The two-hour documentary "Targeted: Osama Bin Laden" (8 p.m., History Channel) delves into the hunt



The two-hour documentary "Targeted: Osama Bin Laden" (8 p.m., History Channel) delves into the hunt for Osama bin Laden, which has led forces to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Afghanistan and Yemen. The program details bin Laden's rise to power and includes commentaries from soldiers, CIA agents and Washington Post Managing Editor Steve Coll, author of "Ghost Wars."
On "History Detectives" (9 p.m., PBS), the detectives take on a case in Frederick, Md.: a family possesses a portrait of George Washington that may have been drawn by the same artist whose Washington portrait graces the dollar bill. The detectives also check out bullets owned by a Wisconsin woman -- not just any ammo, but the lead that may have ended the lives of legendary crime couple Bonnie and Clyde. And a Revolutionary War poem, unearthed in an antique trunk in Oregon, may have been written by an American POW in London in 1780.
Relax, you're not as nutty as you thought. At least, not in comparison to the subjects of "Totally Obsessed" (11 p.m., VH1), a new series profiling people consumed by their extreme hobbies. Such as Pat and Joe Prosey, who for 19 years have been raising a Cabbage Patch doll as their real-life son (much to the displeasure of their flesh-and-blood daughter). Or a 45-year-old man who, with 10 extreme body modification surgeries, has surgically transformed himself into a cat.