TV TOP PICKS
7 p.m. on AMC
The Terror
Henry and Asako (Shingo Usami, Naoko Mori) look to the past as they desperately search for answers to their current turmoil in “Infantry: Into the Afterlife,” the Season 2 finale of this chilling horror anthology. Elsewhere Chester and Luz (Derek Mio, Cristina Rodlo) wrestle with their identities in a last-ditch attempt to save those who are dearest to them. Amy and Yamato-san (Miki Ishikawa, George Takei) struggle to re-assimilate into American life after their ordeal.
8 p.m. on CBS
All Rise
A jury’s field trip to the scene of a crime takes a dramatic and unforeseen turn, leaving Judge Lola Carmichael (Simone Missick, pictured) uncertain whether the outing she approved wound up helping the defendant or causing bias in the jury in the new episode “A View From the Bus.” Elsewhere, Mark (Wilson Bethel) is more than ready to take down an alleged crime boss until he discovers a cop may have tampered with evidence in the case.
8 p.m. on FOX
Prodigal Son
As Malcolm’s (Tom Payne) fragmented childhood memories begin to assemble themselves more clearly, he sees that his father’s (Michael Sheen) killing spree may not have come as a shock to some members of his family in the new episode “Designer Complicity.” Back on the job, the murder of a famous model and social media influencer sends Malcolm, Gil, Dani and JT (Lou Diamond Phillips, Aurora Perrineau, Frank Harts) on the trail of a stalker with an eye for design.
8 p.m. on AMC
Lodge 49
This whimsical comedy-fantasy fully embraced its own eccentricity in its sophomore season, earning even more glowing reviews than the already warm reception it received for its first outing. For now, the story closes with a season finale called, somewhat portentously, “The Door,” as the Lynx regroup at a happily revived Lodge after the events of Mexico and prepare for an important coronation.
9 p.m. on PBS
POV
Journalist and filmmaker Assia Boundaoui grew up in a Muslim-American neighborhood outside of Chicago, where most of her neighbors have felt spied upon for a decade or more. Sure enough, when Boundaoui began investigating the issue for her new film, The Feeling of Being Watched, she uncovered literally tens of thousands of FBI documents that prove her hometown was the subject of one of the largest counterterrorism investigations ever conducted in the U.S. Its codename? “Operation Vulgar Betrayal.”