SUNDAY
 
“The 2017 Grammy Awards”: James Corden hosts the 59th annual Grammy Awards, and leading nominees include Beyonce, and performers include The Weeknd and Daft Punk, Bruno Mars, Metallica, Adele and Little Big Town. (5 p.m. CBS/6)

“America’s Funniest Home Videos”: Did you realize this was still on? Yes, this is still on. (7 p.m. ABC/2)
 
The BAFTAS: The Brits do their award-presenting thing, with the 70th annual EE British Academy Film Awards ceremony honoring movies and performers. (8 p.m. BBC America)
 
“The Missing”: In a new season of the anthology series, David Morrissey (“The Walking Dead”) stars as a father dealing with the sudden reappearance of a daughter who has long been missing. (8 p.m. Starz)
 
 
“Victoria”: Victoria and that royal pill Albert are married, and while that should be good news for the historic couple, I’m already missing Lord Melbourne, probably because Rufus Sewell made him the most interesting character, by a mile. (9 p.m.  PBS/10)

“The Young Pope”:  The most bizarre limited series on TV reaches its conclusion, and by this point, I’d expect anything. Will Lenny (Jude Law) decide he’s sick of this being-the-pope business? Will he fire everyone? Will he start his own reality show? (9 p.m. HBO)

“The Walking Dead”: Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and the rest return to pick up where Season 7 left off, back in December. Let’s hope the second half of the season is an improvement on the dismal first half. (9 p.m. AMC)

 

“Girls”: The sixth and final season begins, with moments that are both funny and perceptive. (10 p.m. HBO)

MONDAY
 
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show: FoxSports and Nat Geo Wild are sharing coverage of the 2017 canine spectacle, and here’s coverage of Day 1 events, including breed judging and masters obedience championship judging. (11 a.m. NatGeoWild)
 
Westminister Kennel Club Dog Show: And coverage of the 141st show in Madison Square Garden continues this evening. (8 p.m. Fox Sports.)
 
“Humans”: Season 2 of the British-made series continues with the “synths” (that is, robots) continuing to grapple with what it means to gain greater awareness. (10 p.m. AMC)
 
TUESDAY

“You Me Her”: Season 2 of the unconventional romantic comedy finds the three-way relationship between suburban Portland (Portland?!) couple Jack (Greg Poehler) and Emma (Rachel Blanchard) and grad student Izzy (Priscilla Faia) getting very complicated. (8:30 p.m. Audience Network/DirecTV)

“This Is Us”: The time-jumping drama shows Jack and Rebecca dealing with Valentine’s Day plans in the past, and present-day challenges for Kate and Toby and Randall. (9 p.m. NBC/8)

“Tower”: Kevin Maitland’s film blends animation and archival footage to tell the story of the first mass shooting at a school, which happened in 1966 when a sniper went to the top of the University of Texas Tower and opened fire on the campus below. Maitland’s focus isn’t on the shooter, but on survivors and heroes who helped save lives. (11 p.m. PBS/10)
 
WEDNESDAY
 
“Madiba”: Laurence Fishburne plays Nelson Mandela in the final chapter of the miniseries about the South African leader. (8 p.m. BET)
 
“Doubt”: Katherine Heigl and Laverne Cox star as attorneys with a hotshot New York firm in a new legal drama. (10 p.m. CBS/6)
 
THURSDAY
 
“Portlandia”: I guess it was only a matter of time before there was an episode about a plan for Portland to secede from the United States. (7 p.m. and repeats at 10 p.m. IFC)
 
“The History of Comedy”: The documentary series continues with an overview of outstanding women comedians and the obstacles they faced to make their mark. (7 p.m. and repeats at 10 p.m. CNN)
 
FRIDAY
 
“Grimm”: What begins as a romantic getaway for Rosalee and Monroe gets weird. Wesen weird, don’t we think? 98 p.m. NBC/8)
 
SATURDAY
 
“Britney Ever After”: Just what the world needed, a TV-movie about Britney Spears’ life and career. Oh, wait, the world didn’t really need this. But if you care to see actors playing Britney, her onetime love, Justin Timberlake, and her former husband, Kevin Federline, well, here’s your chance. (8 p.m. Lifetime)
 

“Planet Earth II”: A successor to the hugely popular documentary, this six-part series is narrated by Sir David Attenborough and goes around the world to spotlight creatures trying to survive and thrive. (9 p.m. BBC America)
 
— Kristi Turnquist

kturnquist@oregonian.com
503-221-8227
@Kristiturnquist

Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.