Last night BBC One offered up feverish fans of loosely business-related game shows a chance to witness yet another cull of ‘bright’ young things on The Apprentice (9pm).
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The Missing drew to a close as viewers across the country prayed to the TV gods in the hope that the finale could actually deliver and finally answer the question on everyone’s lips – what happened to Olly Hughes?
Monday night brought the end to Richard Hammond’s latest solo venture outside of the safety of Top Gear as his dramatic series about weather wrapped up after three exciting instalments.
Digital Prophet, Head of Disruption, Chief Pollinator and Media Shepherd: to the outside world, they’re stupid job titles. But inside, they do make a certain kind of sense…
The past weekend finally brought some relief for right-thinking TV viewers across the country as The X Factor’s (ITV) eleventh series finally rattled to an inconspicuous end.
Wednesday night saw BBC One’s panicked blagging show The Apprentice (9pm) reclaim some of its lost strength after three long weeks of being continuously battered by ITV.
The greatest danger facing the ‘new’ BBC Three is not that it will be hopelessly bad – but that it will lack traction and purpose as it disappears into the endless abyss of the Internet.
Tuesday night saw BBC One’s highly successful eight-part thriller, The Missing (9pm), lurch towards its no doubt devastating conclusion, with last night’s episode offering viewers a tantalising promise of some actual answers.
This month, Torin Douglas speaks with Jason Wills, marketing director at Merlin Entertainments, about social media, repositioning Thorpe Park to family audiences and selling the dream on TV.
The festival of lighter-than-hydrogen assortment of entertainment that makes up The Royal Variety Performance 2014 kicked off at 7:30pm on the commercial broadcaster and aimed to keep viewers gripped.
