1) Football. The Broncos (shown here) host the Patriots at 3 p.m. ET on CBS; then it’s Rams-Seahawks at 6:30 on Fox, with both winners going to the Super Bowl. The Rams were 12-5 in the regular season; others were 14-3. But the Broncos’ quarterback is injured; veteran back-up Jarrett Stidham will face the team that drafted him in the fourth round, seven years ago.
2) “Memory of a Killer,” about 10 p.m. ET (7 p.m. PT), Fox. When the game ends, Fox launches this series, which then moves to Mondays. A diligent dad (Patrick Dempsey) is secretly a hitman working for his friend (Michael Imperioli) … while hiding early-onset Alzheimer’s. It’s slickly crafted, but viewers will have a tough time rooting for him.
3) “Miss Scarlet,” 8 p.m., PBS. Here’s an intriguing change-of-pace — a scam-filled tale propelled by Moses, Eliza’s Jamaican friend with underworld connections. That’s followed by a good “All Creatures Great and Small” and the first half of a clever “Book-ish,” set in the early moviemaking days.
4) Reruns. NBC has double “Dateline” (7 and 8 p.m.), followed by “Law & Order” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” … ABC has double “America’s Funniest Home Videos” and four episodes of the “Shifting Gears” comedy. CBS has an intriguing “Final Twist” (a matriarch disappears while renting her estate for a wedding party) at 8, then “Tracker” and “Elsbeth.”
5) MOVIES: Here are two great duos: Paul Newman and Robert Redford in “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “The Sting,” at 6:45 and 9:15 p.m. on Sundance; Woody Allen and Diane Keaton in “Manhattan Murder Mystery” and “Annie Hall,” at 6 and 8 ET on Turner Classic Movies.