This could be TV3's most galling move yet. Just when we all thought it was safe to write the channel off as a John Campbell-less wasteland of mindless reality shows, they turn around and bring us one of the year's most highly acclaimed new shows - a legitimate, quality British drama series, for heaven's sake - and they're even screening it in a viewer-friendly timeslot.
Humans (Tuesday nights, 8.30) is a "sci-fi thriller" in the most accessible, engaging sense of those words, set in a parallel near-future where synthetic humans - "synths" - are a common household appliance. These lifelike robots have reached a point where they're barely distinguishable from humans, and are all the creepier for it. They can do everything: cook the dinner, do the laundry, lurk ominously in doorways ...
In its tense, slightly uneasy atmosphere the show shares more than a few similarities with Charlie Brooker's popular Black Mirror series. But where that show can threaten to beat you over the head with a dystopian "message" to each episode, Humans seems to be more measured in its approach to exploring the possibilities and problems presented by the rise of artificial intelligence.
Our sympathetic human entry point into Humans' synth-assisted world is pale, sad-eyed Joe Hawkins, a familiar-looking but unpinnable everyman (Tom Goodman-Hill, who was the bloke who hired David Brent to be a motivational speaker in season two of The Office). With his wife out of town on business he has been left to skulk about the house despairing at the tedium of family life. In the end it's the picking up the kids' shoes that does it. He snaps and announces: "We're going shopping."