Killing Eve heads to Amsterdam, there's a documentary about the murder of Fiona Sinnott, and another about four women running for office in the USA . . .

Pick of the Day

Killing Eve, 9.35pm, RTÉ 2

The second season of flavour of the moment Phoebe Waller-Bridge's quirky adaptation of the Codename Villanelle novella series continues. From cult status with Fleabag to Bond films in two years is some feat, even if she's as posh as a Tory peer.

In this week's episode, super psycho Villanelle decides to take matters into her more than capable hands on a trip to Amsterdam, while Carolyn is called in to face the music with her boss.

After the discovery of another dead body – they're as plentiful as Lego bricks in a toy shop in this show - Eve and her new team make a break in their case.

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New or Returning Shows

Forensics: the Real CSI, 9.00pm, BBC Two

You've more than likely seen the show - CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ran for 15 seasons - but is it anything like the reality for those actually involved in forensics?

In this new series, the Beeb follow serious crime scene investigations, beginning in Newcastle, in England's North East.

The forensics team must identify a gunman from evidence left at a shooting scene and determine the cause of death of a body found under suspicious circumstances.

Taoide, 9.30pm, TG4

This first of three programmes about different aspects of the tide will explain how it works: which elements affect or influence the tide, the science behind predicting it, as well as a historical timeline of how people have studied and come to understand the tide.

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Watchdog, 8.0pm, BBC One

Matt Allwright, Steph McGovern and Nikki Fox return to expose the big names letting UK consumers down.

Among tonight’s stories, a shocking report reveals serious safety concerns over some of the country’s best-known companies, and the team looks at people being billed for mobile phone services they've never agreed to, or that don’t even exist.

Life After My Brother's Murder, 10.35pm, BBC One

This promises to be a brutally honest film - and quite a tough view - about grief and the ripple effects of knife crime, which is a massive issue in Britain, especially in London.

Chanell Wallace was just 11-years-old when her brother Daniel (20) was stabbed and killed on the streets of Nottingham. His murderer's parole process will soon begin.

Daniel’s family have been invited to write a Victim Personal Statement that will be considered in the parole process, and Chanell, now 24, has volunteered to write it.

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New to Download

Knock Down The House, Netflix

This rousing documentary follows four extraordinary women - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Amy Vilela, Cori Bush, and Paula Jean Swearengin - who take on the US congressional establishment by mounting grassroots campaigns and building a movement during a time of historic volatility in American politics.

This should offer a fascinating insight of how American politics works. It's pretty nuts, really.

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Don't Miss

Missing: Fiona Sinnott: True Lives, 9.00pm, Virgin Media One

Here's a brand new documentary looking into the disappearance of Fiona Sinnott who vanished over twenty years ago from the small village of Ballyhitt, Broadway, in Wexford.

It’s a story that has resonated for many Irish people for over 20 years and now, for the first time, Fiona’s family have opened up and spoken of her life before her disappearance.

New information is also uncovered through exclusive access to Fiona’s medical records which indicates that she was a victim of domestic abuse.

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