A new YouView study reveals the influence that Facebook and Twitter have on the nation’s TV viewing, and how Brits are using the platforms to discuss – and avoid talking about – their favourite shows.
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This week Dominic Mills chews his way through a menu of advertising news, from Omnicom’s £30m Channel 5 exit, to marketing’s apparent identity crisis.
Couldn’t be bothered to read Capital in the Twenty-First Century, or any other weighty tome on the future of capitalism and its impact on the media industry? Good job Route’s James Whitmore has done it for you.
Johnston Press’ chief commercial officer, Neil Jones, is to leave the regional publisher, with immediate effect, after just five months in the role, Newsline has learned.
Samsung has announced that it will be discontinuing the sale of plasma televisions at the end of 2014, and instead focusing on ultra-HD and curved TV models.
Should programmatic platforms steer clear of advertising creative? No, argues TubeMogul’s Ian Monaghan – they should help inform strategy and improve the art through feedback.
Speaking at Thinkbox’s Big Think event on Thursday, Laurence Green, founder of creative agency 101, warned advertisers of the risks of focusing too much on short-term results and forgetting the value of long-term advertising.
During Q1 2014 there were 4.6 million new subscriptions, taking the total number of subs to 100.9 million.
In his round-up of everything mobile, Simon Andrews, founder of Addictive!, this week looks at embracing digital, the latest mobile adspend forecasts and new developments in the mobile money space.
BBC Two kicked off a highly ambitious new series, bagging Maggie Gyllenhaal for the lead role for the political thriller The Honourable Woman (9pm).
