Wednesday evening saw the TV schedule inundated with a heavy slice of prime time glitter and pomp as the self-congratulatory festival of backslapping that is The National Television Awards 2014 (ITV, 7:30pm) took place.
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Tony Gallagher did an excellent job as editor of the Daily Telegraph, had a leading role in the newspaper scoop of the decade and worked for a very profitable newspaper group. So why was he sacked? asks Raymond Snoddy
Speaking at MediaTel’s CES Debrief, Decipher’s Nigel Walley says media owners can no longer afford to keep making new apps for proprietary operating systems in what has become a deeply fragmented market.
The European ad market experienced some small respite in the third quarter, with only a small decrease of 0.4 percent year over year, 3 according to Nielsen.
The search for that ultimate palate-pleasing taste netted the smallest audience out of all the main broadcasters in the 9pm time slot.
Monday night saw ardent and bereaved soap fans come together on ITV as a vigil was held for one of soap land’s most enduringly popular characters.
Jaguar’s latest campaign is playing up to the car manufacturer’s roots and heritage to great effect, says Dominic Mills – but will it be enough to see it stand out among the splurge of Super Bowl ads?
From Gary Barlow’s Big Ben Bash to Matt Smith’s farewell as the Time Lord, the BBC dominated the Christmas TV schedule.
If Saturday’s showy content was a bit hollow, Sunday evening provided a barrage of scripted drama with the return of feverishly anticipated Call the Midwife (BBC One, 9pm) leading the way.
The festive period appears to have hit the national newspaper market with the latest ABC results for December 2013 showing declines all round – except for the Guardian, which reported a marginal increase.
