Stacey & Joe goes behind the front door of Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash, James Norton and Niamh Algar star in Playing Nice, Bradley & Barney Walsh: Breaking Dad returns for a new run, and Home of the Year continues . . .
Pick of the Day
Stacey & Joe, 8.00pm, BBC One
If you like a snoop around celebrity homes and families, this should keep you entertained.
It offers a glimpse into the lives of Stacey Solomon - who is never off the telly these days - and Joe Swash as they open the doors to their home, Pickle Cottage, to share the day to day for them, their five children, four ducks and two dogs.
On the morning of their second wedding anniversary, Stacey and Joe share how they met and fell in love and with school out for summer, the family prepare to head off on a relaxing holiday in Turkey.
New or Returning Shows
Playing Nice, 10.15pm, RTÉ One
Psychological thriller - recently on ITV - adapted from the best-selling novel by JP Delaney, starring James Norton (below), Niamh Algar, James McArdle and Jessica Brown Findlay.
Pete and Maddie find out that their son Theo was swapped at birth with another boy in a hospital mix-up. Will Theo's real parents want him back or will the couples be able to sort things out amicably?
Georgia Harrison: Porn, Power, Profit, 9.00pm, Virgin Media One
Here's another ITV show.
Georgia Harrison (below) dives into the secretive world of online porn to find out how this industry works and how nonconsensual pornographic images are being created and used to help drive profits and power to individuals.
Bradley & Barney Walsh: Breaking Dad, 8.00pm, UTV
Season 6 sees the actor and his son hit the road together on a new series of adventures, travelling this time to Japan, where they begin in Tokyo.
Together, the pair visit one of the country's biggest and most bizarre shops, get a taste for the national sport of sumo and enjoy some karaoke before resting their heads in one of the city's unique capsule hotels.
Elsewhetre, Brad's fear of heights is tested by hanging on a bridge in the Arakawa Valley.
Kate Garraway's Life Stories, 9.00pm, UTV
The latest run of Kate Garraway's series opens with broadcaster Jeremy Kyle, who talks about the controversy surrounding his daytime TV talk show and the public scrutiny he faced after its cancellation.
Kate explores the personal challenges that shaped him including his battles with gambling and testicular cancer.
Rob and Rylan's Grand Tour, 10.35pm, RTÉ2
This BBC show sees Rob Rinder and Rylan Clark set off on the original package holiday, the Grand Tour, which was a cultural odyssey designed to turn young upper-class Brits into civilised, educated gentlemen.
Their first stop is Venice, where Rob conducts Vivaldi's Four Seasons in the church where it was first performed, while Rylan discovers the hidden side of Venice's famous carnival.
Our Welsh Chapel Dream, 8.00pm, Channel 4
In season 2 of this series, Keith Brymer Jones and his partner Marj restore a 163-year-old derelict chapel on Wales' Llyn Peninsula, to turn it into a forever home with a working pottery studio.
The pair start renovations on the downstairs Sunday School so it can become their living space, complete with a kitchen, bathroom, bedroom and a snug.
But before they can begin they have to rip out the fungus and try to control the dry rot that's infected the chapel.
Ashley Cain: Into the Danger Zone, 9.00pm, BBC Three
The former footballer goes down the Ross Kemp road and visits some of the world's most dangerous cities to explore the issues that affect young men born into a life on the fringes of society.
He begins in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, where he learns what it takes to become a lookout, foot soldier and drug dealer in a world where death could become reality at any moment.
He also comes face-to-face with a gun-toting militia boss to uncover how these men rule through fear and intimidation.
Don’t Miss
All About the Good Life, 9.00pm, BBC Four
This documentary follows the first-ever episode of 1970s' sitcom The Good Life, which goes out at 8.30pm.
In !975 a new sitcom introduced viewers to the self-sufficient world of Tom and Barbara Good, who had a smallholding in their suburban back garden, much to the horror of the upwardly mobile Leadbetters next door.
This documentary reveals all about the show created by Bob Larbey and John Esmonde, from the perils of filming knee-deep in mud to the ultimate accolade of performing live in front of the Queen at Television Centre.
Contributors include stars Richard Briers and Penelope Keith, as well as Monty Don, Brian Sewell and John O'Farrell.
Home of the Year, 8.30pm, RTÉ One
Streaming on RTÉ Player
Joan and Richard live in their old stone-built farmhouse in West Cork, surrounded by animals and the sea. Their children have just left for college.
They bought this house in 2006. Estimated to originally date from the mid-19th century, the building was dilapidated, damp, and cold, with any period details long since removed.

Over two years they rebuilt it using only traditional materials and methods, with natural or recycled materials, breathing new life into their home with a classic period style, natural fabrics and materials creating a warm family friendly home.
Vivian and Philip live in Kildare with their three dogs.
During the height of the Covid pandemic, Vivian and Philip moved into a completely empty shell of a house with no kitchen, flooring, or even a functional bathroom.
After eight long months their redesign began, with the couple having worked hard on design plans and the layout, completely changing the internal function of the house.
Although the build was time-consuming for the couple, it was all worth it, as they created the show stopping home they had always envisioned.
Claire’s home in Dublin was built around 1850, and, in its original form, was quite a small and traditional cottage.
After purchasing the home, the family undertook a deep renovation and gutted the whole house doing a full energy upgrade by heaving up the foundations, walls, roof, windows doors, etc and bringing the property from a C2 to A+ rating and adding a small extension to the rear.
The main bonus of these renovations, aside from making the home warmer, was the windows in the front of the house could be made bigger so they could view the sea from almost anywhere inside the house.