03/03/2018

Download Subtitles

Transcript

0:00:00 > 0:00:01in Russia after football's lawmakers voted to approve the technology.

0:00:14 > 0:00:17Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be

0:00:17 > 0:00:18bringing us tomorrow.

0:00:18 > 0:00:21With me are journalist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and Penny Smith,

0:00:21 > 0:00:26who is a journalist and broadcaster.

0:00:26 > 0:00:28We might have trouble!

0:00:28 > 0:00:30Many of tomorrow's front pages are already in.

0:00:30 > 0:00:33While the Beast from the East subsides and the snow melts,

0:00:33 > 0:00:35The Observer takes stock of the financial cost the wintry

0:00:35 > 0:00:38weather has taken on the country, suggesting it's cost us

0:00:38 > 0:00:41£1 billion per day.

0:00:41 > 0:00:43The Sunday Times leads on an investigation into how

0:00:43 > 0:00:45internet giants may be implicated in the trafficking

0:00:45 > 0:00:48of vulnerable women.

0:00:48 > 0:00:51The paper also looks ahead to tomorrow night's Oscars

0:00:51 > 0:00:54with a picture of Gary Oldman, who has the Best Actor nod

0:00:54 > 0:00:56for playing the part of Winston Churchill

0:00:56 > 0:01:01The actor also takes centre stage on the front of The Telegraph

0:01:01 > 0:01:04alongside the paper's top story, which looks at the way BBC

0:01:04 > 0:01:07presenters' salaries are taxed.

0:01:07 > 0:01:10The top story for The Mail is the latest gossip

0:01:10 > 0:01:17from within Theresa May's Cabinet.

0:01:18 > 0:01:23Boris and dirty tricks... We will

0:01:23 > 0:01:27Boris and dirty tricks... We will talk about that later! And when we

0:01:27 > 0:01:35look at Penny Smith... Kami? She has a very nice Ginette?Especially for

0:01:35 > 0:01:47here.She looks gorgeous.We are shocked. She knows what a woman must

0:01:47 > 0:01:56do, she must cook and she must be able to take part in selling.Shall

0:01:56 > 0:01:59we talk about the papers?

0:01:59 > 0:02:06The Sunday Times, pop-up brothels, the internet giants, Number 10

0:02:06 > 0:02:14considering new laws... What is wrong, Fiona? Do you want that? This

0:02:14 > 0:02:17is the top story. Number 10 considering new laws on sex

0:02:17 > 0:02:23trafficking. How can internet giants like Facebook and Google become

0:02:23 > 0:02:28implicated?That is where you do the search engines and that is where

0:02:28 > 0:02:33people find these brothels and that is the way that they are profiting

0:02:33 > 0:02:37so what they are saying is they have been discovered in Cornwall,

0:02:37 > 0:02:41Swindon, holiday cottages in the Peak District, enraging the Bishop

0:02:41 > 0:02:44of Derby and the Sunday Times find three such clubs operating last week

0:02:44 > 0:02:51near Hyde Park in central London so what happens is Google and Facebook,

0:02:51 > 0:03:01they are used to buy these sex traffickers to kind of pimp these

0:03:01 > 0:03:05victims and it is very difficult because every time we talk about

0:03:05 > 0:03:10something like this and it happens with terrorism also... They come

0:03:10 > 0:03:16back to say, free speech.And that is always... And that is what it is

0:03:16 > 0:03:24really about, the whole thing of the internet, a space that is totally

0:03:24 > 0:03:31free, it has done amazing things. The Arab Spring. Is lots of

0:03:31 > 0:03:35censorship. But increasingly, I think that it is unsustainable

0:03:35 > 0:03:42because it is the terrorism websites, the child abuse websites,

0:03:42 > 0:03:48the deep internet with the most horrific things are being peddled.

0:03:48 > 0:03:53They are profiting directly from these brothels. They are enabling?

0:03:53 > 0:03:59They are not developing a method of regulation, I suppose.I cannot

0:03:59 > 0:04:08understand... We can send Tesla cars into space and all sorts of other

0:04:08 > 0:04:14incredible things and yet we cannot develop algorithms to stop... What

0:04:14 > 0:04:19search words do you put end to find these?Why can you not stop that? It

0:04:19 > 0:04:26is more ubiquitous, these assaults especially on women or people of

0:04:26 > 0:04:32colour or anybody they do not like, when you talk to these people on

0:04:32 > 0:04:35Facebook and the internet giants, they say, it is not my problem.I

0:04:35 > 0:04:42think it is. How do they, with all the will in the world, harness all

0:04:42 > 0:04:48of this? It is so enormous, the scale of it.These men are very

0:04:48 > 0:04:52clever, if they wanted to, they would develop some technical way.

0:04:52 > 0:04:57And they are, doing something with the Isis websites and so on. I think

0:04:57 > 0:05:03they have... It is just where newspapers and broadcasters are, you

0:05:03 > 0:05:08just cannot have freedom without responsibility.They would say they

0:05:08 > 0:05:14are not publishers.One way or another. They are conduits. My other

0:05:14 > 0:05:20peer is that does this go into the dark web, and becomes evermore,

0:05:20 > 0:05:29located?At start with what is obvious. I think this thing happened

0:05:29 > 0:05:33and the culture did not catch up and now cultural awareness is catching

0:05:33 > 0:05:39up and it is not a bad thing.Brexit is never far away.At that point,

0:05:39 > 0:05:49lots of people but on a cup of tea! A glass of wine!Not again! Two

0:05:49 > 0:05:53stories on Brexit. To do with the Conservatives again, the Mail on

0:05:53 > 0:06:00Sunday... Shall I hold this up again? The Mail on Sunday, we have

0:06:00 > 0:06:03these augmented reality graphics and yet we are holding up some paper! It

0:06:03 > 0:06:14is here. Boris in new dirty tricks row with Number 10. Gavin Barwell,

0:06:14 > 0:06:18accused of leaking a letter that Boris Johnson wrote, playing down

0:06:18 > 0:06:21the impact of a heart border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern

0:06:21 > 0:06:27Ireland.Yes, tittle tattle, it does not deserve three pages. You just

0:06:27 > 0:06:32have to say Boris and it is like this lightning rod, everything gets

0:06:32 > 0:06:39very exciting. This is about the difficulties of saying to the world,

0:06:39 > 0:06:47to the party and everything, that speech Theresa May made, it bonded

0:06:47 > 0:06:54everybody, including Remainers, and it was not a bad speech, not bad,

0:06:54 > 0:06:56but the deep conflicts within the country and within our own party

0:06:56 > 0:07:03will not be easily fixed.They will never be reconciled. We just have to

0:07:03 > 0:07:06be grown up about this and say, we are poles apart, let's come

0:07:06 > 0:07:12together. And at the picture of Boris and it is like the Beast from

0:07:12 > 0:07:17the East because he is in Budapest, holding up that letter. Which is not

0:07:17 > 0:07:22the leaked letter at the centre of the dirty tricks row but it is

0:07:22 > 0:07:26allegedly the speech from the Mansion House, where he is allegedly

0:07:26 > 0:07:39giving the thumbs up.He has also said, what did he say? This is a

0:07:39 > 0:07:45nonsense claim from an anonymous source. The denials will climb in.

0:07:45 > 0:07:50It does make you realise, these are all available to fights within the

0:07:50 > 0:07:55party and the plotters, there is nothing like conservative potters.

0:07:55 > 0:08:00They even got rid of Margaret Thatcher, the woman who gave him the

0:08:00 > 0:08:05world, whether you liked her or not...It is not over. The Observer

0:08:05 > 0:08:12has another take on this. The Tory Brexit unity fades as Heseltine

0:08:12 > 0:08:16slams Theresa May's speech. Lord Heseltine has been very outspoken

0:08:16 > 0:08:22about the folly of Brexit.The former Deputy Prime Minister

0:08:22 > 0:08:26dismissing her latest speech as just more phrases, generalisations and

0:08:26 > 0:08:31platitudes which have done nothing to make a deal more unlikely. He

0:08:31 > 0:08:36talks about, we have been talking about cherry picking and he says the

0:08:36 > 0:08:39speech moves us further down the cherry picking road and sets at the

0:08:39 > 0:08:46cherries Britain wants to pick...We haven't got the migrant workers to

0:08:46 > 0:08:52pick those cherries! As a socialist, I hate saying this... I have grown

0:08:52 > 0:08:58to really admire Heseltine and not just recently, a very competent man.

0:08:58 > 0:09:02In Liverpool they want to build a statue for him because he did such

0:09:02 > 0:09:08good work in Liverpool. All that regeneration work. He has been right

0:09:08 > 0:09:14on this all along and much as I hate his wealth and his land... You

0:09:14 > 0:09:20signed envious! I am very happy in my flat.I think he is right on

0:09:20 > 0:09:28this. It is just not... The problem is, if anybody thought this was

0:09:28 > 0:09:34going to be sorted out in any shape or form, it isn't, even when it is

0:09:34 > 0:09:41as over as it will be at some stage... In two years or 22 years...

0:09:41 > 0:09:45I spoke to Bernard Jenkin yesterday about the speech and he was quite

0:09:45 > 0:09:50content with that.There are others...Jacob Rees-Mogg said that

0:09:50 > 0:09:57he thinks...Do you believe these guys? They are very outspoken, if

0:09:57 > 0:10:02they don't like what she is doing. We're coming to the stage... Very

0:10:02 > 0:10:07little time left. For the practicalities. I don't believe, I

0:10:07 > 0:10:14really don't, that there is... It was a good speech. But these guys, I

0:10:14 > 0:10:19would not ever want to be leader of the Tory Party like I would ever be!

0:10:19 > 0:10:26You never know! Stranger things have happened. The Telegraph. Here you

0:10:26 > 0:10:35go. I have this extra job to do. The stars turn on BBC over tax stitcher.

0:10:35 > 0:10:39This is confiscated but it has to do with the fact that a lot of

0:10:39 > 0:10:46presenters were encouraged, or they would say, forced, to set up

0:10:46 > 0:10:51personal service companies in the late 1990s and early 2000s if they

0:10:51 > 0:10:55wanted to engage with the BBC. And it has to do with whether that was

0:10:55 > 0:11:01an appropriate way for them to have run their business affairs.What I

0:11:01 > 0:11:07don't understand, the Telegraph has gone big on this... What does the

0:11:07 > 0:11:14BBC Get Out of it?Nothing.It saves National Insurance contributions.Is

0:11:14 > 0:11:19that it?That is quite a lot of money. I think a lot of presenters

0:11:19 > 0:11:24and other people have done this for their own reasons.They also save,

0:11:24 > 0:11:28the BBC... ISA and it was also about saving because you don't have to...

0:11:28 > 0:11:33If you are not staff you don't have to pay anything else.It is very

0:11:33 > 0:11:36expensive to employ people because you have to pay National Insurance,

0:11:36 > 0:11:42sick pay...But you have freelance contracts, many of us have lived

0:11:42 > 0:11:46freelance lines. We have never felt pressured to get into these deals. I

0:11:46 > 0:11:55don't understand.It is very confusing. There is a feeling or

0:11:55 > 0:12:00sense that HMRC was content with this and they are not content with

0:12:00 > 0:12:06it and now the rules mean that HMRC wants as many people as possible to

0:12:06 > 0:12:11pay their tax at source through the pay as you earn system. I am not

0:12:11 > 0:12:18affected by this! Full disclosure! This is a fiendishly conjugated tax

0:12:18 > 0:12:22situation that people find themselves in and they will have to

0:12:22 > 0:12:26try to unpack this and if they were in the wrong tax vehicle, the wrong

0:12:26 > 0:12:30tax status or employment status, they could end up having to back pay

0:12:30 > 0:12:39tax.It has happened with one presenter, at least.Co-presenter of

0:12:39 > 0:12:46Look North.Nearly £500,000 tax bill. It is not just conjugated,

0:12:46 > 0:12:53this is a mighty mess.Mightily worrying for those affected.There

0:12:53 > 0:12:58are enemies of the BBC who have been waiting for these things to happen.

0:12:58 > 0:13:06Let's go back to The Times. Crackdown on nimby councils. But in

0:13:06 > 0:13:11my backyard. Normally individuals than authorities?This is about how

0:13:11 > 0:13:21they are trying to... We need more houses and we need more affordable

0:13:21 > 0:13:25housing, we keep on saying this and the problem is, there seem to be

0:13:25 > 0:13:31various loopholes that developers seem to be able to exploit so they

0:13:31 > 0:13:35can do fewer affordable households and it used to be in the past that

0:13:35 > 0:13:37we had various other places were people who were essential workers

0:13:37 > 0:13:42but did not get paid a huge amount could rent cheaply or buy houses

0:13:42 > 0:13:48astutely and we don't have those options any more and we are building

0:13:48 > 0:13:53these times and in these places between Oxford and Cambridge, for

0:13:53 > 0:13:58example, they are talking about three huge times being built. And,

0:13:58 > 0:14:04of course, for the people who live around in this little villages, you

0:14:04 > 0:14:08are talking about years of disruption and that sort of thing.

0:14:08 > 0:14:15Is that the right place?If the councils don't building enough

0:14:15 > 0:14:19houses the government will intervene.The London Mayor has been

0:14:19 > 0:14:24quite strong on this because he has seen through some of these loopholes

0:14:24 > 0:14:26and not only are these big developers not building enough

0:14:26 > 0:14:31affordable housing but they are basing the affordable on something

0:14:31 > 0:14:35that is completely wrong because as prices go up, they put the

0:14:35 > 0:14:42affordable at an impossible place. Like you said, nurses and doctors

0:14:42 > 0:14:45and teachers simply would not be able to afford them. I think there

0:14:45 > 0:14:51needs to be a real mission to create... Like when the welfare

0:14:51 > 0:14:57state was created. Part of a nation's mission.Public housing is

0:14:57 > 0:15:07the way to go.Where do you get the land from? A lot of those sites are

0:15:07 > 0:15:11being held by developers, waiting for the right moment, they might

0:15:11 > 0:15:15have paid a lot of money for that and did not give that away for a

0:15:15 > 0:15:20song.Do you know how much of Britain is built upon? It is so

0:15:20 > 0:15:27tiny, the decorously tiny, less than 5%. We have an extraordinary panic

0:15:27 > 0:15:33about being built up and there is a lot of space.When they say that,

0:15:33 > 0:15:36they take into account loads of areas where you cannot even really

0:15:36 > 0:15:41build houses.These things are more possible than we have thought but I

0:15:41 > 0:15:47think it has to be a government led thing, not led by the developers.

0:15:47 > 0:15:52You cannot just -- just put houses in the middle of the field. You have

0:15:52 > 0:15:55to have all the infrastructure and amenities and services, hospitals,

0:15:55 > 0:16:03doctors, schools?Milton Keynes. It works quite well. That was a

0:16:03 > 0:16:08mission, something they did.We will finish with Gary Oldman, on the

0:16:08 > 0:16:13front of the Sunday Times, nominated for an Oscar for Best Actor, I

0:16:13 > 0:16:23think. And he almost did not take that part?Look at the difference.

0:16:23 > 0:16:28It is astonishing is the way that he played Churchill, astonishing.You

0:16:28 > 0:16:32just do not recognise him at all. No. He does not look anything

0:16:32 > 0:16:38like... Just transformed! Who shall be cast as Churchill? You would not

0:16:38 > 0:16:44think Gary Oldman.He almost did not take that, he thought so many people

0:16:44 > 0:16:47have played Churchill better than I could hope for and here he is.

0:16:47 > 0:16:53Amazing actor.The range of roles he has taken on. And he has never won

0:16:53 > 0:17:03this.He did win the Bafta last month so we have recognised him. I

0:17:03 > 0:17:07quite like these old school things, making it up as you go along, but

0:17:07 > 0:17:11had the graphics. It is not like that every night!

0:17:11 > 0:17:13That's it for The Papers this hour.

0:17:13 > 0:17:15We'll be back at 11.30pm for another look.

0:17:15 > 0:17:19Hopefully with graphics!

0:17:19 > 0:17:24Next on BBC News, it's Meet The Author.