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7 p.m. on NBC The Voice
Rock star Gwen Stefani reclaims her red chair alongside fellow superstar coaches Kelly Clarkson, John Legend and Blake Shelton as they return for Season 19 of this four-time Emmy-winning music competition series. Among the new twists this season, in the Battle Rounds, the four artists that were saved by their individual coaches will not automatically advance in the competition. Instead, they must vie in the first Four-Way Knockout. Carson Daly returns as host.
7 p.m. on HALL American Humane Hero Dog Awards: 10th Anniversary Celebration
Carson Kressley, who hosted the inaugural broadcast of these awards celebrating heroes on both ends of the leash, returns in that capacity for this two-hour 10th anniversary special. In addition to honoring working dogs from across the United States, the program also features a number of human VIPs, including Naomi Judd, Vivica A. Fox, Cameron Mathison, Marcus Scribner, Alison Sweeney, Ariel Winter, Debbie Matenopoulos, and Dr. Robin Ganzert, president and CEO of American Humane. Grammy winner Lisa Loeb will perform, and Richard Marx offers a special video message.
7:15 p.m. on FOX
L.A.’s Finest
As the past finally catches up with Syd and McKenna (Gabrielle Union, Jessica Alba), they’re forced to pull off a seemingly impossible mission, while also leaving behind no trace of their own involvement, in the new episode “Déjà Vu.” Meanwhile, a ghost from Syd’s past comes back to haunt her, and McKenna gets distracted by Izzy’s (Sophie Reynolds) strange behavior. Zach Gilford, Ernie Hudson and Ryan McPartlin also star.
7:15 p.m. on ESPN NFL Football
A pair of NFC foes go at it tonight down in “Big D,” where Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys hope the home field is to their advantage in their game against Kyler Murray and the Arizona Cardinals. Prescott’s golden right arm has the Cowboys sitting atop the East, albeit with a lackluster record, while the mistake-prone Murray has the Cards sitting in the middle of the pack in a tough West.
8 p.m. on CBS One Day at a Time
After Alex (Marcel Ruiz) accidentally catches his mother (Justina Machado) in a compromising position, Penelope decides it’s time to sit down with her son for a talk about healthy human sexuality in “Boundaries,” the first of two backto-back episodes. That effort is complicated, however, by Lydia’s (Rita Moreno) shocked and judgmental old-school perspective. Then, in “One Halloween at a Time,” Lydia finds something life-altering in the kitchen trash. Todd Grinnell and India de Beaufort also star.
8:15 p.m. on FOX
Filthy Rich
Rose (Aubrey Dollar) offers the Monreaux home as a sanctuary for Ginger
and Tina (Melia Kreiling, guest star Rachel York) in the tense aftermath of the stalker incident in the new episode “Romans 8:30.” Ginger demands answers from her mother, however, when Tina confesses she knows the stalker’s identity. Meanwhile, Margaret (Kim Cattrall) is forced to recruit some unlikely allies in the face of threats from Reverend Paul (Aaron Lazar), who is in cahoots with
Eric (Corey Cott) and some Sunshine Network investors.
9 p.m. on ABC Emergency Call
In a new episode called “Crime Spree,” tireless emergency call takers in Austin, Texas, Wasilla, Alaska, and Ogden, Utah, receive a series of bone-chilling — or sometimes just bizarre — calls, including a terrified mother who hears an intruder trying to break into her home; passersby threatened by a gun-wielding and erratic driver creating a six-hour wave of mayhem; and residents of a neighborhood bewildered by the surreal sight of an injured man licking a stop sign. Luke Wilson is the host.
9:02 p.m. on HBO We Are Who We Are
Sarah (Chloe Sevigny) is thrilled to learn of her son’s blossoming friendship with Jonathan (Tom Mercier) in the new “Right Here Right Now VI.” Hoping Jonathan will serve as a strong male role model for Fraser (Jack Dylan Grazer), she encourages the two to spend more time together, to Maggie’s (Alice Braga) puzzlement. Meanwhile, Richard (Scott Mescudi) uses a father-daughter hunting trip as a way to get inside Caitlin’s (Jordan Kristin Seamón) head.
10 p.m. on PBS Independent Lens
Rookie filmmaker Arthur Jones won the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Emerging Filmmaker at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival for “Feels Good Man,” the fascinating, even surreal, film he made with collaborator Giorgio Angelini. The 90-minute documentary, which opens Season 22 of “Independent Lens,” recounts the improbable saga of how artist Matt Furie saw his lighthearted cartoon character of Pepe the Frog hijacked by virulent alt-right groups that rebranded the image as a registered symbol of hate during the 2016 U.S. presidential election season.