Godfather of Harlem returns for a third season, new series Stories from the Street follows the plight of homeless people, Ryan Gosling and Claire Foy star in First Man, and Crimecall is back on the beat . . .
Pick of the Day
Godfather of Harlem, 9.30pm, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Forest Whitaker returns for a third season of this gangster drama, where he stars as real-life mobster Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson.
To repay a drug debt owed to the Italians after the Harlem riots, Bumpy Johnson robs from his own community.
Meanwhile, Omar seeks to return to Elise and Malcolm's good graces and someone close to Stella orders a hit on her life.
Don't Miss
Only Connect, 8.00pm, BBC Two
Victoria Coren Mitchell (below) hosts as the Scrummagers take on the Crustaceans in the concluding semi-final as the two teams compete to guess the connections between things that seem utterly random at first glance.
One set of clues asks what links Spread out, Heap, Lock of hair, and Heap of rainstorm.
George Clarke's Amazing Spaces, 8.00pm, Channel 4
George meets a man who plans to turn the front half of a plane into the ultimate crash pad, complete with loads of 'toys'.
To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the show, George tracks down a former contributor from the first-ever series, to find out how Amazing Spaces has changed his - and George's - life.
While in Israel, George drives into the desert to track down a small but breathtaking natural build and, after finding a name for his caravan and moving it 250 miles from its build site in Bedford to its final home in the Lakes.
George's own 10th anniversary build is finally finished, and he can reveal his unique Arts and Crafts caravan.
First Man, 9.30pm, TG4
Director Damien Chazelle's Oscar-winning drama, based on the book by James R Hansen, starring Ryan Gosling and Claire Foy.
It's quite an intimate look at the life of astronaut Neil Armstrong, from his early days in 1961 as a NASA test pilot.
By the late 1960s, as he becomes emotionally distant from his family, he embarks on a space mission that leads to him becoming the first man to walk on the moon.
New or Returning Shows
CrimeCall, 9.35pm, RTÉ One
Sharon Ní Bheoláin (below) presents appeals for help from the public in solving crimes, featuring reconstructions, CCTV footage, news features and a panel of police advisers taking calls.
Stories from the Street, 9.00pm, Virgin Media One
Cameras observe homeless people, including Cian, who works full-time in construction while sleeping on the streets and is trying to improve his situation.
Michelle and Helen's brother Thomas has been found dead in his tent in Loftus Lan, prompting the bereaved sisters to meet Thomas' street family.
Elsewhere, Tracey rebuilds her life studying social care after being homeless since 2017. Plus, the work of Keira who started a soup-run to help Dublin's growing homelessness crisis.
Da Vinci: The Lost Treasure, 8.00pm, BBC Four
Fiona Bruce travels to Florence, Milan, Paris and Warsaw to tell the story of Leonardo da Vinci's life.
She explores why a man whose reputation rests on only a few pictures - including the Mona Lisa - is regarded as one of the greatest painters of all time.
She also visits New York to see a recently discovered piece by the artist.
Bronson: Fit to Be Free? 9.00pm, Channel 4
Charles Bronson is the UK's most notorious prisoner.
After serving 48 years in prison, he is due to make his case for release at a parole board hearing held in public - one of the first of its kind.
This two-part special gives voice to some of his victims, those closest to Bronson, and various members of the criminal justice system to ascertain whether he is fit to be released.
Sex Actually with Alice Levine, 10.00pm, Channel 4
Alice Levine (below, centre) returns to continue exploring the sex lives of others, discovering out-of-the-ordinary love stories from across the world.
In this first episode, she dives into new, advanced technologies that could be what sex and relationships will look like in the future, meeting a couple in Berlin who opened the world's first cyber-brothel, populated by talking sex dolls.
She heads to Las Vegas to witness the next generation of sex-robots and also meets a couple whose relationship exists in a virtual 'furry' universe, but who are about to risk it all, taking their love affair offline and moving across the world to be together IRL (In Real Life).
Bent Coppers: Crossing the Line of Duty, 10.00pm, BBC Four
Documentary examining corruption in the British police in the 1970s, revealing a secret network of officers was operating illegally throughout London.
This led to the formation of the first internal anti-corruption unit A10, which inspired the BBC drama Line of Duty (above).
The story begins in 1969, when a desperate south London criminal tipped off the Times about how he was being extorted for money by a detective in the Metropolitan Police.