• The barefooted 20-year-old's song Only Teardrops won the contest despite tough competition from Azerbaijan and Ukraine.    
  • Ahead of the Eurovision final in Sweden on Saturday, aficionado Dave Goodman predicts the runners and riders for the top three places in the competition.    
  • Could a silent giant from Ukraine prove to be the real star of this year's Eurovision Song Contest?    
  • The trailer for NBC's The Michael J. Fox show the actor imitating real-life by playing Mike Henry, a news anchor returning to work despite his battle with Parkinson's Disease.    
  • Broadchurch star Olivia Colman was left feeling overwhelmed after winning two awards for two very different roles at the TV Baftas 2013.    
  • The Telegraph's Cole Moreton meets the 'Horrible Histories' author Terry Deary who is now working on a four-book series called Dangerous Days.    
  • A news anchor who was fired for swearing during his first broadcast has appeared on The Late Show With David Letterman to talk about his humiliating gaffe.    
  • The BBC's new director-general, Tony Hall, has told MPs at a select committee hearing that he wants to cap severance payments to senior managers at £150,000, which is in-line with the civil service.    
  • Watch live coverage from 10.30am as the new BBC director-general Tony Hall is questioned by MPs on his priorities for the corporation over the next few months.    
  • A musical parody gives us a glimpse of what may be in store for Downton Abbey season four. "Downton Abbey at 45 Below" is directed by John Walton West.    
  • Ceri Thomas, Head of Programmes for BBC News, insists they did a proper risk assessment for a Panorama documentary on North Korea and properly informed the students on the trip.    
  • Sir Peter Sutherland, the Chair of Governors at LSE, says the BBC's refusal to drop a documentary about North Korea is "extremely regrettable".    
  • The BBC presenter says he is 'frankly lucky to be alive" but hopes to return to his eponymous BBC2 programme once he has completed further rehabilitation.    
  • "There is a wrinkle" in the BBC's argument that it withheld information from London School of Economics students visiting North Korea for their own safety, says The Telegraph's Media, Telecoms and Technology Editor.    
  • Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show, Foreign Secretary William Hague says he sees no immediate need to withdraw his country's diplomats from North Korea and that Britian should not "play" to the country's rhetoric.
  • Inspired by the BBC's new series, The Great British Sewing Bee, Paul Kendall tries his hand at sewing one of the easier items to make...pyjamas.
  • Members of The Tonight Show audience give their reaction to the official announcement that Jay Leno is leaving the talk show next spring, to be replaced by Jimmy Fallon.
  • Talk show veteran Jay Leno uses his famous opening monologue to congratulate Jimmy Fallon who will take over as host of The Tonight Show next spring.
  • New BBC director general Tony Hall says he never heard any rumours about Jimmy Savile when he previously worked for the organisation.
  • New BBC director-general Tony Hall says he is excited about the role but knows that it is an "enormous responsibility".

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