Marilyn Manson: Unmasked continues, The Real Manhunter returns, as does The Traitors, Alien: Romulus is the latest in the sci-fi horror franchise, while The Clinic for Well People wonders if drinking 18 pints a weekend is healthy . . .
Marilyn Manson: Unmasked, 10.00pm, Channel 4
The three-part documentary about rocker Marilyn Manson's infamous fall from grace – if he was ever there in the first place – continues.
Tonight the focus turns to examining actor Evan Rachel Wood's shocking allegations against Marilyn Manson of rape and abuse during their relationship.
It also asks why so many assumed that her claims were false before other accusers came forward to speak out against Manson.
The Real Manhunter, 9.00pm, Sky Crime
Streaming on NOW
It's season 4 of this true crime series.
Once again, it's led by former Detective Chief Inspector Colin Sutton, who spent 30 years in the police force, a career that saw him lead many of the highest profile and successful murder investigations of his generation.
This time around, Sutton revisits cases he led and explores everything from the crime itself through to the breakthrough moment when the suspect was identified and arrested.
He takes the viewer on a journey from the moment the police were called to the scene, visits key locations, and explains how he and his team managed to gather enough evidence to secure a conviction.
The Traitors, 9.00pm, BBC One
Season three of this highly addictive show resumes with another contestant heading out of the game. The two Traitors are doing nicely!
After a brutal murderous act, the mission becomes an opportunity for the Faithful to gain some clarity that could give them a fresh perspective for the Round Table.
And don’t forget The Traitors: Uncloaked over on BBC Two at 10pm.
Ed Gamble presents the companion show in which he and his guests delve into the latest twists as the most recent banished and murdered players share their first reactions to discovering the Traitors among them.
The Repair Shop, 8.00pm, BBC One
Leather worker Suzie Fletcher and textile conservator Rebecca Bissonnet restore a jacket and collar that once belonged to a beloved rescue dog that helped search for survivors in the Lockerbie bombing disaster.
Meanwhile, carpenter Will Kirk fixes a table bought in 1975 by a couple who had just moved to the UK from India.
Pete Woods is tasked with repairing a saxophone played by a musician over a career that spanned from the 1940s to the 1990s and cobbler Dean Westmoreland tackles some rugby boots that won England the Women's World Cup in the 1994/95 season.
This week, Neven Maguire travels to Amares, Braga and Barcelos in the north of the country, where he delves into the heart of rural Portuguese cooking and stays at the Pousada Mosteiro de Amares, a 12th-century Cistercian monastery that is now a hotel.
In Braga, Portugal's oldest city, Neven tries some of the famous local petiscos (tapas) at Dona Petisca, where he also learns how to make an authentic caldo verde soup.
The fifth and final season of this Kevin Costner-starring modern Western series continues with an episode entitled The Apocalypse of Change.
Beth comes to a realisation, Kayce reaches out to an old friend in search of information and Jamie meets with Market Equities.
The Clinic for Well People, 9.00pm, Virgin Media One
The series that examines people with no obvious health issues continues with Michael.
Originally from Kerry, Michael worked all his life up to retirement age in the ESB.
He keeps himself fit by walking 25 miles per week but he also enjoys himself at the weekend, regularly drinking 18-20 pints of Guinness between Friday and Sunday.
His genes for longevity are good as his father worked until he was 90 on the home farm, drove until he was 93 and died of a stroke at 97. His mother also lived into her 90s.
But how unhealthy is drinking 18 pints every weekend?
Also on tonight’s show: how loneliness can effect physical health, and a firefighter heading for a heart attack and enduring an uncomfortable testicle gets scanned.
Eric & Ernie, 10.00pm, BBC Four
Another chance to see this fine 2011 drama charting the early years of Morecambe and Wise, one of Britain's greatest comedy double acts, focusing on the influence of Eric Morecambe's mother Sadie Bartholomew (played by Victoria Wood).
A chance meeting on the children's variety circuit sees the start of an unlikely friendship and Eric soon becomes the funnyman to Ernie Wise's 'feed'.
But as they grow older, the duo struggle to make their way in mainstream entertainment with a few dubious tours and an ill-advised TV series that has the critics gunning for them.
Daniel Rigby and Bryan Dick star as Eric and Ernie, with Jim Moir (aka Vic Reeves) and Reece Shearsmith as their fathers.
Alien: Romulus, Disney+
This sci-fi horror-thriller apparently takes the phenomenally successful Alien franchise back to its iconic roots.
While scavenging the deep ends of a derelict space station, a group of young colonizers come face-to-face with the most relentless and deadly life form in the universe.
Starring Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson, Archie Renaux, Isabela Merced, Spike Fearn and Aileen Wu, the film’s directed by horror master Fede Alvarez.
Public Disorder, Netflix
This looks lively!
This Italian drama series opens with a night of ferocious clashes in Val di Susa. A team from the Mobile Unit of Rome loses its chief, who is seriously injured.
But Mazinga, Marta and Salvatore’s team is not like the others - it’s a team that had to learn to contrast chaos and troubles with extreme methods as well as with the harmony of a tribe, almost like a family.
And it’s a family that the new commander, Michele, part of the reformist police, will have to deal with.
For such police, teams like that are the symbol of an old school that must be refounded. As if the chaos that hits the new squad at the moment of maximum internal fragility wasn’t enough, there’s also a new wave of people’s discontent with institutions.
Among rising tensions, the team members are called to take sides and forced to question the deeper meaning of their work and their own membership of the Department.