Don’t Forget the Driver
10pm, BBC Two
There is still time to get caught up in this downbeat dramedy, which, with typical Toby Jones understatement, has quietly become one of the best things on television. In this fourth episode, coach driver Peter (Jones) comes a cropper explaining Shakespeare to a Japanese tourist, but he is soon back tackling more topical national anxieties, such as how much responsibility to take for the refugee crisis. It is an abstract problem made flesh by his house guest Rita (Luwam Teklizgi). Ellen E Jones
Mystic Britain
8pm, Smithsonian Channel
The wry outlook of Clive Anderson and his more learned co-presenter, anthropologist Mary-Ann Ochota, is a good fit for a series about our irrational ancestors. This week: how medieval folk dealt with demons – graffiti on church walls, mostly – and the advent of witch-hunting. Good, informative fun. Jack Seale
Bake Off: The Professionals
8pm, Channel 4
Bake Off star Liam Charles and comedian Tom Allen reunite for a new series of the elite cookery contest. Tonight, the first six duos (there are 12 in total) bake linzer tortes and bakewell tarts before a showpiece challenge to reinvent the red-velvet cake. Tension, tears and collapsing tarts. Mike Bradley
Hard to Please OAPs
8.30pm, ITV
Another round of “things were better in the old days”; an attitude that has really improved matters in the past few years. This week’s celebrity pensioners grappling with those newfangled gizmos include Harry Redknapp, teeing off on a futuristic game of golf, and Amanda Barrie, braving an online food shop. Ali Catterall
Trust Me
9pm, BBC One
More chilling by the week, this Glasgow hospital drama ratchets up the tension as Jamie and Zoe learn that all the dead patients on the ward shared the same symptom: low blood sugar, probably induced by an overdose of insulin. As Dr Archie upbraids Zoe and she gets short shrift from Dr Alex, you suspect the creepy medical duo are up to no good. MB
The Great British School Swap
9pm, Channel 4
The final episode covers the last few days of the social experiment, in which predominately white and Asian schools swap pupils. While on the surface the focus seems to be on a closing party, a deeper look reveals many wonderful examples of how the kids have educated one another. MB
Film choice
John Wick (Chad Stahelski, 2014), 9pm, 5Star
Keanu Reeves’s black-clad John Wick is mourning his tragically dead wife, until a bunch of Russian gangsters start messing with the adorable little puppy she left him. Then it is time to dust down those near-superhuman kill-skills honed through his hitman years, in a relentlessly violent, highly stylised revenge thriller. Paul Howlett
Live sport
Snooker: World Championship 10am, BBC Two. The quarter-finals commence.
Champions League football: Tottenham Hotspur v Ajax 7pm, BT Sport 2. Spurs, conquerers of Man City in the previous round, take on Ajax, who saw off Juventus.
Basketball: NBA Playoffs 3am, Sky Sports Main Event. The playoffs reach the conference semi-final stage.