The return came at a cost for the third series of Death in Paradise (9pm) as its main star became the latest victim of the week, opening the door for a brand new ‘bumbling’ lead; new face, exact same characteristics.
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Between one million and 1.5 million UK homes will subscribe to two or more pay-TV providers by the middle of 2014, according to Deloitte.
BBC1’s Sherlock has broken a record for timeshift viewing, but Richard Marks of Research the Media argues that, as digital TV reaches maturity, growth in timeshifted and VOD viewing may actually be slowing.
Whether its harmless pandering to pent-up nation or inciting hatred, the show is working a treat for Channel 4.
After returning from the dead following a spectacularly final-looking suicide attempt three weeks ago, Sherlock (BBC One, 8:30pm) continued to push credibility to extreme levels.
Nobel award-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman has inadvertently indicated what is potentially the most critical contextual factor for the power of media channels – but how can we make the ‘fast/slow’ media paradigm work?
Over 103 million homes in the US will have pay-TV by the end of 2014, with two thirds of pay-TV subscribers expressing interest in features they currently do not have, according to new research from Parks Associates.
New figures from the Advertising Association and Warc show highest year on year growth for three years is fueling optimism.
Despite online taking ever larger slices of advertising budgets, new findings from Nielsen and Statista reveal that digital ads still lag behind traditional media when it comes to consumer trust.
The second new episode in 16 years saw Sharon, Tracey and Dorien go to very extreme lengths to pay the bills – allowing a TOWIE star to cameo in a misguided attempt at popularity truly is scraping the barrel.