Four to the Floor
1.05am, Channel 4
There is an inexplicable dearth of good TV shows promoting new music. So we should celebrate this late-night oddity, which, in its quirkily uncompromising way, has defied the odds. It’s never predictable: there’s no anchor or definable structure and the music is interspersed with animation, spoken word and surreal visuals. But it is forward-looking in a way that feels, sadly, unique at the moment. This series roundup includes performances from Novelist, Miraa May and Hak Baker. Long may it run. Phil Harrison
Puppy School
8pm, Channel 4
The penultimate episode of the show that should be renamed Puppy Owner School, since it’s the “puppy parents” who need the training (and reminding that their charges are in fact dogs, not children). Cockapoos, labradors and spaniels are among a selection of unruly 12- to 16-week-old pups getting lessons in manners. Mike Bradley
Have I Got News for You
9pm, BBC One
The last show in a riotous run finds Richard Ayoade in charge as regular team leaders Ian Hislop and Paul Merton and their guests, Pointless presenter and producer Richard Osman and the comedian Kiri Pritchard-McLean, lampoon the week’s events and muse on the spectacle of the Tory leadership race. MB
Touched By Auschwitz
9pm, PBS America
This documentary was first broadcast to mark the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland and the testimony it contains has lost none of its power. Film-maker Laurence Rees travels the world, from Chicago to Kraków, meeting survivors and discovering how their subsequent lives have unfolded. Ellen E Jones
The Looming Tower
9.30pm, BBC Two
Dan Futterman’s 9/11 spy drama is dependably gripping: week after week it surprises. Inter-agency politics are key in an episode that sees the brightest player in the game, John O’Neill, shut out by new boss Jason Sanchez as he pleads despairingly: “They’re here in America – we have no idea what we’re up against!” MB
The Mini Mash Report
10.15pm, BBC Two
Mash hits: these bite-size packages from the enthusiastic but scattershot news spoof seem suspiciously like filler to push sombre 9/11 drama The Looming Tower round to the hour. But they are also a useful reminder of the comedic chops of newsdesk pairing Ellie Taylor and Steve N Allen. Graeme Virtue
Film choice
Green Room (Jeremy Saulnier, 2015), 12.05am, Film4
Saulnier’s follow-up to revenge thriller Blue Ruin is another laconically vicious exercise, this time bloodily reworking the tropes of the siege movie. It has punk band the Ain’t Rights holed up in the basement of an Oregon roadhouse, beset by Patrick Stewart’s gang of neo-Nazis in a queasy horror-thriller. Paul Howlett
Live sport
Tennis: The French Open, 10am, ITV4
Day six of the grand slam from Roland Garros.
Cricket World Cup: West Indies v Pakistan. 10am, Sky Sports Cricket
A group match from Trent Bridge in Nottingham.
Cycling: Giro d’Italia, 11.45am, Eurosport 2
Stage 19 from Treviso to San Martino di Castrozza.