Two unrelated developments this week both suggest that the long predicted disruptional change for network television may be reaching critical temperature, writes Raymond Snoddy.
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While the future of programmatic TV ad trading looks both promising and inevitable, there are still huge barriers to overcome, a new TubeMogul white paper has found.
The penultimate episode of BBC One’s deceit-soaked working class drama Ordinary Lies (9pm) and, even though the cautionary tale once again secured the prime time slot, this time attracted its smallest audience yet.
Despite a massive online leak and the fact it arrived a whole day after airing in the States, nihilist punishment fantasy show Game of Thrones (9pm) made a triumphant homecoming on Sky Atlantic.
The ten services with the most subscribers across the globe now have a total of nearly 130 million television customers.
Advertisers might be rushing to create ads for every platform – but in reality people don’t move from device to device to chase their messages, writes Channel 5’s Agostino Di Falco.
Saturday saw Channel 4 kick off a weekend of sporting and entertainment events as the world’s most famous steeplechase got under way for the 168th time on The Grand Nation Live from Aintree (1pm).
Last night saw BBC One’s The Truth About… series, a succession of disposable and pandering magazine shows vaguely concerning itself with general health, once again secure the prime time window for BBC One.
Kind of like I’m a Celebrity… but with no celebrities and a bucket load of real suffering, Wednesday night saw the return of one of Channel 4’s moderate hits of 2014.
BBC One has had its best start to the year in a decade, according to final consolidated data released this week.