TV TOP PICKS
7 p.m. on FOX Empire
The drama’s fourth season concludes with “The Empire Unpossess’d,” which sees ownership of the firm very much in play between Lucious and Eddie (Terrence Howard, guest star Forest Whitaker). Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) does some investigating, in the hope of influencing the outcome. Other pressures also come to bear on the Lyon family, likely setting up cliffhangers for the already ordered Season 5.
7 p.m. on CBS Survivor
The “Ghost Island” round of the competition has had its own unique twists, but it’s still been a season of traditional outwitting, outlasting and outplaying for the contestants trying to avoid having their torches put out. The ultimate survivor of the show’s 36th edition — and latest winner of $1 million — is determined in this two-hour finale, with all of the players then gathering again for the “Reunion Special” immediately afterward. Jeff Probst, pictured, is the host.
7 p.m. on HGTV Brother vs. Brother
Season 6 of this good-natured sibling rivalry competition series is set in the San Francisco suburbs, where Jonathan and Drew Scott have just six weeks to buy, make over and then sell two one-of-a-kind homes in the Bay Area’s red-hot real estate market. The brother who earns the higher net profit claims victory. Each week, their older brother JD referees that episode’s makeover challenges, and such HGTV guest stars as Scott McGillivray and Leanne and Steve Ford decide which brother wins that weekly match.
8 p.m. on NBC Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
The drama series ends its 19th season with two interconnected episodes. “Remember Me” sends Benson (Mariska Hargitay) into a hostage crisis as a young woman (guest star Genesis Rodriguez) holds someone at gunpoint, for a reason that becomes shockingly clear during the ensuing negotiations. Then, “Remember Me Too” reveals the existence of a lethal criminal organization. Carolyn McCormick reprises her recurring guest role as Dr. Elizabeth Olivet.
8 p.m. on SUND The Split
The emotionally charged divorce circuit of London provides the backdrop for this new British drama series that examines that legal venue primarily from the perspective of a family of female lawyers, the Defoes. As the story opens, Hannah (Nicola Walker, Last Tango in Halifax) quits the family firm after a heated spat with her mother, Ruth (Deborah Findlay), who refuses Hannah an overdue promotion.