As TG4 approaches its 25th birthday this October, the Galway-based station has released details of its new autumn schedule.
TG4'zs new programming features home-produced documentaries, entertainment, new and upcoming talent, music and sports programming, and a selection of drama from the US, Australia and the UK.
Documentary series Misneach, shows the treatment of whistle-blowers in Ireland, who have bravely taken a stand against wrongdoing in the workplace. A year-long look at Dublin Bay, one of Ireland’s most iconic and unique ecosystems is explored in An Cuan.

Inspired by the Coronavirus pandemic Go mBeirimid Beo, is a tongue-in-cheek look at apocalypses past, present, and future, and how we as a nation have prepared for them.
History documentary Áille ar Airgead follows the lives of two remarkable women; Mary Cunningham from the Donegal Gaeltacht who became the face of America’s Golden Dollar and Hazel Lavery born in the United States, who graced the first banknote of independent Ireland.
Violet Gibson An tÉireannach Mná a Lámhach Mussolini tells the story of the Irish woman who almost assassinated the Italian dictator.
Colm Cille An Naomh Dána will celebrate birth of the revered but troublemaker saint who was born 1500 years ago.

Hector Ó hEochagáin meets the New Irish who now call Ireland home in Hector Éire Nua. Sustainable fashion features in new entertainment series Éadaí SOS presented by newcomers Caoimhe Ní Chathail and Proinsias Ó Coinn.
Drama this autumn on TG4 includes Stateless, co-created by and starring Cate Blanchett, about four strangers whose lives collide at an immigration detention centre in the middle of the Australian desert.
Academy Award and BAFTA winner Steve Mc Queen’s first project for television Small Axe tells the story of London’s West Indian community of Notting Hill. Desperate Housewives creator Marc Cherry’s Why Women Kill is back for a second season with a new cast.
TG4 will also screen 80’s and 90’s classics The Golden Girls, The Wonder Years and Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman.