There's the season two finale of crime drama KIN, more royal revelrie with The Coronation Concert, some GAA and football action, classic jazz, Eurovision nostalgia and Nicolas Cage as a cowboy . . .
Pick of the Day
KIN, 9.30pm, RTÉ One
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Here we go – its finale time on season two of the crime drama, co-created by Peter McKenna and Ciaran Donnelly, which revolves around a fictional Dublin family of gangsters.
The Kinsella family feud goes into overdrive tonight on KIN as loyalties take a turn. Chances are there could be a few fresh corpses around the capital if people aren’t careful.
Michael and Jimmy find common ground, while Amanda proposes an unexpected partnership for mutual survival and Anthony and Nikita try to come to terms with the consequences of their actions.
Don’t Miss
The Sunday Game Live, 1.15pm, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Today’s GAA double-header begins out west with Sligo v Galway (Throw-in 1.45pm).
Joanne Cantwell (below) presents all the action from the Connacht Senior Football Championship final at Hastings Insurance MacHale Park in Castlebar. With analysis from Colm Cooper, David Tubridy and Lee Keegan.
Then at 3.40pm the action moves south as Kerry face Clare (Throw-in 4.00pm). Once again, Joanne Cantwell’s in the presenter’s chair for all the action from the Munster Senior Football Championship final at LIT Gaelic Grounds in Limerick.
Good Evening Europe agus Anois an Eurovision, 6.10pm, TG4
A nostalgic look back at the heady days of Irish Eurovisions from 1971 (below), when Ireland first hosted the contest, to the seventh and last time, over 20 years ago.
Featuring the inside scoop on all the gossip, glamour, politics and faux pas that go hand in hand with hosting this musical extravaganza.
Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death, 3.45pm, BBC One
Another chance to see this delightfully English duo once again.
Wallace and Gromit open their own bakery, Top Bun, and business is soon booming - not least because a `cereal killer’ is targeting all the rival bakers in town.
Even better, Wallace has caught the eye of local beauty Piella Bakewell. But Gromit is more concerned that his master might become the killer's next victim.
With the voices of Peter Sallis and Sally Lindsay.
Live Irish Cup, 2.10pm, BBC Two
Inaugurated in 1881, the Irish Cup is the fourth-oldest national cup competition in the world.
This year’s final sees Ballymena United face Crusaders (Kick-off 2.30pm) and Stephen Watson presents all the action from the showpiece match at Windsor Park.
These sides also met in last season's final when Crusaders lifted the trophy for the sixth time in dramatic style, equalising in injury-time and then repeating the feat in extra time to claim a 2-1 win.
With commentary by Thomas Kane.
New or Returning Shows
The Coronation Concert, 8.00pm, BBC One
More royal rumbling.
Coverage of the Coronation Concert from the East Lawn of Windsor Castle, staged in front of 20,000 members of the British public and invited guests.
Featuring performances from Take That (above), Katy Perry, Lionel Richie, Andrea Bocelli, Bryn Terfel, Freya Ridings and a 70-piece orchestra.
There are also unique visual moments such as iconic landmarks illuminated by drones and lasers in Lighting Up the Nation and Gareth Malone's 300-voice Coronation Choir singing for Charles and Camilla.
Kirsty Young hears from the performers in a specially built studio within the castle grounds, and backstage, Clara Amfo and Jordan Banjo grab chats with others involved.
Spring Soul and Jazz from Cheltenham, 8.15pm, BBC Four
Marcus Brigstocke presents what should be a great show packed with classic tunes.
Guy Barker's Big Band and the BBC Concert Orchestra join forces at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, with guest performers including Kurt Elling, Mica Paris (above), Madeline Bell, Mica Millar, Ashton Jones, Vanessa Haynes, Tommy Blaize and Ian Shaw.
They play music celebrating the jazz and soul explosion of the late 1950s, and with over 80 musicians on stage and a great line-up of guests, it promises to be an extraordinary night of music.
New to Stream
The Old Way, Sky Cinema & NOW
Academy Award winner Nicolas Cage stars in his first-ever Western as Colton Briggs, a cold-blooded gunslinger turned respectable family man.
When an outlaw and his gang put Colton and his family in peril, Colton is forced to take up arms with an unlikely partner, his 12-year-old daughter (played by Ryan Kiera Armstrong).
Family Flicks
The Jungle Book, 2.05pm, BBC One
Live action remake of Disney's animated adventure based on Rudyard Kipling's stories, starring Neel Sethi, with the voices of Bill Murray, Ben Kingsley and Idris Elba.
A boy is raised by animals in the jungles of India, but his carefree life is threatened by the return of a fierce tiger with a grudge against humans.
The youngster faces a difficult choice between remaining with his friends or returning to his own people.
Mrs Doubtfire, 5.40pm, Channel 4
The classic family comedy, starring the late great Robin Williams, Sally Field, Pierce Brosnan, Harvey Fierstein and Mara Wilson.
Williams is in top form here as he plays a struggling actor and loving father whose ambitious, no-nonsense wife throws him out and demands a divorce.
Desperate to spend time with his children, he puts his talents to good use by donning drag and posing as a British housekeeper to get a job looking after them - unaware of the positive impact the character will have on his life and career.