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Daisy May Cooper, Russell Howard, and more join Jimmy Carr’s ultimate TV quiz

9pm, Channel 4: Pedro Pascal’s brutal Game of Thrones death, a controversy on Bake Off, and Nigella Lawson’s “meecro-wah-vey” are just some of the topics in Jimmy Carr’s ultimate quiz on all things television. Babatunde Aléshé, Daisy May Cooper, Natasia Demetriou, Jamie Demetriou, Judi Love, and Russell Howard form the teams.

7.30pm, BBC One: The Northern Ireland border city of Newry is home to the oldest darts league on the island of Ireland and one of the biggest leagues in Europe. This lovely documentary tells the story of why the sport is so special in the community and follows four of the competitors in the month before finals night. Tense but also touching stuff.

8pm, BBC Four: In 1826, the 17-year-old Felix Mendelssohn, inspired by A Midsummer Night’s Dream, composed an orchestral overture, the expanded version of which forms the highlight of this concert from the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the National Youth Choir of Scotland’s Chamber Choir.

8pm, Sky Nature: Borneo’s fun-loving creatures are always good value as they go from nursery to graduation in the jungle. School’s back and newcomer Bumi is determined to be the center of attention, causing chaos among the other, more well-behaved orangutans. Meanwhile, chief geek Valentino starts college.

9pm, BBC Two: Queen guitarist Brian May is an outspoken critic of the practice of badger culling, which is meant to stop the spread of bovine tuberculosis. He believes the animals are being killed unnecessarily, and this documentary follows him as his wildlife trust researches the causes of the disease and helps to cure cattle.

10.05pm, BBC Three: The latest animated dispatch from Wales’s grimmest Indian takeaway. Nick and Jub are skint, so when they hear of a man called Martin Bastard, who needs a couple of delivery drivers to take a package to Aberdare, they can’t resist.

Film choice: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (John Ford, 1962), 1.55am, Sky Cinema Greats: “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” So says a newspaperman in John Ford’s 1962 western, which teams up two of the big beasts of the genre – James Stewart and John Wayne – for a yarn in which the march of civilisation is scrappy and less than honourable. Stewart’s tyro lawyer arrives in the town of Shinbone with a vision of bringing democracy to the wild west, but Lee Marvin’s robber Liberty has other plans, while Wayne’s cowboy is caught between the rule of law and the survival of the fittest. A classic of its kind.

Source: The Guardian