Tracker just returned with a new episode on April 5, marking the series’ latest chapter in a season-long push to 22 episodes. This longer run is a clear signal that CBS is keeping faith in traditional, weekly procedurals even as streaming reshapes viewing habits.

Per CBS, Tracker Season 3, Episode 15 — titled “No Good Deed” — aired Sunday, April 5 from 9:00–10:00 p.m. ET/PT. The episode (written by Sharon Lee Watson & Thomas Heminger; directed by Tori Garrett) centers on the logline: “Randy enlists Colter’s help when one of his closest friends vanishes while under house arrest.” The broadcast notice and synopsis come directly from the network’s episode brief.

The episode includes a notable guest turn from Reggie Watkins, a veteran character actor whose résumé spans Grey’s Anatomy, The Rookie, 9-1-1 and multiple episodes of This Is Us. He appears opposite series lead Justin Hartley and Lee in Episode 315—bringing familiar network-TV chops to the hour.

Want to watch live? If you have a cable package that carries CBS, tune to your local CBS channel a few minutes before 9 p.m. ET. No cable? You can stream the live CBS feed through services that include CBS in their lineups: fuboTV, Sling TV, Hulu + Live TV, DIRECTV Stream and YouTube TV. Paramount+ subscribers can also catch Tracker episodes—Paramount+ offers both an Essential (ad-supported) tier and a Premium option that includes live CBS and Showtime content (the Premium plan carries a higher monthly price).

If you’re catching up, Seasons 1 and 2 of Tracker are available on Hulu (all 33 episodes from the first two seasons), but new Season 3 hours arrive first on CBS before they appear elsewhere. (That day-after streaming window is a common CBS pattern for broadcast-first series.)

Fans on social platforms reacted quickly after the episode aired, posting scene takeaways and taglines; searches spiked on Sunday night as viewers looked for streaming options and guest-star credits. Why the attention? Tracker’s mix of serialized stakes and case-of-the-week structure keeps watercooler conversation alive—especially for a show now carrying a 22-episode order.

One industry implication worth watching: a third season expanded to 22 episodes bucks the shorter-season trend many networks adopted during the streaming transition. It suggests CBS still prizes appointment TV as a way to build steady weekly audiences and ad revenue — and it gives a show like Tracker room to develop character arcs without rushing storylines.

What’s next: if CBS maintains its schedule, new episodes should continue to air weekly on Sundays; check local listings or the CBS press schedule for any pre-emptions. For streaming, look for the episode in the network’s online player or on Paramount+ depending on your subscription. Want a reminder? Set a calendar alert—this is appointment television, after all.