The Broadchurch-esqe drama from Walford was Thursday’s most watched show, as friends and family of Lucy Beale slowly started to uncover the truth about her life before her demise.
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Last night BBC One’s Panorama (9pm) helped traumatise the midweek prime time audience with its latest shocking expose on some particularly worrying care facilities.
BBC’s Breakfast (6am) show somehow managed to remain unsullied by the flashy commercial experience on the other side.
A new report reveals that a many marketers are not trained in marketing performance and ROI – so no wonder the average boardroom is ill-informed and financially illiterate regarding the value of advertising, writes David Brennan.
Suzy Young, data and journals director at Warc, examines the findings of the latest Advertising Association/Warc Expenditure Report – kicking off with a focus on the long-term changes felt by the ad industry.
In place of a straight-laced Anna Ford and David Frost, viewers were instead treated to a line-up of friendly chit chat, news and reassuring facial expressions.
The latest Advertising Association/Warc Expenditure Report forecasts predict growth of 5.5% in 2014 and 6.5% in 2015, taking UK adspend past £20 billion for the first time in 2015.
On Channel 4, Lester Nygaard’s (Martin Freeman) world continued to close in around him as an idealistic young cop started to poke around the recent deaths in the sweet little Minnesota town featured in Fargo (9pm).
The second episode of Parking Mad perched itself right on the front lines of the great parking war – which apparently is West Bromwich, Croydon and Selby.
Wednesday night saw BBC One’s latest short-lived period drama, Jamaica Inn (9pm), come to a crashing end after three consecutive nights of refined gothic melancholy.
