and fiona harvey, the guardian's environment correspondent, who's at cop 27 in egypt and hasjust leftsion to get on the phone and talk to us. fiona, what's the mood amongstjournalists? have your stories been cutting through on the front pages this week? well, the mood is pretty grim here, actually. last week, we had the world leaders arrived. there was great fanfare. you know, they had great things to say. it was all hugely interesting. what's happening now is that it's a lot of men in suits gathered in windowless rooms, just poring over pages of text, deciding what to do about a semicolon here and a phrase there. it's it'sjust a grind. now, these negotiations and what does it mean for whether the stories are getting out then? well, for the guardian, we have a commitment to put the climate crisis on the front page of our website every day, and we also cover it very deeply in print. so, we're still covering it. we're still here in london a lot. but i think for my colleagues in other newspapers, it's very, very difficult. 0k. well, we'll come back to you in a bit, fiona, but let's talk