10/02/2016 The One Show


10/02/2016

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Welcome to the one Show. Tonight, a Hollywood star who is always

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breaking things. He won an Emmy for outstanding supporting actor. He got

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the record for the fastest Top Gear lap in a Vauxhall Astra. He is best

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known for breaking the law as Jesse Pinkman in Breaking Bad. It is Aaron

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Paul. Look at these beautiful people. We are being quiet for a

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good reason. We've got a film about re-homing chickens so we thought we

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would bring some into the studio. I love chickens. Who does not love

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chickens? These are incredibly talented chickens. Your new film,

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Triple nine, coincidentally, they have laid 27 X.

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talented. Inside them are questions. If you crack the egg, see what

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happens. Here we go. In there, there should be a little

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bit of paper. You can read it. Do you have a man crush? Of course. On?

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This young lad here is pretty adorable. I'm going to go with that.

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I love your socks. He always has no socks. We always have that. This is

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going to get weird. We are asking the audience to write questions to

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you, then we will put the best question into this and we will ask

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you it later. Please get in touch in the usual way. Here is a story of

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how fear and suspicion between two countries 5000 miles away is

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mirrored in the UK's suburbia. countries 5000 miles away is

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Korea. Divided after World War countries 5000 miles away is

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Civil War followed. We were taught that they were very dangerous and

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the vicious people. The North became a totalitarian state accused of

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human rights abuses. They will be arrested and put in jail or killed.

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The south developed into one of the world's major economies. Even those

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who escaped the north to live abroad don't feel safe. Yes I am spied

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upon. 100%. Hostilities may have ended in 1953 at tensions still

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exists. Not just 5000 miles away but, false places -- but of all

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places, New Malden, home to Europe's biggest Korean community. I

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places, New Malden, home to Europe's one of a few North Koreans living

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among this South Korean community. He was a soldier before defecting in

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2004 and making his home in the He was a soldier before defecting in

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West. As a youngster in North Korea, you spend your entire 20s in the

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Army. It is the worst. As a soldier, you're meant to protect your

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country, but the reality is I witnessed many people dying of

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starvation. With his baby son witnessed many people dying of

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to his back, he dodged witnessed many people dying of

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slammer to escape into China. Eventually, after avoiding the he

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made it to the West. Do you feel safe here? I strongly believe they

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check on me because I work for the resident society. They will spy on

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me. I have family in North Korea who I believe our spied upon. How can he

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be certain? I know North Korea very well and they will know me, where I

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work, my personality, my family. They will know everything about me

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and I'm not surprised because I know the government. Although he has

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lived here, he still knows very few South Koreans. The community is

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hardly mix. Refugees from the North normally do the lower paid jobs. The

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Pyrah Nayar -- paranoia seems out of place in New Malden but there are

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almost certainly spies here. It is so difficult to get out of North

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Korea that anybody who does so is assumed to be a plant. There are

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those who want change. From her office, this person is trying to

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build ridges. She has lived here 20 years yet only met her first North

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Korean six years ago. I told my mum. I said it is the first one. She

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said, be careful, they might be spies. When you were growing up,

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what were you told about North Koreans? How dangerous they are. We

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are told they are a threat because they are ready to fight and have a

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war. We thought they were very dangerous and they will kill us. We

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are brainwashed in a way. But they have defectors, they are freedom

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fighters. Those people who are here should be treated as equals. At this

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trust -- this this trust is ingrained. So much so, they have an

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engagement officer. Whilst we take freedom for granted, sometimes it

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comes at a price. There is a language barrier and a culture

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shock. Most of them have left their countries and families behind. When

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you see that divide, why do you worry about it? It worries me on

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many levels. My job predominantly is to make everybody integrate into the

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wider community and for everybody to live a life that is peaceful and

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happy and get the same rights as everybody else. Peace might be a

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long way off in the Korean peninsula but it is hoped they can encourage a

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more trusting relationship in this quiet corner of south-west London,

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though some suspicion will always remain. I know that they are trying

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to get information but it will not affect my life. I live a comfortable

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life and I am safe. Thank you. North and South Koreans have moved here in

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their thousands but we have it on good authority that your ancestors

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moved away. We have done some digging into your roots. Starting

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with the family who came here from Normandy with William the Conqueror.

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In the 60 hundredths, your grandfather, Richard Webb, married

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Mary Holliday and they moved to Tetbury, where Prince Charles lives

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now. Later, the family emigrated on the merchant ship the Canterbury,

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arriving in Pennsylvania on the 10th of December 16 99. And there is

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more. How did you find that out? I have no idea. That is fantastic. I

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love the animation. The ship was owned by William -- William Penn,

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the founder of Pennsylvania. Fantastic. Did you know that you are

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related to George Washington? Yes. I found it out through my family. My

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great, great, great, great, I don't know how many, great-grandmother was

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Martha Ball, who married George Washington. Better than being

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related to Donald Trump. Yes... Isn't it terrifying? I'm so sorry.

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It is incredible to be watching. Shall we move on to Triple nine? I

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saw the new film and I was glued to my seat for two hours. The film was

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one hour and 55 minutes, five minutes to peel myself off the seat.

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And this is why. Three days. Unless you hear from me

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different. By your own admittance this is a fool on. It is a heavy,

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heavy, intense drama. Not for the faint of heart. It is not a family

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film. You play a character called Gabe. Where does he come into it? He

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is an ex-cop who teams up with his brother and some his friends still

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in law enforcement. They are working for the Russian Mafia. They are

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pushing into a corner to pull off an impossible heist, and in order to do

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that they need to take down one of their own police officers. What is

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it about these troubled roles you love so much? I don't know. I love

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the intense side of things. As an actor, it makes me feel like I'm

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really doing something. Does it feel that intense when you're going

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through the motions? Are you surprised when you go to the screen?

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More so when you watch it but onset, in between takes, it is kind of

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light-hearted. We are having a good time, joking around, telling a

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pretty crazy story. You definitely feel it when you are onset. One of

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my favourite characters was Kate Winslet playing this mad Russian

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baddie. She was fantastic. You have a really good cast. If you had to do

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a heist with any of the characters, who would you choose? Who would be a

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good one? I think probably Woody, he is just so funny. Why not have a

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laugh when you are robbing someone? Is it right that when you met him

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there was a weird scenario because he knocked on the trailer? I was

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onset, watching an intense movie that he stars in, he plays an

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absolute psychopath. I get a knock on the trailer and it pauses on his

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face making a crazy expression. He introduces himself, so sweet, but

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I'm so embarrassed because right behind him is a frozen photo of him

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and he turns round and he looks at it. I look like a

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and he turns round and he looks at He was great. He was watching

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and he turns round and he looks at are a lot here. That was a

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painstaking job. That sound effect kills me. This is terrible. What is

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your favourite way to eat chicken? I cannot say this in front of these.

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You like Nando's, don't you? How much? Man. Go for another one.

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What is your secret? What is your secret to your youthful look?

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What is your secret? What is your comes from me. I know that you've

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got a man crush on me. You beautiful man. I drink lots of water.

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You do look youthful. Thank you, you two. Thank you

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You do look youthful. Thank you, you explain why we have the chickens in

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the studio. They have been patient wait for this film. Michael Douglas

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is looking for homes for 9,000 of them. Stand by if you would like to

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give one of them a home. Oh, I love an egg. In the UK we eat an

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estimated 32 million eggs each day. For that many eggs you need

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chickens. Lots of chickens. All the chickens here at Max's farm are

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free-range. Like the eggs they lay the shelve line is not as long as

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you might think. DC Help. These chickens have done their duty and

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are now looking to retire. Come in. Thank you very much. Come and meet

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my girls. Susie runs the farm. What do you do here? What we are looking

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to do at the end of march is try to rehome some of our girls, all 9,000.

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They are friendly? They are lovely. When you walk through the field they

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follow you. They talk to you. They sing to you. I sing to them. It's a

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chicken love fest, really. Hug a chicken. Hug a chicken. How

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difficult are they to pick up? Hold its wing so it feels safe. Nothing

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is Bert therapy than hugging a chicken. That is why I'm so happy

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much I hug a chicken each day. You are trying to rehome 9,000 chickens.

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How many times a year do you do that? We have been rehoming for

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seven years with amazing animal rights organisations. We can't do it

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without their help. It's life-and-death for these chickens?

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It is the same for many laying hens. Without a home to go to, all laying

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hens are slaughtered when their production drops slightly. I'm not

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here to eat you, I'm here to save you. In the last seven years the

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farm has rehomed more than 60,000 of their retired chickens. Nicola is

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giving home to three of the retired chickens. What made you take in some

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chickens? We wanted to get family pets. My daughter is allergic to

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most furry animals. We thought chickens would be perfect. Kids love

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them thechl are great to have around. They are a good talking

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point. It teaches the children where food comes from. It gives them a

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sense of responsibility as well. You saved a chickens life? They have

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given us a lot back in return. Why don't you rehome a chicken, they

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make a cracking pet - don't you? You don't want to stay in the chicken

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for too long, mate much you want to get out of here. Thank you very much

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Michael. We are joined bus Susie and her son Dean. Welcome both. Thank

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you for having us. I fancy some chickens after tonight. Matt went

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no. How big a garden do I need and facilities? You need a garden shed

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with a good run off it that is safe from foxes and dogs. We suggest

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letting them ought in the garden when you are with them. They

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misbehave they are the best pets you can have. Great for kids to learn

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about food education and where eggs come from. They are wonderful

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companions. We have them at home. You can stroke them, they become

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tame, wonderful pets. Bearing in mind what these chickens have been

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through. You get rid of them at 78 weeks, how long would you expect

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them to last from here? On average probably about four years. Some lay,

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carry on longer, some don't quite hit the four year mark. On average

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average four years. They are ideal for keeping in people's back

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gardens. They will lay really well. Not great during the winter. Better

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in the summer. They have laid 27 eggs today. Unreal! Do you fancy

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chickens. Do you have facilities at home that? We have talked about it.

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We are not home all that much. I love chickens. Oh! I'm not nervous

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at all. If anybody does want some chickens though what is the best way

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to get in touch with you? The best way is to fry Fresh Start For Hens

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they are an amazing organisation. Sue at Brighton, Animal Action or

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contact us and we will help you on your way to rehoming one of our

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lovely girls. You could come to your place to pick the chickens up? There

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is a big organisation behind this going on for 9,000. Of course.

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Contact us before hand we can make sure you get a chicken for a home.

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Our friend likes you. Yeah. It's incredible. We have another animal

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that needs rehoming tonight. Aaron, can you help us with this. Put your

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youthful looks down the camera and do the pledge. Hello, I'm Atlas a

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continental giant rabbit. I'm seven months old and I'm 1.2 meters long

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and 20 kilos, I'm still growing. I need a home - a big one! Please take

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me. I want that rabbit. Look at that thing. Brilliant. It's like Honey I

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Blew Up The Bunng. Do you have an animal rehoming story about snakes

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perhaps? You know what, I used to have two giant albino pythons that

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roamed around my apartment. They got huge. They grow to their

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environment. They got so big that they recommended me feeding them

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small rabbits or small chickens. That is not good for this item. I

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got to get rid of these snakes. Do you know where they ended up then?

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Yeah. I gave them to a pet store owner. He was in love with them.

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There we are. Plenty room for the rabbit - Yeah. If you are interested

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in helping to rehome Atlas or any of the chickens you can find more

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details on our website. Thank you Susie and Dean. Thank you very much.

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Aaron owes his career to chemistry in breaking bad. His character Jesse

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is a dropout whose science teacher persuades him to go into the drug

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business. Here's the real-life story of a bio chemist who helped

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manufacturer a medicine that was of a bio chemist who helped

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bit more useful to society. History books tells us that penicillin was a

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chance discovery made by Alexander Fleming. He found a mould growing in

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a dish killed bacteria. He didn't turn it into the medicine we know

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today. The thing is that Fleming was unable to extract anything useful

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from his mould. His discovery lay gathering dust. More than 10 years

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later a bio chemist called Norman Heatley took the first steps towards

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producing a life-saving drug. Heatley was crucial to turning

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Fleming's discovery into a practical drug. He remains largely

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unrecognised. He was part of an Oxford team of scientists who in the

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late 1930s were searching for a new way to combat bacterial infection.

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If the bacteria killing properties of Fleming's mould could be isolated

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it might prove useful. Dr HMRC sidebottom records his key

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contribution to the team. He was the guy who developed all the Meteds

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really for extracting and purifying the penicillin. That was the

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problem. That is where Fleming field. He created a process that I a

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allowed the penicillin to be extracted from the mould there was a

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much more than 1% penicillin and much more than 1% penicillin and

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98-99% in purity. They slowly im#3r06d that. Le having crack

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cracked the extraction technique the next step would be to test it on

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mice to see if it killed infections. To do that they needed to grow more

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mould. Heatley came up with an unusual solution. We found that you

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could grow the stuff in tins, curiously enough. The best container

:23:54.:24:01.

was the hospital bed pan. Using bed pans and milk churns the team

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produced enough penicillin to begin animal trials. I stayed at the lab

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until 3.45pm by which time all three control animals, the ones who hadn't

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received penicillin were dead. The treated mice seemed very well. It

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really looks as if penicillin may be of practical importance. That's a

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classic understatement. They could now start human trials but for much

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bigger subjects they needed now start human trials but for much

:24:35.:24:40.

with the help of the penicillin girls. Six young women who grew

:24:41.:24:47.

mould in hundreds of vessels. After years of hard work the Oxford team

:24:48.:24:52.

proved that penicillin could be used to kill bacterial infections in

:24:53.:24:55.

humans. It was widely used in the war effort, where it was credited

:24:56.:25:00.

with saving countless soldiers lives. Production began on an

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industrial scale and penicillin became the world's first effective

:25:07.:25:12.

antibiotic. In 1945, the Nobel Prize for medicine was awarded to Fleming

:25:13.:25:16.

and the lead scientists on the Oxford team. Norman Heatley didn't

:25:17.:25:24.

get a mention. He was considered (inaudible) his daughter Tamzin

:25:25.:25:27.

thinks her dad was too humble to be bitter. I remember hearing him at a

:25:28.:25:31.

party once and somebody said - what do you do? He said, oh, nothing much

:25:32.:25:39.

I just mostly am a gardener. He was very modest. Very kind. There was a

:25:40.:25:43.

war on. People were losing their very modest. Very kind. There was a

:25:44.:25:49.

lives all around. He had strong moral code and felt that he could

:25:50.:25:57.

help mankind. Norman Heatley was a vital link in the chain of

:25:58.:26:01.

help mankind. Norman Heatley was a that turned a medical curiosity into

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a wonder drug. Penicillin has saved the lives of millions of people

:26:06.:26:08.

since its discovery. Wonderful. Lovely man. That's the sort of drug

:26:09.:26:14.

you should have been making in your RV. Right. Yeah. Listen to me. Here

:26:15.:26:30.

is Walter White, played by Bryan Cranston, giving your character a

:26:31.:26:34.

listen. What element comes to mind? Um? Ah, wire! Yeah. Cooper. Very

:26:35.:26:50.

good, very good. Really, I mean there was a lot chemistry really

:26:51.:26:53.

going on there. The relationship that you two ended up with really

:26:54.:26:55.

was the key. Was that you two ended up with really

:26:56.:27:00.

character was due to be, kind of, killed off? Yeah, he was supposed to

:27:01.:27:04.

die at the end of the first season. Right. It wasn't even the season

:27:05.:27:09.

finale, it was the second to last episode. They decided to keep him

:27:10.:27:14.

around. Right. Do you think that was to do with that - was exactly

:27:15.:27:21.

because It of the dynamic that Bryan #57bd I brought to these characters

:27:22.:27:26.

together. Once we got picked up the series that was the first thing they

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talked about in the writer's room that they would change that

:27:30.:27:33.

storyline and make it more of a two-hander. Credit to you two. That

:27:34.:27:38.

relationship developed on screen as well as off. You refer to him as

:27:39.:27:41.

your father figure, haven't you? Yeah. He's my mentor. I love the man

:27:42.:27:48.

to death. I couldn't be happier for him. You both have a tattoo, is that

:27:49.:27:52.

right, a Breaking Bad tattoo? Yes, we do. Is it in a place we can see

:27:53.:27:58.

or not so much? No, no. It's here. The final day of shooting I was

:27:59.:28:02.

walking around saying - this is just devastating. I can't believe it's

:28:03.:28:07.

over. We all should get matching tattoos. I said that as a joke. Then

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it spiralled into reality. This is a line from the show - no half

:28:14.:28:19.

measures. It represents giving it your all. We all got matching

:28:20.:28:24.

tattoos. Probably about close to 50 crew members as well. Really? Wow.

:28:25.:28:29.

We are running out of time. You will have to crack open the Golden Egg.

:28:30.:28:37.

This is very exciting. OK. It gets me every time. OK. Would you rather

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fight 100 chicken-sized Walter White or one Walter White size chicken?

:28:52.:28:55.

One word answer? Who asked that over there? We put it on the website.

:28:56.:29:01.

That is what you get for live telly. We have to go. I'll sue see you

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tomorrow with Stephen Fry. Oh. Sorry, sorry.

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Join us for the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2016.

:29:11.:29:16.

Some of the finest talent from all over the world

:29:17.:29:20.

We will raise a toast, acknowledging those who have

:29:21.:29:25.

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