Children in Need Rocks brought an eclectic line up of popular musicians of the day under one roof to provide some cheeky rawwwwk on a school night – as Professor Brian Cox investigated the science of Doctor Who.
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After 25 long years, Wednesday night brought some sweet relief for actor David Suchet as he finally laid Agatha Christie’s Poirot (ITV, 8pm) to rest.
The avenging barrister’s actions secured the 9pm slot with a 20% share and generated 478 tweets per minute.
Monday night saw the Beeb offer up a double helping of horror as Ripper Street and The Choir: Sing While You Work both went out at 9pm – with Gareth Malone’s man beard out-terrifying anything the period slasher drama had to offer.
As Google takes steps towards running a fully-subscribed search service, it can only be to the detriment of advertisers says Jon Baron, CEO of TagMan.
9.5 million viewers tuned in to learn that Lady Mary’s epic bout of suitor-juggling looked set to be dragged out for another series at least, easily securing the 9pm slot with an audience share of 39%.
Starcom MediaVest’s Steve Smith says brands should augment experiences with sensory impacts – with what he calls ‘cultural synaesthesia’. So how can brands makes it work?
Using the very latest research findings, UKOM’s James Smythe sets the record straight on multi-device browsing – and debunks some entrenched myths for media owners.
The impressive audience meant that EastEnders (BBC One, 7:30pm) was the most watched show of the entire day, with the rare glimmer of happiness helping secure a 33% share.
ISBA’s Bob Wootton was dismayed Facebook re-allowed decapitation videos – why does the social media giant continue to antagonise advertisers by directly refusing to give them safe passage on their channel?
