experts assembled here tonight, some breaking news. the january 6th committee has subpoenaed donald trump today. using its final hearing to make this historic move, which paves a path to the first ever clash between donald trump and the congress over whether he will show up, speak under oath, tell the truth. that s our top story. tonight we will also be covering other breaking news coming out of the supreme court this afternoon. the supreme court rejecting donald trump s filing in that mar-a-lago stolen documents case. this ruling rebuffs trump s attempt to try to slow down any review of the classified documents, which the government says he stole, and this came out with no dissents, meaning no justice siding with or on behalf of donald trump s position nor his effort to involve the high court in what would be a standard review of stolen stuff. later tonight we ll report on this newly revealed footage from inside the congress in safe zones, bunkers and other rooms where congr
of the regulator, how the regulator shapes the future of the bbc directly impacts on everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all more about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backhurst, group director of content and media policy. and, kevin, reading your review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers, and also to be transparent to the audiences who pay the licence fee, and also to the rest of the creative industries around the uk about what it is planning, how it is approaching programming, how it is delivering its mission, its public purposes. ofcom s role essentially is to make sure the bbc delivers what parliament has set out for the bbc, which is its public purposes, which are across things like delivering things like impartial news, learning conten
gay venue in the capital oslo and led to authorities cancelling the city s pride parade. now on bbc news the media show. hello and welcome to the media show. ., ., ., , ., , , show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts everyone - show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts everyone who l the bbc impacts everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backus, group director of content and media policy, and cabin, reading a review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why- tell us why. i think we feel that the tell us why. i think we feel that the sac tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should - tell us why. i think we feel- that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers
now, the uk s media regulator ofcom has published a major review of what the bbc does, particularly focussed on three areas how the bbc deals with complaints, how the bbc approaches impartiality and how the bbc defines the services that it offers people in the uk. needless to say, how the bbc takes the advice of the regulator, how the regulator shapes the future of the bbc directly impacts on everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all more about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backhurst, group director of content and media policy. and, kevin, reading your review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers, and also to be transparent to the audiences who pay the licence fee, and also to the rest of the creative industries around the uk about what it is
former president trump disputes this and says the records have been declassified. other documents that were seized from mar-a-lago included binders of photos and oddly clemency for roger stone. the raid was also apparently far more expensive than initially thought. they granted fbi agents the authority to seize all physical documents and records that contain evidence of crimes dating all the way back from january 20th 2017 to they don t trust left office in 2021. in other words, every single document from his presidency was potentially up for grabs. and we know the fbi waited three days to execute the raid after the judge signed off on the warrant. this was truly a matter of national security, the attorney general told us if you look at intricate want to take federal agents so long to raid mar-a-lago? to answer this and many more questions that we turn to fox news chief legal correspondent and that no host of fox news sunday, shannon bream. hi, shannon, how are you? reporte