TV What to Watch on Monday: Connie Britton returns for 9-1-1 season finale By EW Staff Published on May 11, 2020 06:00AM EDT We know TV has a lot to offer, be it network, cable, premium channels, or streaming platforms including Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+, Facebook Watch, and others. So EW is here to help, guiding you every single day to the things that should be on your radar. Check out our recommendations below, and click here to learn how you can stream our picks via your own voice-controlled smart-speaker (Alexa, Google Home) or podcast app (Spotify, iTunes, Google Play). 9-1-1 HOW/WHEN & WHERE TO WATCH: 8 p.m. on Fox Season Finale It's not like there's ever a chill episode of the Fox emergency services drama, but when it's the season finale you know the stakes are going to be unbelievably high. After part one of the two-episode finale saw Athena (Angela Bassett) quite literally fight for her life against a serial rapist and Connie Britton reappear as Abby Clark in the final moments as a train passenger involved in a devastating wreck, you could say things are about to go completely off the rails. All we can hope is that the highly-anticipated Buck (Oliver Stark)/Abby reunion is sufficiently epic and romantic. There's always up and downs on this show — emotional and otherwise (Who could forget the Tsunami that kicked off the season?) — but the finale guarantees to be as unmissable as any 9-1-1 call. —Ruth Kinane Related content: Watch Connie Britton return to 9-1-1 in season 3 finale trailer 9-1-1 team tries to save a man dangling from an airplane in exclusive clip Angela Bassett hopes her 9-1-1 character Athena Grant finally finds closure The Price Is Right At Night HOW/WHEN & WHERE TO WATCH: 8 p.m. on CBS RuPaul knows how to come on down… a runway in heels. And now he's dragging himself onto the set of this daytime institution, but in primetime for this special where he's playing to raise money for Planned Parenthood. Expect all the familiar games and prizes — electronics, clothing, cash, cars! — but with an extra dose of fabulous! —Gerrad Hall Related content: RuPaul jokes he hasn't 'been in a grocery store in about 30 years' in Price Is Right clip Contestant on The Price Is Right breaks attendance record Drew Carey's 10 favorite The Price Is Right moments Amy Schumer Learns to Cook Food Network HOW/WHEN & WHERE TO WATCH: 10 p.m. on Food Network Series Debut Audiences have been able to go Inside Amy Schumer, thanks to her Emmy-winning sketch series for Comedy Central. And now we get to go inside…her kitchen for this new Food Network series, where her James Beard Award-winning chef husband Chris Fischer has been teaching her how to cook during quarantine. Self-filmed in their Martha's Vineyard home, where they're also raising their baby, the series kicks off with back-to-back episodes where she learns breakfast dishes (perfectly poached eggs, crispy bacon; celery and fennel salad; applesauce for their son), and then some of her favorite late-night treats (Moscow Mule; fried rice; chicken wings; peanut butter cup cookies). Come for the food, stay to see how big of a trainwreck she is in the kitchen. —Gerrad Hall Related content: Amy Schumer changes son's name after realizing it sounded like 'genital' Expecting Amy documentary, chronicling Amy Schumer's difficult pregnancy, coming to HBO Max See why Kristin Chenoweth is making Trisha Yearwood so nervous in exclusive clip of her cooking show Asian Americans HOW/WHEN & WHERE TO WATCH: On PBS; check local listings Docuseries Debut The monumental, five-part docuseries aims to enlighten us on the history of Asians in the United States, the discrimination they faced, as well as their contributions to American society. Audiences will learn about famous faces like Bruce Lee and Anna May Wong, as well as lesser-known figures such as Japanese-American actor Sessue Hayakawa or Wong Kim Ark, and how they paved the way for current Asian American creators, activists, and more. Daniel Dae Kim and Tamlyn Tomita serve as narrators, while Randall Park, Hari Kondabolu, Pulitzer Prize-winner Viet Thanh Nguyen, and others were interviewed for the series. "It's drawing that arc from Hayakawa to Randall Park to people in The Joy Luck Club, to all the artists today," filmmaker Renee Tajima-Peña tells EW. "That's what's really meaningful. The fun part of the series. It's like yesterday, today, and the future." —Rachel Yang Related content: 11 Asian American comics who need to be on your 2020 radar From Parasite to Never Have I Ever, here are 5 Asian-centered titles to stream this month Amy Tan looks back on The Joy Luck Club, 30 years later — and ahead to a post-Crazy Rich Asians Hollywood What ELSE to Watch Check local listings Rewind (U.S. doc debut) — PBS 8 p.m. The Bachelor Presents: Listen to Your Heart — ABC The Voice — NBC 9 p.m. Bakeaway Camp with Martha Stewart (series debut) — Food Network 90 Day Fiancé — TLC Roswell, New Mexico — The CW 10 p.m. The Baker and the Beauty — ABC Songland — NBC Streaming Barkitecture (series debut) — Quibi Blackballed (docuseries debut) — Quibi Trial By Media (docuseries debut) — Netflix Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedelics — Netflix RISS. A Film About More Love with Carissa Kainani Moore — Red Bull TV Dispatches From Quarantine (series debut with guest Larry King) — YouTube, Silver Screen Studios *times are ET and subject to change