Today's top telly includes Building Ireland - which looks at the original Dublin Airport, learn how to make your own headphones, Mary Beard is back, and Mark Kermode checks out heist movies . . .
Pick of the Day
Building Ireland, 8.00pm, RTÉ One
Back for a third season, architect Orla Murphy explores the building of Dublin Airport's first terminal building, which still stands in the centre of today’s enormous sprawl.
Also, there’s the transatlantic telegraph cable project at Valentia in Kerry, copper mining on the Beara Peninsula, the hydro-station at Turlough Hill and the development at Shannon Newtown in Clare.
Don't Miss
The Good Karma Hospital, 11.25pm, RTÉ One
The feelgood medical drama set in India and starring Amanda Redman, Neil Morrissey and Amrita Acharia continues to put smiles on faces.
A medical train rolls into town, providing miracle surgeries and carrying a surprise for Gabriel - a glamorous older surgeon from his past.
While he is reminiscing with his old colleague, a vicious attack on one of the team shocks the medics and leaves Lydia reeling.
Devs, 9.00pm, BBC Two
Continuing on from last night’s opener, Lily’s investigation leads her to the man who knows Sergei's secrets, and stirs suspicion about her employer, Forest.
But when he tries to throw her off the scent, she becomes more driven to find answers, and turns again to Jamie - although he is concerned how she will act upon whatever he finds.
New or Returning Shows
The Blacklist, 9.00pm, Sky One & NOW TV
The seventh season of the forever twisting thriller starring scene-shredder James Spader as master criminal-turned-FBI informant Raymond 'Red' Reddington.
After being abducted by Katarina Rostova, Red finds himself alone in hostile territory, unsure of who, if anyone, he can trust.
Surrounded by old enemies and new allies, Red must stay one step ahead of the Blacklist’s most dangerous criminal, who will stop at nothing to unearth the very truth Red wants no one to know about.
Front Row Late, 11.30pm, BBC Two
Host Mary Beard gets to grips with the latest broadcast technology as she aims to present the latest run of the arts review show from her study each week.
And with cultural institutions around the country closed, the programme aims to bring content alive through interviews, discussions and exclusive performances from leading writers, artists, actors and musicians.
The first show features an exclusive puppet production based on a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, created in confinement in Canada by leading author Margaret Atwood and her sister Ruth.
Ending Tonight
How to Make: Headphones, 8.00pm, BBC Four
In her final look at how everyday things are made, designer Zoe Laughlin sets out to redesign audio headphones, an item that transport the wearer to another place.
In search of inspiration she heads to Hull University to discover a new substance that can turn any surface into a speaker - from a wall to a table and even the bone of a skull.
Zoe also looks at the device's history, from the stethoscope-style home contraptions of the 19th century and the game-changing 1980s Sony Walkman.
Repeats of the Day
Mark Kermode’s Secrets of Cinema, 9.00pm, BBC Four
The quiffed critic examines techniques and conventions behind the heist movie, from The Asphalt Jungle and Oceans Eleven to The Italian Job and Baby Driver.
Kermode also reveals why this genre plays with peoples' sympathies more than any other.
The Interrogation of Tony Martin, 11.05pm, Channel 4
This drama tells the story of what happened on the night in 1999 when Norfolk farmer Tony Martin confronted two burglars who broke into his farmhouse.
Martin, who had been plagued by burglaries and had lost faith in the police, blasted his shotgun as the thieves attempted to flee through a window.
But when teenager Barras was found dead the following day, Martin's actions divided public opinion across the UK.
Daytime Film Choices
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, 3.05pm, BBC Two
Mega-casted period comedy, starring the likes of Terry-Thomas, Sarah Miles, James Fox, Robert Morley, Benny Hill, Tony Hancock, Eric Sykes and Gert Frobe.
A publisher offers to sponsor the first London-to-Paris air race in a bid to boost the sales of his newspaper. It attracts a motley assortment of characters.
Carry on Nurse, 2.55pm, Film4
Kenneth Williams and crew return in the second of the Carry on cult comedy classics.
The patients on the men's ward of a Hospital cause more mayhem for the staff than the rest of the hospital combined, forcing the management to send in a formidable matron to control the situation.
Prime Time Movie Picks
Minority Report, 6.35pm, Sky Cinema Sci-fi & Horror
Steven Spielberg's futuristic thriller, starring Tom Cruise, Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton and Max von Sydow, is a superb slice of sci-fi drama.
Cop John Anderton is forced to go on the run when a supposedly infallible trio of psychics foretell he is about to kill a man he never heard of before.
Convinced their prediction is false, he kidnaps one of the so-called precogs to prove his innocence - and stumbles across a complex conspiracy.
The Keeper, 8.00pm, Sky Cinema Drama
Director Marcus H Rosenmüller's biopic, starring David Kross, Freya Mavor and John Henshaw, is much a story of human spirit than a football tale.
It tells the true story of Bert Trautmann, the German prisoner-of-war who became a footballing legend, and how he and his young English wife overcame prejudice, public hostility and personal tragedy in post-WWII Britain.
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, 9.00pm, Sky Cinema Thriller
Rebecca De Mornay leads the cast in this enjoyable and often scary yarn.
A doctor is caught molesting a patient and commits suicide, after which his wife has a miscarriage.
She blames his victim for her losses and plans to get revenge, infiltrating the unsuspecting woman's house as a nanny and playing twisted mind games to destroy her life.
Late Late Flick Picks
Welcome to Marwen, 12.10am, Sky Cinema Drama
Robert Zemeckis' fact-based drama, starring Steve Carell, is a quirky film that’s well worth a look.
While artist Mark Hogancamp attempts to recover from a devastating attack by white supremacists, he draws power and healing from a fantasy village he builds in his backyard.
He imagines the dolls he places there are alive, and photographs his fantasies to help him cope with acute memory loss and post-traumatic stress disorder.
A Field in England, 1.10am, Film4
This horror film, starring Reece Shearsmith and Michael Smiley, is absolutely nuts.
Three deserters escaping the front line during the English Civil War are taken hostage by an alchemist and his associate.
They are forced to help dig for a mythical treasure believed to be buried in a nearby field, but the search unleashes dangerous and disturbing mystical forces.
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