1) “Stumble,” 8:30 p.m., NBC. This has quickly evolved into a terrific comedy. Fresh from last week’s hilarious sexual-relations lecture, it now has a small-town talent show (shown here). Courteney — the transplanted New Yorker — is flummoxed. Her husband, a folksy coach recovering from a concussion, fits in;Taran Killam plays him with subtle perfection.
2) “Happy’s Place,” 8 p.m., NBC. Could two comedies be more mismatched? This show has a few good characters — Bobbie, Emmett,tDakota — but will suddenly turn others into idiots for the sake of a cheap laugh or a forced emotion. Last week, it was sweet Steve; this time, as usual, it’s Gabby.
3) “Sheriff Country,” 8 p.m., CBS. The pilot film, with all its strengths and weaknesses, reruns. A great character (Morena Baccarin as Sheriff Mickey Fox) faces a swirl of crises. It’s overloaded, including — in the final minute — the beginning of a poor storyline. Still, it has some strong moments.
4) Movies. Families can try the three “Cars” cartoons, at 3:25, 6 and 8:30 p.m. on Freeform. Others might catch the first two “Hunger Game” films (6 and 9 p.m., Syfy), Dwayne Johnson’s fierce “The Smashing Machine” (arriving today on HBO Max) or a Bill Murray comedy — “Caddyshack,” 7:45 p.m., IFC, or “Ghostbusters,” 8, MGM+.
5) ALSO: Reruns of “Fire Country” (Manny makes a troubling discovery) and “Boston Blue” (the district attorney faces backlash) are at 9 and 10 p.m. on CBS. And at 8, HBO has the second half of its profile of Mel Brooks, who turns 100 on June 28; the first half reruns at 6:15.
— Mike Hughes, TV America