There's the self-explanatory Trump Revolution: 100 Days That Changed the World, new coming of age drama Penelope, Ambulance returns for a 14th season, Annika and The Change land on RTÉ, and Penn Badgley’s You comes to an end . . .
Pick of the Day
Trump Revolution: 100 Days That Changed the World, 9.00pm, Channel 4
The end of April sees 100 days since the inauguration of the second term of Donald J Trump as US President.
One hundred days of unprecedented political and economic decisions that have caused stock markets to plummet and left governments around the world scrambling to respond.

This film charts these chaotic days, but also asks what is going on behind the headlines? Does Trump still have the confidence of his supporters and his billionaire backers?
Tariffs, Ukraine, the Middle East, Russia, the economy, gender and diversity, the sacking of thousands of government workers - is Trump's strategy thought out and is creating chaos part of it?
With leading voices, insiders and commentators, we ask if Trump's leadership thrives on unpredictability and whether his strategy rests on the idea that breaking things apart creates an opportunity to rebuild them on his terms?
New or Returning Shows
Penelope, 9.55pm, Sky Atlantic
Streaming on NOW
This brand-new series is a coming-of-age drama from Mark Duplass and Mel Eslyn starring Megan Stott and Austin Abrams.
While on a high-school camping trip, restless 16-year-old Penelope (Stott) feels the urge to abandon her family and friends to explore a new life in the remote wilderness of the Pacific Northwest.
Episode two follows at 10.35pm.
After making it through her first night in the forest, Penelope spends the day acquiring new wilderness skills through exhausting trial and error.
Ambulance, 9.00pm, BBC One
It’s season 14 of the documentary series offering an insight into the work of frontline staff as they struggling to deliver care to London’s nine million people.
An emergency call is received for a patient threatening to jump off a bridge.
Crewmates Kinsey and Lottie are the nearest available ambulance and are immediately dispatched alongside police and fire.
In south London, paramedic Hannah and specialist nurse Niall operate in one of London's mental health cars.
They attend to the needs of patients, while hoping to prevent unnecessary trips to hospital. Narrated by Christopher Eccleston.
Annika, 11.15pm, RTÉ One
This British crime drama – previously broadcast on BBC One and U&Drama - is all the better for the presence of Nicola Walker (below), who helps to rise it a little bit above the norm in an overcrowded TV genre.
She stars as DI Annika Strandhed, who has returned to Glasgow to head up the Marine Homicide Unit, where she is tasked with solving puzzling crimes and unexplained murders that wash up in Scotland's waters.
On her first day in a new role, Annika is called in to solve the murder of a man found in the Clyde, with a harpoon piercing his head.
The Change, 9.00pm, RTÉ2
Comedy drama, starring Bridget Christie (below), who also created and wrote the show for Channel 4.
She plays fifty-year-old mother of two Linda, who is told that what she thought was early onset dementia is actually menopause.
As a result, she decides to do something for herself for a change and reconnect with the person that she used to be.
New to Stream
Étoile, Prime Video
In an ambitious gambit to save their storied institutions, two world-renowned ballet companies in New York City and Paris swap their most talented stars.
From the Executive Producers of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel comes what promises to be a bold series celebrating the beauty, humor, and unpredictability of a life devoted to the arts, both on stage and off.
Could be fun – and the cast includes the likes of Charlotte Gainsbourg and Simon Callow.
You, Netflix
Penn Badgley returns to play the serial killer for the last time.
In the epic fifth and final season, Joe Goldberg returns to New York to enjoy his happily ever after as the husband of philanthropist Kate (played by Charlotte Ritchie).
Well, that is until his seemingly perfect life is threatened by the ghosts of his past and his own dark desires.
Don’t Miss
The Complaints Bureau, 7.00pm, RTÉ One
Streaming on RTÉ Player
This week, Amy Molloy tries to help a Kerry pensioner feeling the cold and Conor Pope helps a Louth family not feeling the cold - their fridge is broken.
Meanwhile, Siobhán Maguire tracks an online clothing scam.
For the Love of Dogs with Alison Hammond, 8.30pm, Virgin Media One
A pair of sighthounds learn how to stand on their own four feet and a shar pei with a painful eye condition is in serious need of a surgical facelift.
Alison does some sound training with a litter of three-week-old jack russell puppies to prepare them for their new lives as pets.
Ending Today
What We Do in the Shadows, 12.00am, BBC Two
Here’s a season finale double-bill of the Staten Island-set vampire sitcom starring Kayvan Novak, Matt Berry and Natasia Demetriou.
First up, the housemates are invited for a weekend away at the home of a mysterious and illustrious vampire.
Then at 12.25am, Guillermo goes into hiding after Nandor finds out he's a vampire, and the others visit him to say their final goodbyes.