tv The Papers BBC News May 15, 2019 10:40pm-11:01pm BST
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cannot ask for a bit of history, i cannot ask for a better day as well. i am fighting on the 16th of may endows the day that i won my first ever world championship. sol i won my first ever world championship. so i can ask for more and have it written in history, that will be a great day. the world championships two years ago at the last edition in south korea with a claimed five metals. they're hoping to be dead here in manchester this week you'll be able to find the best of the action on the bbc. former formula i world champion fernando alonso has crashed in practise for the indianapolis 500. the spaniard is trying for a second time to win the prestigious race. it's the last part of his quest to become the only man aside from graham hill to claim motorsport‘s triple crown, which also includes the monaco grand prix and le mans 2a hours. alonso wasn't hurt, but will lose vital practise time ahead of qualifying which starts on saturday.
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that's all from sportsday. coming up in a moment, the papers. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the political editor of the new statesman, stephen bush and the brexit editor for the telegraph, dia chakravarty. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. let's start with the metro. mps have launched a probe into reality tv programmes, following the death of a man
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who appeared on thejeremy kyle show. the same story makes the front page of the i, which also says a mental health charity has welcomed itv‘s decision to axe the controversial daytime show. jeremy kyle is "heartbroken" following the death of steve dymond, who was on his show. that's according to a mirror exclusive. the financial times reports that president trump is likely to defer a decision on eu and japanese auto tariffs, while the us continues to battle china over trade. the telegraph claims backbench conservative mps are plotting to force theresa may from office within a month. and, the supervision of offenders in the community is to be undertaken by the state in future, so says the guardian. so, a varied set of front pages, but the jeremy kyle show cancellation dominating, let's see what our reviewers make of some of the stories. do you want to start us off? looking
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at the telegraph first? we have been hearing the tory mps have lost their patients with theresa may and they wa nt patients with theresa may and they want her to go, this is been going on for some time and they have come up on for some time and they have come up with a few ways to try and get rid of her, if you'd like, and failed. one of those ways was to vote against her, for her to lose a vote against her, for her to lose a vote of confidence and get rid of her. but it seems like they lost their appetite, they did keep her in place and according to conservative parties rules, once a leader has won a vote of confidence in the house of commons, you cannot bring a no—confidence motion again to make against that person for another year. but this is about is the 1922 committee which is the conservative mps trying to change their rules in order to see if they can actually bring another vote of confidence against theresa may get rid of her
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before that year has passed. we are 110w before that year has passed. we are now told that tomorrow, midday, the 1922 committee is going to be with the prime minister and say to her that they would like her to leave office whether or not her withdrawal bill actually passes so it is a bit ofa bill actually passes so it is a bit of a strange condition that theresa may faces. she put forward a bill which a lot of the comments did not like and it felt multiple times, but when it was brought to her that she should leave office, she said i will leave my position if my bill, which is hugely unpopular in the house of commons, passes. it is a bit of a strange situation to put her collea g u es strange situation to put her colleagues in. so it midday, never mind the bill, you need to go and the date they are trying to look at is the 12th of june the date they are trying to look at is the 12th ofjune and if she is not budging, but straight afterwards there's going to be a meeting of the 1922 executive bed of that committee, they're 1922 executive bed of that committee, they‘ re going 1922 executive bed of that committee, they're going to look into changing their rules which they
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can then bring a vote of no confidence against her and tried to get herfor confidence against her and tried to get her for that. so they're going to give her the revolver and the dagger. that is it stop by to pick up dagger. that is it stop by to pick up on dagger. that is it stop by to pick up on some dagger. that is it stop by to pick up on some of the brady on the 1922, they are lining up brady on the 1922, they are lining up one stripe and another who is think it's time to go on. it is the classic, we cannot persuade you, there is no constitutional means within the body to get rid of you but we can try to ease you out. but this apartment has rejected the only negotiated brexit on offer, and a negotiated brexit on offer, and a negotiated exit and has rejected stopping brexit, the only way for them to get the thing it wants is to try and tell parliament, but they do not want to have an election while she is still around, but it is over
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in december, they'll have to ask for another extension which means having to go to the country to extend the brexit process not once, but twice, which they assume will probably mean that they will be sharply rejected but this is all really about why it matters for all of us, is it hugely increases if she does vote on the prospect that will have an election later this year. to really shift the lockdown on brexit. yes. it quite interesting and important story on the guardian, the probation to be re—nationalized, not unexpected. the guardian, the probation to be re-nationalized, not unexpected. no, not unexpected at all. he became justice secretary after ten clark returned to the back benches. he introduced a very controversial programme to privatise probation services and bluntly, it has not worked. no one really disputes that
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i'iow worked. no one really disputes that now and his successors are but three, doing a lot of sensible things shorter sentences, really got to grips with this department and is i'iow to grips with this department and is now going to unpick his reform. the slight oddity is that it is one thing for someone who who is having their reforms and picked is another to have someone who is now officially a government policy that this is not chris grayling as minister of justice, this is not chris grayling as minister ofjustice, they were not fit for purpose. it does not quite do itjustice in the quite catastrophic, worth a? they need to be unpick to get apparently, it is 0k be unpick to get apparently, it is ok forthem to be unpick to get apparently, it is ok for them to be secretary of state for transport. is partly because theresa may is so weak and it was surprising that she was even able to fire gavin williamson, but it is truly remarkable that this is happened and somehow he sitting around the cabinet table. a quick word on that? it is remarkable and as steven has just said, we have
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such a weak government, which is a very wea k such a weak government, which is a very weak administration, there's very weak administration, there's very little that the prime minister can actually do. which cuts back to the previous story that if she is in power, does she really have the power, does she really have the power to govern if she is in office. will not deal with that right away, but he is moving out to the metro and the story that is dominated news all day and all week so far and is going to dominate for a few more days. the reality show. the select committee, the media committee that is going to investigate the duty of ca re is going to investigate the duty of care at itv and elsewhere. this is extremely sad story of steve dymond who died last week after he was left totally distraught after an appearance in this show. thejeremy kyle show, a reality tv show. he was put through a lie detector test to
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prove his faithfulness to his partner and he felt that test, which resulted in his life exploding and he could not take the pressure and actually killed himself. this has led to itv scrapping the show entirely. it is also interesting, equally sad, i would say is that there are other reality shows like love island is mentioned here, which is also seen the suicide of two of its x contestants. i think love island, their excuse or defence here that we are just talking about before we came on air, is that the two people who killed themselves killed themselves after a while, while after they appeared. of these various issues being raised and what people do go voluntarily into appearing into the shows but are the tv channels are production hazards
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giving them productive care afterwards or how to handle the infamy of whatever happens in their personal lives following disappearances? that is the real question here. those are two issues that work. a specific genre of fairly cruel reality tv shows that the describe is poverty born which jeremy kyle is the most successful example and they are also going to probe the after care given to people i reality tv shows. where people become very famous for a very brief night of time but then they have to reenter the world and lots of people find that quite difficult. it is a transformation. it will be difficult. it is also such a tiny group of people. if you think about when we retire or are made redundant orany of when we retire or are made redundant or any of those changes, what thousands of people who we know go through that we know someone to talk to. if you are a love island
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co nte sta nt to. if you are a love island contestant and you go back, there's nobody else was gone to that experience and can say, this is what it is like and what it help with me. so people are cut adrift when they leave reality tv shows. there's a big chance as well as being very important in terms of how we cover family breakdown, but this could change how reality tv operates in this country forever. take us through the front page and president trump talking about how many enemies he wants it once. is already in a trade standoff with the people's republic of china and he has been making noises about his desire to rebalance making noises about his desire to re balance the making noises about his desire to rebalance the terms of global trade in the us with the eu and japan. in most trade deals, the us is a huge global hegemon that can, but with
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these nations, it can't set them in these nations, it can't set them in the same way. he has tears being slapped on exports on both sides of china and it feels unlikely that the us economy could have another front with the eu and japan. although the big difference in the advantage that he has with them is that they are both democracy, it is hard for eu to absorb the pain is working. he has probably been enough more than he can chew with china because he has to worry about getting reelected. and the other doesn't have to worry about getting reelected ever. another thing about the showdown with all these various adversaries, is that they are taking the toll, creating a bit of a chill on the global economy. when something happens because of the size of the market that it is, with something that happens within it, it affects
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the entire world and that is why we are concerned here, sitting here looking at president trump and wondering what he's going to do next, and exit are relevant to us. but he doesn't like the shares in the us and european car—makers and supplies are going up and then the decision to delay the tariffs and some of the knock on effects. let's ta ke some of the knock on effects. let's take a look at the mail, very different story. can you explain this to us, it sounds huge, is it is huge as it sounds? if it is is use as it sounds, it is a good news story. what we are looking at here isa story. what we are looking at here is a way that cancer experts have come up with a way of looking at cancer ina come up with a way of looking at cancer in a slightly different way and looking at it as a chronic disease rather than a killer disease. what does that mean? we are looking at battling all types of, we are moving away from battling all
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types of cancer to managing them. so if we can find a way of actually living with the disease in a way that it becomes liveable with rather than a killer disease, it is a huge project that is apparently going to be undertaken and will develop new drugs under a 75 million programme that we are looking at coming into existence next spring. and if this happens, it'll be a whole new way of dealing with the disease that we have been completely baffled for so long. and stephen, it sounds like what we're seeing, we are going to jettison chemotherapy and all of the hideous side effects of that. that is the idea of that because the problem of cancer treatment and they struggled with that throughout battling it. cancer is malignant, but it is very hard to separate good cell growth that we all need to stay alive and cancer cell growth without killing a bunch of healthy cells
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which is why chemotherapy leaves people feeling so tired and exhausted. the new idea by putting it behind this research facility is the regrowth of the cancer cells we can live with cancer in the same way that prostate cancer which mostly affects mostly men towards the end of their lives, if you're 85 and you're going to be able to live with your cancer for ten years, you probably are not that worried about it and you can hopefully get to a point where that is the case for all cancers and there are tenses that will be able to outlive us without overtaking and destroying our bodies, so it could completely change how cancers treated and also the future of old age. because cancer is the number one killer of most people it can be something we can live with and it will completely change how long we expect to live.|j was looking at this quote from professional workmen for the new institute that says we hope to
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enable survivors to the point where cancer patients will... it is a slightly weird, dissident way of looking at success. that his abductors look at it. it is solving one problem and when cancer is the problem you're looking at it to the exclusion of everything else and what he was saying is that we've come to a position where cancer doesn't have to be the thing that actually kills you, you can carry on living with it if they can happen, that would be fabulous news. i am glad we ended up with something positive. that's it for the papers this hour. thank you stephen and dia. you'll both be back at half past eleven for another look at the papers. headlines coming up at eleven. next it's the weather with matt taylor. hello there. when taking in the uk as a whole,
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i think wednesday we will see the peak sunshine and also the peak temperature. we saw our warmest day of the year so far recorded and can lock you in highland scotland, temperatures just shy of 26 degrees, added by those blue skies and barely a breath of wind. things will change over the next few days, high—pressure being with us. it will start to nudge away a little bit in that process begins through the night and thursday in the southern flank they will introduce a bit more of us south easterly breeze, they will introduce a bit more of asouth easterly breeze, of a south easterly breeze, not much of the wind around and you could just be a bit more cloud across parts of southern and western scotland, isolated chance of a shower and the odd mist and fog patch with the drifting towards orkney. temperatures not quite as low as recent nights but still a fresh enough start to tomorrow morning, mid—single figures for the vast majority. mist and fog will clear, west of scotland one or two isolated showers, some high cloud in northern ireland and some low cloud shetland, but late in the day after sunny start across parts of the midlands, east anglia, southern england, bit more cloud developed we're getting used too.
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the breeze not as strong so get yourself in that the sunshine and it will feel very pleasant and across—the—boa rd, very pleasant in the sunshine. by and large, it will still be there for many of you. but thursday and friday, pressure developing in the mediterranean, high—pressure nudging away in a bit more of an easterly wind developed across the uk, that would take take back not affect and developed across the uk, that would take knock—back am affect the temperatures, to the feel on the eastern coast, through england and wales. if you showers pushing westwards as well, scotland and northern ireland sting largely dressed in sunny spells and temperatures could still reach the upper teens across scotland by friday afternoon and even closer to 20 celsius and one or two spots but across england and wales given amounts of cloud in the month of sunshine and breeze. as we going to the weekend, cloudy story will continue but still some sunny spells, cloud will continue to bring the odd shower with winds later in the south but does break up in the sunshine comes through, wanted to showers across england and wales
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but the showers north of england and scotland and northern ireland, comes through, one or two showers across england and wales but the showers north of england and scotland and northern ireland, substantially cooler there compared to what we have seen throughout the week, a lot more cloud around and barely a breath of wind for many again on sunday, so if you do get caught by a shower, it could be a very slow moving shower but the sunshine will certainly one things up and especially in the south. will certainly warm things up and especially in the south.
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this is bbc news. the headlines at 11:00: itv‘sjeremy kyle show is axed for good following the death of a participant in the programme. steve dymond was found dead a week after his pre—recorded appearance — itv‘s boss says her decision was prompted by the gravity of the situation. us president donald trump has declared a national emergency to protect us computer networks from foreign adversaries. the inquest into the london bridge attacks hears how the only briton to be killed was helping a woman when they were both stabbed to death. cabinet ministers warn theresa may's brexit deal will be
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