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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    BBC apologises, Blue Origin launches Mars probes, and the rise of nunmania

     
    today’s media story

    BBC apologises to Trump, but rejects damages claim

    What happened
    The BBC has issued a formal apology to Donald Trump for an edited Panorama documentary that merged separate parts of his 6 January 2021 speech, creating what the corporation now concedes was a “mistaken impression” of a direct call to violence. The programme, broadcast ahead of last year’s US presidential election, will not be shown again.

    Who said what
    In a letter to Trump’s legal team, the BBC said it “sincerely regrets the manner in which the video clip was edited”, but “strongly disagrees that there is a basis for a defamation claim”. BBC chair Samir Shah has also personally written to the White House to express regret. Trump’s lawyers have demanded a “full and fair retraction”, an apology and financial compensation, threatening a $1 billion lawsuit. Speaking to Fox News, the US president said his speech had been “butchered” and that viewers had been “defrauded”.

    Trump has a history of legal action against news organisations, said Athena Stavrou in The Independent, having “filed lawsuits against media companies before, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and CNN”. This is “the BBC v Trump, Farage and co”, said Marina Hyde in The Guardian. Not so, said The Telegraph’s editorial board. “There is no right-wing plot against the BBC”, rather “its troubles are of its own making”.

    What next?
    The BBC argues that any legal action would face significant hurdles, including US protections for political speech and the limited distribution of the programme. It remains unclear whether Trump will proceed with a lawsuit.

     
     
    today’s space story

    Blue Origin sends probes to Mars in breakthrough launch

    What happened
    Blue Origin has fired its 98 metre-long New Glenn rocket from Cape Canaveral, sending Nasa’s twin Escapade spacecraft on a 22-month journey to Mars. Several days of weather-related delays, including cloudy skies and a geomagnetic storm, pushed the launch time back. The mission marks a major achievement for the company as the rocket’s reusable first stage separated cleanly and returned to land on an Atlantic barge.

    Who said what
    Jeff Bezos watched from launch control, celebrating alongside engineers as the booster touched down. Cheers filled the room when confirmation came that the upper stage had completed its objective.

    The launch is a “major step forward for Jeff Bezos’s rocket company as it seeks to catch up with Elon Musk’s SpaceX”, said Aaron Gregg in The Washington Post. This is a “shot across the bow”, said Scientific American, and a “major step forward in its bid to rival SpaceX as a reliable provider of reusable rockets”.

    What next?
    The two probes, known as Blue and Gold, are expected to reach Mars in 2027, entering co-ordinated elliptical orbits for an 11-month study of how solar winds interact with the planet’s weak magnetic field and thin atmosphere.

     
     
    Today’s music story

    Big-name artists urge action on ticket touts

    What happened
    More than 40 A-list musicians – including Dua Lipa, Coldplay and Sam Fender – have signed a letter to Keir Starmer asking him to fulfil his election promise to “stop touts from fleecing fans”, said the BBC. According to findings by the Competition and Market Authority, tickets are typically marked up by more than 50% when sold on the resale market.

    Who said what
    The statement calls on the government to fix the “extortionate and pernicious secondary ticketing market” that benefits touts, which is “preventing genuine fans from accessing the music, theatre and sports they love”.

    Dan Smith, lead singer of Bastille, said the industry wanted to reach a point where people no longer got “ripped off by touts” and “genuine” fans could resell unwanted tickets for their original price”. A spokesperson for the Department for Culture said the government was “fully committed to clamping down on touts and is going further to put fans back at the heart of live events”.

    What next?
    Seven months after an initial government consultation closed, there has been “no indication of when legislation might be introduced”, according to the BBC.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Doctors and researchers at Stanford University have created an AI tool that could dramatically boost the efficiency of organ transplants. The model predicts whether a donor will die within the crucial timeframe needed to preserve organ quality, cutting wasted preparations by 60%. Trained on data from more than 2,000 donors, it outperforms top surgeons and helps ensure that more viable livers reach patients in need. Researchers say the breakthrough could ease pressure on transplant teams and give more people a chance at life.

     
     
    under the radar

    Rosalía and the rise of nunmania

    The Spanish prime minister and a Catalan bishop are both fans of avant-garde singer Rosalía’s new album “Lux”, “perhaps surprisingly for an artist who sings an ode to the Berlin techno club Berghain”, said The Times.

    Featuring an image of the Catalan singer adorned with a white nun’s veil and a rosary on its cover, the album exudes “religiosity” despite its sometimes explicit lyrics. It is also part of a wider trend across Spain: a “growing return to the Catholic faith”.

    What’s more, the new release “has already made Spotify history”, said Rolling Stone. With more than 42 million streams in just one day, “Lux” broke the platform’s record for a female Spanish-language artist.

    Rosalía fans think she is “somewhat of a saint, worthy of candlelit ‘altars’”, added The Times, and “Lux” has quickly become a smash hit. A “fusion of faith, flamenco and rock opera”, with lyrics from 14 languages, it has “cemented Rosalía’s place among innovators in contemporary pop music”. The album includes collaborations with the likes of Björk, Yves Tumor and Escolanía de Montserrat – a choir “regarded as the region’s beacon of Catholic faith”.

    “Lux” “seems to be making everything related to nuns trendy … even the wimple”. Rosalía “is neither the first nor the only celebrity to seek answers to the modern world within the walls of the convent”. But the album does coincide with many other signs that nuns are “making a comeback”.

    Sociologists have also identified a “parallel revival of the Catholic faith” among those under 35. The craze may just be a “seasonal spike”, but for now Spain – “long caught between its Catholic heritage and a secular present” – seems to be “enthralled” by all things nun.

     
     
    on this day

    14 November 1922

    The BBC began daily radio broadcasts from the 2LO transmitter at Marconi House. According to the latest RAJAR figures for the period 23 June to 14 September, the BBC remains the No. 1 radio brand in the UK with 31 million people tuning in each week for live output across the corporation’s stations.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘84 in… 113 out’

    “84 in… 113 out”, says Metro, calculating the latest ratio in the government’s one-in-one-out strategy. It adds that figure is “dwarfed” by the more than 8,000 people who have arrived on small boats since the deal began. A second Trump clip was “doctored” by the BBC, reports The Telegraph, saying that Newsnight also misleadingly edited a Trump clip from the same speech, for a programme in 2022. There is a “call to arms”” in Germany, says the Financial Times, after Berlin announced that all 18-year-old German men must have medical inspections to see if they are fit enough to serve in the military.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Fare play

    A man who took a bus on a joy ride around a Canadian city has been praised by police for his handling of the vehicle. The 36-year-old boarded the parked bus in Hamilton and drove off – before making several stops and allowing passengers to get on and off. “There was not a ding on the bus. He did a great job,” said a police spokesperson. “It’s comical, but at the same time it’s serious.” The man was charged with theft, possession, obstructing police and driving while prohibited.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Will Barker, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Marian Femenias-Moratinos.

    Image credits, from top: Leon Neal / Getty Images; Paul Hennessy / Anadolu / Getty Images; Tomas Cuesta / Getty Images for ABA; Illustration by Marian Femenias-Moratinos / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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