In Person of Interest the machine's seeming inactivity coincides with a storm hitting the eastern tri-state area, while The Rolling Stones: Ladies and Gentlemen is a concert film culled from Texas performances in 1972.
Person of Interest
8.00pm RTÉ Two
Presumed-dead former CIA agent John Reese (Jim Caviezel) teams up with mysterious billionaire Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) to prevent violent crimes. The pair work outside of the law, combining Reese's black ops skills with Finch's technological prowess and unlimited wealth to unravel the mystery of the person of interest, and stop the crime before it happens. In tonight's instalment, the machine's seeming inactivity coincides with a storm hitting the eastern tri-state area which may require evacuation of coastal residents. In fact, the machine has not provided any numbers in three days.
The Rolling Stones: Ladies and Gentlemen
4.30pm Sky Arts 1
Film following the band on their 1972 North American tour, featuring footage of two concerts in Texas, where they performed hits including Brown Sugar, Jumping Jack Flash and You Can't Always Get What You Want. This concert film was released as part of a three-DVD set in 2010, incidentally, along with the documentary, Stones In Exile, and a hardback book of vintage photos running to over 40 pages. Also included in the lavish package was a five-foot-long black faux silk scarf with the title and Rolling Stones logo in silver glitter, based on the original scarf given out at the 1974 cinema premiere of Ladies and Gentlemen. No kidding. Picture shows Mick Jagger at Heathrow, heading for a US tour in 1972 - the year in question - with then wife Bianca.
Baby P: The Untold Story
8.30pm BBC One
Ninety-minute film on the UK's Baby P case. An image of Peter Connelly, known as Baby P, made front page news in Britain in November 2008. The 17-month-old toddler had died in London in 2007. His mother, her boyfriend and her boyfriend's brother were later convicted of causing or allowing his death. It was subsequently revealed that Peter was known to the authorities, and that he was visited over 60 times by various agencies. The 90-minute film features interviews with many of those connected to the case, including social workers Gillie Christou and Maria Ward; former Children's Minister Ed Balls; and the husband of Dr Sabah Al-Zayyat, the last medical practitioner to see Baby Peter before he died.