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Dec 7, 2020
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>> burns: nope. >> whitaker: mark coyle did not agree to be interviewed for our story. the university of minnesota believes that the changes it has made, however heart-breaking, will best position its department of athletics for sustainable, long-term success." in college sports, football does pay all the bills, doesn't it? >> wiskus: it does, yup. don't get me wrong, i-- i respect the football team and what p.j. fleck has done for them. but, their hard work is not any more important than our hard work. >> burns: so i kind of had this image of the seven athletic directors in the big-ten that have men's gymnastics, and they're sitting around the poker table with their visors down and their stogies and their glass of whiskey over here, and they go, "okay, i'm going to-- i'm going to call your men's gymnastics and raise your men's tennis." "oh, that's a good bet! i'll call your men's tennis. what do you got?" and, like, using us as-- as poker chips in a way, you know? and-- but it's more than just a poker chip. it's somebody's life, you know? >> whitaker: the university of
>> burns: nope. >> whitaker: mark coyle did not agree to be interviewed for our story. the university of minnesota believes that the changes it has made, however heart-breaking, will best position its department of athletics for sustainable, long-term success." in college sports, football does pay all the bills, doesn't it? >> wiskus: it does, yup. don't get me wrong, i-- i respect the football team and what p.j. fleck has done for them. but, their hard work is not any...
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in just the studies and as a professor of criminal justice at california state university dr coyle says the prison not only increases criminal behavior and has a deleterious effect on society as a whole what happens to a family when the wage earner is removed from society and thrown into prison for 10 years. what happens to those trover how are they imposed where their chances of success in life start to go down what will how does that impact the community loss of resources in our community more demands in the community now to help to help this family maybe the other parent maybe the children it's just so clearly a failure by every measure that you look at it but i think we just need to rethink the whole thing and not just keep trying to put lipstick on this bag because that's what don't i think it is difficult for people to imagine a world without prisons now we've become so accustomed to the idea of prisons that it's hard for people to imagine well what do you do with people if you don't put them in prison when when they've done wrong there are other alternatives to ascii set the degr
in just the studies and as a professor of criminal justice at california state university dr coyle says the prison not only increases criminal behavior and has a deleterious effect on society as a whole what happens to a family when the wage earner is removed from society and thrown into prison for 10 years. what happens to those trover how are they imposed where their chances of success in life start to go down what will how does that impact the community loss of resources in our community...
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Dec 19, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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mick ellis, for example, wrote this to us recently: alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesday, had a similar perspective: and colin ainslie wasn't happy either: at least english viewers should be satisfied, you'd think. but the live broadcasts across the uk of briefings from scotland's first minister nicola sturgeon is annoying david watson, who emailed a couple of weeks ago. it is clear that you cannot please all of the people all of the time but to tell us how the bbc tries to balance his coverage between the different nations and regions i am joined by to by nations and regions i am joined by toby castle, deputy news editorfor bbc news. by toby castle, deputy news editor for bbc news. toby, thank you for coming on news watch and let's start with the fa ct watch and let's start with the fact that huge parts of the uk have been in here 3a weeks, even months. why did bbc news make such a big deal about london going into tier three? well, i think we made a big deal about london going in this week to tier 3 because it was a big new story. and that's not to say that when leiceste
mick ellis, for example, wrote this to us recently: alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesday, had a similar perspective: and colin ainslie wasn't happy either: at least english viewers should be satisfied, you'd think. but the live broadcasts across the uk of briefings from scotland's first minister nicola sturgeon is annoying david watson, who emailed a couple of weeks ago. it is clear that you cannot please all of the people all of the time but to tell us how the bbc tries to...
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Dec 18, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesday, had a similar perspective... and colin ainslie wasn't happy either... at least english viewers should be satisfied, you'd think. but the live broadcasts across the uk of briefings from scotland's first minister, nicola sturgeon, is annoying david watson, who emailed a couple of weeks ago... it's clear that you can't please all of the people, all of the time. but to tell us how the bbc tries to balance its coverage between the different nations and regions, i'm joined by toby castle, deputy news editorfor bbc news. thank you for coming on. let's start with the fact that huge parts of the uk have been in tier 3 for weeks even months. why did bbc news make such a big deal about london going into tier 3? well, i think we made a big deal about london going in this week to tier 3 because it was a big new story. and that's not to say that when lester went into tighter restrictions or nottingham or liverpool or greater manchester, those were also big news stories for bbc news. and i would say that we covered those in gre
alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesday, had a similar perspective... and colin ainslie wasn't happy either... at least english viewers should be satisfied, you'd think. but the live broadcasts across the uk of briefings from scotland's first minister, nicola sturgeon, is annoying david watson, who emailed a couple of weeks ago... it's clear that you can't please all of the people, all of the time. but to tell us how the bbc tries to balance its coverage between the different...
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Dec 14, 2020
12/20
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for this morning, we are on with rebecca coyle.e want to focus on vaccine registries while we have her. james, newark, new jersey on the line for medical practitioners. caller: good morning. two things. one question and one statement. peopleout the homeless and people in prison? this.atement is i have had [indiscernible] , yet. i will tell you the recipe, how to get rid of it. he is talking about homeless individuals. how will you ensure that population is included in what you're trying to do? guest: it goes back to what i was mentioning earlier. this is going to be a state and local effort, so the local health departments are aware of where target populations are this is not being managed at the federal level. it is being managed at the local level, so those populations are known and will be vaccinated. host: robert, philadelphia. people are asking how this came out so quickly. it is because covid-19 is a sars covid virus. they have had these viruses on their shelves for years. they keep tweaking the vaccine to fit the virus. the
for this morning, we are on with rebecca coyle.e want to focus on vaccine registries while we have her. james, newark, new jersey on the line for medical practitioners. caller: good morning. two things. one question and one statement. peopleout the homeless and people in prison? this.atement is i have had [indiscernible] , yet. i will tell you the recipe, how to get rid of it. he is talking about homeless individuals. how will you ensure that population is included in what you're trying to do?...
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Dec 1, 2020
12/20
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KPIX
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coyle says it is a chance to give students hands-on asked variance that is hard to find during the pandemic. students are tasked with crowd control, checking people in and collecting saliva test samples. the university plans to offer the course again quarter. >>> hard to believe it was the end of november, with the weather we had over the things giving holiday there, paul. the sun came out every day and it was actually warm. >> it warmed up nicely every day after chilly start each morning. the late night and early morning hours definitely feel like middle of autumn or even approaching the first day of winter. it will be another chilly night, a bit on the breezy set especially in the higher terrain. absolutely. below average precipitation really almost next to zero and it is not just for the bay area it is most of california. to go along with the below average precipitation, above average temperatures are expected as we head into the first half of december, so the beginning of december basically going to bring is the same whether the last half of november brought us the drier weather. may be
coyle says it is a chance to give students hands-on asked variance that is hard to find during the pandemic. students are tasked with crowd control, checking people in and collecting saliva test samples. the university plans to offer the course again quarter. >>> hard to believe it was the end of november, with the weather we had over the things giving holiday there, paul. the sun came out every day and it was actually warm. >> it warmed up nicely every day after chilly start...
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Dec 1, 2020
12/20
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david coyle says it is a chance to give students hands-on experience that is pretty hard to find during the pandemic. the adversity plans to offer the course again next quarter. >> it is a lot harder now to say, shadow a doctor and hospital or whatever, there's a lot more restrictions, a lot of research on campus, love you opportunities for students to do these kinds of things, this gives them an opportunity to do that within a safe setting. he reveals six of the 10 most educated cities in the bay area, they are in marin county. researchers use 2010 census data to figure out that the towns of ross, belvedere, sausalito, san salmo, fairfax and mill valley are leaders in the bay area for lack of diversity. in sausalito less than 1% of residents are african-american. one of the authors of the study believes it is because city's in marin county have long battled against adding multifamily developments, which slams the door on many lower income families. >> you are not seeing people who living in these committees are racist or this is actually -- but the policies itself could actually keep p
david coyle says it is a chance to give students hands-on experience that is pretty hard to find during the pandemic. the adversity plans to offer the course again next quarter. >> it is a lot harder now to say, shadow a doctor and hospital or whatever, there's a lot more restrictions, a lot of research on campus, love you opportunities for students to do these kinds of things, this gives them an opportunity to do that within a safe setting. he reveals six of the 10 most educated cities...
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Dec 1, 2020
12/20
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john: marcia coyle is chiefin waon correspondent for the national law journal. >> every court has towhether it'got a case or controversy, somebody has been injured and how to provide relief for that jury. and so if they don't know all toe facts they need to kno determine that, then the case could be what some would say, not ripe for decisio john: nonetheless, the trump administration is asking the supreme cot for a speedy ruling. for the pbs newshour, i'm jo yang. ptjudy: in late ber, war again broke out between armenia and azerbaijan over the coveted enclave of nagorno-karabakh. last week, as part of an armistice, ethnic-armenian forces handed over territory to azerbaijani control. p it wt of a russian-brokered deal that ended an ugly six-weekar, and re-established moscow's footprint in all of its southern, former republics. with the support of the pulitzer center, special corrpondent simon ostrovsky traveled to the region again for the newshour. simo so this is what victory looklike. walls spray painted with names of azerbaijani soldierand the cities that they hail from in an ethni
john: marcia coyle is chiefin waon correspondent for the national law journal. >> every court has towhether it'got a case or controversy, somebody has been injured and how to provide relief for that jury. and so if they don't know all toe facts they need to kno determine that, then the case could be what some would say, not ripe for decisio john: nonetheless, the trump administration is asking the supreme cot for a speedy ruling. for the pbs newshour, i'm jo yang. ptjudy: in late ber, war...
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Dec 13, 2020
12/20
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talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitution center jeffrey rosen and rebecca coylethe american immunization registration association on vaccine registries and what's track vaccination efforts. watch c-span's "washington journal" at 7:00 eastern monday morning. join the discussion with your facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. sexuallook into cases of assault and violent crimes at the fort hood army base. we will hear from numbers of an independent review committee on the climate and culture at fort hood.
talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitution center jeffrey rosen and rebecca coylethe american immunization registration association on vaccine registries and what's track vaccination efforts. watch c-span's "washington journal" at 7:00 eastern monday morning. join the discussion with your facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. sexuallook into cases of assault and violent crimes at the fort hood army base. we will hear from numbers of an independent review...
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Dec 8, 2020
12/20
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john:a coyle is chief washington correspondent for the national law journal. >> and justice breyer thenl, you knowwe'ves had some bad a our future, in our past and what if claims were brought involving the internment of the japanese? claims forsleparations for ery? would they allow those claims to be heard by foreign judges in foreign courts? john: leiber's fought to right what he sees as an 85-year-old wrong for more than a decade. ase this whrocess has been going on have you been thinking , of your grandfather moving chess pieces around the board? >> you nailed it. john: playing fair, thinking to win.oves ahead, and playin for the pbs newshour, im jn yang. ♪ judy: tonight we take a look at some of the challenges many formerly incarcerated men and women face as they reenter society. the coronavirus pandemic has upended the lives of all americans, but it's been especially hard on individuals known as returning citizens. shlliam brangham tells the story of one man in waington, d.c. who is trying to beat the odds. it is the first in a serie wof reports thk called, "searching for justice."
john:a coyle is chief washington correspondent for the national law journal. >> and justice breyer thenl, you knowwe'ves had some bad a our future, in our past and what if claims were brought involving the internment of the japanese? claims forsleparations for ery? would they allow those claims to be heard by foreign judges in foreign courts? john: leiber's fought to right what he sees as an 85-year-old wrong for more than a decade. ase this whrocess has been going on have you been...
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Dec 4, 2020
12/20
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alix: for more on the virus, joining us is carmella coyle, --ifornia hospitalization california hospital association ceo. where are we in terms of capacity? statewide,ght now, or intensive care units are at about 80% of capacity. about 20% left. california is of course a very large and diverse state. there are parts of the state and southern parts, san diego, imperial county, where it is even more challenging, and we got places in the north that still have quite a bit of i see icu capacity left -- of capacity left. guy: how far into the expected surge post thanksgiving are we now? do you think we will cac uptick in numbers as we get close to the end of a two week period after thanksgiving? armela: we are now seeing tremendous surge, and thanksgiving isn't even factored into that. what we are seeing right now is the outcome of halloween, the october 31 holiday, when there is quite a bit of gathering. our numbers we expect today will hit 20,000 more individuals turning covid positive in just a single day. saw far exceeds anything we in terms of our surge during the summer months. so the re
alix: for more on the virus, joining us is carmella coyle, --ifornia hospitalization california hospital association ceo. where are we in terms of capacity? statewide,ght now, or intensive care units are at about 80% of capacity. about 20% left. california is of course a very large and diverse state. there are parts of the state and southern parts, san diego, imperial county, where it is even more challenging, and we got places in the north that still have quite a bit of i see icu capacity left...
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Dec 15, 2020
12/20
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. >> rebecca coyle is the director of the american registry's association.ame, date of birth, and what does they received and win, federal health officials will also store some information electronically. >> the key here is knowing that this information is going to be used to really look across the u.s. what is our uptake look like in terms of vaccine coverage. >> health and human services officials tell fox news every jurisdiction administering the vaccine and has agreed to submit data, but not every state has signed up to share personal information. >> the trump administration insists they won't be collecting highly sensitive data's. there's also safeguards in place to make sure the data they are looking at is only going to be for health officials and not useful for everyone. bret. >> bret: mark, thank you. up next, the panel on the georgia senate runoffs and breaking news on the coronavirus relief package talks where they are tonight. fox 11 in los angeles says orange county fight a court order aimed at slashing the population of inmates in the county due
. >> rebecca coyle is the director of the american registry's association.ame, date of birth, and what does they received and win, federal health officials will also store some information electronically. >> the key here is knowing that this information is going to be used to really look across the u.s. what is our uptake look like in terms of vaccine coverage. >> health and human services officials tell fox news every jurisdiction administering the vaccine and has agreed to...
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Dec 7, 2020
12/20
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. >> yang: marcia coyle is chief washington correspondent for the "national law journal." >> and justicethen was saying, well, you know, we've had some bad acts in our future, in our past and what if claims were brought involving the internment of the japanese? claims for reparations for slavery? would that open? would that allow those claims to be heard by foreign judges in foreign courts? >> yang: leiber's fought to right what he sees as an 85- dear-old wrong for me than a de. as this whole process has been going on, have you been thinking ec your grandfather moving chess around the board? >> you nailed it. u nailed it. >> yang: playing fair, thinking three moves ahead, and playing to win. for the pbs newshour, n yang. >> woodruff: night we take a look at the challenges many formerly incarceted men and women are facing as they reenter society. the coronavirus pandemic has upended the lives of all americans, but it's been esly hard on individuals known as returning citizens. of one man in washington, d.c. who is trying to beat the odds. >> brangham: after 23 years behind bars, this was
. >> yang: marcia coyle is chief washington correspondent for the "national law journal." >> and justicethen was saying, well, you know, we've had some bad acts in our future, in our past and what if claims were brought involving the internment of the japanese? claims for reparations for slavery? would that open? would that allow those claims to be heard by foreign judges in foreign courts? >> yang: leiber's fought to right what he sees as an 85- dear-old wrong for...
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Dec 14, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN
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states, will talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitutional center, and rebecca coyleexecutive director of the american immunization registry association on vaccine registries, and what's being done to track the covid vaccination efforts. watch live at 7:00 eastern monday morning, and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. >> from the sunday news programs, questions on the distribution of the coronavirus vaccine and what some senators are saying about the prospects for another covid relief package. >> hhs secretary azores said the u.s. in his view was ready to have doses ready for 20 million americans
states, will talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitutional center, and rebecca coyleexecutive director of the american immunization registry association on vaccine registries, and what's being done to track the covid vaccination efforts. watch live at 7:00 eastern monday morning, and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. >> from the sunday news programs, questions on the distribution of the coronavirus...
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Dec 16, 2020
12/20
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just to reinforce the partnerships we've developed with the hospitals with the leadership of carmela coyle working here in state. and looking at scheduled surgeries not just elected surgeries looking at traditional and no traditional ways of providing surge in the healthcare delivery system. so these surge plans have been well-considered. many of them have been actualized. many of them are in the planning phases. all of it additive to all of the work the state is doing. there's more abundance in terms of the staffing and protocols that have been exposed on one or two slides. and by the way to that end, i want to just remind you some of that abundance because dr. gahly referenced it briefly, but it's important to go back. the p.p.e. vintory in this state, remember, a few months issue. at was the big we have currently over half a billion units in n-95 and surgical/procedure masks. we currently still -- this is the current status of just the state inventory. this is not the inventory that persistence exists at the local level or within the hospital system itself. the doctor referenced ventila
just to reinforce the partnerships we've developed with the hospitals with the leadership of carmela coyle working here in state. and looking at scheduled surgeries not just elected surgeries looking at traditional and no traditional ways of providing surge in the healthcare delivery system. so these surge plans have been well-considered. many of them have been actualized. many of them are in the planning phases. all of it additive to all of the work the state is doing. there's more abundance...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 6, 2020
12/20
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coyl >> caller: hello. so i live near the area where this happened. and i just -- i guess that i have questions about how this occurred. and what is being done after the fact to support the person who was shot by police multiple times and seemed to be faced and shot with the bean bags and the baton. does this person remain in restraints? i know that you mentioned charges, so, you know, if they're in the hospital with life-threatening injuries, do they remain in restraints or given any care? and what is the follow-up for caring for this person? thank you. >> thank you, caller, for your call. the person is still hospitalized and it's really up to the hospital staff to determine what's appropriate for their patient. and i can't speak, i'm not a part of the staff and i can't speak to what is appropriate, because i'm not there. but i will say that typically the hospital staff in our city do not restrain patients unless there's a need to do that. and typically that is not what they do, so like i said i can't speak to whether or not that is the case or not.
coyl >> caller: hello. so i live near the area where this happened. and i just -- i guess that i have questions about how this occurred. and what is being done after the fact to support the person who was shot by police multiple times and seemed to be faced and shot with the bean bags and the baton. does this person remain in restraints? i know that you mentioned charges, so, you know, if they're in the hospital with life-threatening injuries, do they remain in restraints or given any...
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them to comply and you have all these hyper critical politicians in california, supervisors sheila coyleoutdoor dining. what she said was well, the ordinance did not take place until the next day and that's not the point. i thought we were supposed to be afraid of outdoor dining and here she is engaging in it. you've got the london mayor going to that same french restaurant that gavin newsom went to and by the way when gavin's went to that restaurant he was there with california medical officials who said they weren't violating any kind of measure and he says we were and that's why he apologized but even he is not on the same page that his own medical experts. it's maddening. visitors are down dramatically -- the little shop in the building or a work. stuart: keep going specters us little shop in the business where i work and asked the young lady who owns it how much is your business down. i thought she would say 25%, 30%, maybe 50% down 75% paid my barber who cuts my hair his business is down 50%. how people can survive is beyond me. this is maddening. the covid is serious, don't get me
them to comply and you have all these hyper critical politicians in california, supervisors sheila coyleoutdoor dining. what she said was well, the ordinance did not take place until the next day and that's not the point. i thought we were supposed to be afraid of outdoor dining and here she is engaging in it. you've got the london mayor going to that same french restaurant that gavin newsom went to and by the way when gavin's went to that restaurant he was there with california medical...
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Dec 14, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN
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states, will talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitutional center, and rebecca coyle, executive director of the american immunization registry association on vaccine registries, and what's being done to track the covid vaccination efforts. watch live at 7:00 eastern monday morning, and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. >> from the sunday news programs, questions on the distribution of the coronavirus vaccine and what some senators are saying about the prospects for another covid relief package. >> hhs secretary azores said the u.s. in his view was ready to have doses ready for 20 million americans by the end of the year. that is just 18 days away. you have going out now. 2.9 million that does not seem possible, does it? >> i think it is possible. i have certainly heard those discussions and i think that is a reasonable prediction and i have confidence around that. >> the fda advisory panel is slated to meet this thursday about whether to authorize a vaccine by moderna. do you expect by the end of this w
states, will talk about the meeting of electors with the national constitutional center, and rebecca coyle, executive director of the american immunization registry association on vaccine registries, and what's being done to track the covid vaccination efforts. watch live at 7:00 eastern monday morning, and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. >> from the sunday news programs, questions on the distribution of the coronavirus...
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Dec 19, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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mick ellis, for example, wrote this to us recently: alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesdayons i am joined by toby castle, deputy news editorfor bbc news. toby, thank you for coming on newswatch, and let's start with the fact that huge parts of the uk have been in here 34 weeks, even months. why did bbc news make such a big deal about london going into tier three? well, i think we made a big deal about london going in this week to tier 3 because it was a big new story. and that's not to say that when leicester went into tighter restrictions, or nottingham or liverpool or greater manchester, those were also big news stories for bbc news. and i would say that we covered those in great detail using our specialist correspondents and those correspondents based around the country to reflect the regional nature. but this week, the decision that london was to go into the tightest of restrictions just as we approached london was a big, big news story. 20 minutes of a 30 minute bulletin, as one of our viewers noticed? i would urge people have to do is look at our coverage in the round
mick ellis, for example, wrote this to us recently: alison coyle, writing from northern ireland on wednesdayons i am joined by toby castle, deputy news editorfor bbc news. toby, thank you for coming on newswatch, and let's start with the fact that huge parts of the uk have been in here 34 weeks, even months. why did bbc news make such a big deal about london going into tier three? well, i think we made a big deal about london going in this week to tier 3 because it was a big new story. and...