This week's Strictly will be a battle for places in Blackpool, there’s McFly the 21st Birthday Party, Ultimate Cover Versions at the BBC: Volume 2. John & Yoko and David Baddiel’s The Not The Trilogy . . .
Strictly Come Dancing, 6.35pm, BBC One
Things are really hotting up on this run of Strictly as the annual battle for Blackpool is on.
The remaining couples return to the dance floor, with routines they hope will earn them a place at the iconic Tower Ballroom next weekend.
The judges will then cast their expert eyes over the performances before tomorrow’s vote.
After that, it’s off to Blackpool!
McFly the 21st Birthday Party, 5.30pm, UTV
I hope it doesn't make you feel old, but it’s been 21 years since McFly first formed, a journey which has taken them from their breakthrough hit Five Colours In Her Hair to last year’s album Power To Play.
Along the way they scored seven chart-topping singles, seven Top 10 albums, 10 million sales, a BRIT Award, sold-out arena shows and still remain the youngest band to ever have a debut album go straight to number 1, beating The Beatles.
The lads celebrated the band's 21st birthday by playing two very special shows at The O2 in London in October – and here are the highlights.
The programme also features behind-the-scenes moments between Tom Fletcher, Danny Jones, Harry Judd and Dougie Poynter and a look at how they put the monumental celebration together.
Ultimate Cover Versions at the BBC: Volume 2, 8.05pm, BBC Two
Another selection of cover versions from the BBC’s archive, featuring the best in pop, rock and soul from the past five decades.
It features artists including Adele (above), Annie Lennox, Happy Mondays, Manic Street Preachers and Erasure.
The collection may also raise eyebrows with some songs thought written by the acts whose versions became better known than the originals – for example, Blondie's Denis, Natalie Imbruglia's Torn and Tina Turner's The Best
After Jools Holland there’s Ultimate Cover Versions at the BBC (10.50pm), featuring acts as diverse as the Moody Blues, Soft Cell, Alexandra Burke, Mariah Carey and UB40.
David Baddiel - The Not The Trilogy, 10.00pm, Sky Arts
Streaming on NOW
Performing live at the Royal Court Theatre in London, former Fantasy Football League co-host David Baddiel (below) returns to all three of his Not the . . . stand up shows in a special series for Sky Arts.
It begins with David reviving his deeply personal show My Family: Not the Sitcom.
A West End, Olivier-nominated smash-hit, the show is a massively disrespectful celebration of the lives of David Baddiel’s late mother, Sarah and dementia-ridden father, Colin.
John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky, 12.00am, TG4
Beatle fans may have seen this before, but most wouldn't mind seeing it again.
The story of John Lennon's album Imagine, released in 1971, exploring how the art, politics and music of the pair are intrinsically entwined.
Featuring interviews with Yoko Ono, Julian Lennon, David Bailey, John Dunbar, Dan Richter and Eddie Veale, some of whom have never spoken publicly on film before.
The documentary also includes previously unseen footage of Lennon and Ono from their private archive.
There's Something in the Barn, Sky Cinema Premiere & NOW
Here's something a little different: a Norwegian horror comedy film starring Martin Starr, Amrita Acharia, and Kiran Shah.
Bill moves his American wife Carol and children Nora and Lucas to Norway where he's inherited a family estate.
There, Lucas discovers a mischievous barn elf from ancient folklore living in the barn who plots to get rid of the American intruders.
Emma., 4.05pm, BBC Two
First time director Autumn de Wilde's adaptation of Jane Austen's novel, with Anya Taylor-Joy, Johnny Flynn and Josh O'Connor.
And while it may not add anything to the classic tale, it is an enjoyable adaptation.
In Regency-era England, wealthy Emma Woodhouse searches for a new companion after her governess, Miss Taylor, marries
The well-meaning but selfish young woman proceeds to interfere in the romantic affairs of her friends.
Once upon a time, this star-studded WWII yarn from 1963 was a permanent fixture on Christmas TV schedules.
Good to see it back as it’s hugely entertaining.
Steve McQueen, James Coburn, Donald Pleasence, James Garner, Charles Bronson and Richard Attenborough feature as the most rebellious Allied prisoners of war.
They’re sent to a supposedly escape-proof maximum-security detention camp but plan an ingenious mass breakout by digging a tunnel.
But even when free of the camp, making it across occupied Europe proves to be a dangerous and potentially fatal journey.
Up there with Reservoir Dogs and Jackie Brown in my top three Tarantino movies, this love letter to 1960s’ LA stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Timothy Olyphant and Al Pacino is both poignant and very funny.
Faded television actor Rick Dalton and his stunt double Cliff Booth strive to hang on to their careers during the final years of Hollywood's Golden Age in 1969 Los Angeles.
As they navigate a changing film industry they barely recognise any more, they are drawn into the orbit of both ill-fated rising star Sharon Tate, and Charles Manson and his cult of zealous followers.
Swallows and Amazons, 2.35pm, BBC Two
I remember seeing this when it was first released in 2016 and thought it was a little gem.
It's a children’s period drama set in England between WWI and WWII and based on Arthur Ransome's classic novel, starring Rafe Spall, Kelly Macdonald and Andrew Scott.
Four siblings on holiday in the Lake District discover an island, only to find another group of children have laid claim to it.
The rivalry that ensues between the two factions must be put aside when a bigger and more dangerous challenge presents itself.