エピソード
-
There’s a summer boost for households as energy prices are falling - thanks to the new price cap.
Yet forecasters warn your gas and electricity bills will soar once again in the autumn.
So is now the right time to fix your energy price? And what other action can you take to make savings?
In this episode Charlie Frost tells you, what you need to know... -
Across a deeply divided and polarised nation, there is one thing that the US can now all agree on - that Joe Biden’s performance in the presidential debate, was a disaster.
From the inception, he looked lost, confused and charmless.
While he lacked coherency, his opponent, Donald Trump spewed lies and fake news - often unchallenged and unchecked.
The debate has led to calls for Biden to step aside but could that happen at this stage of the campaign?
US Correspondent Dan Rivers tells Yasmin Bodalbhai what you need to know... -
エピソードを見逃しましたか?
-
Brianna Ghey, Ava White and Rhamero West might be three separate cases and individuals, but they all have something in common – they were all kids killed tragically by knife crime.
Now, in the wake of their deaths, their mothers are relentlessly campaigning for change.
But is the government listening? Is knife crime prioritised enough? And how can we better protect the next generation?
Kelly Foran tells Faye Barker What You Need to Know…
For more on this, tune into ITV Evening News Friday 28 July at 7pm. -
After a cold, damp and slow start to summer, we’re finally feeling the heat.
As the strong sunshine gets to work, temperatures are looking likely to soar over the next week and Brits can finally get basking.
But, how long will this hot spell last? Could this be our only scorcher for the summer? And why are we about to be hit with a pollen bomb?
ITV Weather Presenter Becky Mantin tells Sangeeta Kandola what you need to know... -
A dismal one all draw to Denmark was just what England didn’t need to settle the shaky Euros nerves.
Outclassed by the Danes, Southgate’s side seemed muddled and lacklustre.
They left the pitch at full time with boos and jeers from normally loyal travelling fans ringing in their ears.
So, what’s going on? Has the tide turned against Southgate? And can he turn it around?
ITV News Sports Editor Steve Scott tells Lucrezia Millarini what you need to know... -
Jamie works two jobs. His day starts before the sun rises and won’t end until it sets.
He’s just one of many battling Britian’s Cost-Of-Living crisis.
But now the phrase has become so ubiquitous, it risks losing its true meaning. And for those like Jamie, it’s become a question of surviving, not living.
But could the general election be a turning point?
ITV News Investigations Editor Daniel Hewitt tells Lucrezia Millarini what you need to know... -
2024 has been dubbed the year of the TikTok election.
And now, we’re only half-way through Britain’s general election campaign and already the social media platform has been flooded with misinformation.
But where is it coming from? Is it really making an impact? And how do you sift the fact from the fiction?
ITV News Digital Video Producer George Hancorn tells Faye Barker what you need to know... -
There's around 1.2 million hoarders across the UK.
Many don’t even recognise they have a problem.
On the surface, it might seem like someone is being messy, but hoarding is a disorder and can be a coping mechanism for other things.
But at what point does it become dangerous? And is there enough help out there?
ITV News Reporter Sam Holder tells Yasmin Bodalbhai what you need to know... -
As the country gears up for the general election, ITV’s Tonight programme is taking you one step closer to the leaders of Great Britain’s largest political parties.
In one of a series of interviews, Paul Brand speaks to the Prime Minister to find out whether he has the plan or the personality to win.
It was an interview which made headlines for a number of reasons here, Paul Brand brings you What You Need To Know…
For more on this, tune into the Tonight programme on ITV, on Wednesday 12th June at 7pm. -
For many of us across the country, it’s been a rather wet, dull and gloomy Spring.
And yet, according to the Met Office, the UK has just had its warmest Spring on record.
But why can’t we feel it? What’s behind this confusing weather forecast? And when can we finally feel the heat?
ITV News Weather Presenter Becky Mantin is joined by ITV Anglia Weather Presenter Chris Page and ITV News Weather Presenter Nick Miller. -
In an unprecedented moment for English football, Man City have launched a legal assault against the Premier League.
The four-time champions are suing the league over its sponsorship regulations.
It’s the latest dramatic twist in a dispute over City's spending power that threatens to unbalance the world’s most successful football competition.
So, what happens if City are successful? And could it hail a new dawn for English football?
ITV News Sports Editor Steve Scott tells Cari Davies what you need to know...
-
To some he’s a deity - to others a dictator.
But few ever doubted Narendra Modi’s firm grip on power in India - until now.
He has secured a third term as Prime Minister, but his party has lost its majority for the first time in ten years.
So what impact could India's shock election result have on this economic powerhouse and the rest of the world?
Geraint Vincent tells you, what you need to know. -
We’re about to mark 80 years since one of the largest military operations of all time: D-Day.
ITV News Meridian have recorded more than 80 new interviews with men and women who lived through the Normandy landings.
So how do they feel about their part in this extraordinary moment of history? What can we learn from them and what they went through? Why is it more crucial than ever to hear their stories? And how do we best remember D-Day once the living link is gone?
ITV News Meridian reporter Derek Johnson tells Matt Teale what you need to know… -
It's been 30 years since a new era of hope began in South Africa, with the election of Nelson Mandela.
On Wednesday, the country goes to the polls again in an atmosphere where much, if not all, of that hope seems to have disappeared.
Mandela's party - the African National Congress - may well lose its majority for the first time in the history of South Africa's democracy.
But why are voters deserting the party? And where's next for the Rainbow Nation?
Geraint Vincent is joined by ITV News Global Security Editor Rohit Kachroo to tell you, what you need to know. -
One dead and at least 20 in intensive care.
Last week, turbulence saw what should have been a simple flight descend into tragedy.
We’re often told it’s the safest form of transport, but with holiday season on the horizon - how safe do you really feel?
Cari Davies is joined by Science correspondent Martin Stew to tell you, what you need to know. -
Packed boats, a perilous journey and dreams of a fresh start.
The gangs responsible promise a new life.
But for many, it’s one they’ll never see.
The Rwanda Bill's dominated headlines, yet the small boat crossings show little sign of letting up.
One side treats them like cattle, the other - a criminal, but how far would you go to protect your family?
Sangeeta Kandola is joined by ITV News' Peter Smith to tell you, what you need to know. -
It was a medical disaster that saw 30,000 victims infected with HIV and hepatitis C by
contaminated blood transfusions.
The infected blood inquiry confirmed that the disaster was no accident, and one that unfolded on a horrifying scale.
It was a scandal that could have been avoided, but for the actions of frontline medical staff, civil servants and successive governments, as institutions put saving face ahead of patient safety.
So how could this have happened? How will the victims be compensated? and how do we ensure it never happens again?
ITV News' Health Correspondent Rebecca Barry and Political Editor Robert Peston tell Charlene White what you need to know. -
Alastair Hamilton was 47 when he secretly arranged to end his life.
His family retraced his last steps to Switzerland, where they spoke to the clinic that helped Alastair to die without their knowledge.
Now, with so much debate around assisted dying in the UK, what can we learn from Alastair’s story? And what’s to stop anyone else doing the same?
ITV News UK Editor Paul Brand and producer Nathan Lee, who joined Alastair's family on their journey to Switzerland, tell you what you need to know... -
Can you spot the difference between what’s real and what’s fake?
The rise of artificial intelligence has opened the door to a world of technological possibilities. But with it comes a more sinister side.
Deceptively realistic deepfakes – created by AI technology – are cropping up more and more online.
So what are they? What happens when you're a victim of one? And, in an election year, how worried should we be about this technology?
ITV News Presenter Mary Nightingale, who was recently a victim of this technology, and Science Correspondent Martin Stew tell Yasmin Bodalbhai what you need to know... -
The Post Office, infected blood, Hillsborough, Waspi women, Grenfell.
All national scandals that seem, on the face of it, to be completely different.
But do they have more in common than we might think?
And how fit for purpose are our systems for writing the wrongs of the past?
After years campaigning for justice, Jo Hamilton, Jackie Britton and Shelagh Simmons tell ITV Meridian's Christine Alsford what you need to know.... - もっと表示する