Turn on, log on, join in
There's always a lot of chat about the brave new world where TV and the web are converging - but how much is it happening in reality?
With my hat on as editor of 蜜芽传媒 Election programmes I can point to a very real example this Thursday night/Friday morning: the 蜜芽传媒 Election Night programme.
It's become increasingly clear that the web has something extra to offer on election night. An elaborate network of opinion formers, activists and analysts collide online producing fact, rumour, and mood not found anywhere else. While guarded politicians offer the official line on radio and TV ("let's just wait and see" or "what you say is a disaster is really a triumph") the web provides the unvarnished truth about what the parties are really thinking.
That's why we're harnessing these strengths as never before on Election Night. and Nick Robinson will be in the studio with some of Britain's top politicians bringing authority and analysis to proceedings as the 蜜芽传媒 has always done; but a new addition is Emily Maitlis who'll be sifting the chatter online with the help of some of the UK's most committed political bloggers; , and .
They'll be using their contacts to provide us with immediate reaction from the parties to the night's results. Our website colleagues will be providing a special webpage with the best of each of their blogs - all hosted by Ms Maitlis at "Emily's Election".
That's alongside the normal comprehensive online offering which includes a map of all the results; the chance to find out what happens where you've voted; and at-a-glance look at how the night develops.
This year's local elections promise to be the most politically significant for years. They'll also see a step change in how we use TV and online to cover the story. So put on a pot of strong coffee, turn on, log on, and join in.
蜜芽传媒 Election coverage:
鈥⒚垩看 One, 2335 BST
鈥⒚垩看 Radio 4 Midnight to 0300 BST with Jim Naughtie and Carolyn Quinn
鈥adio 5 Live 2200 to 0500 BST with Richard Bacon and Dotun Adebayo
鈥nd 蜜芽传媒 London 94.9 on Friday from 1500 to 2200 BST
鈥n the web at















Foremost amongst these has been the issue of suicide. After much discussion and after consulting with 

The first comes as a result of reading a piece of academic research written by a former colleague, , who has now gone to a better place as a journalism professor at the . Alf's paper is called (pdf link). It documents an extraordinary change of heart by 蜜芽传媒 managers about the idea of blogging, from suspicion and scorn - in 2003 one website editor argued "They are an interesting phenomenon, but I don't think they will be as talked about in a year's time鈥 - to enthusiastic embrace.



First, judges seem more and more willing to believe that juries will disregard press coverage that they might have seen around the time that someone is arrested. In fact, they think jurors will probably have forgotten about it by the time the case comes to trial.
But Italy has a wider importance to the rest of Europe too. It's one of the largest countries in the EU and has an economy which is in decline. It adopted the Euro at its inception, but its public finances are in such a state some Italians would like to abandon the currency, which could have a serious impact on the prestige of the new money. Italy also faces a dilemma - in some ways similar to that faced by France - of deciding whether to introduce liberal economic reforms at the risk of jeopardising a quality of life many in the rest of world envy.
Our entertainment reporter Natalie Jamieson made a great video at the Led Zeppelin reunion gig, political reporter Rajini Vaidyanathan crafted a behind-the-scenes film at Downing Street, (which you can
Burgers for kids are a form of child abuse. Every snack bar should have traffic light alert warnings. This is a fat fight to the death. And on, and endlessly on. 
Not only did something extraordinary and tragic happen on the last day of summer in 1997 when Princess Diana, her companion Dodi Al Fayed and the driver Henri Paul, died in the crash in Paris; but something extraordinary has happened ever since.
Lord Stevens said he hoped the clear verdict that Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed were unlawfully killed due to the "gross negligence" of driver Henri Paul and the paparazzi could bring 鈥渃losure to what has been a traumatic event鈥.
Another 92 names have been added to the memorial, making 2007 a dismal year for the . Their names have been added to a soaring wall of etched glass panels inside the , a glitzy, hi-tech tribute to journalism which opens next week just down the road from the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue.
We鈥檝e tightened up the white spacing on stories and indexes 鈥 this was one thing a lot of you mentioned. The masthead and banner area of the page, specifically how the black 蜜芽传媒 masthead works in conjunction with the current News banner, was another common theme, and we鈥檝e asked the design team to look into this.
Of course, that was all before . What a difference a year makes. It seems hardly a day goes by without 