when i came to the bbc, understanding the director general s real focus on impartiality, we did a really big piece of work asking audiences across the uk and around the world what they needed today to trust us, and they told us they wanted fairness and respect. and fairness and respect really come together to form impartiality fairness in reflecting the fullness of the political conversation and respect in showing that we are listening to them because they pay for us and the bbc is here for everyone. eight in ten uk adults came to the bbc during the election period. they said, when asked, who would you choose for trusted, impartial coverage of this election? , four times more chose the bbc than any of our nearest other competitors. so i would say i really am incredibly proud of our output during the election, and i really feel that we stepped up to deliver on our democratic duty as a platform for freedom of speech and to reflect the fullness of the political conversation
the cyber security firm responsible, warned of bad actors that will try to exploit events like this. in total, more than 9,000 flights have been cancelled since friday with the potential for more delays on saturday. here in the uk, airports, which saw severe disruption, say that systems are working again but advised people to check before travelling. a flawed update rolled out by the cybersecurity firm, crowdstrike, knocked many machines offline, hampering retail systems and health care, with problems for gps and pharmacies. here s our technology editor zoe kleinman. yesterday, the global it outage caused worldwide chaos. today, we re still dealing with the aftermath. thousands of flights were grounded and while airports are getting back to normal, there are still many travellers who are stuck. my flight got cancelled while i coming out of my aeroplane while i was coming out of my aeroplane and i ve been stranded for around. 0ver 2a hours by now, i think. i have been on
let s take a brief look now at some of the front pages of tomorrow morning s papers. most are leading with the global it outages that took place today. the daily mirror is calling it the day the world stood still. beside pictures of stranded passengers, the financial times reports that fixing the problem may take days. the daily express describes it as the digital pandemic that paralysed the world. the telegraph is describing it as a global it meltdown , alongside an article on the tv personality mariam margolyes, who says she has lost friends because of her opinions on gaza. the mail reports that the gunman who attempted to assassinate donald trump downloaded photos of kate middleton, princess of wales. and the daily star covers american wrestler hulk hogan s surprise appearance at the republican conference in milwaukee where he gave a passionate speech endorsing trump, which involved ripping off his shirt and calling for trump o mania to run wild again . now time for
until april the next year and it is only september and we ve been talking about it all week. the reshuffle. it is pretty much nearly done as we are recording this on thursday evening but let s recap the big winners because what has been happening is the lower rungs of the ladder. the top rungs were done on wed and stay and the big winners are liz truss who is now the foreign secretary, now the second woman to hold the role in the first conservative woman. i think it probably is the biggest surprise. and robert buckland is one of the three cabinet ministers to lose his job. he was this just a secretary. and the cladding crisis. and gavin williamson and that was no surprise. i think it is fair to say. she was found out but there was movers as well as big names here. i ll be really intrigued to see if he does anything with that add on title he got. the bonus title deputy prime minister. after a black belt move he ended up getting that bubble which as i understand it, boris johns
workplace? i am how do you get people back into the workplace? iam here how do you get people back into the workplace? i am here at the greenwich peninsula to find out. it was an extraordinary night in the champions league. liverpool staged a second half comeback to beat the italian side ac milan at anfield, while manchester city won a nine goal thriller. whilst there will be the odd touch of fog and shower, most places have a dry day. it s thursday the 16th of september. our top story. after a ruthless day of firing and hiring, the prime minister is set to continue the biggest shake up of his government since he entered downing street. gavin williamson was sacked as education secretary, while dominic raab was demoted from his role as foreign secretary. he ll be replaced by liz truss. borisjohnson has promised that his new cabinet will work tirelessly to unite the country, as our political correspondent, helen catt, reports. there were hirings, firings and some eye catching