Five Dates a Week is a new dating show with a difference, The Liffey looks at the river's swimmers, there’s Harry Styles on the double, some Queen of England jubilee stuff, and the season finale of Gentleman Jack . . .

Pick of the Day

Five Dates a Week, 10.00pm, Channel 4

There’s nothing like Channel 4 for creating a dating show with a difference. This one could be hilarious, a disaster, or a path to true love - or hopefully a combination of all three.

This is one in which a single person shares a house with five potential partners for a week, with one being eliminated from the contest at the end of each day.

The first tenant is social media content creator Michael, who says he has trouble meeting women who like him for more than just his looks - and who brings his mother to judge the contenders.

Don’t Miss

The Liffey, 7.30pm, RTÉ One

This week’s episode takes a look at the sustenance that the river offers for both body and soul, hearing from coach Maxine Strain who uses the Liffey to train endurance swimmers.

The programme also meets Deke Rivers in his Dublin Port diner where he has catered to truck drivers for 20 years, and sees how swimmer Padraic Reilly gets on as he enters the Liffey Swim for the first time.

New or Returning Shows

Harry Styles x Radio 1's Big Weekend, 10.40pm, BBC One

I’ll be having this. Harry Styles’ solo work is very listenable.

Clara Amfo introduces global star and Sunday headliner Harry Styles as he takes to the stage to perform some of his huge hits including recent number one As It Was (or A-ha's It Was, as I like to call it) and debuting songs from recent album Harry's House.

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This is followed at 11.35pm by Harry Styles at the BBC, a one-off special in which the One Direction star performs tracks from his self-titled debut album, including the song that launched his solo career, Sign of the Times.

In between numbers, he talks to Radio 1 DJ Nick Grimshaw about his career to date, being a solo artist and the start of his acting career, having appeared in Christopher Nolan's acclaimed war movie Dunkirk.

Elizabeth: The Unseen Queen, 7.45pm, BBC One

The story of the UK’s Queen Elizabeth II in her own words, featuring never-before-seen home movie footage from her childhood up to her 1953 Coronation at the age of 27.

It features a clip marking the first extended visit of Prince Philip to Balmoral in 1946, while the couple's engagement was still not public and depicts Elizabeth as a young mother with Charles and Anne spending time with their grandparents, the King and Queen.

Two Daughters, 9.00pm, BBC Two

A year after the murders of her daughters Bibaa Henry and Nicole Smallman, retired archdeacon Mina Smallman invites Stacey Dooley to help tell her story.

She talks through both the trial of her daughters' killer and the trials of two Met police officers who took photographs of their bodies and shared them on WhatsApp.

Ending Today

Gentleman Jack, 9.00pm, BBC One

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As the season two finale opens, Anne Lister and Ann Walker’s trip to London is blighted by tension.

Anne refuses to introduce Ann to her society friends, and simmering resentments on both sides of the relationship boil over when Miss Walker takes Anne to task over her financial borrowing.

Back in Halifax, in the run-up to the Northgate ceremony, Anne is privately dismayed to realise she cannot count on the support of her family and receives terrible news about a friend.

The ongoing mission to divide the Walker estate puts the couple under even more strain when Captain Sutherland arrives from Scotland determined to destroy Anne Lister’s reputation.

Is the marriage strong enough to survive constant attack?

Sunday Cinema

Mamma Mia! 9.30pm, RTÉ One

The hugely popular musical comedy, with a soundtrack of Abba songs, starring Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan, Julie Walters, Colin Firth, Stellan Skarsgard and Amanda Seyfried.

I've managed to avoid it so far, which is quite an achievement.

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A former member of a singing trio, now running a hotel on a Greek island, is reunited with her old bandmates for her daughter's wedding.

She then gets the surprise of her life when three of her old flames also show up unexpectedly.

The three men have been invited by the bride, who wants to find out which one of them is her father.

A View to a Kill, 6.00pm, RTÉ2

Another classic spy adventure, starring the late great Roger Moore in his final appearance as 007, alongside Christopher Walken, Grace Jones, Tanya Roberts and Patrick Macnee.

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James Bond clashes with a megalomaniac international businessman plotting a global takeover of the computer industry by engineering a devastating earthquake in California's Silicon Valley - and killing millions in the process.

A Passage to India, 3.40pm, TG4

David Lean's highly-regarded period drama, adapted from the EM Forster novel, starring Judy Davis, Victor Banerjee, Peggy Ashcroft, Alec Guinness, Nigel Havers, James Fox, Art Malik and Saeed Jaffrey.

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A headstrong upper-class Englishwoman accuses an Indian doctor of sexual assault when she visits India for the first time, exposing snobbery and inter-racial tensions during the British Raj.

Family Flick

Monsters University, 2.00pm, BBC One

Pixar's entertaining animated comedy prequel to Monsters Inc, with the voices of John Goodman, Billy Crystal, Steve Buscemi and Helen Mirren.

Student creatures Mike Wazowski and James P Sullivan, aka Sulley, attend university to learn how to be scary, but their rivalry gets them both kicked off the course.

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The monstrous duo must learn how to work together if they are to realise their dreams of terrifying children.

Winning the Scare Games will make the difference between Mike staying at the campus or having to leave.

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