let s take you through what today will look like. the current prime minister, liz truss, held her fourth and final cabinet meeting starting about an hour ago. she is due to make a statement outside number 10 at around 10:15, before travelling to buckingham palace for an audience with king charles. after this, rishi sunak will head to the palace, where he ll be invited to form a government. then it s back to downing street, and the new prime minister will address the nation at around 11:35. and over the next 2a hours, we can expect to see a trickle of cabinet appointments which will start to shape what rishi sunak s government will look like. of course, not just of course, notjust appointments, but the message too. what is the message is likely to be when he appears at the podium which is just being put up behind us? first of all four at liz truss, then for a rishi sunak later on. keeping us company throughout the morning as we follow these events is nick eardley, our chief po
the 73 year old lived in a building adacent to the flats. you are watching bbc news. next it s time for talking movies the review of 2022. hello from new york. i m tom brook and welcome to our talking movies review of 2022, special edition. in today s programme we look back at highlights of the year in cinema. we review many of the major movie events of 2022. we look at the films that nobody thought would become big global hits as well as the breakout arthouse offerings. plus my top ten films of the year. without doubt, one of the biggest movie events of 2022 was the arrival ofjames cameron s sci fi epic avatar: the way of water. it is of course the sequel to his 2009 avatar movie which became the biggest grossing film of all time. i went with some trepidation to see the new picture the other day here in manhattan. i say trepidation because it s more than three hours long. well, i did survive and i was very impressed by the cinema technology. it really is beautiful to watch
233 seats total. bill: on the senate side a toss-up expected to come down to four big races we ve been watching all year. pennsylvania, georgia, nevada, arizona. dana: democrats appear to be stumbling in the homestretch. they have failed to put forward a coherent message on inflation and the economy, two issues where the president is seen as a liability. president biden: we the democrats are the ones fiscally responsible. let s get that straight now, okay? we re investing in all of america, reducing everyday costs while lowering the deficit at the same time. republicans are fiscally reckless. i m here to deliver what i believe is a closingment what we need to do in the next 15 days to assure a victory. dana: team fox coverage. karl rove is on deck with analysis. we begin in washington with alexandria hoff. we ll start by taking a look at shifts in two races for governor. interesting dynamics are at play. let s go to oklahoma. you have a democrat who used to be a rep
on the asteroid. i was telling alex before when we were talking about this, when i kept hearing this incredible story yesterday about smashing into the asteroid, come on, what was i thinking. i was thinking aerosmith i don t want to miss a thing, hear the news story i don t want to close my eyes it was incredible. willie, stop him. a sappy summer movie. they tried to do this last night. you got bruce. you throw affleck in there, mika, if you don t know what we re talking about, this was a huge movie 25 years ago, with the plausible plot they trained oil drillers in a matter of days to become nasa astronauts and effectively do what we saw yesterday in real life, they knocked a rocket with a ship the size of a refrigerator, they knocked an asteroid off its course yesterday, nasa did this in real life. no liv tyler, now they know if something is barrelling toward earth, they have a decent chance of knocking it away. scientifically, the movie, i don t think it w
one top secret document was among those found at the president s office. the white house leaving many unanswered questions about how and why documents ended up there. is it too late to do damage control now that a special counsel is involved? plus, historic selma, alabama taking a direct hit from a massive tornado. one of more than two dozen that plowed through the southern u.s. smashing buildings launching mobile homes into the air across a 200 mile stretch. at least 700 people were killed including a little boy. we ll take you to selma live. and my live interview with captain sully sullenberger, the man best known for the miracle on the hudson. he ll share his unique insights on what s right and wrong with the airline industry in 2023 and what he thinks needs to be done to fix it. but we start with the white house on defense amid new details and new fallout from the discovery of classified documents at president biden s former office and home in delaware. nbc news learn