"There was another man in the room". A divorce case from Australia has made lots of the Irish papers... because of the pictures involved.
The was away for the night with work. She took pictures of herself and sent them to her husband from her hotel room.
But the husband spotted another man's boots in the background in one of her photos.
On the front pages,
The Irish Times has a story about how more than 500 disqualified drivers were involved in collisions causing serious injury or death.
"Carrickmines survivors to live in a car park", also in the Times.
In The Irish Examiner: "Adams denial of IRA link not tenable" and "Travellers in carpark a sad indictment of Irish society".
Also in that paper: "Revenue warns Christmas shoppers of tax implications of shopping online".
If your delivery is worth more than €22, and it is from outside the EU VAT charges will apply. If the goods are worth over €150 custom duty may also be owed.
Chris admitted it had happened to him once on a parcel that came from the US. Revenue said "pay your VAT and then you can have your... cream".
The Irish Independent has: "Sinn Féin wounded by IRA cash claims".
In the tabloids there are four different crime stories on the front pages.
Starting with The Herald: "I didn't kill him - woman denies city centre gun murder".
The Star has a story about Adrian Crevan Mackin. Going back to 2010 apparently he was involved in a robbery on a casino, with that paper featuring images from CCTV footage.
The Sun: "Shameless. Brazen John Gallagher describes evil slaughter of ex and her Mum as unfortunate".
The Mirror: "Give our gardaí guns". A retired Detective Sargeant has urged gardaí to follow the example of police in the North.
The Daily Mail also has: "Dramatic phonecall from the Taoiseach 24 hours before impasse was resolved credited by householders delighted by outcome".
Ivan's reaction: "I'm not quite sure in what direction the Taoiseach is intervening... the issue is not resolved".
Finally, The Farmer's Journal covers the drop in milk prices and coverage of the FBD EGM.
Two stories caught Chris' eye from inside the papers.
The Irish Independent covers Mick Wallace's loss of his rope ladder. He used his ladder to scale the fence at Shannon airport during a protest against US rendition - a judge has now ordered the ladder be donated to the local scouts.
The Irish Times has proposals from Minister Alan Kelly on rent certainty - firstly, tenants would have to be given three months notice of a rent hike and secondly that three comparable properties of a similar price are detailed by landlords setting rents.
In The Daily Telegraph, the decline of men wearing hats is being linked to the loss of manners.
Ivan wondered if it could be true, and appealed to listeners to help him decide.
Listen to the paper review here: