Tonight's viewing highlights include crime drama Kin, Áine Lawlor joins Brendan Courtney for Keys to My Life, and documentary maker Nick Broomfield revisits the murders of Biggie and Tupac . . .

Pick of the Day

Kin, 9.35pm, RTÉ One

Last week’s opener in this new crime drama set a pretty high bar for the show - here's to more of the same!

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This week, the Kinsellas deal with the fallout of Cunningham's retaliation, with Frank attempting to avoid an all-out war.

Meanwhile, Mikey is torn between wanting to help Jimmy seek revenge and staying out of the fray so he can see Anna again.

Don’t Miss

Keys to My Life, 8.30pm, RTÉ One

Brendan Courtney is joined by broadcaster and political interviewer Áine Lawlor (below) to visits certain places that have shaped her life, including her childhood home in Dublin's Raheny.

This is where she grew up the bright ambitious daughter of a postal worker and a psychiatric nurse.

Reflecting on her teenage days as a care assistant on the wards of St Ita's Psychiatric Hospital in Portrane she wonders at the arc of her life.

It's taken her from those forbidding Victorian walls to narrating RTÉ's seminal States of Fear series that blew the lid on decades of institutional abuse.

The Meaning of Life, 10.35pm, RTÉ One

Joe Duffy meets fellow broadcaster Eamonn Holmes (above) at his alma mater of St Malachy's College in Belfast.

The TV and radio presenter talks about his working-class Catholic roots and how his teenage years going to and from school in an interface area in 1970s’ Belfast equipped him to deal with life's inevitable roadblocks and battles.

New or Returning Shows

Last Man Standing: Suge Knight and the Murders of Biggie and Tupac, 9.00pm, BBC Two

This documentary will be essential viewing for anyone into hip hop.

Suge Knight (above), the former CEO of music label Death Row Records, was recently sentenced to 28 years imprisonment for manslaughter.

In a follow-up to his 2002 documentary Biggie & Tupac, film-maker Nick Broomfield revisits Los Angeles in search of new evidence of Knight's involvement in the deaths of rap superstars Tupac Shakur and the Notorious BIG.

Being James Bond, 8.00pm, RTÉ2

Daniel Craig (below) candidly reflects on his 15-year adventure as James Bond, with archive footage from his five films in the role, from his debut in Casino Royale through to the upcoming No Time To Die.

The actor shares his personal memories in conversation with producers Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli.

Bond movie The Man with the Golden Gun precedes this show at 5.40pm.

When the Dust Settles, 11.00pm, Channel 4

This is the latest Danish drama from DR (who made Borgen and The Killing), which portrays the lives of people whose paths converge at a cataclysmic event.

Morten and Camilla are celebrating their anniversary, but the celebration is cut short when their son Albert gets into trouble.

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Holger is depressed in a residential home and wants to end it all, while Nikolaj wants a career change and he's not afraid to play dirty, and Jamal is trying to get a driver's licence so that he can chauffeur his brother around for his wedding.

And when 10-year-old Marie discovers a bag near an asylum centre, this discovery will affect the judgement of Minister of Justice Elisabeth Hofmann, who has a major bill planned around asylum and refugees at the same time as her beloved wife Stina is urging her to give up politics.

Rifkin on Rifkin, 9.00pm, Sky Crime

Streaming on NOW TV

Using newly-revealed interviews from one of New York’s most high-profile prisons - the Attica Correctional Facility - Joel Rifkin reveals exclusive insights into the mind of a killer.

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With unprecedented access to Rifkin’s childhood friends, investigators and those closest to his victims, viewers can learn how Rifkin became the undetectable monster who operated under the radar and claimed the lives of seventeen over a five-year reign of terror.

And thanks to just one tiny mistake, one of New York’s most prolific and terrifying serial killers was handed a 203-year prison sentence.

The Sky at Night, 10.00pm, BBC Four

This is a special Question Time edition of the long-running astronomy programme, recorded at the Civic Theatre, Chelmsford, as part of the British Science Association's annual science festival.

Planetary scientist Dr Carly Howett and cosmologist Professor Hiranya Peiris join Chris Lintott, Maggie Aderin-Pocock and Pete Lawrence to answer questions from viewers covering all things astronomical.

They range from the size of the universe to the possible nature of alien life.

It’s followed at 11pm by another special, where Maggie Aderin-Pocock looks through the archives to show how, with assistance from Nasa, the BBC reported the Apollo 11 mission, the first lunar expedition to put humans on the Moon.

Ending Tonight

The Isle of Wight Festival 2021, 7.00pm, Sky Arts

Streaming on NOW TV

The party concludes at this year’s Isle of Wight Festival.

The Sunday lineup Duran Duran and Dubliners The Script (above), with Razorlight and Maisie Peters also appearing.

Sunday Cinema

If Beale Street Could Talk, 9.00pm, RTÉ2

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Director Barry Jenkins' Oscar-winning drama, starring KiKi Layne and Stephan James, is a superb slice of cinema.

In early 1970s Harlem, 19-year old Tish Rivers recalls the longtime relationship between her and fiancé Alonzo 'Fonny’ Hunt.

With a child on the way, their plans of starting a family and embracing the future are derailed when Fonny is arrested for a crime he did not commit.

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