:00:08. > :00:12.Welcome to South East Today. Tonight's top story. A former Kent
:00:12. > :00:17.Police officer claims police investigating the M25 road rage
:00:17. > :00:22.murder in 1996 were put at risk by leaks to the News of the World.
:00:22. > :00:29.Lorries packed on the M20. Weeks of delays. What next for Operation
:00:29. > :00:35.Stack? Also in the programme is as the last ever space mission
:00:35. > :00:42.launches we talk to Piers Sellers about the end. The Kent magician
:00:42. > :00:50.that dreamed up a new act that could land him up in Las Vegas. And
:00:50. > :01:00.20 years on, it is still perfect. How you too can visit the real
:01:00. > :01:02.
:01:03. > :01:06.locations made famous by The Good evening. A former senior Kent
:01:06. > :01:10.detective says that leaks of information to the News of the
:01:10. > :01:14.World about a murder investigation her was running may have put his
:01:15. > :01:19.officer at risk. Nick Bidis was investigating the murder of Steven
:01:19. > :01:25.Cameron in 199. He clay claims the News of the World named their chief
:01:25. > :01:31.suspect, Kenneth Noye, before it had become public knowledge. He
:01:31. > :01:36.believes police officers were being paid for that and other information.
:01:36. > :01:39.1996. A murder on an M25 slip road. 21-year-old Steven Cameron had been
:01:39. > :01:42.stabbed to death. Detectives suspected Kenneth Noye was
:01:42. > :01:46.responsible and while that information had been shared with
:01:46. > :01:51.Interpol and the Met police, it wasn't public knowledge. The former
:01:51. > :01:54.head of Kent CID beliefs someone in the police leaked that fact and
:01:55. > :01:58.other information to the News of the World. There were leaks, and
:01:58. > :02:01.definitely there were people who were telling the media, making
:02:01. > :02:04.phone calls to the media, and giving them information. Do you
:02:04. > :02:08.think they they were receiving money forthat? No doubt they were
:02:08. > :02:14.receiving something. If it wasn't something, it was favours. I don't
:02:14. > :02:17.know, we never got to the bottom of it. Not only did the world's action
:02:17. > :02:22.potentially let Kenneth Noye know police were on to him, it is
:02:22. > :02:25.claimed it put officers at risk. were putting officers into
:02:25. > :02:29.dangerous situations, don't forget. Kenneth Noye was a known killer.
:02:29. > :02:33.What I didn't need was publicity about that. The vast majority of
:02:33. > :02:37.journalists respected that, and were co-operative. But the News of
:02:37. > :02:42.the World weren't. The police are investigating allegations the News
:02:42. > :02:45.of the World paid officers for confidential information. In 2003,
:02:45. > :02:51.Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson editors of sunand News of the World
:02:51. > :02:57.respectively were asked by MPs about that very subject. We operate
:02:57. > :03:04.within the code and the law. If there is public interest, the same
:03:04. > :03:07.holds for private investigators, is illegal for police officers to
:03:07. > :03:10.receive payment. But a former News of the World journalist who won a
:03:10. > :03:16.tribunal against the newspaper says claims about payment to police and
:03:16. > :03:22.hacking of voice mail messages may just be the start of it. So far it
:03:22. > :03:26.has been centred round voice mails and messages,, they went further
:03:26. > :03:30.and could obtain people's medical records. People's financial
:03:30. > :03:34.statement, they could get their iet miceed phone bills which they did
:03:34. > :03:42.with Rio Ferdinand once. Criminal investigations and two public
:03:42. > :03:45.enquiries into how the News of the World operated are under way. John,
:03:45. > :03:48.have Kent Police have had anything to say about these ail
:03:48. > :03:54.investigations, that information was leaked during their
:03:54. > :03:57.investigations? Yes, they have. But first we really should point out
:03:57. > :04:02.that Nick Bidis isn't saying that these leaks came from within Kent
:04:02. > :04:04.Police. In fact at that time, he says, both Interpol and the Met
:04:04. > :04:07.police knew that Kenneth Noye was their suspect. So the leak could
:04:07. > :04:11.have come from anywhere. Kent Police say they have a zero
:04:11. > :04:16.tolerance towards this sort of thing, and anyone who compromises
:04:16. > :04:20.and investigation by leaking information to the press could face
:04:20. > :04:23.serious disciplinary, if not criminal action as a result. Thank
:04:23. > :04:27.you. And later in the programme, we will hear from the Bishop of
:04:27. > :04:32.Rochester about how he hopes that the News of the World scandal will
:04:32. > :04:35.be a turning point in press history. It has seen the M20 turned into a
:04:35. > :04:40.giant lorry park, leading at times to weeks of delays and frustration
:04:40. > :04:44.for drivers in Kent. Operation Stack is a problem the authorities
:04:44. > :04:49.have struggled to resolve. A today a meeting has taken place to
:04:50. > :04:53.discuss other options to manage the backlog of traffic on the M20 when
:04:53. > :04:57.cross-Channel sailings are disrupted. Between April last year
:04:57. > :05:01.and May this year op operation stack had to be implemented three
:05:01. > :05:04.times. The year before the lorrys were parked on six different
:05:04. > :05:07.occasions and between r between 2008 and 2009 it was put into force
:05:08. > :05:14.ten time, including the longest ever implementation of Operation
:05:14. > :05:17.Stack, which lasted for nearly three weeks. Operation Stack is a
:05:17. > :05:21.police and multi-agency response to congestion caused at the ports.
:05:22. > :05:26.What that means for us if you track back 2008 it cost �2 million to put
:05:26. > :05:30.it on. Every time I do that, on behalf of Kent Police, it means I
:05:30. > :05:34.am committing resources to doing that, when we put it on we move
:05:34. > :05:41.officers from local policing officers out to the motorway to be
:05:41. > :05:46.able to put it on. So what from the options? Kent County Council wants
:05:46. > :05:50.to build a lorry park at Aldington. Earlier this year they were dealt a
:05:50. > :05:53.blow after the Government announced it wouldn't pay for it. The
:05:53. > :05:58.Campaign to Protect Rural England has suggested an ambitious plan to
:05:58. > :06:02.build a lorry park in the sea off the Kent coast but reclaiming land
:06:02. > :06:06.at Dover. The MP for Folkstone & Hythe has suggested a network of
:06:06. > :06:10.smaller scale parks alongside the M20. I think something we will take
:06:10. > :06:14.to ministers is whether there should be a review of a lot of the
:06:14. > :06:17.planning rules that have ruled certain sites out this is a piece
:06:17. > :06:21.of national infrastructure so maybe we should look at national planning
:06:21. > :06:25.guidelines and see if that can speed the process up and bring into
:06:25. > :06:29.play other parking sites. business correspondent was at the
:06:29. > :06:32.meeting and he is in Dover for us now. Mark, did anything specific
:06:32. > :06:36.emerge from this meeting today?. think three main points. One is
:06:36. > :06:41.this idea that planning regulations could help create a permanent lorry
:06:41. > :06:46.park or a number of temporary ones to relieve the problems. Secondly,
:06:46. > :06:50.once any strikes or bad weather is over, it is how do we get it on to
:06:50. > :06:53.the ferries as past as -- fast as possible. How do you pay for
:06:53. > :06:56.Operation Stack? And this idea that perhaps foreign hauliers could be
:06:57. > :07:00.charged, a tax for that, and a number of ideas round that are in
:07:00. > :07:06.front of Government at the moment. Really, those are the three main
:07:06. > :07:08.points. Thank you. Representatives from the group that met today will
:07:09. > :07:15.be pressurising the Department of Transport for a decision, they plan
:07:15. > :07:19.to meet again before the end of the year. Coming up in a moment. The
:07:19. > :07:29.Open starts next week. How our local boys are preparing for the
:07:29. > :07:32.
:07:32. > :07:37.Now today saw the final launch of a space shuttle from the Kennedy
:07:37. > :07:42.Space Center at Cape Canaveral in Florida. It will be the 135th and
:07:42. > :07:46.last mission o of the 30yeerd year programme. Aus naught Piers Sellers
:07:46. > :07:52.was there to watch Atlantis take off. He joins us live now from
:07:52. > :07:57.Florida. Pierce, good of you to be be with us. You have flown in three
:07:57. > :08:03.shuttle missions. You must have had some mixed emotions today. I did. I
:08:03. > :08:09.did. I was very glad to see a safe and successful launch of my
:08:09. > :08:13.favourite shuttle. And it is a tribute to everybody here they have
:08:13. > :08:16.managed to get it more or less on time. Maybe just over a minute late.
:08:16. > :08:23.Did you have your heart in your mouth a bit, when the clock stopped
:08:23. > :08:27.at 31 seconds, thinking, perhaps it is not going to go off today?
:08:27. > :08:32.could imagine the moans in the cockpit. This happened a few times
:08:32. > :08:37.we have stopped at 31 seconds, and you know, generally that it is for
:08:37. > :08:41.the day, because it is too little time to sort it out. The ground
:08:41. > :08:45.team fixed it and moved back into the count. You have been in space
:08:45. > :08:51.and there aren't many people who can say that. What does it feel
:08:51. > :08:55.like launching in the shuttle? is quite a ride. When you launching
:08:55. > :08:57.you get this huge push in your back and then everything in the cockpit
:08:57. > :09:02.is thrashed round, it's a very rough ride for the first two
:09:02. > :09:06.minutes. You look out the window and the sky goes from tpwhrue black
:09:06. > :09:10.quickly and as you go out of of the atmosphere, you get mashed back in
:09:10. > :09:14.your seat for another six minutes, more and more pressure on your body,
:09:14. > :09:18.up to 3G, right up to eight-and-a- half minutes, at which point you
:09:18. > :09:24.are going five miles a second, which is very fast. That the point
:09:24. > :09:28.the main gins cut off and you go from being pushed into your seat to
:09:28. > :09:36.zero G. Everything is floating. Thank you for being with us. Thank
:09:36. > :09:41.you. A man from Kent and his wife have been sentenced in connection
:09:41. > :09:43.with Europe's biggest illegal veterinary medicine visit. Ronald
:09:43. > :09:48.Meddes and his wife Regine Lansley sold unauthorised medicines from
:09:48. > :09:53.warehouses in Kent and Belgium. The trade netted more than �6 million
:09:53. > :09:59.and the scam came the light after customers -- customs made large see
:09:59. > :10:02.shuefrs drugs at Ashford and Dover. Special rail fares for London 2012
:10:02. > :10:06.Olympic spectators have gone on sale. Tickets are designed to be
:10:06. > :10:12.flexible to allow passengers to change the time they return, should
:10:12. > :10:17.an event be rescheduled. Two Sussex police officers who risked their
:10:17. > :10:20.lives after an explosion at a fireworks factory have been
:10:20. > :10:25.rewarded for their courage. Sergeant Dan Pitcher and PC Dave
:10:25. > :10:28.Upjohn were called to the Ringmer fireworks fire in 2006. Both men
:10:28. > :10:35.pulled a seriously injured man to safety, as the factory was about to
:10:35. > :10:40.explode. We weren't expecting anything else to happen, so very
:10:40. > :10:43.proud. Likewise, and as I said, our thoughts go out to especially in
:10:43. > :10:49.this instance to the family of the two firefighters that died as a
:10:49. > :10:52.result of the fireworks factory, and without a doubt we are humbled.
:10:52. > :10:56.The Bishop of Rochester, one of the most senior figures in the Church
:10:56. > :11:01.of England has said that he hopes revelations surrounding the News of
:11:01. > :11:04.the World will lead to a change in the way the press operates. In the
:11:04. > :11:06.public's demands for salacious stories. The Right Reverend James
:11:06. > :11:09.Langstaff is calling on the public and newspaper editors to think
:11:09. > :11:17.again about the type of stories they run and the methods they use
:11:17. > :11:21.to get them. Our social affairs correspondent reports. Expose says
:11:21. > :11:25.and gossip. Crime and tragedy. It is all there in the tabloids but
:11:25. > :11:28.the closure of the News of the World is leading to some people
:11:28. > :11:34.hoping there will be an effect on the newspapers and society. A move
:11:34. > :11:37.towards less of a hung foretabloid- style scandal Some of the anguish
:11:37. > :11:41.and scandal over the present situation is that it is vulnerable
:11:41. > :11:45.people it seems who have been targeted, who have had their phones
:11:45. > :11:49.hacked. And that, if society begins to react against that, that could
:11:49. > :11:53.be something good. But the News of the World became the biggest
:11:53. > :11:57.selling Sunday paper because people liked its exclusive, revelations
:11:57. > :12:02.insider knowledge and style. Only how some journalists got their
:12:02. > :12:06.scoops it is argued is what should change For nearly 170 years the
:12:06. > :12:09.world was the world's most successful newspaper. It gave the
:12:09. > :12:13.British public the entertaining, light-hearted titillation they want
:12:13. > :12:18.on a Sunday. That is good. We shouldn't want to stop that. We
:12:18. > :12:22.should, however, want to stop newspapers doing things which are
:12:23. > :12:28.immoral and illegal. People today mostly thought there would be
:12:28. > :12:32.little change. Obviously there is thicks going on in the background,
:12:32. > :12:37.that like obviously you don't see every day and whatever, and it has
:12:37. > :12:43.brought it out in the open, but yeah, it's going on everywhere
:12:43. > :12:49.isn't it. It doesn't matter to me. It is just a comic any way isn't it.
:12:49. > :12:52.Who cares? I think it is disgusting what has happened, you know, them
:12:52. > :12:57.getting into phones and things like that. I don't think it is right.
:12:57. > :13:01.But I do think it will change people's minds about papers now.
:13:01. > :13:06.probably won't change. It will make no difference. I will blow over and
:13:06. > :13:11.something else will happen, so, it won't be the last of it. Everyone
:13:11. > :13:21.wants it to change. It will be sales figures which ultimately
:13:21. > :13:23.
:13:23. > :13:27.It is just gone 6.40. The former senior Kent Police officer says
:13:27. > :13:32.leaks to the News of the World may have put officers at risk. Nick
:13:32. > :13:35.Bidis who was investigating the M25 road rage murder in 1996 claims
:13:35. > :13:41.that the paper named their chief suspect, Kenneth Noye, before it
:13:41. > :13:46.had become public knowledge. Also in the programme. The Kent magician
:13:46. > :13:50.who has dreamed up a new plan for getting to Las Vegas. We will talk
:13:50. > :14:00.to Richard Bellars in the studio. Still larking round. How you can
:14:00. > :14:02.
:14:02. > :14:07.visit the locations of the Darling Buds of May 20 years on. Six months
:14:07. > :14:12.ago he tried to trick the legendary American illusionists Penn and
:14:12. > :14:17.Teller on their programme Fool Us but he narrowly failed. So he is
:14:17. > :14:23.brave or foolish to give it another go tomorrow in a bid to be their
:14:23. > :14:28.support act in Las Vegas. In a moment he will explain why he is
:14:28. > :14:36.doing it again and how his trick came to him in a dream. Please
:14:36. > :14:43.welcome from Tunbridge Wells Richard Bellars. My skills in the
:14:43. > :14:48.art of brainwash. Against your Poker Face. Go back to one and
:14:48. > :14:58.repeat that process. Look at that card. Remember the card. Close your
:14:58. > :15:01.
:15:01. > :15:10.eyes and close the deck. Have you got one in your mind? In a nice
:15:10. > :15:15.loud voice which card are you thinking of. Ten of hearts. No way!
:15:15. > :15:20.Richard is with us now. Why, why did you want do it again? It was
:15:20. > :15:25.more to gain the respect from my peers really. Going on and not
:15:25. > :15:30.fooling them to that extent was not embarrassing but I knew I could do
:15:30. > :15:35.better. So you have dreamed up a trick I kind of, it was, haunting
:15:35. > :15:41.me a bit the last one, so I had some dreams where I was dreaming up
:15:41. > :15:45.a routine, and woke up and figured I had to make it a reality. 1.00 in
:15:45. > :15:49.the morning, scribbling ideas and it came together. Like all the best
:15:49. > :15:53.practising noefrs things you started small, didn't you. I was
:15:54. > :15:59.this big when I started! In height as well as, you were going to show
:15:59. > :16:04.us. Yes, this thing. This is the first trick you learned I loved
:16:04. > :16:08.sweets as a kid. I never used to buy cards, I used to buy sweets.
:16:08. > :16:11.The idea is, we will do it on this one. Pop it on there. The idea if
:16:11. > :16:18.you close your hand round that band to make a fist and I put this on
:16:18. > :16:25.this side of the band, there is technically no way past your hand
:16:25. > :16:31.or through the band. Houdini used to get out of locks and escape from
:16:31. > :16:34.just about anything. How did do you that? That was the first trick I
:16:34. > :16:40.learned as a kid. I did it at school. Got more sweets. So it is
:16:40. > :16:46.all about the sweets You do it if your own hand. You see as you rub
:16:46. > :16:50.it, it vanish completely. Hang on, where has it gone? Look at that.
:16:50. > :16:53.He's good. He's good. You are a dab hand at card trick, because I know
:16:53. > :16:57.you brought your pack along. We were so impressed last time, that
:16:57. > :17:01.we want to see some more. Yeah, sure. Last time I did a trick, you
:17:01. > :17:04.picked a card and I found it and stuff. That is the standard way.
:17:04. > :17:09.I'm going to try a different way this time. Normally you would take
:17:09. > :17:13.one out and hide it. This is different. I am going to spread
:17:14. > :17:20.them out. Look at a card. Once you have seen it look back up but keep
:17:20. > :17:28.a Poker Face on. So pick a card. Look, see and come back up. Both of
:17:28. > :17:37.you. OK. Got one. Yeah. I am going try and get both. Yours is red,
:17:37. > :17:41.yes? Let me finish or black. Yourzs red. Yes. I am getting confused. It
:17:41. > :17:50.was one of the higher cards. A diamond. Was it a picture card.
:17:50. > :18:00.King of diamonds. Yours was black, yours is a lower one. A club. Yes
:18:00. > :18:01.
:18:01. > :18:08.Really low. Two Two? It was. There is no two of clubs. Hang on, what
:18:08. > :18:11.has he done with them? So, Penn and Teller, you want to get to Las
:18:12. > :18:15.Vegas, do you think what you have done this time is going to take you
:18:15. > :18:18.there? I have a better chance, because I wrote it from scratch. It
:18:18. > :18:22.is not something they could have seen before, they can work it out.
:18:22. > :18:27.They are clever guys but I have given myself the best chance.
:18:27. > :18:31.luck, tomorrow night. We will be watching. Now, over the weekend
:18:31. > :18:38.many of the competitors at the year's Open Golf will begin to
:18:38. > :18:41.arrive in Kent. Joining the world's best professionals will be two
:18:41. > :18:44.local golfers looking at their first chance to take on the likes
:18:45. > :18:48.of Rory McIlroy. Andy Smith has never practised so hard before. He
:18:48. > :18:52.knows the next few days could change his life forever. A few
:18:52. > :18:56.months ago his career appeared over, a serrys you operation forced him
:18:56. > :19:00.to stop playing. His sponsor pulled out and he started doing odd job,
:19:00. > :19:05.but a friend paid for him to try to qualify and he set off with a bag
:19:05. > :19:10.of borrowed clubs. What happened next surprised almost everybody
:19:10. > :19:16.Matt in the shop here rang me, in Greece and said, "Have you heard?"
:19:16. > :19:20.I said what is going on. He said "Andise got through." We fell to
:19:20. > :19:23.pieces. Andy will travel down on Sunday, determined to enjoy every
:19:23. > :19:28.moment I am probably there because I had no expectations this time and
:19:28. > :19:32.didn't know what was going to happen. So it is just, a seriously
:19:32. > :19:38.good feeling. Francis is equally as excited by the prospect of Micking
:19:38. > :19:44.with the world's best player, especially as he will do so almost
:19:44. > :19:48.literally on his doorstep. His father owned a golf club near the
:19:48. > :19:53.course. Last week I was there, and I thought I was pretty much done,
:19:53. > :19:57.come back this week and I thought "Blimey they have done loads more."
:19:57. > :20:02.It is very busy. The Open has thrown up unlikely winners. Ben
:20:03. > :20:07.Curtis was almost unknown when he lifted the title in 2003. Andy and
:20:07. > :20:12.Francis I know they are unlikely to emulate him but being there will be
:20:12. > :20:18.the high light of their golfing lives. It is getting close. I am
:20:19. > :20:22.excited. 20 years ago this summer, pop -- Pop and Ma Larkin and their
:20:22. > :20:26.brood of children appeared on our screens in The Darling Buds of May.
:20:26. > :20:34.The series was more popular than Eastenders and Coronation Street
:20:35. > :20:44.when it aired in 1991. It was predomnandly filmed in the village
:20:44. > :20:49.of Pluckley. Today a new visitor centre has been opened. It was set
:20:49. > :20:55.in an idyllic rural Kent of the 1950s. HB Bates wrote the novel
:20:55. > :20:58.which inspired the series, a series produced by his son. Bates moved to
:20:58. > :21:06.Kent with his wife and was looking for inspiration for a novel, when
:21:06. > :21:11.he stopped outside a village shop to buy sweets. Quick, quick! Hand
:21:11. > :21:15.them round. No extra licks on the way! Out of the shop came this
:21:15. > :21:19.extraordinary family, with ice- creams and crisps and so on, and
:21:20. > :21:23.they piled into this great big blue truck and disappeared on the
:21:23. > :21:29.horizon. That was his first and only glimpse of the Larkin family,
:21:29. > :21:36.as he called them. That was his inspiration, that was his starting
:21:36. > :21:41.point. Roger lived with his parent tons farm used as the Larkin family
:21:41. > :21:45.home. After three years of filming, he became very friendly with the
:21:45. > :21:50.cast. David Jason restores old motorcycles so we had something in
:21:50. > :21:59.common. I was restoring an old car at time with my father, he used to
:21:59. > :22:04.come down, and say "You haven't done much to it this time" or say
:22:04. > :22:09."Wow a lot of progress this time." The farm was used as one of the
:22:09. > :22:19.major location and it was outside this building here that Charlie
:22:19. > :22:19.
:22:19. > :22:24.first laid eyed on Mariette. Hello. I spot yod first. Now a trail is
:22:24. > :22:30.encouraging people to visit. The tour will take do you Larkin's farm,
:22:30. > :22:34.the pub where they drank and the church where they got married.
:22:34. > :22:37.hope visitor also come and do The Darling Buds of May trail and see
:22:37. > :22:43.some of those places, but at the same time enjoy some of the new
:22:43. > :22:48.things that we can offer today, and relive perhaps some of that lovely
:22:48. > :22:56.romantic period captured in the TV programme. The trail will be
:22:57. > :22:58.available to download from Kent on 15th July. But what we need is
:22:59. > :23:02.15th July. But what we need is glorious sunshine. Lara? Yes at the
:23:02. > :23:06.time on a Friday night the pressure is really on to tell you something
:23:06. > :23:10.exciting. Don't get me wrong, the weeged isn't looking bad, it is
:23:10. > :23:14.just not particularly thrilling. Tonight, it will be a wet picture,
:23:14. > :23:17.but after that things are clearing up. A lot of cloud cover round
:23:17. > :23:23.though. As you can see, today there has been a fair bit of cloud. You
:23:23. > :23:26.will have seen that by looking out your window, but we are seeing
:23:26. > :23:29.clearer spots, so this evening pleasant evening sunshine, the next
:23:29. > :23:33.couple of hours are looking all right. After that there is trouble
:23:33. > :23:37.on its way. As you can see here, a bit of shadow along the south coast.
:23:37. > :23:41.Now that is where we see the next weather system creep in from the
:23:41. > :23:45.Continent. With it, there will be some rather heavy rain,
:23:45. > :23:50.particularly round coastal parts, up to 25 millimetres falling. But
:23:50. > :23:54.by the time most of us are awake, that rain should have stopped. It
:23:54. > :23:58.is remaining mild, both temperatures down 12 degrees.
:23:58. > :24:03.Tomorrow morning, still a few showers in the wake of that rain,
:24:03. > :24:07.they could be heavy and thundery, but after that, just quite a lot of
:24:07. > :24:14.cloud cover. Temperatures tomorrow getting up to about 21 degrees at
:24:14. > :24:21.their highest. The odd shower still not far away, so Surrey and east
:24:21. > :24:24.sus -- Sussex could see a somehow ur. It will be breezy there as well.
:24:24. > :24:28.Generally, just a rather cloudy picture. Now, by tomorrow night,
:24:28. > :24:31.any of those showers should have crept away, a fair bit of cloud
:24:32. > :24:36.cover, meaning overnight those temperatures not dropping too low.
:24:36. > :24:41.Down to about 12 degrees, and Sunday, well, it is going to be
:24:41. > :24:44.rather cloudy picture. High pressure, setting out in the
:24:44. > :24:48.Atlantic, that means things are generally dry, a bit of wet weather
:24:49. > :24:51.in the north, but here it will be a drier picture, not a huge amount of
:24:51. > :24:58.sunshine but the temperatures remaining constant over the next
:24:58. > :25:02.few days and enjoy the dry weather because by Tuesday it is looking
:25:02. > :25:05.wet again. Let us look at the main headline. The former editor of the
:25:05. > :25:09.News of the World Andy Coulson has been arrested by police
:25:09. > :25:12.investigating the allegations of phone hacking. Tonight the Bishop
:25:12. > :25:18.of Rochester has said that he hopes the public will think again about
:25:18. > :25:23.the types of stories they want. Lots of you have been e-mailing us.
:25:23. > :25:27.One says "We get the journalism we deserve, because people do keep
:25:27. > :25:33.buying these trashy paper, and enjoy the scandal, the stories and
:25:33. > :25:43.the dirty details. The tabloids were invented in the Victorian era,
:25:43. > :25:43.
:25:43. > :25:52.it is your enthuse yusm that pushes journalists to go too far." "It is
:25:52. > :25:59.a seven situation -- sensation list and morally corrupt industry." I
:25:59. > :26:02.believe Joe Public is to blame. "People have obviously been willing
:26:02. > :26:06.to buy the News of the World because it has been the best
:26:06. > :26:10.selling Sunday paper, so a lot of people are getting the journalism