Armagh face Galway at Croke Park with the Sam Maguire trophy at stake, there's loads of action at the Olympics, there’s Sarah Vaughan and Debbie Reynolds – and Saucy! Secrets of the British Sex Comedy recalls British sex comedies of the 1970s . . .
Pick of the Day
The Sunday Game Live, 2.15pm, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player
It’s Armagh v Galway (throw-in 3.30pm) as Joanne Cantwell (below) presents coverage of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final from Croke Park.
This is a bit of an odd pairing, as neither county looked likely to make this year’s Sam Maguire decider. Which makes it an even more intriguing encounter.
There’s probably not going to be much between them, and Armagh saw off the challenge of Kerry to get here, while Galway defeated Dublin in the quarter-finals.
As ever, it’s about who performs best on the day.
And please note that The Sunday Game is on RTÉ one this week, at 9.30pm, where Jacqui Hurley and guests take a look back at this afternoon’s All Ireland Football Final.
New or Returning Shows
Saucy! Secrets of the British Sex Comedy, 10.00pm, Channel 4
Part one of a two-part documentary looking at a rather bizarre – and certainly unique – period in British cinema.
It’s all about the impact of 1970s' British sex comedies, which both saved the British film industry from financial ruin and transformed that nation's attitudes to sex.
In the first episode, actor Robin Askwith reveals how Confessions of a Window Cleaner became the most successful home-grown movie of 1974, inspiring dozens of copycat titles and making his bum the most famous - and most viewed - in British history.
Don’t Miss
Talking Pictures, 5.30pm, BBC Two
Another chance to see this tribute to the late, great Debbie Reynolds (below).
Sylvia Syms narrates a profile of the American actress, who became a mainstay of Hollywood's golden age with her appearance in the iconic musical Singin' in the Rain.
The programme makes use of rare archive interviews in which the star discusses her favourite film roles.
Also covered is Debbie's private life, including the collapse of her marriage to Eddie Fisher, and her relationship with her daughter Carrie Fisher, who died just one day before her mother in December 2018.
Britain Behind Bars: A Secret History, 9.00pm, Channel 4
Rob Rinder explores one of the darkest chapters in Britain's criminal past - capital punishment.
At Shrewsbury Prison in Shropshire, he visits the place where the Pierrepoint family began their reign as Britain's most infamous dynasty of hangmen, leading hundreds of prisoners to their death.
Sarah Vaughan at the BBC, 9.40pm, BBC Four
Craig Charles explores some of the American jazz singer's best-known tracks recorded for the BBC.
Featuring footage from TV shows such as Jazz Scene and Music from Montreux, plus a look at an appearance with Jack Jones and Cleo Laine.
Jazz Ship, 11.00pm, BBC Four
Following the SS Rotterdam, the third biggest passenger liner in the world, which set to sail from New York towards the Caribbean, with some of the greatest names in jazz aboard.
Featuring music from Lionel Hampton and his Orchestra, with The Cannonball Adderley Quintet, Count Basie and his Orchestra, Sarah Vaughan and her Trio, and Joe Williams.
First broadcast 26 August 1975.
Reg, 10.30pm, RTÉ2
This is a fact-based drama, starring Tim Roth and Anna Maxwell Martin. Worth watching just to see those two in action.
In June 2003, Lance Corporal Tom Keys was among six military policemen killed by a mob in the Shia city of Majar al-Kabir in southern Iraq.
Angered by his belief and the growing public feeling that the war with Iraq was based on a lie, Tom's father Reg forms pressure group Military Families Against the War and decides to stand against prime minister Tony Blair in his home constituency of Sedgefield in the 2005 general election.
New to Stream
Walter Presents: Carmen Curlers, All4
Here's the second season of the stylish, 1960s-set Danish drama, which you can also watch weekly on Channel 4, starting at 12.30am.
Axel makes a deal with an American cosmetics giant just as his workforce goes on strike. Tove is unhappy with Axel about the lack of time he gives to their son and creates a minor crisis.
The series comes in Danish and English. And if you missed it, season one is also available on All4.
Family Flick
The Water Horse, 3.30pm, TG4
This children's fantasy adventure, based on the book by Dick King-Smith, features Alex Etel, Emily Watson and David Morrissey.
A lonely boy living in the Scottish Highlands during the Second World War stumbles on a curiously large egg by the water's edge of the local loch.
Astonishingly, it hatches into a cute baby sea monster and, although he tries his hardest to keep it concealed, the task is made almost impossible by the creature's alarming rate of growth.
Sport
Paris Olympics 2024: AM, 9.15am, RTÉ2
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Live coverage of day two gets under way with more swimming heats at La Defense Arena.
Elsewhere, the individual and team cross-country disciplines take place in equestrian at Chateau de Versailles, and the women's cross-country mountain biking event gets under way at Elancourt Hill. Evanne Ní Chuilinn presents, with analysis from Barry Murphy, Earl McCarthy and Tom Freyne
Paris Olympics 2024: Today follows at 2.15pm on RTÉ One.
The women's cross-country event mountain biking event concludes at Elan Court Hilll.
Meanwhile, the first archery gold of the Games is claimed in the women's team final at Invalides, before the men's 66kg and women's 52kg judo medal matches at Champ de Mars Arena, while over at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium, the women's kayak single final is contested.
Finally, at 6pm there’s Paris Olympics 2024: Tonight, which includes the 400m individual medley and 100m breaststroke swimming finals from La Defense Arena.
The women's 100m butterfly also takes place today.
Peter Collins presents, with analysis from Andrew Bree, Darren Cave, Grainne Murphy and Sene Naoupou.