1) “Marshals” debut, 8 p.m. Sunday, CBS. In “Yellowstone,” Kayce Dutton (shown here) left his family’s mega-ranch to be a SEAL and then to live on the neighboring reservation, where his wife grew up. Now a former military buddy is a U.S. marshal who needs help. The opener lays on the macho-folks dialog way too thick, but gives us sturdy people to care about.
2) “CIA” debut, 10 p.m. today, CBS. Colin (Tom Ellis) is a CIA agent who keeps secrets and avoids rules. Goodman (Nick Gehlfuss) is an FBI guy; Colin calls him “a Boy Scout with a briefcase,” but needs an FBI link to work on U.S. soil. They’re a great combination; this high-stakes case opens a week in which CBS also returns to new episodes of 12 shows.
3) “The Fall and Rise of Reggie Dinkins,” 8-9 p.m. today, NBC. First is a rerun of the pilot film, with a disgraced football star (Tracy Morgan) and a failed filmmaker (Daniel Radcliffe) trying a comeback reality show. Then a new episode includes Reggie’s inability to apologize. There’s a hit-and-miss feel here, but at the right moments, it’s hilarious.
4) “The Voice” opener, 9-11 p.m., today NBC. Fresh from the Olympics, NBC tries to start big. It has new rules and trims to three judges, including the most successful one (Kelly Clarkson, four champs in nine tries), plus Adam Levine (three in 17 tries) and John Legend (one in nine). It overlaps with ABC’s “American Idol” and reruns at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
5) “Independent Lens: The Interrogator,” 10 p.m. today, PBS. Emerging from a hard-scrabble Houston neighborhood, Barbara Jordan was an instant leader. Her Texas Southern University debate team beat Yale and tied Harvard. She got a law degree and was a pioneering state senator and congresswoman, delivering a potent impeachment talk. Here’s a compelling profile.
6) State of the Union, 9 p.m. ET Tuesday, ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, PBS, more. Donald Trump’s speech is followed by the Democratic response. And if you’re skipping those? There’s wrestling on CW, basketball everywhere and movies: The first “Godfather” films (6 and 9 p.m, Showtime), the final Harry Potter film (7:05 p.m., Syfy), “The Terminator” (8:30, BBC America) and more.
7) “Scrubs” return, 8 and 8:32 p.m. Wednesday, ABC, rerunning at 9:58 and 10:31. In 2010, “Scrubs” ended a strong, nine-year run. Now, 16 years later, it’s back. J.D. (Zach Braff) returns to the hospital, where his old colleagues (Donald Faison, Sarah Chalke, Judy Reyes and more) still work. At 9:02 is a game show, “The Greatest Average American.”
8) “Sheriff Country,” 8 p.m. Friday, CBS. In the previous episode, Mickey arrested the patriarch of the fierce Barlow clan; now her jailhouse is under siege and her ex-husband is near death. It’s a strong action hour, starting an unrelenting night. At 9, “Fire Country” probes a deadly blaze. At 10, a taut “Boston Blue” finds Jonah hunting his dad’s killer.
9) “NAACP Image Awards,” 8 p.m. Saturday, BET, repeating at 10; also, 8-10 p.m., CBS. Deon Cole hosts, Viola Davis gets a lifetime award and the night is filled with awards. Nominated for best movie are “Sinners,” “Wicked: For Good,” “Sarah’s Oil,” “Highest 2 Lowest” and “One of Them Days”; there’s much more, including TV and music categories.
10) “Saturday Night Live” return (11:29 p.m. Saturday, NBC). After a three-week Olympic break, “SNL” is back to new episodes. Connor Storrie (“Hidden Rivalry”) hosts, with Mumford & Sons as music guest. Other NBC shows return to new episodes, Thursday (two “Law & Order” shows and “The Hunting Party”) and Friday (“Happy’s Place” and “Stumble”).