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  • Days after the 9-11 terrorist attacks, a Fox News satellite truck is positioned opposite the Pentagon which was badly damaged by the crashed Americans Airline flight 77, on 18th September 2001, Washington DC, USA. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    fox_news-18-09-2001.jpg
  • A detail of the Edinburgh Evening News board on the Gorgie Road, on 26th June 2019, in Edinburgh, Scotland.
    edinburgh-21-26-06-2019.jpg
  • Donald Trump and Queen Elizabeth look out of the News Building in central London. The News Building is a 17-storey office block forming part of the London Bridge Quarter development. It houses all of News UK's London operations, including The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun and HarperCollins. It was designed by the Italian architect Renzo Piano, who also designed The Shard across the road from it, and was financed by Qatar, which is behind the London Bridge Quarter development.
    media_window01-16-02-2016.jpg
  • The Shard rises high above the News Building at London Bridge. The News Building is a 17-storey office block forming part of the London Bridge Quarter development. It houses all of News UK's London operations, including The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun and HarperCollins. It was designed by the Italian architect Renzo Piano, who also designed The Shard across the road from it, and was financed by Qatar, which is behind the London Bridge Quarter development.
    tall_shard01-16-02-2016.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district. Paul Julius Freiherr von Reuter (Baron de Reuter) (21 July 1816 – 25 February 1899), a German entrepreneur, pioneer of telegraphy and news reporting was a journalist and media owner, and the founder of the Reuters news agency. Reuter founded Reuters, one of the major financial news agencies of the world. On 17 March 1857, Reuter was naturalised as a British subject, and on 7 September 1871, the German Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha conferred a barony (Freiherr) on Julius Reuter. The title was later "confirmed by Queen Victoria as conferring the privileges of the nobility in England"
    city_people10-09-10-2015.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district. Paul Julius Freiherr von Reuter (Baron de Reuter) (21 July 1816 – 25 February 1899), a German entrepreneur, pioneer of telegraphy and news reporting was a journalist and media owner, and the founder of the Reuters news agency. Reuter founded Reuters, one of the major financial news agencies of the world. On 17 March 1857, Reuter was naturalised as a British subject, and on 7 September 1871, the German Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha conferred a barony (Freiherr) on Julius Reuter. The title was later "confirmed by Queen Victoria as conferring the privileges of the nobility in England"
    city_people09-09-10-2015.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district. Paul Julius Freiherr von Reuter (Baron de Reuter) (21 July 1816 – 25 February 1899), a German entrepreneur, pioneer of telegraphy and news reporting was a journalist and media owner, and the founder of the Reuters news agency. Reuter founded Reuters, one of the major financial news agencies of the world. On 17 March 1857, Reuter was naturalised as a British subject, and on 7 September 1871, the German Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha conferred a barony (Freiherr) on Julius Reuter. The title was later "confirmed by Queen Victoria as conferring the privileges of the nobility in England"
    city_people08-09-10-2015.jpg
  • During a journey into America's hinterlands, days after the September 11th attacks in New York and Washington DC, the breaking news flashes from Fox TV's studios that there are expected to be no more survivors found at Ground Zero. The tragic message reads 'No Signs of Life' in large red letters, read by passers-by along the on the Avenue of the Americas on Manhattan. As the news travels across the building, the camera blurs other TV pictures of live broadcasts with a sense of urgency, speed and desperation in the fruitless search for life.
    september11th016-17-09_2001.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman4-20-July-2011.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night54-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night51-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A businessman reads The Times newspaper in the early 90s when the News International title was a broadsheet - before it went to a tabloid format. The headline refers to a British Rail axing of 5,000 jobs, dated Friday 20th November 1992 when it cost just 45 pence. The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register (it became The Times on 1 January 1788). The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times (founded in 1821) are published by Times Newspapers, since 1981 a subsidiary of News International, itself wholly owned by the News Corporation group headed by Rupert Murdoch.
    times_newspaper02-20-11-1992.jpg
  • Businessmen associates together read The Times newspaper in the early 90s when the News International title was a broadsheet - before it went to a tabloid format. The headline refers to a British Rail axing of 5,000 jobs. The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register (it became The Times on 1 January 1788). The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times (founded in 1821) are published by Times Newspapers, since 1981 a subsidiary of News International, itself wholly owned by the News Corporation group headed by Rupert Murdoch.
    times_newspaper01-20-11-1992.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman2-20-July-2011.jpg
  • Days after the September 11th 2001 attacks in New York and Washington DC, the US government had identified Osama Bin Laden as the head culprit of the terrorist action on America. Here, a businessman wearing a smart dark suit and polished loafers bends down to buy the latest copy of the New York Daily News from an African American vendor near Wall Street in the heart of New York's financial district. Bin Laden's demonic face is spread across the front page and the words "Wanted: Dead or Alive" tells Americans that their al-Qaeda evil-doer will be caught eventually, like a baddie rounded up by the Sheriff by the last scene of a Hollywood western.  .
    binladen_america004-19-09-2001.jpg
  • Live BBC News broadcasts a breakdown of College votes results the morning after Barack Obama's historic victory in the 2008 Presidential election. The TV screens are in he audio and electronics floor of the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at the rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night58-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. The Reverend Jesse Jackson who once stood next to Martin Luther-King during the days of segregation and racial discrimination sobs with tears falling down his face at Barack Obama's victory rally before party faithful at a rally in Chicago. His face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Jackson weeps with joy thinking of the changes promised to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night53-05-11-2008.jpg
  • In London England, a life-size cardboard cut-out of Barack Obama stands next to a SKY News TV screen that is broadcasting live the latest polls of the 2008 US presidential elections. A Democratic party supporter listens intently and reacts with the tension of the early polls that suggest Obama is doing well against his Republican adversary, John McCain in this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The location is a pub called the Hoop and Toy, in South Kensington, West London which has been opened all night for this special event for the American expatriate community living in this European capital.
    obama_election_night15-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. The Reverend Jesse Jackson who once stood next to Martin Luther-King during the days of segregation and racial discrimination sobs with tears falling down his face at Barack Obama's victory rally before party faithful at a rally in Chicago. His face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Jackson weeps with joy thinking of the changes promised to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night53-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night51-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live Sky News broadcasts latest results with life-size cardboard cut-out of Barack Obama during 2008 elections
    obama_election_night14-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live Sky News broadcasts latest results with life-size cardboard cut-out of Barack Obama during 2008 elections
    obama_election_night13-05-11-2008.jpg
  • BBC News coverage shows John Simpson speaking behind a life-size cardboard cut-out of Barack Obama during 2008 elections
    obama_election_night11-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A week after the 9-11 terrorist attack on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, a newspaper vendor sells copies of the New York Daily News with the face of Osama bin Laden and a cowboy-era outlaw's headline of 'Dead or Alive', on 18th September 2001, New York, USA. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    bin_laden_newspapers01-18-09-2001.jpg
  • A week after the 9-11 terrorist attack on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, front pages of Newsday and the New York Daily News with the faces of Osama bin Laden and a cowboy-era outlaw's headline of 'Dead or Alive', on 18th September 2001, New York, USA. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    bin_laden_newspapers02-18-09-2001.jpg
  • Evening Standard headlines with news of Meghan Markle's father not attending the upcoming royal wedding between the American actor and prince Harry, at Bank underground station in the City of London, the capital's financial district aka the Square Mile, on 15th May 2018, in London, UK.
    markle_headline-02-15-05-2018.jpg
  • Evening Standard headlines with news of Meghan Markle's father not attending the upcoming royal wedding between the American actor and prince Harry, at Bank underground station in the City of London, the capital's financial district aka the Square Mile, on 15th May 2018, in London, UK.
    markle_headline-01-15-05-2018.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-18-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-09-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-22-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-13-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-07-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London, 9th November 2016: US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper at Oxford Circus, London, on the day of his election. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. © Richard Baker / Alamy Live News
    trump_headline-05-09-11-2016.jpg
  • A detail from an iPad screen of the BBC News app icon.
    bbc_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • Members of Chinese exile community keep vigil and await more news outside their embassy a day after the Tiananmen Sq massacre. Catching up on the latest from home, the young Chinese activists read newspapers reporting of the massacre by the Chinese regime on protesting students in Beijing. The political crackdown that initiated on June 3–4 1989 became known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre as troops with assault rifles and tanks inflicted casualties on unarmed civilians trying to block the military’s advance towards Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, which student demonstrators had occupied for seven weeks.
    tiananmen_london01-05-06-1989.jpg
  • A foreign TV reporter updates news to her audience at home on developments of the Duchess of Cambridge's birth details.
    royal_baby_wait21-22-07-2013.jpg
  • London 19th July 2013: Japanese Fuji TV markings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world. Copyright Richard Baker/Alamy Live News
    royal_baby-wait29-19-07-2013.jpg
  • London 19th July 2013: Media interview Met policeman as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world. Copyright Richard Baker/Alamy Live News
    royal_baby-wait19-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Spanish news reporter in media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait14-19-07-2013.jpg
  • US NBC TV reporter Natalie Morales with technicians reports live for Today from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world. Amercian NBC TV correspondent Natalie Morales plus technicians reports live for the Today show from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London. Here, media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait11-19-07-2013.jpg
  • London 19th July 2013: Media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world. Copyright Richard Baker/Alamy Live News
    royal_baby-wait06-19-07-2013.jpg
  • London 19th July 2013: Media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world. Copyright Richard Baker/Alamy Live News
    royal_baby-wait05-19-07-2013.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. Page Three (or Page 3) is a tabloid newspaper photograph consisting of a topless female glamour model, usually printed on the paper's third page. Women who model regularly for the feature are known as Page Three girls. "Page Three" and "Page 3" are registered trademarks of the Sun tabloid, where the feature originated in 1970. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking.
    tabloid_workman1-20-July-2011.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial viewpoint which gives a perspective of deserted housing and empty roads, Jill Parmeter plays post woman. She is a resident of the experimental community village of Poundbury, Dorset, England. Delivering her own newsletter from door-to-door, she crosses Netherton Street and Tinten Lane to post her local news to residents and friends. The roads are empty of cars- nor is there anyone else to talk to. It is as if this community has vanished, leaving her alone. Poundbury is the visionary model village that Charles, Prince of Wales sought to develop in 1993 as a successful and pioneering town near Dorchester, built on land owned by his own Duchy of Cornwall, challenging otherwise poor post-war trends in town planning and to some extent following the New Urbanism concept from the US except that the design influences are European.
    poundbury06-07-06_2003.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen woth his smiling wife Michelle and young family after speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago the night of their election victory. Their faces merge together in a moment of television merging of images, large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The First Family have become household names and their lives  are about to change forever before they move into the White House. Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night60-05-11-2008.jpg
  • TV news on screen in luxury room at hotel chain Sofitel at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1108-12-08-2009.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen woth his smiling wife Michelle and young family after speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago the night of their election victory. Their faces merge together in a moment of television merging of images, large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The First Family have become household names and their lives  are about to change forever before they move into the White House. Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night60-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Barack Obama and family seen on BBC News TV screens in London's John Lewis department store after election victory
    obama_election_night61-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Winner Obama College votes totalled on BBC News TV screens in London's John Lewis department store after election victory
    obama_election_night59-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Barack Obama and family seen on BBC News TV screens in London's John Lewis department store after election victory
    obama_election_night57-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Shopper watches Barack Obama Democrat supporters stage rally seen on BBC News TV screens in John Lewis department store
    obama_election_night56-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Barack Obama gives election victory speech on BBC News TV screens on audio floor of John Lewis department store
    obama_election_night55-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Barack Obama gives election victory speech on BBC News TV screens on audio floor of John Lewis department store
    obama_election_night52-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Newspapers and magazines on sale at a news kiosk on Slovenska Cesta (street) in the Slovenian capital, Ljubljana on 27th June 2018, in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
    slovenia-490-27-06-2018.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-02-09-11-2016.jpg
  • London Mayor Boris Johnson is interviewed in Trafalgar Square by Channel 4 News presenter Cathy Newman. As the sculpture known as Gift Horse, by German artist Hans Haacke, is unveiled in London's Trafalgar Square on the public space called the Fourth Plinth. Johnson financed the 10th artwork to appear here. The skeletal, riderless horse (derived from The Anatomy of a Horse - George Stubbs, 1766) with a London Stock Exchange tickertape is a comment on power, money and history.
    unveiling_gift_horse33-05-03-2015.jpg
  • BBC brolley and camera in media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait10-19-07-2013.jpg
  • A group of Democratic party supporters look ecstatically happy after the final news of their Man's victory. Gone is the nervous tension earlier in the evening when these party faithful arrived for a whole night following developments. Polls suggested Obama was doing well against his Republican adversary, John McCain in this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The location is a pub called the Hoop and Toy, in South Kensington, West London which has been opened all night for this special event for the American expatriate community living in this European capital.
    obama_election_night29-05-11-2008.jpg
  • The morning after the terrorist attack at Fishmongers Hall on London Bridge, in which Usman Khan (a convicted, freed terrorist) killed 2 during a knife a attack, then subsequently tackled by passers-by and shot by armed police - news crews film from the Southbank using Fishmongers Hall as a background, on 30th November 2019, in London, England.
    london_bridge_terrorism-08-30-11-201...jpg
  • The morning after the terrorist attack at Fishmongers Hall on London Bridge, in which Usman Khan (a convicted, freed terrorist) killed 2 during a knife a attack, then subsequently tackled by passers-by and shot by armed police - news crews film from the Southbank using Fishmongers Hall as a background, on 30th November 2019, in London, England.
    london_bridge_terrorism-07-30-11-201...jpg
  • Two Evening Standard news distributors push a laden trolley with the first editions of the free London newspaper at Oxford Circus, on 17th July 2019, in London England.
    newspapers_distributors-01-17-07-201...jpg
  • On US President Donald Trump's first day of a controversial three-day state visit to the UK by the 45th American President, international TV news anchors report opposite Buckingham Palace, on 3rd June 2019, in London England.
    trump_visit-12-03-06-2019.jpg
  • On US President Donald Trump's first day of a controversial three-day state visit to the UK by the 45th American President, international TV news anchors report opposite Buckingham Palace, on 3rd June 2019, in London England.
    trump_visit-11-03-06-2019.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-20-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-19-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-16-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-14-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-12-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-11-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-08-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-10-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-06-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-17-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-04-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-01-09-11-2016.jpg
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-20-09-11-2016.tif
  • US president-elect, Donald Trump appears on the front page of the London Evening Standard newspaper, on the day of his election, on November 9th 2016, in central London, England. The headline reads "Trump Triumph Shocks World" and Londoners of all colours and races take the free paper to read the latest overnight news. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    trump_headline-21-09-11-2016.tif
  • London Mayor Boris Johnson is interviewed in Trafalgar Square by Channel 4 News presenter Cathy Newman. As the sculpture known as Gift Horse, by German artist Hans Haacke, is unveiled in London's Trafalgar Square on the public space called the Fourth Plinth. Johnson financed the 10th artwork to appear here. The skeletal, riderless horse (derived from The Anatomy of a Horse - George Stubbs, 1766) with a London Stock Exchange tickertape is a comment on power, money and history.
    unveiling_gift_horse32-05-03-2015.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district.
    city_symmetry05-10-04-2014.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district.
    city_symmetry04-10-04-2014.jpg
  • A stone carving of the German-born news tycoon, Paul Julius Reuter, seen at lunchtime in the City of London, the capital's financial district.
    city_symmetry01-10-04-2014.jpg
  • Two police officers patrol past a group of Chinese state news consumers in a Shenzhen street. Locals stop to scan headlines and the stories of the day from the sheets of newsprint posted up on street corners. The policemen in uniform patrol the area with a presence to deter petty crime in a new and prosperous China. Since the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 and until the 1980s, almost all media outlets in Mainland China were state-run. Independent media outlets only began to emerge at the onset of economic reforms, although state-run media outlets such as Xinhua, CCTV, and People's Daily continue to hold significant market share.
    90s_china_police-21-04-1995.jpg
  • Members of Chinese exile community keep vigil and await more news outside their embassy a day after the Tiananmen Sq massacre. A mock coffin draped in the Chinese flag sit on the London pavement, a presence to officials in the embassy opposite. The political crackdown that initiated on June 3–4 1989 became known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre as troops with assault rifles and tanks inflicted casualties on unarmed civilians trying to block the military’s advance towards Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, which student demonstrators had occupied for seven weeks.
    tiananmen_london03-05-06-1989.jpg
  • Members of Chinese exile community keep vigil and await more news outside their embassy a day after the Tiananmen Sq massacre. A mock coffin draped in the Chinese flag sit on the London pavement, a presence to officials in the embassy opposite. The political crackdown that initiated on June 3–4 1989 became known as the Tiananmen Square Massacre as troops with assault rifles and tanks inflicted casualties on unarmed civilians trying to block the military’s advance towards Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing, which student demonstrators had occupied for seven weeks.
    tiananmen_london04-05-06-1989.jpg
  • Foreign media tape markings for their TV broadcasts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait30-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Foreign media tape markings for their TV broadcasts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait26-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Foreign media mark out tape for their TV broadcasts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait27-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Foreign media reporter makes a live link outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending lbirth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait06-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Media interview on tall stepladders as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait03-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Media photographers stand on tall stepladders  as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait23-22-07-2013.jpg
  • Media and reflectors as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait33-19-07-2013.jpg
  • US Fox TV markings on pavement as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait30-19-07-2013.jpg
  • US NBC TV  time zone clocks in media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait28-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait26-19-07-2013.jpg
  • US Fox TV markings on pavement as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait25-19-07-2013.jpg
  • US NBC TV  time zone clocks in media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait24-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Amercian NBC TV correspondent Natalie Morales plus technicians reports live for the Today show from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London. Here, media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait23-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Amercian NBC TV correspondent Natalie Morales plus technicians reports live for the Today show from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London. Here, media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait22-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Amercian NBC TV correspondent Natalie Morales plus technicians reports live for the Today show from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London. Here, media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait20-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Amercian NBC TV correspondent Natalie Morales plus technicians reports live for the Today show from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London. Here, media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait18-19-07-2013.jpg
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