There's the season one finale of PSNI drama Blue Lights, Clive Myrie's Italian Road Trip, Derry City host Shamrock Rovers, while Andrew: The Problem Prince looks at the British royal's infamous Newsnight interview . . .
Pick of the Day
Blue Lights, 9.00pm, BBC One
The sixth and final episode of this enjoyable drama about a team of PNSI officers, starring Sian Brooke, Richard Dormer and Martin McCann.
In the aftermath of the shooting at the end of last week’s episode, the recruits are determined the McIntyres will pay for what they have done.
Stevie then goes to arrest the MI5 operatives involved in the undercover operation - but Joseph orders Jonty to let them go free.
Meanwhile Tina demands that James tells Mo his dark secret, and Grace accepts that she might have to break her promise to Angela.
Don’t Miss
SSE Airtricity League Live, 7.00pm, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player

It’s Premier Division pretenders v champions as Derry City host Shamrock Rovers at the Ryan McBride Brandywell (Kick-off 7.15pm).
Peter Collins is joined by Alan Cawley and Rory Patterson to present all the action from the encounter on Foyleside as the Candytripes face the Hoops.
These sides finished second and first respectively last term and will be among the leading contenders once again, though Bohemians have set the early season pace this time around.
With Commentary by Des Curran and Stuart Byrne.
New or Returning Shows
Andrew: The Problem Prince, 9.00pm, Channel 4
The first of two programmes telling the inside story of Prince Andrew's 2019 Newsnight interview with Emily Maitlis and the subsequent chain of events that led to a royal disaster.
In the 1980s, Andrew was a Falklands war hero and a UK-wide heart-throb - glory years that culminated in his marriage to Sarah Ferguson.
But following his departure from the British Navy, his image took a turn to the negative as his new role as trade envoy proved unsuccessful.
Then his need to fund a lavish lifestyle, combined with a friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, eventually prompted the interview that cemented his downfall.
Clive Myrie's Italian Road Trip, 6.30pm, BBC Two
The newsreader and Mastermind host travels around the country, immersing himself in Italian culture and sampling its renowned cuisine, beginning in the south-eastern region of Puglia.
Clive discovers how the James Bond franchise helped turn an abandoned town into a world heritage site, finds out why Puglia is the gay holiday capital of Italy and learns to play in a traditional pizzica band.
Novels That Shaped Our World, 11.20pm, BBC Four
Documentary examining the impact of novels from three perspectives - the empire, class experience and, in this first film, women's voices.
The programme aims to show the plight of women is a theme that reaches right back to the earliest novels, with extracts from various texts from down the centuries.
Writers include Jane Austen, the Brontes, Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf, through to the post-war publishing boom where a new generation of global writers such as Zadie Smith (above), Toni Morrison, Arundhati Roy and Margaret Atwood have continued to speak out for women to a new generation of readers.
History’s Greatest Heists with Pierce Brosnan, 10.00pm, Sky History
Streaming on NOW
This is a one-hour series that will explore some of the most unbelievable and elaborate heists to have ever been pulled off.
The series will use cinematic recreations and state-of-the-art VFX to tell the stories of these iconic heists. Every episode is said to take a focus on one heist will explore every aspect of it.
They will discuss the "mark" of the heist, the plan, how the heist actually worked out, and what the fallout of it all was.
Ending Today
Snooker: The World Championship, 7.00pm, BBC Two
Coverage of the fourth and concluding session of the final at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, where the first player to reach 18 frames will be crowned the 2023 champion.
It was Ronnie O'Sullivan who took the honours last year for the seventh time in his career, winning four of the six frames in the final session against Judd Trump to record an 18-13 victory.
The result ensured O'Sullivan ended the season as world number one, and he also became the oldest world champion in history as well as setting a new record for the most matches won at the Crucible, with 74.
Bank Holiday Movies
Superman, 3.10pm, RTÉ One
Classic comic-strip adventure, with Christopher Reeve as the eponymous hero, along with Gene Hackman, Margot Kidder and Marlon Brando.
A fledgling superhero crash-lands on Earth after evacuation from his home planet and is taken in by an elderly couple who raise him as their own.
But with adolescence comes a greater understanding of his superhuman powers, leading to his rebirth as a crusader for justice and defender of the American way of life.
No Time to Die, 9.30pm, RTÉ One
Cary Joji Fukunaga's action thriller, starring Daniel Craig in his fifth and final outing as 007. With Léa Seydoux, Rami Malek, a scene-stealing Ana de Armas and Christoph Waltz.
James Bond has left active service and is enjoying a life of tranquility in Jamaica. However, his peaceful retirement is disturbed when old CIA friend Felix Leiter turns up asking for help.
Bond then sets off on the trail of an enigmatic villain armed with lethal new technology. It's a case the turns out to be more personal than ever for the super-spy - and has far-reaching consequences.
Pulp Fiction, 9.30pm, TG4
Quentin Tarantino's crime drama, starring John Travolta, Samuel L Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames, Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer.
A series of interlinked stories about the Los Angeles underworld. A hitman plays minder to his boss's wife, and he and his partner deal with a dead body following a mishap with a gun.
Meanwhile, a washed-up boxer goes on the run after refusing to throw a fight, and two lovers plot a hold-up in a diner.
Though not as good as Tarantino’s cracking Reservoir Dogs debut, and a bit flabby round the middle, it’s an engaging yarn that relaunched John Travolta’s career.