Comment – Page 180
-
Comment
Public Enemies / PhoneShop / The Witch Doctor...
Milkshake!’s Sarah Broad and doc maker Robb Leach on murder, shop assistants and jungle cures.
-
Comment
Off Cuts: Bonneville in boneshocker
Hugh Bonneville is among the cast riding the wave of Downton’s success.
-
-
-
-
Comment
The future of investigative journalism
Wherever you go nowadays, everyone is terribly worried about the future of investigative journalism, writes Dorothy Byrne.
-
Comment
State of Welsh media is a drama in itself
Ken Skates is looking for answers in a bid to maintain a sustainable and forward-thinking media industry in Wales.
-
-
Comment
Time for a little C4 mischief
Broadcaster needs programmes that pack a punch to attract key audience.
-
Comment
A radical idea for local radio
BBC must think differently following DQF, says Andrew Harrison.
-
Comment
Investing in indies’ success is BBCW’s business
Our start-up deals catch the headlines, but we do a lot more besides, says Helen Jackson.
-
Comment
Animation industry needs a break
Future for the sector looks very bleak without government help, writes Miles Bullough.
-
Comment
You can’t trust anything on TV
Are programme-makers deliberately misleading us? You bet they are, says Steven D Wright.
-
-
Comment
Sorority Girls / Stormchaser / Ade In Britain
The BBC’s Amy Oakes and Unit Media’s Lucy Clark on college girls, tornadoes and Ade’s travels.
-
Comment
Off Cuts: E4's time-shifting troubles
For the third time in three years, E4 was kept waiting for Misfits’ series launch ratings as a glitch following the clocks going back delayed our usual overnight data on Monday.
-
Comment
Frozen Planet / Death in Paradise
Michael Rosser and George Bevir cast their eye over two new shows.
-
-
Comment
Talking to the Taliban
Finding Taliban fighters to talk on camera was always going to be the greatest challenge, writes Sam Collyns, series producer of Secret Pakistan (BBC2, 9pm).
-
Comment
The rise and rise of UK TV viewing
A recent report revealed that people in the UK are watching television for longer. Dr Thomas Kirsch examines the possible reasons why.