Tuesday night’s prime time fun saw not one but two final instalments of two very different shows about children, as Child Genius faced off against the brave troopers of Great Ormond Street for the third week in a row.
More Newsline articles
Despite the prolific rise of smartphones, laptops remain the most popular screens, according to new data from the second wave of Mediatel’s Connected Screens report.
Despite a 4% decline in viewing figures, which chief executive Adam Crozier said remains a key area for improvement, pre-tax profits were up 25% to £391 million.
Full report available at:Mediatel Connected > Connected Surveys > Data
The first episode saw sisters Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf jump head first into a world of excitable artistic debate while meeting some YOLO-type characters who were determined to change the stuffy conventions.
AA/Warc: UK ad spend in Q1 was the highest on record with growth in traditional display advertising – including TV, radio and outdoor – particularly strong.
The rise in weather-activated ads shows how the barriers to real-time campaigns are finally coming down, writes Glen Wilson, managing director of Posterscope.
The new BBC Store, run by the Beeb’s commercial arm BBC Worldwide, will aim to offer more than 10,000 hours of programming within the first year, including popular shows such as Doctor Who.
Sky is set to offer satellite households an “Apple and Netflix-style” experience, moving on from the grid-style guide that the broadcaster first developed back in 1998.
The News Hub, a start-up open journalism platform, has appointed Graham Lovelace as a senior advisor to help guide editorial development and marketing strategies.
