it is quite hot and sweaty. it is. is is really inconvenient, and obviously on the flight as well, but it is worth it. a teenager appears in court charged with conspiracy to murder, following the shooting of sasha johnson, the black lives matter activist. the $6 trillion plan. president biden pushes the biggest spending programme since world war ii to try to reboot america s economy. another lost summer for uk musicalfestivals a report by mps blames the government for not backing an insurance safety net for organisers. that is it for now, i will be back with all the main story is at the top of the hour. now on bbc news.it s time for the media show. welcome. it s official, martin bashir used lies and deception to secure the biggest tv interview of all time. lord dyson s report into the whole affair raises questions about the governance of the bbc. in fact, the prime minister says the bbc needs to make sure that nothing like this ever happens again. so, on today s media s
time for the media show. welcome. it s official, martin bashir used lies and deception to secure the biggest tv interview of all time. lord dyson s report into the whole affair raises questions about the governance of the bbc. in fact, the prime minister says the bbc needs to make sure that nothing like this ever happens again. so, on today s media show, we are tackling this head on. we are exporting the relationship between reporters and their editors. we are asking what tighter safeguards at the bbc will actually look and feel like. we are exploring the impact of this scandal onjournalism more broadly. let me introduce my guests, i ve got richard tate, former editor in chief of itn. now a professor ofjournalism at cardiff diversity. dorothy byrne, former head of news and current affairs affairs at channel four. david yelland, former editor of the sun and now runs a pr firm, kitchen table partners. john ware is a investigative reporter and fronted last week s panorama on mar
welcome. it s official, martin bashir used lies and deception to secure the biggest tv interview of all time. lord dyson s report into the whole affair raises questions about the governance of the bbc. in fact, the prime minister says the bbc needs to make sure that nothing like this ever happens again. so, on today s media show, we are tackling this head on. we are exploring the relationship between reporters and their editors. we are asking what tighter safeguards at the bbc will actually look and feel like. we are exploring the impact of this scandal onjournalism more broadly. let me introduce my guests. i ve got richard tate, former editor in chief of itn. now a professor ofjournalism at cardiff university. dorothy byrne, former head of news and current affairs at channel four. david yelland, former editor of the sun and now runs a pr firm, kitchen table partners. john ware is an investigative reporter and fronted last week s panorama on martin bashir and the bbc. jane ma
being faced by hospitals. the newly elected leader of the democratic unionist party accuses the eu of using northern ireland as a play thing to punish the uk for brexit saying it s playing fast and loose with the peace process. a new nationalflagship is to be commissioned by the government in a bid to boost british trade and industry overseas. and. borisjohnson marries his fiancee carrie symonds in a secret ceremony at westminster cathedral. now time for the media show. welcome. it s official, martin bashir used lies and deception to secure the biggest tv interview of all time. lord dyson s report into the whole affair raises questions about the governance of the bbc. in fact, the prime minister says the bbc needs to make sure that nothing like this ever happens again. so, on today s media show, we are tackling this head on. we are exploring the relationship between reporters and their editors. we are asking what tighter safeguards at the bbc will actually look and feel l
on jefferson between 1809 to 1826. i work with a total of ten people to do that. our job is to take jefferson s letters and papers and produce an authoritative edition for those years that will enable future scholars to rely on that and not have to go back to the originals. so then, what exactly do you do as a documentary editor? one of the most important things is to make it clear what we are not. you hear of a documentary editor and you think either that you are creating film documentaries, and we have in fact have people apply for jobs who were baffled at first because the application was all about how they could splice film, and that was not what we were after. we are also not editors like in a newspaper, would take an who would take an incoming letter to the editor and market through and make all sorts of corrections. our job is to give as accurate a representation of the materials that we are editing as possible, so as to convey what was on the hand-written page to