Kirstie Allsopp and Phil Spencer return with Location, Location, Location, the second season of Fire County begins, there's the BBC Prime Ministerial Debate, some more Harry Wild, and Little Simz on My Glastonbury . . .
Pick of the Day
Location, Location, Location, 8.00pm, Channel 4
As the new season of this long-running show begins, Kirstie Allsopp and Phil Spencer are searching in Oxfordshire, literally trying to find some middle ground
Kirstie is with self-proclaimed 'pocket rocket' Reena, who is looking for the geographical balance between her work in Oxford and her family in the Midlands.
And Phil's with Tan and Steve, a couple living an hour apart who want to be under the same roof.
Phil has his work cut out, as the couple want open plan living so they can host family and friends but are searching an expensive patch.
New or Returning Shows
Fire Country, 9.00pm, Sky Witness
Streaming on NOW
The hit US drama returns for a second season.
Max Thieriot walks back into the fire as convict-turned-firefighter Bode Donovan, who finds himself back in prison as the new season starts, where he receives some shocking news.
Meanwhile, the station 42 crew responds to a massive earthquake that rocks Edgewater to its core.
BBC Prime Ministerial Debate, 8.15pm, BBC One
As the UKs general election approaches, Mishal Husain chairs the BBC's head-to-head debate between Rishi Sunak (below, right), leader of the Conservative Party, and Keir Starmer (below, left), leader of the Labour Party.
Then at 9.30pm there’s After the Debate, where Laura Kuenssberg and Clive Myrie, who are due to host the BBC's election night coverage, are in Nottingham to present reaction and analysis of the earlier Prime Ministerial Debate.
Don’t Miss
Harry Wild, 9.35pm, RTÉ One
Harry and Fergus are hired by a woman whose sister has gone missing in a sinister village in the countryside, and soon find a skeleton dumped in the woods.
They unearth a glut of possible suspects, including a doctor's bitter wife, a creepy old gravedigger and an angry priest with a dark secret to hide.
A Small Light, 10.50pm, RTÉ2
As laws against Jews intensify in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands , two small children land in Miep and Jan’s care.
Meanwhile, Jan forges his own ties to the Dutch Resistance as Miep distances from those she cares about.
Little Simz: My Glastonbury, 10.00pm, BBC One
The British rapper, musician and songwriter Little Simz talks through her Glastonbury journey as she prepares to take to the upper echelons of the Pyramid stage for the very first time.
The 2022 Mercury Prize winner reminisces about her own experiences at the festival from performing in 2016 on the West Holts stage, to her return on the Park stage in 2019.
Plus, she reflects on some of the standout performances she has seen at Worthy Farm including the likes of The Good, The Bad & The Queen, Burna Boy and Kendrick Lamar.
The Supervet: Noel Fitzpatrick, 9.00pm, Channel 4
Two-year-old Boston terrier Rogan needs Noel's help with his debilitating hip dysplasia
Noel explains to Rogan's mums Megan and Shana that, due to Rogan's age and breed, an off-the-shelf cemented total hip replacement has an increased chance of loosening over time.
Noel's offered alternative is a next-generation uncemented implant system, custom-made for Rogan. Meanwhile, nine-year-old Hungarian vizsla Brodie is affected by developmental elbow disease.
Noel finds that the joint has completely collapsed and is infected as the result of a previous botched operation performed by another vet.
And Vinnie the two-year-old tabby cat is rushed into the surgery after being hit by a car. Thankfully he has no internal injuries but he has sustained significant damage to his back legs.
The Heiress and the Heist, 10.35pm, RTÉ One
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Another chance to hear the remarkable story of Rose Dugdale.
She went from being an English millionaire's daughter to an avid supporter of the IRA who led the theft of paintings worth millions from Russborough House in Wicklow.
The documentary begins by looking at her privileged upbringing in an aristocratic family and her academic achievements at Oxford University and abroad - to reveal how these chapters of her life led her down the path of a revolutionary.
Ghislaine Maxwell: The Making of a Monster, 11.05pm, Channel 4
Repeat of the documentary profile of the sex trafficker (below, with Jeffrey Epstein), originally told over three nights, beginning by delving into her lavish childhood in the shadow of a tyrannical father and examining if this affected the woman she was to become.
Her father was publisher Robert Maxwell and his death left the family penniless and ostracised.
But Ghislaine's move to New York in the early 1990s, and association with a mysterious money manager, enabled her to make a new start.
But at what price?
Sport
Live UEFA Euro 2024, 4.30pm, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Joanne Cantwell is joined by Richie Sadlier, Kenny Cunningham and Shay Given for live coverage from Stuttgart of Ukraine (below) v Belgium in Group E. KO 5pm).
Meanwhile, from 4.50pm on RTÉ News channel and RTÉ Player, there's live coverage of the other Group E game, between Slovakia v Romania (KO 5pm). Commentary from John Kenny and Graham Gartland.
All four teams in this group have three points, so whoever wins will go through. Even a draw should be enough - unless both games end in a draw, then Ukraine are out on goal difference.
From 7.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player, Joanne is once again joined by Kenny, Richie and Shay for live coverage from Hamburg of Czechia v Türkiye in Group F (KO 8pm).
And from 7.50pm on RTÉ News channel and RTÉ Player there's the other Group F game, between Georgia and Portugal (KO 8pm). Commentator: Adrian Eames.
Portugal are already through with six points, while Turkiye have three and the other two have a point apiece. Bottom line: a win here will put any of the other three through to the knockouts. A draw will do for Turkiye.