Dramas Ackley Bridge and Our Girl are back, while Channel 4 introduces two new and rather different reality shows about relationships.
Pick of the day
Ackley Bridge, 8.00pm, Channel 4
The acclaimed school drama series set in a Yorkshire mill town returns.
In a bid to disguise her sexuality, Nas (Amy-Leigh Hickman) has agreed to a sham engagement with Naveed (Gurjeet Singh) - who is also in the closet. But she struggles to continue the lie and emotions run high at the family engagement dinner.
Meanwhile, Mandy (Jo Joyner) is under pressure from Sadiq (Adil Ray) as both the Year 7 intake and exam results have plummeted, forcing her to instigate a strict academic regime that causes uproar among staff and students alike.
Emma (Liz White) and Mandy's friendship is tested when they clash over the decision and Emma allows the students to protest.
New or Returning Shows
Hello Stranger, 10.00pm, Channel 4
Lucy and George are a couple at a crossroads looking to re-start their relationship and recapture the excitement and butterflies of falling in love once again.
The couple meet hypnotist Aaron Calvert, who uses amnesia hypnosis to make Lucy and George temporarily forget each other. In this way the couple lose their memories and knowledge of all their relationship baggage.
They then risk the future of their relationship as they go out on dates with two other people who match what they are looking for in an ideal partner. They also meet each other, as if for the first time, to find out whether they might fall in love all over again.
Bride & Prejudice, 9.00pm, Channel 4
Six couples preparing for the biggest day of their lives are determined to win their families' blessing. Will love bring relatives together? Or tear them apart?
In this first episode, 24-year-old politics student Dee from Hull is weeks away from marrying local councillor John - who, at 59, is 35 years her senior.
Dee's granddad Paul, who helped raise her, is just eight years older than John and has never been able to comprehend the relationship.
The Fourth Estate, 11.10pm, RTÉ One
Granted unprecedented access to the editors and reporters on the front lines , Emmy®-winning and Oscar-nominated filmmaker Liz Garbus’ The Fourth Estate follows the inner workings of The New York Times, revealing the challenges, triumphs and pitfalls of covering a President who has declared war on the free press.
Our Girl, 9.00pm, BBC One
Still grieving and heartbroken from the death of Elvis Harte, Lance Corporal Georgie Lane (Michelle Keegan) is sent to Nigeria on a training mission, alongside 2-section.
Working as part of the British Army’s effort to help train local forces in the fight against terror, Georgie throws herself into work helping to train local medics, as well as overseeing a local women’s health initiative.
Don't Miss
Legion, 9.00pm, FOX
We're up to season two's 8th episode and I'm none the wiser, really. This show is easily the most bonkers thing on the box these days. It makes Twin Peaks look like Mrs Browne's Boys.
It stars Dan Stevens as David Haller, the mutant son of X-Men founder Charles Xavier, who's also a diagnosed schizophrenic. But this is unlike any superhero show and is almost beyond categorisation.
This week, David and Farouk resume their hunt for Farouk's body. Learning where the body is buried, David devises a plan and psychically implants pieces of the search into the minds of the others.
And although he knows where to go, David doesn't know how to get there.