Do you still play the lottery?published at 08:39 British Summer Time 5 September 2017
Mark Carter
Presenter, BBC Sussex
Sales are falling, and I want to know whether you've fallen out of love with the game.
Join me on BBC Sussex from 09:00 BST.
Updates on Tuesday 5 September 2017.
Mark Carter
Presenter, BBC Sussex
Sales are falling, and I want to know whether you've fallen out of love with the game.
Join me on BBC Sussex from 09:00 BST.
Ben Weisz
Political reporter, BBC Sussex
It's not just MPs facing abuse for doing their jobs.
Sussex's county and city councillors have been telling us what they're dealing with. Of the 68 who answered our questions, five said they'd had a death threat.
Eight said they'd been threatened with some other form of violence, eight said they'd had hateful messages about race, gender, or sexual orientation, and three said their families had been targeted.
I asked them why they thought they were on the receiving end. Some blamed the ease with which someone could hide behind anonymous social media profiles to launch vitriol. Others said there was a growing lack of respect - that people forgot that councillors were human, with a life outside politics.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, councillors said abuse was worse when political feelings were running high more generally - the EU referendum, the General Election, and key local decisions were all mentioned as flashpoints.
Nobody told me they thought the levels of abuse were getting any better over time - and quite a few thought they'd gotten significantly worse. Perhaps most worryingly, eight councillors said they'd considered quitting over the abuse they received.
Kathryn Langley
BBC Live reporter
The mother of a five-month old baby who died because she needed a heart transplant is calling for the organ donation law to be changed.
Almost two million people are on the register but their family's consent is still needed before a donation.
In the last 10 years 330 people have died while waiting for a transplant in Kent, Sussex and Surrey.
Stuart Maisner
BBC Live reporter
Meet the barber with a passion for photography who displays his work on the walls of his salon.
James Brown is the first in our series meeting our #PhotoOfTheDay regulars.
Kate Kinsella
BBC Weather
It's going to feel quite warm today but prepare for some possible outbreaks of rain.
Lizzie Massey
BBC Live reporter
Nearly half of local MPs have received a death threat while in office, a BBC South East questionnaire has found.
One Kent MP recalled having to be accompanied by a plain clothes police officer to an event because a threat made against him was considered so serious.
In Kent and Sussex 13 MPs responded to the questionnaire, half of those who were asked.
It comes after Helen Whately, the Conservative MP for Faversham and Mid Kent, said she had received death threats in July and the death of Jo Cox, Labour MP for Batley and Spen, who was shot in 2016.
More than a third of respondents said they get abusive messages on a weekly basis and one Sussex MP said they had to put in “extra vigilance around my children who received direct threats”.
One Sussex MP said they no longer hold open surgeries and many agreed social media had a huge part ot play in the abuse.
But one MP said: "I'd rather quit the job than change the way I do it if it would mean being less accessible."
Yasmine Djadoudi
BBC Live reporter
What a great way to start the day with this wonderful pic of Seaford by Alan Jeffrey - it's our #PhotoOfTheDay.
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