a Millionaire” (ABC, 8 p.m.).
Hayden’s tryst is exposed on “Tyler Perry’s Sistas” (BET, 9 p.m.).
“Welcome to Wrexham” fans may be interested in the friendly of Chelsea vs. Wrexham (ESPN, 10 p.m.).
Turner Classic Movies salutes the work of director Stanley Kubrick with “The Killing” (8 p.m.), “Paths of Glory” (9:30 p.m.), “A Clockwork Orange” (11:15 p.m.) and “Barry Lyndon” (1:45 a.m.).
During the day Karl Malden stars in “Bombers B-52” (6 a.m.), “Parrish” (8 a.m.), “Cheyenne Autumn” (10:30 a.m.), “The Hanging Tree” (1:15 p.m.), “Baby Doll” (3:15 p.m.) and “Birdman of Alcatraz” (5:15 p.m.).
Baseball includes Cincinnati at Atlanta (MLB, noon), Angels at Seattle (MLB, 3:30 p.m.), Mets at Yankees (ESPN, 7 p.m.) and San Francisco at Dodgers (MLB, 10 p.m.).
Daytime Talk
Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos: Rob Lowe, John Owen Lowe, Monica Mangin. The View: Ralph Macchio. The Talk: JB Smoov, Chloe & Maud Arnot, Cirque du Soleil, Lisa Ann Walter (rerun). Drew Barrymore: Matt Bomer, Jonathan Bailey, Noah J. Ricketts, Jelani Alladin, Alison Williams (rerun). Kelly Clarkson: Peyton Manning, Mike Tirico, Jessica Long, Fred Richard, Breanna Stewart, Sunny Choi, Victor Montalvo, Lawrence Chasing Gold. Jennifer Hudson: Sanaa Lathan, Egypt Sherrod and Mike Jackson (repeat). Tamron Hall: Katy Bodenhorn Barnes (rerun).
Late Talk
Stephen Colbert: Melinda French Gates, Saoirse-Monica Jackson. Jimmy Kimmel: Emma Corrin, Orville Peck, Noah Cyrus, Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman. Jimmy Fallon: Matt Damon, Josh Hartnett, Hardy. Seth Meyers: Whoopi Goldberg, Abby elliott (rerun). Taylor Tomlinson: Dustin Nickerson, Reggie Watts, Irene Tu.