FA Cup Football: Manchester City v Blackburn Rovers | The Restoration Man | Waterloo Road | Hidden Histories: Britain's Oldest Family Businesses | The Kumars | Live At The Apollo | Finding Mum And Dad | Being: Mike Tyson*FA Cup Football: Manchester City v Blackburn Rovers
8pm, ITV*
One of the more unlikely of this week's third-round replays. City were widely expected to dispatch Rovers with ease when the pair met last weekend, but in the event were quite fortunate to escape with a 1-1 draw. Inevitably Manuel Pellegrini's side are heavy favourites again here, but will need to keep a close eye on Rovers' prolific striker Jordan Rhodes, who has already attracted covetous glances from Premier League clubs in the current transfer window. Gwilym Mumford
*The Restoration Man
8pm, Channel 4*
Architect George Clarke follows couple Neil and Jackie as they take on the renovation of an old church in Brixham, a picturesque fishing town in Devon. Neil is a professional architect, so the spiralling budgets and impending doom characteristic of the house-building genre might not be such an issue here, although Clarke is on hand anyway with his invaluable design expertise. But with the pair having never even lived together before, will this carnival of stress reinforce their relationship or will cracks begin to show? Rachel Aroesti
**Waterloo Road*
8.30pm, BBC1*
The school-set drama continues with a well-worn but polished cast holding together a series of plod-along stories. As wonderfully named Dynasty Barry's desperation to go on the school trip builds, her mum Carol is determined to scrape the cash together. Zoe Lucker's matriarch is everything a Waterloo Road mum should be: hard of face, arched of brow and not afraid to embarrass her kids by becoming a dinner lady. Connor, meanwhile, has a job offer in London and it's decision time for Vix and Nikki's relationship. Hannah Verdier
**Hidden Histories: Britain's Oldest Family Businesses*
9pm, BBC4*
Now this is a splendid idea: a look at the stories of Britain's longest-running family businesses, through recessions, world wars and, even more menacing for the modern bottom line, internet shopping. This episode focuses on Bridport butchers Balsons, which has been in business since Henry VIII's reign. Current patriarch Richard goes on a journey through the family tree, revealing the evolution of his family's trade. But even more fascinating is the way it chronicles British life. Bim Adewunmi
**The Kumars*
9pm, Sky1*
After eight years away from our screens, the British Indian family returns to treat the famous faces of today to some amiable nose-tweaking. Despite the action leaving the cosy confines of No 42 (and the BBC) in favour of the box-strewn surroundings of the flat behind Ashwin's shop in glitzy Hounslow (and Sky1), the appeal of smushing on to the couch with Sanjeev, Ashwin and Ummi et al hasn't dimmed, with tonight's opener playing host to Daniel Radcliffe, Chevy Chase and Bafta-bagging Olivia Colman. Mark Jones
**Live At The Apollo*
9.30pm, BBC1*
Nina Conti – lately of Family Tree and the only reason you will ever need to use the words "amusing ventriloquist"– comperes this final episode of the standup comedy series. Conti specialises in a kind of elaborate, mechanical audience participation, and here she introduces acts of a similarly high polish. Jimeoin (latecomers: you say "Jim Owen") will reprise his gentle and not enormously surprising range of observational material, while Rob Beckett offers an amiable take on class. John Robinson
**Finding Mum And Dad*
10pm, Channel 4*
According to recent estimates, there are nearly 7,000 children awaiting adoption in the UK. Finding Mum And Dad introduces two of them: brothers Connor and Daniel, aged six and four. They've been in care for more than a year, pairs of siblings being harder to place than single children. Recent changes to the adoption process, and extra grants to councils – £150m last year, with another £50m scheduled for this year – are supposed to streamline the process: this film explores how, or if, this will work in real life. Andrew Mueller
*Being: Mike Tyson
10pm, FOX*
It is understandable that Mike Tyson has spent much of the near-decade since his retirement from boxing seeking some sort of redemption, though this might have seemed more sincere if he'd done so quietly and privately. The most recent instalment of this quest was a one-man show, during the tour of which this series was filmed. In this episode, Tyson meets Evander Holyfield, out of whose ears Tyson bit a chunk during their 1997 bout. Holyfield appears more forgiving of fellow boxers than of some strata of his fellow man. AM Reported by guardian.co.uk 15 hours ago.
8pm, ITV*
One of the more unlikely of this week's third-round replays. City were widely expected to dispatch Rovers with ease when the pair met last weekend, but in the event were quite fortunate to escape with a 1-1 draw. Inevitably Manuel Pellegrini's side are heavy favourites again here, but will need to keep a close eye on Rovers' prolific striker Jordan Rhodes, who has already attracted covetous glances from Premier League clubs in the current transfer window. Gwilym Mumford
*The Restoration Man
8pm, Channel 4*
Architect George Clarke follows couple Neil and Jackie as they take on the renovation of an old church in Brixham, a picturesque fishing town in Devon. Neil is a professional architect, so the spiralling budgets and impending doom characteristic of the house-building genre might not be such an issue here, although Clarke is on hand anyway with his invaluable design expertise. But with the pair having never even lived together before, will this carnival of stress reinforce their relationship or will cracks begin to show? Rachel Aroesti
**Waterloo Road*
8.30pm, BBC1*
The school-set drama continues with a well-worn but polished cast holding together a series of plod-along stories. As wonderfully named Dynasty Barry's desperation to go on the school trip builds, her mum Carol is determined to scrape the cash together. Zoe Lucker's matriarch is everything a Waterloo Road mum should be: hard of face, arched of brow and not afraid to embarrass her kids by becoming a dinner lady. Connor, meanwhile, has a job offer in London and it's decision time for Vix and Nikki's relationship. Hannah Verdier
**Hidden Histories: Britain's Oldest Family Businesses*
9pm, BBC4*
Now this is a splendid idea: a look at the stories of Britain's longest-running family businesses, through recessions, world wars and, even more menacing for the modern bottom line, internet shopping. This episode focuses on Bridport butchers Balsons, which has been in business since Henry VIII's reign. Current patriarch Richard goes on a journey through the family tree, revealing the evolution of his family's trade. But even more fascinating is the way it chronicles British life. Bim Adewunmi
**The Kumars*
9pm, Sky1*
After eight years away from our screens, the British Indian family returns to treat the famous faces of today to some amiable nose-tweaking. Despite the action leaving the cosy confines of No 42 (and the BBC) in favour of the box-strewn surroundings of the flat behind Ashwin's shop in glitzy Hounslow (and Sky1), the appeal of smushing on to the couch with Sanjeev, Ashwin and Ummi et al hasn't dimmed, with tonight's opener playing host to Daniel Radcliffe, Chevy Chase and Bafta-bagging Olivia Colman. Mark Jones
**Live At The Apollo*
9.30pm, BBC1*
Nina Conti – lately of Family Tree and the only reason you will ever need to use the words "amusing ventriloquist"– comperes this final episode of the standup comedy series. Conti specialises in a kind of elaborate, mechanical audience participation, and here she introduces acts of a similarly high polish. Jimeoin (latecomers: you say "Jim Owen") will reprise his gentle and not enormously surprising range of observational material, while Rob Beckett offers an amiable take on class. John Robinson
**Finding Mum And Dad*
10pm, Channel 4*
According to recent estimates, there are nearly 7,000 children awaiting adoption in the UK. Finding Mum And Dad introduces two of them: brothers Connor and Daniel, aged six and four. They've been in care for more than a year, pairs of siblings being harder to place than single children. Recent changes to the adoption process, and extra grants to councils – £150m last year, with another £50m scheduled for this year – are supposed to streamline the process: this film explores how, or if, this will work in real life. Andrew Mueller
*Being: Mike Tyson
10pm, FOX*
It is understandable that Mike Tyson has spent much of the near-decade since his retirement from boxing seeking some sort of redemption, though this might have seemed more sincere if he'd done so quietly and privately. The most recent instalment of this quest was a one-man show, during the tour of which this series was filmed. In this episode, Tyson meets Evander Holyfield, out of whose ears Tyson bit a chunk during their 1997 bout. Holyfield appears more forgiving of fellow boxers than of some strata of his fellow man. AM Reported by guardian.co.uk 15 hours ago.