• ‘Strong evidence’ junk food TV ads make children eat more, charity claims

    Cancer Research UK has called for Ofcom to ban junk food adverts being shown during programmes that are popular with teenagers, after research by the charity claimed to show a direct link between TV advertising and obesity.
    The charity commissioned YouGov to survey 3,348 teenagers aged between 11 and 19 on their viewing habits and diet. It found that those who watched three hours of commercial TV a day or streamed content with ads were more than twice (139%) as likely to drink fizzy drinks
  • Tanya Joseph: Seven ways to make 2018 a successful year

    I once did ‘dry January’. I discovered that January is a very long month and that I didn’t feel any better having been on the wagon for its entirety. I shan’t be doing it again. But this is the time of year when one can take stock, reflect on behaviours (professional and personal) and decide to change things.
    I don’t mean deciding that you have to lose 15kg by Easter, do an Iron Man, climb K2 or walk the Inca Trail in bare feet. I am talking about achievable t
  • Tesco Clubcard, Pret, Volkswagen: Everything that matters this morning

    Tesco backtracks on changes to Clubcard loyalty scheme
    Tesco has backtracked on planned changes to its Clubcard loyalty scheme after facing a backlash from customers. The supermarket was set to change the value of some of its rewards; currently points collected can be turned into vouchers that can be redeemed for between two and four times their value. Tesco wanted to change this to mean vouchers would always be three times their face value.
    The supermarket argued this would make the system easi
  • OnePlus, the Guardian, Formula One: Everything that matters this morning

    OnePlus breaks billion-dollar sales barrier
    Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus has broken the billion-dollar sales barrier for the first time, doubling its revenues last year to more than $1.4bn (£1bn).
    Speaking to The Telegraph, OnePlus chief executive Pete Lau confirmed the company had made “healthy profits” during the period and now plans to challenge bigger players by collaborating with mobile networks in the US and Europe. While the company started out selling to fans d
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  • Iceland, Airbnb, Disney: Everything that matters this morning

    Iceland becomes first grocer to go ‘plastic free’ by 2023
    Supermarket chain Iceland has said it will eliminate or drastically reduce plastic packaging of all its own label products by the end of 2023.
    Prime Minister Theresa May has called plastic waste “one of the great environmental scourges of our time”, and vowed to ban all avoidable plastic waste in the UK by 2042.
    As a first measure, the grocer says new food ranges being launched in February will be packaged using a
  • Greggs, KitKat, YouTube: Everything that matters this morning

    Greggs unveils hot food menu with evening appeal
    High street baker Greggs is continuing to expand its offer to customers, following the introduction of home delivery and the increased focus on breakfast and healthy options, by testing a menu designed to appeal to evening eaters. Evening is currently the “the part of the day when Greggs doesn’t trade”, CEO Roger Whiteside is quoted saying in The Guardian. “Hot food is the last of the big food trends we have chosen to purs
  • Budweiser, Nike, Asda: Everything that matters this morning

    Bud takes advantage of dry January with Prohibition push
    Budweiser has kicked off a marketing push for its alcohol-free Prohibition Brew beer to make the most of consumers doing dry January.
    As part of the drive, Love Island’s Gabby Allen, will unveil a fleet of beer floats that will travel around the country giving away free samples of Prohibition Brew, as part of the brand’s UK launch.
    Budweiser is also partnering with Time Out to raise awareness of the alcohol-free variant, includ
  • Five trends that will change the media landscape in 2018

    Streaming services will take more cues from traditional media
    Streaming services are working hard to steal eyeballs from traditional broadcasters – and they seem to be succeeding. Netflix beat analysts’ expectations by adding 5.3 million new subscribers during the third quarter of 2017.
    And it is planning on spending some serious money to continue that trajectory, with a content budget of roughly $8bn (£5.9bn) for 2018 – a major leap from the $2bn (£1.5bn) it spent
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