Terrestrial Unreported World Channel 4, 7.35pm In the heart of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, blameless people are paying a cruel price for the world's financial crises. As the price of gold rises to record levels, thousands of miners are illegally mining in remote territory set aside for the indigenous Yanomami people, who have had little contact with the outside world. The miners bring disease, alcoholism and prostitution, as well as ecological devastation.
- Terrestrial
Unreported World Channel 4, 7.35pm
In the heart of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, blameless people are paying a cruel price for the world's financial crises. As the price of gold rises to record levels, thousands of miners are illegally mining in remote territory set aside for the indigenous Yanomami people, who have had little contact with the outside world. The miners bring disease, alcoholism and prostitution, as well as ecological devastation.
Benidorm ITV1, 10pm
Mel's proposal to Madge is the talk of the resort. Janice tries to convince Madge not to agree to wed a man they have known for only five minutes. After all, for all they know he could be a serial romeo Lib Dem leader. Kate encounters Mateo again, but after telling him that last year's traumatic affair was simply a moment of madness, it becomes clear that Mateo doesn't actually remember her. An arm-wrestling match organised by the Oracle and his mum turns into Fight Club, with a chance to settle old scores.
Teenage Kicks ITV1, 10.30pm
Vernon faces up to home truths when Max and Milly tell him what a rubbish dad he was while they were growing up. Vernon is mortified and sets about putting things right. First on the list is Max's bully from school. Vernon decides to confront psycho Andy Hollingsworth at the pub and take revenge for the years of abuse he inflicted.
- Digital
Sacred Music BBC4, 8pm
Simon Russell Beale travels to Germany, where Luther's Protestant Reformation led to a musical revolution and the glorious works of J S Bach. Simon's journey begins in Eisenach, east Germany, where Bach was born in 1685. Dominating the town is the impressive Wartburg Castle, where more than 150 years earlier Luther had begun the huge task of translating the New Testament into German. Bach owned two copies of Luther's translation and referred to it frequently. Simon visits the room where the translation was done, beginning a revolution in the establishment of a single German identity. His next stop is the small town of Wittenberg, where Luther held his first service.
William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet More4, 9pm
Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes star in Baz Luhrmann's Oscar-nominated version of ol' Shakey's tale of star-cross'd lovers. Updated in setting to Verona Beach, Luhrmann's film retains the dialogue but imposes the director's own stunning visual stamp on the film, making a classic play into a classic film.
The Rolling Stones ITV4, 12.05am
Red-carpet access to the star-stunned UK premiere of Martin Scorsese's Strolling Bones in-concert movie Shine a Light. The pride of Anstruther, Edith Bowman, chats to some old geezers: Mr Jagger, Mr Watts, Mr Wood and Mr Richards.
- Radio
Performance on 3 Radio 3, 7pm
Now billed as one of the station's new voices on world music, Mary Ann Kennedy, familiar to Radio Scotland listeners, hosts Radio 3's Awards for World Music ceremony at Camden Town in London. Featured acts include Indian classical singer Kaushiki Chakrabarty and Algerian rai-rocker Rachid Taha. Alternatively, on Radio 2 at 7pm, humorist and musician Tim Minchin continues his exploration of music's debt to different cultures since the sixteenth century. This week, in Classical City to City, his choice is Vienna. Earlier, in Monsieur le Maire (Radio 4, 11am), Susan Marling reports on the re-election campaign of the first British mayor in France, Ken Tatham, in the Normandy village of Saint Ceneri le Gerei.













