Baby Daddy
7.30pm, E4
The modern take on Three Men And A Baby returns for a new series. Baby daddy Ben worries that Riley might be harbouring feelings for dopey Danny, so slips an anonymous love note into her bag. In true comedy style, she assumes it’s from Danny and much farce ensues. Meanwhile, Bonnie has money problems that can’t be solved by selling off Danny’s belongings, so her Babysitting Barn is open for business. The one-liners are fast-flowing and the laughs, like the characters, are goofy but enjoyable. Hannah Verdier
Jamie’s Super Food
8pm, Channel 4
Jamie Oliver travels the globe in this new series, on a quest for the secret to eternal life. Or, at the very least, he tries to fathom what to eat so we can all push on through to our hundreds. From Costa Rica to Japan, he wonders what the really old people are eating, then jets home to write his own life-prolonging menu including the all-important “hero” ingredients. Why can’t he just call them superfoods like it says in the title? Why does he default to this matey guff when he knows we hate it? Julia Raeside
Jeremy Corbyn: Labour’s Earthquake – Panorama
8.30pm, BBC1
Something amazing happened after veteran backbencher Jeremy Corbyn entered Labour’s leadership race to “broaden the debate”. The debate did not broaden. Instead, it narrowed like a halo – or noose, depending on your position – around Jeremy Bernard Corbyn, perhaps the UK’s first truly social-media politician. A week before the election, John Ware explores the veteran leftwinger’s appeal and speculates on the future for the party should he win. New socialist dawn or plague of locusts? Ali Catterall
Bletchley Park: Code-Breaking’s Forgotten Genius
9pm, BBC2
The heroics at Bletchley Park during the second world war have become almost exclusively associated with Alan Turing. Which is fine, and some small recompense for the way he was subsequently treated. However, other Bletchley boffins deserve to be remembered, Gordon Welchman not least among them. As this film demonstrates, his work at Bletchley, and subsequently in the US, define him, for better or worse, as a pioneer of the web surveillance and data mining of today. Andrew Mueller
Doc Martin
9pm, ITV
A return for the Cornwall-based comedy-drama starring Martin Clunes as the medic with a personal life so chaotic it could figure as a metaphor for the NHS itself. With Louisa still taking time out from their marriage, the curmudgeonly doc is considering therapy with Aunt Ruth (Eileen Atkins). However, his plans for self-improvement are thwarted when a local lifeboat training exercise runs into trouble. Meanwhile, Al struggles to get his B&B ready for its first guests. Hannah J Davies
Fear The Walking Dead
9pm, AMC
Cash-cows rarely go unmilked, and so the somewhat inevitable spinoff to AMC’s rampantly successful The Walking Dead continues. A slower, soapier affair than its source, it follows one family through the breakdown of society, zombie sightings a rarity offering welcome respite from parental bickering and irritating teens. This didn’t hurt its initial ratings – the opening episode set viewing records in the US – though whether fans stick around for what is essentially a passable family drama with the odd zombie in it remains to be seen. Luke Holland
Film choice
Ali (Michael Mann, 2001) 10.10pm, Sky Atlantic
A near three-hour biopic in which director Michael Mann meticulously covers Muhammad Ali’s biggest battles both in and out of the ring, from his stand against the Vietnam war draft to the legendary rumble in the jungle with George Foreman. It’s a powerful drama with Will Smith adapting his slick, smart-mouthed persona to give a committed and convincing performance as the boxer who really was the greatest. Paul Howlett
Berlin Express (Jacques Tourneur, 1948) 2.20am, Movies4Men
Set amid the wreckage of postwar Germany, Tourneur’s tense little drama has representatives of the four occupying powers fighting to save German democrat Paul Lukas from a gang of Nazis. Merle Oberon is the very chic French member of the quartet and Robert Ryan is reliable as ever as the American, but more gripping is the grim, almost documentary portrait of a devastated nation. PH
Today’s best live sport
One-Day Cricket: Surrey v Nottinghamshire Outlaws The second semi-final from the Oval. 11am, Sky Sports 2
Tennis: The US Open The latest action from Flushing Meadows. 4pm, Sky Sports 3
Euro 2016 Football: Scotland v Germany Could Gordon Strachan’s men topple the World Cup holders? 7pm, Sky Sports 1
Republic Of Ireland v Georgia The latest game in Group D. 7.30pm, Sky Sports 2