Our guide to this year's final show...
TV music show Glee is set to have three main characters exit the show, and the end of the next series.
BBC strike could lead to news programmes being taken off air
The Voice, a US singing talent show which sees hopefuls perform for judges without them seeing their face is now coming to the UK and is bringing along its US judge Cee Lo Green.
Promised to be a 'working class' range, Robbie Williams put his name or rather his Grandfathers Jack Farrell to clothing but caused upset amongst fans due to the unaffordable high prices.
A man, who posted his opinions on an alleged fixture of the recent Britain's Got Talent final, was cautioned by the police under the Malicious Communications Act.
Britain's Next Top Model returns for its seventh series today, and with it sees the return of the customary catfights and tantrums too. However this time it's not just the contestants who are rifling each other's feathers; it seems the nastiness has now spread to the judges.
Perhaps it's because the previous series only seemed to end a few months ago, but after two episodes, "The Apprentice" already seems to be getting a little repetitive.
After a brief interval "The Apprentice" returned to our screens this week, for a brand new series in which the winner will get a £250,000 investment into their own business from Lord Sugar.
Yesterday the 2010 series of the Apprentice finally came to an end with Lord Sugar declaring Stella English to be the winner of the much coveted six-figure-salary job at his organisation.
In the penultimate episode of the Apprentice the five remaining candidates faced their toughest challenge yet. They had their grandiose claims about themselves challenged and examined by a tough team of Lord Sugar's henchpersons.
On the day that the OECD published its international league tables showing that Britain's educational system is now in such a state that it falls behind those of minor ex-Soviet Republics, the candidates on the Apprentice yet again demonstrated their unbelievable ignorance.
This week Lord Sugar and the Apprentice were briefly transformed into David Dickinson and Bargain Hunt as the contestants were given the task of finding ten set items at the lowest possible price.
This week on the Apprentice the candidates were sent off to Hamburg to sell crisps by British manufacturers to the German market.
One of the many things that surprises me when I watch the Apprentice is just how shockingly ignorant the contestants, supposedly some of the best brains in Britain, are.
This week's Apprentice clearly showed the need of any good business leader to always have a good overall view of everything. The task was simple, bake something and sell as much of it as possible to corporate and individual client's.
Following the firing of Dan Harris last week the teams competing to be Lord Sugar's "Apprentice" appeared to shy away from the dictatorial manner of Mr Harris, with varying degrees of success.
Otto von Bismarck, the famed Chancellor of 19th century Germany, is famously said to have remarked that in life there are two things that it is better not to know how they are made: laws and sausages. Watching the first episode of the new series of "The Apprentice" I can't help but feel the old man was right.