TV tonight: from fracking to pigeon-flying clubs, an irreverent look at British culture

<span>Photograph: Graeme Robertson/The Guardian</span>
Photograph: Graeme Robertson/The Guardian

Squeamish About

10.30pm, BBC Two

Matt Berry’s silken-toned, factually erratic historian Michael Squeamish returns for this four-part short-form series on the esoteric world of British culture, following last year’s mockumentary Road to Brexit. We open with 15 minutes on “entertainments”, as Squeamish narrates from his archive, covering everything from vole-culling to fracking and pigeon-flying clubs. Irreverent, deeply strange and often hilarious, this is Berry on top satirical form, mocking everyone and everything. Ammar Kalia

Celebrity MasterChef: A Recipe for Success

8pm, BBC One

The starry MasterChef spin-off has been going for 15 years, with more than 300 celebrities slaving over hot stoves, with often memorably mixed results. This new six-part series sees judges John Torode and Gregg Wallace look back at some of their favourite moments, including a 2012 trip to the set of New Tricks. Graeme Virtue

Escape to the Chateau: Make Do and Mend

8pm, Channel 4

Back to Angel and Dick Strawbridge’s balmy French idyll, where this week they remotely advise punters on making furniture from pallets, upscaling an old drinks trolley using découpage, and the simple, honest pleasure of laying level paving. Enormously wholesome. Jack Seale

Red Dwarf: The First Three Million Years

9pm, Dave

Craig Charles succinctly calls it “Porridge in space”. But the inventive sitcom remains widely adored and this retrospective documentary series demonstrates why. It is full of fascinating titbits, including how Alfred Molina very nearly landed the part of Arnold Rimmer. Phil Harrison

Lee Mack is the unhappy Stuart in Semi-Detached.
Lee Mack is the unhappy Stuart in Semi-Detached. Photograph: Adam Lawrence/BBC/Happy Tramp North

Semi-Detached

10pm, BBC Two

Lee Mack stars in this real-time sitcom as the bumbling Stuart, navigating a chaotic half-hour in his suburban life. Stuart’s marriage to the younger April (Ellie White) has been going downhill rapidly since the birth of their daughter and now he hopes to patch things up with a disastrous lunch. AK

Imagine: My Name is Kwame

10.45pm, BBC One

Alan Yentob follows actor and artistic director of the Young Vic theatre in London, Kwame Kwei-Armah. Yentob explores Kwei-Armah’s vision for theatre as a community hub, from his beginnings acting in Casualty to staging one of the first plays by a black British writer at the National Theatre. AK

Film choice

Saoirse Ronan plays a teenage assassin in Hanna.
Saoirse Ronan plays a teenage assassin in Hanna. Photograph: Allstar Picture Library

Hanna (Joe Wright, 2011), 9pm, Sony Movies

Like Jason Bourne, except the assassin is a hit-girl: 16-year-old Hanna (Saoirse Ronan), is brought up by her ex-secret agent dad (Eric Bana) in remote Lapland and taught all the ruthless skills she needs for when nasty Cate Blanchett turns up. Joe Wright directs without stinting on the action. Paul Howlett

Live sport

PGA Championship Golf 7pm, Sky Sports Main Event. Day one coverage of the Major from San Francisco.

Europa League Football: Sevilla v AS Roma 5.45pm, BT Sport 1. Last-16 single-leg tie.

Europa League Football: Wolverhampton Wanderers v Olympiacos 7.30pm, BT Sport 2. Second-leg clash from Molineux.