mph, and some scattered, potentially wintry showers, so it won t be particularly warm. but when you add on the wind, it will feel really freezing out there this weekend. sarah, thanks. that s it. goodbye from me, now for the news where you are. have a very good evening. i can t stop thinking about those people and their families and their loved ones. they left their families hoping for a betterfuture. we ll talk to those in power on both sides of the channel, as they search for solutions to prevent further tragedies. if it needs more people on the ground and at sea to stop the crossings, then we ve made that offer. and we ll hear from the people who live and work here, on the front line of the cross channel migrant crisis. a majority of them are seriously looking for somewhere to stay, but here. it s putting pressure on the governments here, local councils. we just can t say, oh, yeah, another loss, another boat. i mean, it s people who are fleeing for their lives. good eve
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the writer and academic maya goodfellow and the sunday times media editor, rosamund urwin. we ll pause before hearing from them and bring you up to date with the very latest front pages. the tragedy in the english channel dominates tomorrow s front pages. the telegraph says five women and one child are among the 27 people who died while trying to reach the uk by boat, in search of a better life is the headline on the front page of the i. it has a picture of a group of migrants carrying a dingy boat, preparing to leave the french coast to cross the english channel. the paper says this particular group s progress is unknown. the guardian is reporting that two survivors of the tragedy are in intensive care, while police have arrested four people suspected of being linked to the drownings. why didn t france stop them, is the question on the front page of tomorrow s metro. that questio
of south west england. and this is the one day of the year when i turned from a serious bbc correspondent into a eurovision cocktail pianist. more details coming up. and coming up on bbc news. treble chasing manchester city are two games away from lifting their first champions league trophy after a kevin de bruyne wonder strike earned them a draw at real madrid. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. at the start of a trial about alleged phone hacking of several high profile figures including the duke of sussex, mirror group newspapers has been accused of using illegal methods on an industrial scale to get stories. the company, which has previously admitted phone hacking and paying private investigators, said it would never be repeated. prince harry and three other people are bringing claims at the high court against the group that publishes the mirror, the sunday mirror and sunday people. the claimants argue that executives at the company knew about widespread
it is likely to reach mozambique for a second time on saturday, forcing residents there to take shelter. this is bbc news. well, in about ten minutes time it is news watch, but first on bbc news, it s click. here is something that s hard to get your head around. more and more tourist attractions are clocking how important social media is in getting their name out there. yeah, we re at the new twist museum in central london, which is filled with a multitude of mirrors and instagrammable illusions that will play with your perceptions. oh, this makes a change. look at you down there. we know. and for reference, this is our true social standing that you re looking at right now. and what s weird is this isn t even the strangest thing i filmed recently. it is a fundamental law of the universe that nearly everything looks better in slo mo, something that the slo mo guys have been proving since 2010. three, two, one, go. there are 1a million youtube subscribers regularly. watch gav
including an unborn baby. coming up its news watch but now it s time for the troubleshooter. now its time for the travel show. welcome back to paris. welcome to paris, where i m soaking up the sun on the banks of the river seine. it s lovely. both the left bank and right banks of the river seine are unesco world heritage sites. the left is famous for inspiring generations of artists and intellectuals, while the right is home to the world s most visited museum, the louvre. and with all this heritage to soak up here, it s the perfect setting to take an amble down memory lane and revisit some of our favourite historical journeys. and let s begin right here in paris. in 2018, one of the classics of the french car industry turned 70. and christa managed to get behind the wheel to give it a spin. i m definitely going to need a lesson, vincent. vincent takes guided tours around paris. now, where is the gear stick? the gear stick is there. 0k! she laughs so, you just turn that, i if