After eight weeks the emotionally manipulative divisive documentary, that swears it has something important to say, came to an end as Educating Yorkshire (9pm) closed its doors for the term.
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As Rajar releases its third quarter results for radio listening, Newsline has captured some industry reaction, with opinion from MEC Global, Gekko and ZenithOptimedia.
Agatha Christie’s Poirot (ITV, 8pm) finally returned to TV screens last night, four months after the series opening aired, indicating ITV is happy to drip feed agitated fans the last lot of episodes.
AA/Warc’s full year adspend forecasts have been upgraded with expenditure set to reach an all-time high of £18.7 billion in 2014.
Nick Grimshaw’s BBC Radio 1 breakfast show drops to 5.6 million listeners – the lowest figure recorded in almost two decades – plus the rest of the radio market news in our Rajar round-up.
A poll has revealed that the majority of the public believe that investigative journalism has a positive effect on democracy – yet does it have a future in a time of flagging newspaper sales and uncertain business models?
After 10 grueling weeks, Tuesday evening brought sweet relief to many baking fans as their magnificent new ruler was finally crowned on the finale of The Great British Bake Off (BBC Two, 8pm).
Public Wi-Fi is no longer a Cinderella technology, says GfK’s Colin Strong, but one which is now seen to confer strategic advantage and an increasingly important means for brands to engage with consumers.
A new study from AOL UK reveals a new breed of consumers – described as a fast-moving, tech-savvy, multi-screening generation – are increasingly attracted by content emerging though native advertising.
Can advertising shrug off its outmoded garbs and ‘go native’? Author Simon Pont looks at some of the best examples and argues that the future of content is looking very bright – so long as it can give people something they want.
