"The Best Pastry Chef" seems to be a mini-cluster on its own. 16 characters from the show came back positive for Coronavirus. Xavier Niel and La Provence by Bernard Tapie have until 6 p.m. this Friday evening to confirm their proposal to buy La Marseillaise. In the United Kingdom, the BBC and Sky News are controversial with a program aimed at picking up migrants at sea. In Belarus, the work of journalists is still as complicated as ever with violent arrests and a protester has been killed in recent hours by the police.

A member of the "Meilleur Patissier" team on M6 has tested positive for Covid. Filming was interrupted. Everyone has since taken a test and Closer has just revealed the results. 

"The Best Pastry Chef" seems to be a mini-cluster on its own. After having to put a cotton swab in their nose, 16 characters on the show came back positive for Coronavirus. We do not know who it is: members of the production, technical staff, candidates, jury or perhaps Cyril Lignac himself. Filming still cannot resume. 

The daily La Marseillaise is worried about being bought by press magnates.

This Thursday, 12:30 pm, all the editorial staff of the newspaper demonstrate in front of its premises in the center of Marseille. You can read the anger on the faces and the banners in hand. Because the newspaper, in liquidation, is for sale. There is one buyer that everyone likes: Maritima, a large audiovisual group from the south of France. Journalists said go. But another offer to buy could turn everything upside down. Léo Purguette, editor-in-chief.

Xavier Niel and La Provence by Bernard Tapie will they stand for a buyout of La Marseillaise? They have until six o'clock this evening to go or withdraw.

In the UK, the BBC and Sky News are controversial.

Men always leave the French coasts to cross the Channel on makeshift boats. Sometimes with them there are women and children too.

This week the BBC got an idea. Why not go fishing for migrants? Why not rent a big motorboat and try to find them in the open sea, all live? 

The show is called BBC Breakfast. It is barely 7 o'clock. The British eat their cereals and their porridge. A star reporter from the channel appears on their TV. He spotted migrants in the distance. "We are from Syria," they reply. Half an hour later, the border police disembark. The crew is stopped at sea. We are still live in BBC Breakfast. The cameras don't miss a thing. The next day, the Sky News news channel also wants to try its luck.

Among the critics, writer Owen Jones. He writes in the Guardian. "Some of the most desperate people on Earth are turned into entertainments. UK 20/20".

In Belarus, the work of journalists is still so complicated. 

Belarus is the last dictatorship in Europe. Since Sunday, its nine million inhabitants risk their lives to say no to Alexander Lukashenko. 26 years that he is president-despot.

Martin Cangelosi spoke to Andrei Vaitovich, one of the journalists in the capital, Minsk, on the phone. At first, he texted her. "Hi Andrei ... can I call you in 3/4 hours". Here is what he replied: "No, please call me now. In 3 hours, I might have been violently arrested." Because being a reporter in Belarus these days is a constant fear.

Since the rigged election, more than fifty reporters have been arrested. Martin Cangelosi sent a message to Andrei this morning. So far, he's doing well. But another protester has been killed by police in recent hours. The Russian Euronews channel has been cut and the Internet is slowed down by a power that is playing for its survival.