BORDERLINE, C5, 10pm

I DON’T look to Channel 5 for comedy. I don’t look to them for anything, really, unless I’ve taken a severe blow to the head and want to recover by watching Big Brother and car chases.

So I was surprised to find myself e-mailing their press team about this new show.

It’s a spoof documentary set in the fictional Northend Airport and follows the bungling Border Force as they try to cope with directives from the Home Office that order them to keep out the bad guys whilst remaining politically correct and most definitely not using that awfully bad word – profiling. “No-one is using that word!” gasps the boss. So when an Arab passenger turns up draped in a headscarf and white robes, the beleaguered official sighs, “Aw man! We’re definitely gonna have to ask you some questions.” But definitely not in a “profiley” way…

It’s topical, yes, but at the same time feels very dated. The spoof documentary set in an incompetent workplace was done to perfection by The Office back in 2001. This often feels like a tepid tribute act, but does have some good moments.

BRITAIN’S POMPEII: A VILLAGE LOST IN TIME, BBC4, 9pm

THE real Pompeii was part of the glorious Roman civilisation and met its end in spectacular fashion. The “British Pompeii”, on the other hand, is very British indeed, being a recently discovered village buried in the marshy fenland of Cambridgeshire, covered in centuries of muck, drizzle and dampness.

Three thousand years ago, a Bronze Age settlement caught fire and its ruins gradually sank into the mud. Luckily, the boggy earth contained peat, which has preserved much of the contents. Now some excited archaeologists are at work to excavate this “perfectly preserved time capsule that’s been dubbed The British Pompeii” and take us inside a reconstructed Bronze Age home that's been reconstructed using the various unearthed tools, fabrics and utensils.

The show also asks what started the dreadful fire all those years ago. Could it have been an act of arson or was it just a terrible accident?