alan yentob has held senior roles here at the bbc.bbc two. he sued the mirror group newspapers in 2015 after his phone was hacked. a very good evening. you've had some experience, what happened to you? what happened to me was unusual because there weren't many stories about me in the mirror, but my address book and my phone were sort of cold and aladdin's came by david sherwood, involved in the harry case and has done many of the hacking cases. it was the met police who came to me because people had been found responsible for hacking and felt guilty and owned up to the fact that they had been hacking my phone. what's particularly interesting about my case, i think, is there was about my case, i think, is there was a complete denial by the mirror that they had hacked it. eventually, they offered me £100,000, which was a significant sum in 2015. particularly because the stories, the hacking had led to them really getting to other people's phones. they were keen on the mirror on stories with things like this. it was a sort of invasion, b