welcome to the programme. sixty interviews, two and half days of cross examination, and a 48 page report that documents dominic raab s misuse of power . we will dig deep tonight into the deputy prime minister s response to those allegations, and the political fallout from his resignation. also tonight. stagnation, fifth season syndrome and staying afloat in the premier league. why does survival, feel like an end in itself, for so many of england s biggest clubs. no stagnation at wrexham, not any more. ryan reynolds fairytale could reach its climax tomorrow. the world s third oldest professional club, on the brink of the non league championship and a return to the football league. and the changing global economy, are we splitting into two competing blocks. and what does that mean for trade, currency, and politics. our paneljoining us to dicuss that after 9. but let s start with dominic raab s resignation. the report from adam tolley kc, concluded that the deputy prime ministe
hurricane ian makes landfall in south carolina after it hit florida earlier this week, causing severe devastation. we causing severe devastation. will be live in fort mye the prince of wales says online safety for young people should be a prerequisite, not an afterthought after a coroner rules social media did play a part in the death of the british teenager, molly russell, who took her own life. hello there, welcome to the programme. president putin has announced the illegal annexation of four regions of ukraine that are in part controlled by russian forces it s the biggest seizure of territory in europe since the second world war. in a signing ceremony at the kremlin, mr putin declared that donetsk, luhansk, zaporizhzhia, and kherson are now part of russia. in response, ukraine has formally applied tojoin nato. our russia editor steve rosenberg reports. what he was about to do had sparked international condemnation, but vladimir putin didn t care. in the kremlin, he ann
in a measure of the challenge facing the talks, the us climate chief john kerry said, i don t think anybody here wants to be associated with the failure to live up to this responsibility. not a lot of people in public life are asked to make life and death choices historically. this is a war for survival. live now to carl nasman in dubai, where everyone is waiting on a new draft agreement. everyone is waiting and you get the feeling as if we are standing in the airport terminal and you look on the screens that list the different leavings and summits and press conferences that are supposed to be taking place, they are pretty much blank, all flights cancelled, everyone waiting for this next edition of potential draft documents to be released, since the mummy so last night which disappointed pretty much everybody involved. since the document was published last night. david, this is not yourfirst cop. you have seen plenty of these go down. what you make of the situation goin
this week, we re revisiting the tech that we ve seen used in and around the world of art. and the first question i have is, what is lara thinking right now? do i like it? does it make me feel happy, sad? ammie s gone to town to test the newest, oldest cameras we ve seen for a while. paul heads to florence to see how tech is revealing a 17th century artwork. and we re on the stage helping musicians get used to what it feels like to get a standing ovation, or a slow clap. how did it do that? the v&a london, home to 145 galleries of works from across the globe, spanning 5,000 years of art. museums like this are always looking at new ways to engage audiences. one idea here to see how our brains react to what we re seeing. we often talk about how art makes us feel or what it gets us thinking about. well, today it s time for a way of quantifying that. so we re just going to put this on your head here. 0k. just goes behind your ears. this muse headset, which would more commonly be
the v&a london, home to 145 galleries of works from across the globe, spanning 5,000 years of art. museums like this are always looking at new ways to engage audiences. one idea here to see how our brains react to what we re seeing. we often talk about how art makes us feel or what it gets us thinking about. well, today it s time for a way of quantifying that. so we re just going to put this on your head here. 0k. just goes behind your ears. this muse headset, which would more commonly be used as a meditation device, has been repurposed to translate brain activity into a real time 3d visualisation. and this has four eeg sensors. that s right, four sensors that are on your forehead and picking up the electromagnetic activity off your brain. 0k. and what does that mean its going to learn from me? it s going to take this raw data right off your headset. 0ur set up processes it in lots of different ways, which kind of indicate sort of what your brain s doing when you re looking