Arguably, British journalism damaged the future of its own audiences thanks to its insistence on false equivalence. With the US presidential race hotting up, will we see the same problem in media?
More than a third of YouTube’s viewing comes from inside UK homes. Is it time to finally consider the video-sharing giant as a rival for TV ad budgets?
British streamers taking out a new video-on-demand (VOD) service has reached its lowest level in 12 months this past quarter, according to new research.
Vivendi plans to list Canal+ and Havas in London and Amsterdam respectively to reflect the “international dimension” of the businesses.
Zoopla will show house price data on Worst House on the Street for the first time.
Bringing together rich datasets with high-quality continuous panel data makes sense. There are endless examples of great pairings (Tom and Jerry, salt and pepper, gin and tonic…) — sometimes, you just can’t pick between the two.
Reporters Jack Benjamin and Ella Sagar look at the stories that mattered most in media and advertising this week, including coverage of the Euros and takeaways from the latest IPA Bellwether.
An OECD survey found that the UK has the lowest level of trust in news media. Let that be a warning to Sir Keir Starmer, who needs to encourage and strengthen a plural and independent media sector.
The organisation has increased its reporting sample of UK households from 5,150 to 7,000 to now include approximately 16,000 people.
A 60-second TV ad with Cher making surprise appearances in different programmes will run on ITV, Channel 4 and Sky.
The current BBC charter ends in 2027.