Browse content similar to 02/07/2012. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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After weeks of rain, we go inside a rainbow and give people a glimpse | :00:10. | :00:20. | |
:00:20. | :00:25. | ||
Hello, and welcome to a very overgrown One Show studio with Matt | :00:25. | :00:32. | |
Baker. And Alex Jones. Wow, you leave the the studio unattended for | :00:32. | :00:38. | |
a few weeks and look what happens! Well, at least it's making our | :00:38. | :00:48. | |
:00:48. | :00:53. | ||
guest tonight feel right at home, Friendly atmosphere. Something is | :00:53. | :00:57. | |
different... I cannot work out what it is! People are going to be | :00:57. | :01:01. | |
wondering how this makes you feel at home, what have you been doing | :01:01. | :01:08. | |
in the words, Will? I have been singing, yes, I have been singing | :01:08. | :01:12. | |
shows for the Forestry Commission. I have got one more to go, and what | :01:12. | :01:18. | |
is great about them, well, it is sold out, that is nice, and the | :01:18. | :01:21. | |
profits for the Forestry Commission go back into the forests, it keeps | :01:21. | :01:25. | |
them ticking over. It is a good cause. It has not been the best | :01:25. | :01:30. | |
summer for it, but the audiences have been amazing. Do you dress up | :01:30. | :01:37. | |
as Robin Hood? I wanted to, and as a Morris dancer, and both of them | :01:37. | :01:41. | |
were ruled out by my very good manager, otherwise I wouldn't have | :01:41. | :01:44. | |
a career. Talking about the atmosphere, it must be great to do | :01:44. | :01:49. | |
it in the woods. It is brilliant, but the last place I went to, it | :01:49. | :01:54. | |
was a natural basin, almost like a natural amphitheatre, and the | :01:54. | :01:57. | |
audiences have been amazing, because some of them have been | :01:57. | :02:01. | |
quite wet, and they stay, they do not leave. I would leave, | :02:01. | :02:06. | |
personally! They love you, Will. You are doing something you have | :02:06. | :02:10. | |
never done before, and we will talk to you about that later on. Yes, | :02:10. | :02:18. | |
what is it? We are hoping you can tell us! This week sees the start | :02:18. | :02:23. | |
of the BBC's When I'm 65 season, a series of programmes about the | :02:23. | :02:28. | |
fastest-growing age group in the UK. To some people 65 can seem a long | :02:28. | :02:33. | |
way off, so we sent two of our older team members to give them a | :02:33. | :02:43. | |
:02:43. | :02:43. | ||
This looks like a go at spot, doesn't it? Nice and busy. | :02:43. | :02:48. | |
Guildford is perfect, let's go and have a word with a few people. What | :02:48. | :02:54. | |
you think of my grey hair? I was wondering whether it was real! | :02:54. | :03:03. | |
Really?! I love that. I think the Silver Fox looks suits you. You why | :03:03. | :03:10. | |
are all right, yes. How would you feel if you looked like Alex when | :03:10. | :03:16. | |
you're 65? I would be happy with that. Really?! What do you reckon | :03:16. | :03:20. | |
you will be like? What you hope for? I think I will still be | :03:20. | :03:24. | |
working. Maybe I will at some grandchildren by then. It is | :03:24. | :03:29. | |
worrying, because some people are just watching us, going, they look | :03:29. | :03:33. | |
old off the television. What about that woman with the trolley? | :03:34. | :03:39. | |
took a long time to work out you were wearing a wig. And someone | :03:39. | :03:43. | |
called Matt John Craven! What will you look like? I would be | :03:43. | :03:48. | |
interested to find out. Well... Were have got some of the latest | :03:48. | :03:54. | |
phone apps which can add decades to your image right in front of your | :03:54. | :04:02. | |
eyes. Oh, dear! We are upsetting the whole of goal 30th. I think the | :04:03. | :04:07. | |
beard would hide the jowls. Are you going to keep it? It hides a | :04:07. | :04:15. | |
multitude of sins! Does it make you think, I will not drink as much? | :04:15. | :04:19. | |
Right, that is it, we are done, we have got to get the buzz back by | :04:19. | :04:29. | |
:04:29. | :04:30. | ||
What a way to start back after three weeks off, we do not look | :04:30. | :04:35. | |
relaxed, we look for all. We are still picking pieces of latex off. | :04:35. | :04:41. | |
We have tried it and you, Will, you will be glad to know. Thank you so | :04:41. | :04:47. | |
much! This is Will as he is now. These is Will Young, and here comes | :04:47. | :04:56. | |
will hold. -- will hold. You do not look too bad! New line just | :04:56. | :05:01. | |
stretched slightly, gravity has taken hold. That is really | :05:01. | :05:09. | |
depressing. Nice shirts that he is wearing. No alcohol, you'll be | :05:09. | :05:14. | |
fine! During the Jubilee, we met loads of big stars over 65, Paul | :05:14. | :05:18. | |
McCartney, Elton John, Tom Jones. Which would you most like to be | :05:18. | :05:25. | |
like? Well, if we are thinking are musicians, another one he was over | :05:25. | :05:30. | |
65 is Stevie Wonder. His voice is still amazing, he has obviously got | :05:30. | :05:34. | |
that catalogue of songs. If I could sing like him when I am 65, I would | :05:34. | :05:39. | |
be very happy. You obviously think about the future quite a lot, | :05:39. | :05:45. | |
longevity is a big thing. Oh, yeah, planning from the beginning, really. | :05:45. | :05:49. | |
Where I'm at now, my 5th studio album is where I wanted to get to. | :05:49. | :05:54. | |
I think you have to come as a performer, you have to think ahead. | :05:54. | :05:58. | |
This series of programmes coming up on the BBC, When I'm 65, it is | :05:58. | :06:03. | |
going to be great, keep an eye out. If you need more inspiration to you | :06:03. | :06:08. | |
look after yourself, look no further than this man, Terry Donlon. | :06:08. | :06:13. | |
Andy Murray may be making headlines in the tennis, but in the table | :06:13. | :06:18. | |
tennis world, this man is the big story, find out why later. Terry | :06:18. | :06:23. | |
and Will are going to play, so we will let Terry warm-up a bit there. | :06:23. | :06:27. | |
Rain does not stop play on the One Show. A man who has finished his | :06:27. | :06:31. | |
warm-up and is raring to go is Marty Jopson, who was marking the | :06:31. | :06:34. | |
wettest June on record by putting himself inside one of nature's most | :06:35. | :06:43. | |
Rainbows, one of the most delightful spectacles in the | :06:43. | :06:48. | |
natural world, always with the promise of a pot of gold at the end. | :06:48. | :06:53. | |
But how do rainbows happen? And can we make one for ourselves? Oh, and | :06:53. | :07:00. | |
I've got some bad news about that part of gold -- pot of gold. To see | :07:00. | :07:03. | |
rainbows, you need sun and rain at the same time. To make rainbows, | :07:03. | :07:09. | |
you need to know three bits of physics. Number one, liked Ben's | :07:09. | :07:15. | |
when it hits water. And it also splits in two different colours. | :07:15. | :07:19. | |
Philip, one of the world's rainbow experts, has a glass and light to | :07:19. | :07:25. | |
show just that. Each colour pens at a slightly different angle, so we | :07:25. | :07:31. | |
get the familiar rainbow colours. There it is! No. Two, this explains | :07:31. | :07:36. | |
were the curve comes from. The shape of a raindrop. Raindrops are | :07:36. | :07:41. | |
almost spherical, something like this. This is a light bulb which I | :07:41. | :07:45. | |
have filled with water, and we can see it, the curved arc of the | :07:46. | :07:53. | |
rainbow. That is really good, there it is, look. But why can we never | :07:53. | :07:57. | |
travel under the arch? Why is it that even when you move towards a | :07:57. | :08:02. | |
rainbow, it never seems to get closer? It is all down to the third | :08:02. | :08:09. | |
bits of rainbow physics, angles. Now, to see a rainbow, the son must | :08:09. | :08:15. | |
be behind you, so if this is me here, right, like that, there is my | :08:15. | :08:24. | |
nose, there is the hair, the son has to be back here, behind you. | :08:25. | :08:29. | |
The rain it has to be in front of you. It does not need to be raining | :08:29. | :08:35. | |
on you. Then light from the Sun hits the drops of rain, just like | :08:35. | :08:39. | |
with the light of that was full of water, the light from the Sun has | :08:39. | :08:44. | |
bounced back and hits as in the eye. And this is the crucial bit, your | :08:44. | :08:49. | |
shadow. Imagine a line between your eyes and the end of your shadow. | :08:49. | :08:54. | |
The top of a rainbow will always be at an angle of 42 degrees to that | :08:54. | :08:59. | |
line, and that is true for each of us individually. What that means is | :08:59. | :09:04. | |
that no matter where you are, the rainbow will always go with you. If | :09:04. | :09:08. | |
you move, the rainbow moves. We each see our own individual | :09:08. | :09:15. | |
rainbows. So we know the theory, let's put it into practice. Perfect | :09:15. | :09:18. | |
rainbow conditions are hard to come by, we have got the sun, but we | :09:18. | :09:28. | |
:09:28. | :09:29. | ||
With the Sun behind us, instant reign in front, and a bit of | :09:29. | :09:33. | |
tweaking, bingo! And it is my personal rainbow, if I move, it | :09:33. | :09:43. | |
:09:43. | :09:44. | ||
moves with me. As I moved across, Isn't that beautiful? But there is | :09:44. | :09:49. | |
a secret to reveal about the end of the rainbow. Rainbows are actually | :09:49. | :09:54. | |
four circles, and usually we only see part of the top half. Why don't | :09:54. | :09:58. | |
you see the bottom half? It is because you need the rain to be | :09:58. | :10:04. | |
below you, and that rarely happens. It is usually up in the clouds. If | :10:04. | :10:07. | |
you point down, you might be able to see the bottom part of the | :10:07. | :10:13. | |
rainbow. Just about see it there. It is rare to spot one, but it has | :10:13. | :10:19. | |
given me an idea. Could I stand inside a circular rainbow? I will | :10:19. | :10:27. | |
need to wrap it up. -- ramp. We have got hosepipes and squirting at | :10:27. | :10:33. | |
shin level to get water below me. A thousand watt light is directly | :10:33. | :10:41. | |
overhead. I have got a waterproof camera, and I am hopeful. Getting | :10:41. | :10:50. | |
Oh, I can see a rainbow! With the light directly above me, my shadow | :10:50. | :10:56. | |
is really short, so the 42 degrees brings the Rainbow really close to | :10:56. | :11:00. | |
me. That is why you will never find a pot of gold at the end of a | :11:00. | :11:05. | |
rainbow, because rainbows don't have an end. | :11:05. | :11:11. | |
How can you finish a film on that note? He has shattered my dreams! | :11:11. | :11:17. | |
Marty Jopson has got a lot transfer falls -- a lot to answer for. | :11:17. | :11:26. | |
film. But an awful ending! lovely! Shall we talk about your | :11:26. | :11:32. | |
new single? Let Soham talk about me! We love it, but it is about you | :11:32. | :11:42. | |
:11:42. | :12:03. | ||
That his kind of Howard starts, Will, and I have danced with a | :12:03. | :12:09. | |
trolley as well, you cannot help but do that spin. It is so much fun. | :12:09. | :12:13. | |
That is like Strictly trolley dancing week one, but this is we | :12:13. | :12:21. | |
gauge. Here he goes, look at him! It is a thing of beauty! You would | :12:21. | :12:25. | |
win a Strictly trolley. Have things got so desperate that you have | :12:25. | :12:34. | |
turned to a trolley?! Yes! No, the idea came from talking to Paul, who | :12:34. | :12:38. | |
does my hair and make-up, and he was saying, you should do something | :12:38. | :12:43. | |
in the supermarket. And I love taking everyday situations in | :12:43. | :12:47. | |
videos, you know, trying to make them something that they are not, | :12:47. | :12:52. | |
so I play a shopping trolley attendant, and then I fall in love | :12:52. | :12:56. | |
with the trolley. There is something about that long trolley | :12:56. | :13:02. | |
in the car park, left and discarded. It wants some attention. You must | :13:02. | :13:06. | |
have used a lot of pound coins in the video. But then you are | :13:06. | :13:10. | |
promoted from trolley boy to checkout. Let's have a look at the | :13:10. | :13:20. | |
:13:20. | :13:22. | ||
end of the video. Sorry, that is... �38.73. You have a store card? | :13:22. | :13:27. | |
is brilliant! You know what is really fun? I have been doing this | :13:27. | :13:32. | |
for 10 years, and what is so much fun, knowing a song is coming out, | :13:32. | :13:36. | |
turning it on its head, taking a really normal situation like a | :13:36. | :13:40. | |
supermarket, something we all do every day, making it more glamorous | :13:40. | :13:44. | |
and fun and exciting. At such a catchy tune. The thing we talked | :13:44. | :13:48. | |
about at the beginning that you did not know about, something you have | :13:48. | :13:53. | |
never tried before, it is musical theatre. Yes. You did kind of start | :13:53. | :13:58. | |
at hoping to achieve that. Well, I did, around the corner, before I | :13:58. | :14:06. | |
entered pop idol, I did a musical theatre course in Chiswick, and now | :14:06. | :14:10. | |
I am finally doing Cabaret the musical, which starts at the end of | :14:10. | :14:15. | |
August, and then we are in the Savoy Theatre from the beginning of | :14:15. | :14:20. | |
October, I think, yeah, for four months. Why Cabaret? Why did you | :14:20. | :14:26. | |
choose that one? I had been talking to Rufus Norris the director for | :14:26. | :14:29. | |
almost three years, it is one of my favourite musicals. I am playing | :14:29. | :14:34. | |
the NC. I was saying to you earlier, the songs are amazing, the story is | :14:34. | :14:41. | |
amazing, and the party is an incredible part. It is the big part. | :14:41. | :14:50. | |
Exactly, so I have started doing... I've worked with Penny in Mrs | :14:50. | :14:53. | |
Henderson Presents, I have got to speak with a Berlin accent. It | :14:53. | :14:58. | |
sounds really bad at the moment, actually! We cannot stitch him up | :14:58. | :15:03. | |
like this! Rufus might change his mind! It is going to be great, and | :15:03. | :15:07. | |
you know what is so nice, after this record, it has gone down so | :15:07. | :15:12. | |
well, it has been almost a year since I was on with the first | :15:12. | :15:16. | |
single, Chelsy, to go and do something different, please come | :15:16. | :15:21. | |
and see it! The banks are in the headlines again for all the wrong | :15:21. | :15:24. | |
reasons, the Berkeley scandal adding one more black mark to a | :15:24. | :15:29. | |
long list of bad behaviour. -- Barclays. Also on the list is the | :15:29. | :15:32. | |
lack of money available to small businesses, and as Lucy Siegle has | :15:32. | :15:42. | |
:15:42. | :15:43. | ||
been finding out, patience is Mark Landsberg is a businessman. He | :15:43. | :15:49. | |
is serious about cars. Let's go. | :15:49. | :15:53. | |
This sports car is his pride and joy. | :15:53. | :15:59. | |
It is quite some car. Yeah! But now Mark's giving up the | :15:59. | :16:04. | |
car of his dreams, for what he hopes will be a short-term farewell | :16:04. | :16:09. | |
for a long-term reason, to build his business. | :16:09. | :16:14. | |
Mark's about to hand over the keys to his Lamborghini to a total | :16:14. | :16:20. | |
stranger. Are you ready? Yeah. Thanks, Mark. We will take good | :16:20. | :16:25. | |
care of it. James is a pawnbroker, Mark is | :16:25. | :16:30. | |
borrowing �50,000 against the car to give his business the boost it | :16:30. | :16:34. | |
needs. The seven month loan could cost him over �17,000 in interest, | :16:34. | :16:38. | |
but he needs the money to develop a mobile phone product. | :16:38. | :16:43. | |
I have been to the banks, forget it the first bank we went to see, did | :16:43. | :16:49. | |
not know what a mobile phone appcation was. �50,000 mass gone | :16:49. | :16:52. | |
into it, we need the finished product. | :16:52. | :16:57. | |
Why not just sell the car? What?! Why are you so shocked about that | :16:57. | :17:01. | |
when you are going to pawn it? Pawning it is like lending it to | :17:01. | :17:05. | |
someone, isn't it? You are not getting rid of the car, you are | :17:05. | :17:13. | |
just borrowing money against it. He is the -- not the only one | :17:13. | :17:16. | |
borrowing against his car for business. According to the | :17:16. | :17:20. | |
federation for small businesses, banks are not lending enough to | :17:20. | :17:27. | |
small and medium-sized companies. Maybe this is why the pawn brokers | :17:27. | :17:32. | |
are reporting a 28% interest increase in business coming to them. | :17:32. | :17:38. | |
The interest rates are steep? start at% a month ending up at 9% a | :17:38. | :17:42. | |
month, but if you add up the cost that other lenders are asking, it | :17:42. | :17:46. | |
is a short-term solution and it is competitive. | :17:46. | :17:53. | |
9% is 10le% a year. -- 9% a month is 108% a year. | :17:53. | :17:57. | |
Do you feel guilty for doing well in a recession? No, I don't think I | :17:57. | :18:01. | |
should feel guilty. We are providing a service. It is a | :18:01. | :18:05. | |
valuable service, as I have pointed out we are helping people where | :18:06. | :18:08. | |
other doors have been closed in their faces. | :18:08. | :18:14. | |
James has tapped into the growing market. People who want to borrow | :18:14. | :18:19. | |
cash against assets and he has helped Mark put a price on them. | :18:19. | :18:27. | |
This is not what what you find down the local off-licence? No, have one | :18:28. | :18:34. | |
of the most valuable cases of wines here. It is probably worth about | :18:34. | :18:37. | |
�12,000 for a case of 12. It does not stop there. | :18:37. | :18:41. | |
We are seeing here a collection from a customer that needed to | :18:41. | :18:47. | |
raise money to support his business. First editions? Yes, Captain Cook | :18:47. | :18:53. | |
here. This part of the collection is worth in excess of �500,000. The | :18:53. | :18:56. | |
whole collection is worth in excess of �2 million. | :18:56. | :19:02. | |
But it is not just those with �2 million worth of books, using the | :19:02. | :19:07. | |
pawn brokers. I have watches that I'm interested | :19:07. | :19:15. | |
in pawning. Jane is borrowing �3,000 for her business, the banks | :19:15. | :19:18. | |
would not loan to her. This could cost her more than �1,000 in | :19:18. | :19:22. | |
interest. This is how I started. | :19:22. | :19:28. | |
She is in the business of inventing products for babies, but going to | :19:28. | :19:33. | |
the bank to get finances for the next idea, a cot blanket. They said | :19:33. | :19:36. | |
"no". They did not look at the bigger | :19:36. | :19:39. | |
picture, where the product was going. They looked at the figures | :19:39. | :19:44. | |
on the paper and said "no". So this was a good option for us as a | :19:44. | :19:47. | |
family to use the watches instead of taking out a personal loan of | :19:47. | :19:51. | |
our own. So tomorrow, I can push the switch | :19:51. | :19:54. | |
on the suingmans at the manufactures to go with a new | :19:54. | :19:58. | |
product. The banks say that last year they | :19:58. | :20:02. | |
lent small businesses over �7 billion in new loans, despite | :20:02. | :20:10. | |
seeing less demand for them. Jane and Mark know the risks involved in | :20:10. | :20:14. | |
pawning possessions to finances their businesses. If they fail, | :20:14. | :20:19. | |
Mark cowed lose his Lamborghini, and Jane could lose her watches, | :20:19. | :20:22. | |
but they feel they have made the right choice. | :20:22. | :20:26. | |
There is a risk in anything you do. I believe if you want to succeed in | :20:26. | :20:31. | |
life you have to take risks. This is all part of my journey, I | :20:31. | :20:35. | |
will look back and think it was definitely worth it. | :20:35. | :20:40. | |
Let's hope so. Now, you have lots of stuff you | :20:40. | :20:47. | |
could pawn, haven't you? She says so knowingly! Very nothing! Have | :20:47. | :20:55. | |
you been in my house? I have a room full of hats and canes, you said? | :20:55. | :20:59. | |
have a bamboo book bike. Where did you find that? Zambia! | :20:59. | :21:04. | |
You didn't expect that. How did you get that back? They | :21:04. | :21:10. | |
sent it, the company that makes the bamboo bikes. I still have not | :21:10. | :21:13. | |
assembled it yet. But you have kept stuff from the | :21:13. | :21:17. | |
video? I have kept stuff from the video. You see I had a name badge | :21:17. | :21:23. | |
that he to wear. You can make a choice which one you | :21:23. | :21:26. | |
want. What, we can have them? Yes. | :21:26. | :21:32. | |
Well, that is very kind of you. Very generous. You can have two of | :21:33. | :21:37. | |
them. We will share them out! That is | :21:37. | :21:43. | |
good. Any way, oh, we have been rehearsing this bit. Legendary soul | :21:43. | :21:49. | |
singer, Edwin Starr once sang... # War, what is it good for? # Well | :21:49. | :21:55. | |
in the music, it is good for one thing, selling records. The early | :21:55. | :21:59. | |
1980s, was a time of tension. A domestic recession and | :21:59. | :22:03. | |
international unrest. The seen has been described by | :22:03. | :22:08. | |
Ronald Reagan as an evil empire. there conscious in the Kremlin? | :22:08. | :22:15. | |
Britain had fought another war... massive Argentine in vaigs of the | :22:15. | :22:18. | |
Falklands is taking place. -- invasion. | :22:18. | :22:23. | |
And Russia and the USA were squaring up over nuclear weapons. | :22:23. | :22:33. | |
:22:33. | :22:33. | ||
The threat cast a long shadow, even in popular culture, eeveryone new | :22:33. | :22:38. | |
George Orwell's 1984, suddenly it was here. So no surprising that | :22:38. | :22:44. | |
this song went to number one, Frankie Goes To Hollywood and Two | :22:44. | :22:50. | |
Tribes. T is triebts Two Tribes a protest | :22:50. | :22:55. | |
song? It is kind of, but I was not a peace and love hippy. | :22:55. | :22:59. | |
It was that this is the state of the world at the moment. | :22:59. | :23:09. | |
:23:09. | :23:12. | ||
There was a certain sort of declamatory atmosphere to it. | :23:12. | :23:15. | |
Trying to instil the danger of these men who are making thee | :23:15. | :23:21. | |
decisions for us. The song got written in a rehearsal | :23:21. | :23:25. | |
room. Then the band was just a drummer and a base player and a | :23:25. | :23:30. | |
singer which was me. A few of the songs were written like that, just | :23:30. | :23:39. | |
with the rim section. So -- with the rythm section. So we | :23:39. | :23:46. | |
had very talented a group. There was great practised lycs that | :23:46. | :23:49. | |
sounded Russian. It got me thinking that I could make a sound out of | :23:49. | :23:56. | |
that. When it was amplyified by a 60- | :23:56. | :24:06. | |
:24:06. | :24:07. | ||
piece Orchestra... That was amazing. That this little song that we had | :24:07. | :24:14. | |
made with base drums, with a guitar, that we used to have to do twice at | :24:14. | :24:18. | |
live gigs because we only had seven songs had become this mammoth, | :24:18. | :24:26. | |
amazing production. The thing about Two Tribes, it is a | :24:26. | :24:31. | |
hybrid of dance music and rock music. | :24:31. | :24:37. | |
There is Assange pect of classical music to it also it is underpinned | :24:37. | :24:46. | |
by the classic disco beat. Like their first single, Relax, the | :24:46. | :24:49. | |
song had a controversial video, featuring look alikes of the US | :24:49. | :24:55. | |
President of The time, Ronald Reagan, wrest -- wrestling with the | :24:56. | :25:00. | |
head of the seen. Now, the video of the song is | :25:00. | :25:08. | |
amazing. Kevin Godly and Lol Crane had been | :25:08. | :25:14. | |
members of 10CC, somebody that I watched on Top of the Pops. Then | :25:14. | :25:18. | |
they were directing pop videos. They used the two leaders fighting | :25:18. | :25:22. | |
it out in a snake pit. The crowd around them were a United Nations, | :25:22. | :25:27. | |
it was the perfect solution. Why have a Cold War and put everyone | :25:27. | :25:33. | |
else at risk when you could just fight it out, boys? It was just | :25:33. | :25:41. | |
just a brilliant idea. Two Tribes was a phenomenal success. | :25:41. | :25:44. | |
It spent nine weeks at the top of the UK chart. | :25:45. | :25:49. | |
Frankie Goes To Hollywood became one of the top-selling bands of | :25:49. | :25:54. | |
1984. Nearly 30 years on, Two Tribes still packs a punch. | :25:54. | :25:59. | |
It's amazing to perform it. The crowd just goes crazy. | :25:59. | :26:07. | |
It is the point in the show when it just ramps the whole thing up. | :26:07. | :26:11. | |
It ramps it up by 1,000% and people love it. | :26:11. | :26:21. | |
:26:21. | :26:22. | ||
I am very proud of the fact that, you know, I instigated that song. | :26:22. | :26:27. | |
It is one of them that you can't help singing. I love it. | :26:27. | :26:34. | |
Talking of Two Tribes, it is time to pit our Will against one of | :26:34. | :26:43. | |
Britain's best Ping-Pong players. Yes it is the extraordinary | :26:43. | :26:46. | |
octogenarians in the world. This is not for the faint-hearted. | :26:46. | :26:56. | |
:26:56. | :27:04. | ||
I don't want to go home, watch # One more time you hurt me | :27:04. | :27:12. | |
# You thought you had your victory. # I don't care how good she is, I | :27:12. | :27:17. | |
should get her. She can't move, right? Yes! How about a round of | :27:18. | :27:25. | |
applause for three-times Gold Medallist, Terry Donlon! So, Terry, | :27:25. | :27:29. | |
we said there you are 83. How old were you when you started playing | :27:29. | :27:35. | |
table tennis? I was boxing when I was 21. | :27:35. | :27:39. | |
It keeps you young, is that the idea? Yes. | :27:39. | :27:45. | |
What does it do for you? I'm 83, going on 41. That is what it does | :27:45. | :27:48. | |
for you. To be fair you struggle with your | :27:48. | :27:52. | |
health? Yes. Just give us an idea of some of the | :27:52. | :27:59. | |
things you have come up against? had TB when I was 14. | :27:59. | :28:07. | |
Then he prostate cancer in 1996. Eight months after that, I had a | :28:07. | :28:12. | |
different cancer in my kidney, so they took the kidney out. Then I | :28:12. | :28:18. | |
went to Turkey, I had an accident. I hit a vertebrae it was out of | :28:18. | :28:23. | |
place in my neck, that caused the bone cancer and the lung cancer. | :28:23. | :28:30. | |
I have got... Terry, this is what you are still achieving and it | :28:30. | :28:34. | |
doesn't end there, you have problems with your lungs as well! | :28:34. | :28:41. | |
How do you keep going? The mind. The mind. | :28:41. | :28:45. | |
The doctor's advise you to keep playing ping upon? Yes. You see | :28:46. | :28:51. | |
that, over the table, I am really dying, but what a better way to go! | :28:51. | :28:55. | |
What is your message to people at home who are watching this now? | :28:55. | :28:59. | |
hope that they get out of the chair and come and play table tennis it | :28:59. | :29:04. | |
is good for the mind and it is good for the body it keeps you fit. | :29:05. | :29:07. | |
Forget age, forget the numbers of the age. | :29:07. | :29:13. | |
That has nothing to do with it. It is what your body tells you. Good | :29:13. | :29:19. | |
lad, Terry. It is time it is time to play Will Young. Here we go, | :29:19. | :29:23. | |
ladies and gentlemen. I take no prisoners, Terry! Off you | :29:23. | :29:33. | |
:29:33. | :29:34. |