countries around a quarter of the roughly 20,000 global infections were diagnosed there. the film review will be here in around 10 minutes time but now on bbc news, it s click. it s been a while since i ve been in one of these. it hasn t been in action for 60 years so you must have been 12? 0y! we are at the riverside transport museum in glasgow and you can really see how things have changed over time. one thing that s changing is the way we pay for public transport. many of us are ditching paper money and tickets. instead, we re using smartphones or, like you, smartwatches to pay for our journey. i never carry cash but one time, i went to pay for this at a shop and i didn t have it on. it was a bare wrist, so embarrassing. d oh! but for the bus or london underground, it s easy. and things might get easier with smart ticketing set to spell the end of ticket barriers. instead, sensors will talk to an app which tracks your journey and automatically charges you. 0ne system us
good evening. there s yet more disruption on britain s railways this weekend as train drivers who are members of the aslef union walk out, in a row over pay. drivers from seven rail companies are involved in the strike. it s the second this week affecting passengers, with more strikes scheduled for dates in august. our correspondent, judith moritz, reports on the scale of the disruption. folkestone station this morning was a gateway to nowhere. no southeastern trains running and passengers who didn t know about today s strike caught by surprise. so we were planning to go to brighton and now we ll have to find an alternative. probably we ll have to take the bus or something. not right, because i don t go to london very often and i ve got a lunch date with my daughter and a friend. but not all stations are closed. though around 5,000 train drivers at seven companies have walked out over pay on a busy sporting weekend, not all lines are affected. at leeds station, northern rail
a volcanic love story. quite a mixture. yes, so let s start with thirteen lives. this is a dramatisation by the director ron howard of the thai cave rescue of 2018, about which there was a documentary recently that we discussed. yet, not that long ago. that s right. ajuniorfootball team and their coach, 13 of them trapped in a cave following flooding. the screenplay is by william nicholson, as i said, ron howard, who s a very good director and has, in the past, directed things like apollo 13, which is again, a real life rescue mission. colin farrell and viggo mortensen who you wouldn t recognise when they come on screen as the british cavers who first find the boys and their coach. here s a clip. you are very brave. how do you stay so strong? we are team we help eachl other, and our coach help us. coach. on behalf of our coach, we stay strong. - he teach us to meditate. and we pray. you pray? i bet you do. all right. we dig! this is to get out? good work. so, the terrif
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me is kieran andrews, scottish political editor at the times. tomorrow s front pages, starting with the sunday express carries the latest policy initiative from prime ministerial wannabe rishi sunak he says he ll revitalise britain s high streets; the independent leads on a poll that suggests more than half the country want a general election to be called as soon as the tory leadership contest is over and a new prime minister is in place; the sunday telegraph also leads on the race to be the next conservative leader it says rishi sunaks wants the nhs to be able to fine people who miss their appointments, and it reports liz truss says there will be no second scottish independence referendum on her watch ; the sunday mirror focuses on the england match tomorrow calling the lionesses roar talent but it s main story focuses on conservative leadership contender rishi sunak. over at the