Last night saw BBC One jump aboard the current adult fantasy obsession with the launch of their latest big budget Sunday night drama. Based upon a number of salacious novels by Philippa Gregory, The White Queen (9pm) delivered a mixture of pageantry and good ol’ rumpy-pumpy.
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Amol Rajan becomes Fleet Street’s first non-white editor as The Independent, The Evening Standard and i announce new appointments.
Magna Global, Interpublic’s trading and forecasting wing, has predicted the global advertising market will grow by +3.0% this year as UK ad revenue is set to grow 2.2% in 2013 and 2.5% in 2014.
This week, Simon Andrews takes a look at the key highlights from Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference and asks if all the criticism is starting to rattle the tech giant. Perhaps, Andrews argues – but we shouldn’t bet against them not claiming their mojo back in the longer term…
OMD’s The Future of Britain project is trying to understand how the recession has impacted people’s lives – and the implications for brands in such a diverse, fragmented and chaotic society. In the first of our exclusive new series, OMD’s insights director Chris Worrell explains how the British household is changing – – from old people that just won’t stop having fun, to children that just can’t quite fly the nest…
Despite all the hullaballoo surrounding last night’s live launch of Big Brother, BBC Two’s long running documentary show, Horizon, managed to steal the show.
Sky Sports Ashes HD will screen 63 days of cricket this summer, including live ball-by-ball coverage of the Ashes – available to customers at no extra cost.
Similar to social media peers such as Twitter, Instagram and Tumblr that all integrate the hashtag feature, Facebook hashtags will allow users to add context to a post or indicate that it is part of a larger discussion.
Global Radio has today filed an application with the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) for a review of the Competition Commission’s final decision in the Global Radio/Real & Smooth transaction.
BARB, the official source of television viewing figures in the UK, has today announced that it has appointed Kantar Media to collect census data for TV viewing through all computer devices, including tablets.
