Have traditional broadcasters really hit a stale patch, stifled by a love for nostalgia and a reluctance to innovate? Raymond Snoddy dissects the latest in a series of assaults on television
More Weekly Columnists articles
From the BBC’s annoying channel-swapping, to NBC’s terrible adverts-to-sport ratio, how is the way we watch major sporting events changing, asks Raymond Snoddy
The ANA lifted the lid on the media toilet earlier this summer to discover something rotten. How can the industry get rid of such a putrid mess, asks Dominic Mills
There is a commendable rise recently of media companies trying out new business ideas, writes Raymond Snoddy – but the tricky thing about innovation is that it doesn’t always work.
Many journalists view Trump as a high-risk demagogue – but is that a good enough excuse for them to throw their best-practice textbooks out of the window, asks Raymond Snoddy
Will withholding the names and images of terrorists from TV and newspapers have any real impact in the age of social media, asks Raymond Snoddy
Dominic Mills argues that the evidence supposedly meant to demonstrate ad effectiveness is just too feeble to truly work
There are two fundamental problems with digital, writes Dominic Mills – but are they enough to swing the pendulum back in print’s favour?
From the recent Tory leadership race, to the Chilcot inquiry and Iraq war, newspapers still very much set the political agenda, writes Raymond Snoddy – but not always for good…
Artificial Intelligence might be about to become the next big brand tool – but where do agencies fit in, wonders Dominic Mills – plus: why Facebook has forced media owners into a tailspin
