UK government is caught up in a feud between Trump and the BBC

LONDON (AP) — Britain's government was due to weigh in Tuesday on a feud between theBBCand U.S. President Donald Trump, who isthreatening to suethe broadcaster over the way it edited a speech he made after losing the 2020 presidential election.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy was set to deliver a statement on the BBC crisis in the House of Commons, with critics demanding major changes to the corporation and supporters urging the government to defend the U.K.'s public broadcaster from political interference.

Outgoing BBC Director-General Tim Davie, who announced his resignation on Sunday because of the scandal, said the BBC needed "to fight for our journalism" in the face of growing attacks.

"We have made some mistakes that have cost us," Davie acknowledged in a statement to staff, but added he was "fiercely proud" of the organization.

"I think we've got to fight for our journalism," he said.

A lawyer for Trump is demanding a retraction, apology and compensation from the broadcaster over the allegedly defamatory sequence in a documentary broadcast last year.

Fallout from the documentary has already claimed the BBC'stop executive, Davie, and head of news Deborah Turness, who both resigned over what the broadcaster called an "error of judgment."

The BBC has apologized for misleading editing of a speech Trump delivered on Jan. 6, 2021, before a crowd of his supporters stormed the Capitol in Washington.

Broadcast days before the November 2024 U.S. election, the documentary "Trump: A Second Chance?" spliced together three quotes from two sections of the speech, delivered almost an hour apart, into what appeared to be one quote in which Trump urged supporters to march with him and "fight like hell." Among the parts cut out was a section where Trump said he wanted supporters to demonstrate peacefully.

BBC chairman Samir Shah said the broadcaster accepted "that the way the speech was edited did give the impression of a direct call for violent action."

The BBC has not yet formally responded to the demand from Florida-based Tump attorney Alejandro Brito that it "retract the false, defamatory, disparaging, and inflammatory statements," apologize and "appropriately compensate President Trump for the harm caused" by Friday, or face legal action for $1 billion in damages.

The publicly funded BBC is a century-old national institution under growing pressure in an era of polarized politics and changing media viewing habits.

Funded through an annual license fee of 174.50 pounds ($230) paid by all households who watch live TV or any BBC content, the broadcaster is frequentlya political football, with conservatives seeing a leftist slant in its news output and some liberals accusing it of having a conservative bias.

Governments of both left and right have long been accused of meddling with the broadcaster, which is overseen by a board that includes both BBC nominees and government appointees.

The center-left Labour Party government has backed the BBC, without criticizing Trump, while stressing the need for the broadcaster to quickly correct its errors to maintain public trust.

"If you look at the levels of trust people have in the BBC, it's extraordinarily high," local government minister Alison McGovern told LBC radio. "If they've made an editorial mistake, then they should apologize."

UK government is caught up in a feud between Trump and the BBC

LONDON (AP) — Britain's government was due to weigh in Tuesday on a feud between theBBCand U.S. President Donald Trum...
Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK Duke McCloud as Milo Irvine and Sarah Snook as Marissa Irvine in 'All Her Fault'

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK

NEED TO KNOW

  • All Her Fault — starring Sarah Snook, Dakota Fanning and Jake Lacy — was released on Peacock on Nov. 6

  • Based on Andrea Mara's 2021 novel of the same name, the series follows a mom who discovers her son Milo has been kidnapped

  • The author revealed that her novel was inspired by a real-life event that she experienced

All Her Faultdepicts every parent's worst nightmare.

Based on Andrea Mara's 2021 novel of the same name,All Her Faulttells the story of a mother, Marissa Irvine (Sarah Snook), who goes to pick up her son Milo from a playdate, only to find that the person who opens the door is a stranger who has never heard of her child.

As the search for Milo begins, more lies start unraveling amongst the characters, who are portrayed by a star-studded cast includingDakota Fanning,Jake Lacy,Jay EllisandAbby Elliot.

As tensions grow, Marissa develops an unexpected friendship with Jenny Kaminski (Fanning), despite being "set up to have a tumultuous relationship," as Fanning told PEOPLE ahead of the series release.

So, isAll Her Faulta true story? Here's everything to know about the real-life event that inspired the series.

Warning:All Her Faultspoilers ahead.

IsAll Her Faultbased on a true story?

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK) Jake Lacy as Peter, Sarah Snook as Marissa, Michael Peña as Detective Alcaras in 'All Her Fault'

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK)

All Her Faultis not based on a true story, but real-life events inspired it.

In a June 2021videointroducing her novel, Mara — who is also an associate producer on the series — shared that the plot is based on an experience that occurred in April 2015, when she went to collect her daughter from a playdate, only to find herself standing outside an unoccupied house.

"The panic only lasted for a few seconds, until a neighbor told me that the family had moved house a few weeks earlier and I was just working off an old address list," the author said. "It all ended very quickly, much more quickly than it does for Marissa in the book."

Mara revealed more about the incident in a July 2021 essay forThe Irish Independent, writing that she began theorizing about an "elaborate kidnap plan" after nobody answered the door for a few tries.

Though she reconnected with her daughter nearly five minutes later, the moment made Mara think about "how much trust we place in other people when it comes to our kids; when we send them off to school and crèche and playdates and parties."

"How do we decide what's safe and not safe, when it comes to our kids?" the author wrote. "And why do parents today seem to worry more than ever?"

What happens to Milo inAll Her Fault?

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK Kartiah Vergara as Ana, Duke McCloud as Milo and Sophia Lillis as Carrie in 'All Her Fault'

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK

After Milo goes missing, Marissa and her husband Peter (Lacy) launch a frantic search for their son. Once detectives get involved, Jenny's nanny, Carrie Finch (Sophia Lillis), becomes the prime suspect. Milo is eventually returned, but Carrie — whose real name is Josephine Murphy — remains at large.

The penultimate episode flashes back six years, showing how losing her newborn at 16 drove Carrie to mental instability and fueled her obsession with Milo, ultimately leading to his kidnapping. But, viewers learn that her obsession with Milo isn't random: Carrie actually believes he is her son.

By the final episode, Carrie enters the Irvine family home — in the middle of a blowout fight between Peter, his siblings (Abby Elliot and Daniel Monks) and Marissa's longtime friend and colleague Colin Dobbs (Ellis) — and explains that she believes Milo is her son.

The series reveals that Carrie, Marissa, and Peter were involved in a devastating car accident years earlier that supposedly killed Carrie's newborn. Marissa, who was unconscious after the accident, thought that the mom, then known as Josephine, had died by suicide after the wreck. But in reality, it was Marissa's baby, not Carrie's, who died that night.

After accidentally shooting and killing Colin in a struggle for the gun she brought, Carrie insists she is only here to warn Marissa about Peter. Peter shoots Carrie before she has a chance to tell Marissa the whole story, but admits the truth to his wife just before the police arrive: he switched the newborn babies after the wreck.

By the end, Marissa learns the truth of all of Peter's actions — including that he murdered Carrie's dad, who had tried to demand a ransom in exchange for Milo — and "accidentally" kills Peter by kissing him and sending him into a severe allergic reaction from something she ate.

With Peter's death ruled an accident and the case closed, the series ends with Milo enjoying a playdate with Jenny's son after all.

What has author Andrea Mara said about theAll Her Faultadaptation?

Noam Galai/Peacock via Getty Andrea Mara

Noam Galai/Peacock via Getty

During a June 2024 conversation withThe Irish Times, Mara discussed how many of her thriller novels are inspired by real-life stories, though she acknowledged that all of them "ended pretty quickly with reasonable explanations."

But, to lean into the fictional versions, the author said she focuses on the "what if."

"What if my child was kidnapped on a playdate, what if my child disappeared on the Tube, what if there really was someone living in the attic?" she said, referencing some of the story lines of her other novels.

In the interview, she also talked about living with Synaesthesia — the neurological condition where sensory crossovers occur — that connects Milo and Carrie inAll Her Fault.

In early November, Mara shared photos onInstagramafter attending theAll Her Faultpremiere, and opened up more about the true elements of the show.

"The book is about a missing child, yes, but it's also hugely about female friendship, and this has been carried through to the TV show," she captioned the carousel. "I know a lot about female friendship and women supporting women because of the wonderful people I'm lucky to know in real life. So even if the kidnap element of the real life inspiration is fictional, the friendship element is absolutely true."

Where can I watchAll Her Fault?

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK Sarah Snook as Marissa Irvine and Dakota Fanning as Jenny Kaminski in 'All Her Fault'

Sarah Enticknap/PEACOCK

All eight episodes ofAll Her Faultare available to stream onPeacock.

Read the original article onPeople

The Heart-Pumping True Story of “All Her Fault”: All About the Real-Life Incident That Inspired the Show

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