:00:00. > :00:17.Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be
:00:18. > :00:24.With me are the broadcaster Penny Smith and Philippa Kennedy
:00:25. > :00:39.Tomorrow's front pages, starting with...
:00:40. > :00:47.The Mirror leads with Nice, telling his family apparently everything was
:00:48. > :00:48.normal before he went on to kill 84 people.
:00:49. > :00:51.The Sunday Times leads with events in Turkey and the President's
:00:52. > :00:54.warning that those involved in the military coup will pay
:00:55. > :01:00.President Erdogan's revenge mission against the coup plotters.
:01:01. > :01:02.The Observer also leads with the repercussions
:01:03. > :01:04.for the people involved in the attempted coup.
:01:05. > :01:07.The Mail says Brexit Minister David Davis
:01:08. > :01:10.could send new EU migrants to the UK back home.
:01:11. > :01:13.And the new Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson writes
:01:14. > :01:16.in the Express that the UK can become a global nation
:01:17. > :01:31.Those are just a touch of what's on the front pages. Penny, let's kick
:01:32. > :01:37.off with the Sunday Mirror because they focus on the last words of the
:01:38. > :01:45.Bastille Day killer as they put it. Those words... Everything is normal,
:01:46. > :01:49.quite a chilling line. They say he rang his brother hours before the
:01:50. > :01:54.massacre in Nice and even sent a selfie are his last words. As we
:01:55. > :01:58.know so-called Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the
:01:59. > :02:03.carnage. It's very difficult. There's a question posed on one of
:02:04. > :02:08.the other papers, was he connected, was the Nice killer really linked to
:02:09. > :02:13.ISIS? The thing is, with all the stories we've been hearing about
:02:14. > :02:18.him, he was a wife beater, a criminal, he didn't pray, he took
:02:19. > :02:22.drugs, drank and ate pork. And he was very angry, a very angry man.
:02:23. > :02:31.But he was an angry man. What we do know was that often angry men try to
:02:32. > :02:38.find an outlet and it will just find the path in their minds of least
:02:39. > :02:46.resistance. Perhaps he felt this was the only open to him. The fact ISIS
:02:47. > :02:51.is claiming this is simply because they have been sending out these
:02:52. > :02:57.messages. They would, wouldn't they? Exactly. The message is if you
:02:58. > :03:02.haven't got a gun, use stones, knives, whatever you've got. And
:03:03. > :03:06.they have in the past, putting videos how you can adapt something
:03:07. > :03:13.for example like a lorry to become a weapon and a killing machine.
:03:14. > :03:19.Probably he never even went near a mosque and hadn't been radicalised,
:03:20. > :03:24.just a crazy person. The Sunday Times, so many agonising stories
:03:25. > :03:28.about victims, those who died, those who narrowly survived, but the
:03:29. > :03:34.Sunday Times have a story about the agony of a father unable to save his
:03:35. > :03:39.son. I find these very hard to read, I really find it difficult. The
:03:40. > :03:44.human stories... I thought there would be more of them in the Sunday
:03:45. > :03:49.papers, more individual stories. There probably are inside the pages,
:03:50. > :03:56.this is just the front. This is a little boy called Yanis, jumping
:03:57. > :04:01.around playing with his friends, having a beautiful evening at the
:04:02. > :04:06.fireworks. That's the awful ghastliness of it. So many children.
:04:07. > :04:11.An everyday event and yesterday the papers were full of pictures of
:04:12. > :04:21.bogeys and small bodies and a goal behind them -- bodies. He was a
:04:22. > :04:26.four-year-old child, he was playing on the beach, he wanted to stay
:04:27. > :04:31.longer, they walked essentially into the path of the lorry and he turned
:04:32. > :04:35.around to see if Yanis was there and he wasn't, he was on the pavement
:04:36. > :04:41.bleeding and he said he knew then, if only they had allowed him to stay
:04:42. > :04:45.on the beach. It's when you focus on the individual story that it starts
:04:46. > :04:50.to hit home. How it relates to you and your life. Moving on to the
:04:51. > :04:54.Sunday Times... We are on the Sunday Times but their main lead is a
:04:55. > :05:00.dramatic picture of the attempted coup in Turkey, a brilliant picture,
:05:01. > :05:04.isn't it? Look at the age of those, young people out on the streets
:05:05. > :05:12.trying to... This is people power, isn't it, standing up to democracy.
:05:13. > :05:18.Challenging the coup. They were responding to Erdogan, who had done
:05:19. > :05:23.his FaceTime via a television journalist holding it for him and he
:05:24. > :05:28.said get on the streets and fight fire with fire. Even though Erdogan
:05:29. > :05:33.isn't everyone's idea of the most democratic president in the world.
:05:34. > :05:38.He isn't. This is the most terrifying thing, the restoring of
:05:39. > :05:44.democracy in Turkey supposedly... 2800 soldiers arrested, where are
:05:45. > :05:54.they going to put them all? The judges, 2700 judges sacked just like
:05:55. > :05:57.that. And journalists as well. Erdogan is using this in a way to
:05:58. > :06:00.carry out a purge of the military, of the judiciary to strengthen his
:06:01. > :06:05.position. Indeed. He wants the presidency to be changed. He's been
:06:06. > :06:09.hampered by that in various areas so perhaps this is a way of him getting
:06:10. > :06:13.rid of the people stopping him. The Observer have that as their
:06:14. > :06:26.headline, Turkish leader clamps down after crushing the coup. Again, the
:06:27. > :06:30.Prime Minister, Dallaglio Viren, changing the constitution to allow
:06:31. > :06:35.plotters to be executed. -- Binali Yildirim. This is a country that
:06:36. > :06:40.wants to join the EU, now you see why it has taken so long to get them
:06:41. > :06:44.ready to join the EU. It was a big issue in the referendum campaign,
:06:45. > :06:50.whether or not Turkey would join. When you look at the map and you see
:06:51. > :06:56.where it is bound on each corner, Greece at the bottom, Bulgaria, then
:06:57. > :07:03.Georgia and Russia so close. It is such a pivotal country. No wonder
:07:04. > :07:10.the worldly as are backing so-called democracy in the form of Erdogan.
:07:11. > :07:17.The other thing I was surprised to read was 600,000 in the Army, a huge
:07:18. > :07:21.army. The biggest army certainly in Europe, 27 divisions? How many have
:07:22. > :07:27.we got, two or three? I'm married to a soldier, that's why. The Sunday
:07:28. > :07:32.Telegraph, you like their headline, revenge of the coup plotters. I
:07:33. > :07:36.thought the headline was amusing because it could have been a
:07:37. > :07:41.headline on any number of stories, of the political stories. The Tory
:07:42. > :07:47.leadership or the Labour leadership? We do have a little bit about the
:07:48. > :07:55.Labour Party tearing itself apart, that was in the Observer. A kind of
:07:56. > :08:00.gruesome fascination watching the internal machinations of the Labour
:08:01. > :08:08.Party. They are all turning on Angela Eagle now. The suggestion by
:08:09. > :08:14.Owen Smith is that there should be just two of them, presumably himself
:08:15. > :08:22.against Corvin. But she's not having any of it. It's getting very messy.
:08:23. > :08:28.Very messy -- Corbyn. It is huge relief by the solidarity of Carizza
:08:29. > :08:38.may's actions. All of a sudden it is looking like the Tories are all done
:08:39. > :08:42.-- Teresa may. Everything is falling apart and if you do this I will do
:08:43. > :08:46.this and everyone is saying that -- Theresa May. But are you going to
:08:47. > :08:53.vote for them if you pay ?25 or if you are one of the ?3 Lot? Speaking
:08:54. > :08:57.of voting, the Independent online, it's not an actual newspaper any
:08:58. > :09:02.more, they have given us their front page and they have done an opinion
:09:03. > :09:09.poll that suggests a lot of people don't want Theresa May to call an
:09:10. > :09:13.election, or a second referendum. A lot of people seem to feel
:09:14. > :09:20.disenfranchised by the election of Theresa May as the Tory party
:09:21. > :09:24.leader. They don't seem to understand this is not the American
:09:25. > :09:30.system, we don't vote for a guy or a woman, we vote for a party. If the
:09:31. > :09:34.party changes its leader then that's tough, that's what happens. Don't
:09:35. > :09:39.you worry now about opinion polls, they haven't been very good for the
:09:40. > :09:44.last few times. When the opinion poll said 57% rejected demands from
:09:45. > :09:48.Labour MPs for a second referendum after a Brexit deal, 4 million
:09:49. > :09:53.people I think signed a petition saying we need a second referendum
:09:54. > :09:59.because they feel that quite a lot of people went and voted on things
:10:00. > :10:05.for example like here, ?350 million for the NHS if we're out and
:10:06. > :10:08.actually that's not true. They're saying quite a lot of people voted
:10:09. > :10:14.for that and when they found out that wasn't true they said I
:10:15. > :10:20.wouldn't have voted like that. Then you get some sort of popstar like
:10:21. > :10:26.Damon Albarn at Glastonbury saying everyone that voted for Brexit was
:10:27. > :10:31.ill informed. Let's talk about the Mail on Sunday, they have got a
:10:32. > :10:35.story quoting the Brexit Minister, as he is an officially known, David
:10:36. > :10:44.Davis, talking about maybe sending home Europeans who come to the UK
:10:45. > :10:50.just before Brexit, Europeans who tried to beat the border deadline.
:10:51. > :10:54.He has said he is determined to win a generous settlement from EU
:10:55. > :11:02.migrants already here. He is quite clearly thinking of the Brits who
:11:03. > :11:07.are happily ensconced in Tuscany and Spain and places like that. He
:11:08. > :11:11.doesn't want those countries to kick those people out or make it
:11:12. > :11:15.difficult for them to live their. Penny, we don't know the form these
:11:16. > :11:22.negotiations will take. He can say whatever he likes. But unless we
:11:23. > :11:25.start the process, we can shout and rail and everything, but it's like
:11:26. > :11:31.somebody shouting in a different room. There are no negotiations,
:11:32. > :11:36.nothing is happening, and the EU are probably going to cut up quite rough
:11:37. > :11:41.about this and probably lay down the law. It doesn't matter what he says,
:11:42. > :11:48.does it was blue in a way I feel the whole story was a desperate attempt
:11:49. > :11:55.to get away from all the mayhem. For the Daily Mail? Yeah. Do you think
:11:56. > :12:01.they should be leading on Turkey? I still think Nice is the story.
:12:02. > :12:06.There's plenty of human stories. We talk about it before, the guy on the
:12:07. > :12:10.motorcycle, I still want to know what happened to him, the guy that
:12:11. > :12:17.tried to clamber onto the lorry and stop this from happening. What a
:12:18. > :12:21.huge act of courage! One report said he had fallen under the wheels, but
:12:22. > :12:27.when I saw it on it on television he had fallen off away from the lorry.
:12:28. > :12:33.I don't think that's true. Another paper not talking about even me Gunn
:12:34. > :12:42.-- Nice or Turkey is the Daily Express, a Boris Johnson exclusive.
:12:43. > :12:46.The photographs here, is he looking less nuts? When he was first
:12:47. > :12:52.appointed there were a lot of hanging from the wire photographs.
:12:53. > :13:00.Also I was thinking of waving a little flag with a crash helmet.
:13:01. > :13:06.With the two union jacks. On the zip wire, it is like they are trying to
:13:07. > :13:09.make him look more serious. He's trying to make himself more serious,
:13:10. > :13:14.he doesn't know what to do with his hands, putting them in his pockets,
:13:15. > :13:18.then behind his back. Walking into Downing Street it was interesting to
:13:19. > :13:22.see the body language. His message of the fines on terror and his
:13:23. > :13:27.promise of trade after Brexit, saying with ready to go global and
:13:28. > :13:32.we don't have to worry -- defiance. We are respected globally and we are
:13:33. > :13:37.going to carry on business as usual but with different people. He would
:13:38. > :13:41.say that, wouldn't he? I'm quite excited about the free ice cream
:13:42. > :13:48.sundae. Let's finish off with the golf, I know you love your golf,
:13:49. > :13:53.Philippa, but you're not a fan of Rory McIlroy. He's from where I am
:13:54. > :13:59.in County Down and he is a huge role model for young people. How old is
:14:00. > :14:07.he? He's in his twenties. While you talk I will find out. 27. He's 27.
:14:08. > :14:13.No, that's a 27-year-old from Barnet, that's a different person.
:14:14. > :14:18.Get on with the story, come on, what has he done? He has broken his club,
:14:19. > :14:22.he was in such a temper, he hit a bad shot, the same shot he hit on
:14:23. > :14:27.the 15th he hit on the 16th and he was so crossed that he first through
:14:28. > :14:35.it and then broke it. Quite a thing to do -- cross. Steel is bendable
:14:36. > :14:39.and malleable. This is like tennis players smashing their racket? It is
:14:40. > :14:45.bad and he shouldn't do it. Bad form. Bad form. Golf is the last
:14:46. > :14:51.bastions of good manners. Isn't it nice to have a bit of emotion and
:14:52. > :14:54.passion? Not on the golf course. He should have apologised and he should
:14:55. > :14:59.have apologised straight after his round but he didn't, he said he was
:15:00. > :15:04.just angry with himself. He should have said he was really sorry. But
:15:05. > :15:09.nobody got hurt. You don't know that. You've got a whole generation
:15:10. > :15:16.of young kids that might copy him. A small piece of metal could have
:15:17. > :15:24.flown off. Fillip and Penny, thank you both so much. Are you playing
:15:25. > :15:29.golf tomorrow -- fillip. Maybe. That is the papers this hour. -- fillip.
:15:30. > :15:33.Coming up next for you it is the macro film review. -- The Film
:15:34. > :15:40.Review.