What the papers say – July 9
he story of a BBC presenter paying a young person to ship them express photographs dominates the entrance pages of Sunday’s newspapers.
After The Sun broke the story on Saturday, its Sunday version continues protection because it talks to the alleged sufferer’s mom and divulges the unnamed star “sent pants pics” to {the teenager}.
Both the Mail on Sunday and Sunday Times describe the story as a “BBC crisis”, the Mail saying the presenter is a “household name” whereas the Times says {the teenager}’s dad and mom complained months in the past and divulges stars had been lining as much as say “it’s not me”.
The BBC is coming below hearth over its dealing with of the affair, in line with The Sunday Telegraph, whereas the Daily Mirror stated bosses partied with the star after the household’s criticism.
Other tales do make the entrance pages elsewhere, the Sunday People reporting that the Government plans to spend one other £800,000 to color a Union Flag on the Prime Minister’s airplane.
The Sunday Express concentrates on what it calls “a risk to national security” from banks refusing to do enterprise with Britain’s defence business.
And the Daily Star on Sunday revives the phrase bonk with the most recent in its tales about boffins.