The BBC is in turmoil. A leaked file exposing a misedited speech of United States President Donald Trump and different editorial considerations has triggered resignations on the high – and a $1bn lawsuit risk from the US chief. Why the leak surfaced now, and who steps in subsequent, are nonetheless open questions. Most significantly, will the BBC have the ability to recuperate from this second?
Contributors:
Ben de Pear – Former editor, Channel 4 Information
Jane Martinson – Professor, College of London
Karishma Patel – Former newsreader, BBC
Tom Mills – Writer, The BBC: Delusion of a Public Service
On our radar
This week, Ahmed al-Sharaa turned the primary Syrian president ever to set foot within the White Home. A landmark diplomatic journey full of picture ops and political theatre, marking his transition from a US-designated terrorist to an ally. Meenakshi Ravi studies.
AI slop tsunami: Is the web now a junkyard?
Elettra Scrivo explores how social media platforms are quickly altering with the surge of AI content material. Low-quality, mass-produced, artificially generated content material, in any other case often called AI slop, is designed to set off the algorithms and generate income for Massive Tech corporations.
That includes:
Drew Harwell – Expertise reporter, The Washington Submit
Mark Lawrence Garilao – AI video content material creator
Myojung Chung – Affiliate professor, Northeastern College
Printed On 15 Nov 2025

