Browse content similar to 15/02/2013. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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OK, so how much is it that each go? Three for �1. And if you do it, you | :00:12. | :00:22. | |
:00:22. | :00:24. | ||
get to meet Moneypenny. I will have a go. No. No way! You have either | :00:24. | :00:34. | |
:00:34. | :00:39. | ||
got it, or you have not. She has I should have been wearing my | :00:39. | :00:49. | |
:00:49. | :00:51. | ||
sports bra. That was shocking. was not too bad. You told Alex! | :00:51. | :00:54. | |
Good evening. Welcome to the One Show with Alex Jones and Chris | :00:54. | :01:01. | |
Evans. For 50 years, Moneypenny has been stuck behind the desk. But in | :01:01. | :01:11. | |
:01:11. | :01:18. | ||
Skyfall she got to do a whole lot That's better. She is here. Naomie | :01:18. | :01:28. | |
:01:28. | :01:32. | ||
Harris. Hello. How are you? Welcome to the programme. My goodness me! | :01:32. | :01:40. | |
You look lovely. You do look stunning. Thank you. Exciting, | :01:40. | :01:48. | |
shaving Daniel Craig. Yes, but very nerve-racking. The key hair person, | :01:48. | :01:53. | |
she got her father RIM, who was a barber, to give me shaving lessons. | :01:53. | :01:58. | |
So I had about three weeks of shaving lessons. Not that it takes | :01:58. | :02:02. | |
three weeks to learn to shave, but I was very bad at it. You were so | :02:02. | :02:08. | |
close that you could not have your hand shaking. The producers thought | :02:08. | :02:13. | |
it would be funny for you to shave me tonight, but I said you cannot | :02:13. | :02:20. | |
because you have to train. I am not a natural. Tonight, we are talking | :02:20. | :02:24. | |
more Skyfall with Naomie, and some behind-the-scenes footage you will | :02:24. | :02:29. | |
not want to miss. First, to what is falling from the skive. We will be | :02:29. | :02:32. | |
talking about the surprise strike from a meteor in Russia earlier | :02:33. | :02:38. | |
today, and we are 20 minutes away from an asteroid the size of an | :02:38. | :02:42. | |
Olympic swimming sq -- swimming- pool whizzing past. At a safe | :02:42. | :02:48. | |
distance. We will cross to NASA. Plus, we were wondering if any of | :02:48. | :02:52. | |
you have any space treasure that has fallen from this guide. Take a | :02:52. | :02:59. | |
picture and e-mail it to us. -- from the sky. You send it in if you | :02:59. | :03:05. | |
have got it. Do we need to worry between now and 7:24pm when the | :03:05. | :03:15. | |
:03:15. | :03:18. | ||
Honestly, it was just over a month ago when I had to stock up because | :03:18. | :03:21. | |
of the Mayan calendar predicting the end of the world. Now, with the | :03:21. | :03:27. | |
asteroid hurtling towards us, I have to do it again. Where are the | :03:27. | :03:36. | |
toilet rolls? Thank you. Hang on, I know you. You are the astronomer | :03:36. | :03:40. | |
and Lucie Green. There is no need for this panic-buying. The asteroid | :03:41. | :03:47. | |
will miss by miles. Come on. I will show you what is going to happen. | :03:47. | :03:52. | |
Where are we? This is the asteroid belt. We have lots of objects | :03:52. | :03:57. | |
around us but there are three areas where we find icy, rocky objects. | :03:57. | :04:01. | |
We have the cloud surrounding the solar system at the very edge. | :04:01. | :04:05. | |
There is this fear of comets that sometimes come into the inner solar | :04:05. | :04:10. | |
system. And then we have beyond the orbit of Neptune, where rocky, icy | :04:10. | :04:16. | |
objects orbit. I have a leather belt. Not useful for this situation. | :04:16. | :04:20. | |
And then we have the asteroid belt, hundreds of rocks orbiting the Sun | :04:20. | :04:24. | |
between Mars and Jupiter, it is from here that the asteroid | :04:24. | :04:30. | |
probably originates. How big is it? About 45 metres across, with a mass | :04:30. | :04:37. | |
of about 130,000 times. What is staggering is that it is moving at | :04:37. | :04:42. | |
five miles per second. Wow! Has anything like this hit Earth | :04:42. | :04:49. | |
before? Yes. In 1908, an object of this size penetrated the atmosphere | :04:49. | :04:55. | |
and flattened trees over an area of 800 square miles. If that happened | :04:55. | :05:01. | |
over the city, it would wipe it out. How close will it come? It will | :05:01. | :05:07. | |
pass within 17,200 miles. Will we be able to see it with the naked | :05:07. | :05:11. | |
eye? Unfortunately not, but you could use binoculars or a telescope | :05:11. | :05:16. | |
to look for it. It will come from the north-east horizon, passing | :05:16. | :05:20. | |
through the plough. If you see it, think about the fact that it is | :05:20. | :05:24. | |
closer than many of our satellites, particularly our communications and | :05:24. | :05:28. | |
weather satellites. What about mobile phones? It will whizz | :05:29. | :05:37. | |
through, and it will not hit us or our satellites. I am convinced. I | :05:37. | :05:42. | |
understand that this thing is going to miss by 17,000 miles, but if it | :05:42. | :05:47. | |
is in orbit, surely what goes around comes around. The asteroid | :05:47. | :05:51. | |
is in an elliptical orbit, which means it will come round again, not | :05:51. | :05:57. | |
making another noticeable pass until 2046, when it will be 620,000 | :05:57. | :06:00. | |
miles away. But gravitational interaction with the planets in the | :06:00. | :06:05. | |
solar system can change the path of an asteroid or comet, sending it in | :06:05. | :06:10. | |
a different direction. 3500 million years ago, the whole solar system | :06:10. | :06:15. | |
was like a shooting gallery, with impacts and collisions all the time. | :06:15. | :06:21. | |
Many of the scars UC on the moon, or one Mercury, they come from that | :06:21. | :06:26. | |
time. They left craters on the surface. So the big lumps out of | :06:27. | :06:31. | |
the moon were from things crashing into it. At one point, people | :06:31. | :06:34. | |
thought it was volcanoes but we know they are the result of | :06:34. | :06:39. | |
something slamming into the surface of the moon. I will never get used | :06:39. | :06:44. | |
to that. What are the chances of us getting hit by something this big | :06:44. | :06:50. | |
now? NASA thinks that a close pass of something about this size will | :06:50. | :06:53. | |
happen once every 40 years, and something this size would make an | :06:53. | :06:59. | |
impact with the Earth once every 1000 years. Not too bad. Not too | :06:59. | :07:04. | |
bad. The objects we need to worry about are much larger, about a | :07:04. | :07:08. | |
kilometre across. If they were to hit the Earth, it would cause | :07:08. | :07:11. | |
global catastrophe. There are objects that we do track. For | :07:11. | :07:17. | |
example, this one. This is radar imagery showing the shape and | :07:17. | :07:21. | |
rotation of the Astrid. This one regularly visits us on the Earth, | :07:21. | :07:27. | |
making close passes. And what about the dinosaur killer? The one that | :07:27. | :07:30. | |
slammed into the surface of the Earth and gouged agree to 100 miles | :07:30. | :07:36. | |
across and wiped out the dinosaurs. We can see the crater. Beautiful, | :07:36. | :07:41. | |
buried under the sea in the Gulf of Mexico. Wow! Have I ever told you | :07:41. | :07:48. | |
that I get vertigo? No. Can we go back to earth? So, there is nothing | :07:48. | :07:54. | |
to worry about? You can tell Bruce Willis to stand down. It is a near | :07:54. | :07:57. | |
miss, something you should know about, given your strike rate for | :07:57. | :08:03. | |
England. He looked so comfortable in his | :08:03. | :08:07. | |
dressing-gown. But it is a reference to the Hitchhiker's Guide | :08:07. | :08:12. | |
To the Galaxy. We are joined by an astronomer Brendan Owens from the | :08:12. | :08:15. | |
Royal Observatory in Greenwich. What is the difference between an | :08:15. | :08:22. | |
asteroid, a meteor and Comet? take an asteroid and a meteor, an | :08:22. | :08:27. | |
asteroid is like a space rock, made of rock or metal. But when it comes | :08:27. | :08:31. | |
through the atmosphere and starts to burn up, it looks like a meteor | :08:31. | :08:36. | |
and the caller to meteor. It looks like a shooting star. And if it | :08:36. | :08:40. | |
reaches the ground, you get a meteorite. That is why people | :08:40. | :08:44. | |
watched the show, because you get the journey of the life of an | :08:44. | :08:49. | |
asteroid. It is usually born as dust grains in the early solar | :08:49. | :08:58. | |
system which clump together. want to know about a comet? Yes, a | :08:59. | :09:04. | |
comet has a stream that comes after it. Yes, it is completely different | :09:04. | :09:11. | |
composition. It is like a dirty, I see snowball, mainly made of water. | :09:11. | :09:16. | |
It can be seen with the lovely tale, and you can recognise it. Back to | :09:16. | :09:21. | |
today. We are all slightly worried, not about being hit by anything at | :09:21. | :09:25. | |
7:24pm, because it will miss, hopefully. But how much do we know | :09:25. | :09:31. | |
about what is going on and what could we collide with? Because the | :09:31. | :09:35. | |
meteorite which it Russia today, nobody knew about that. It | :09:35. | :09:39. | |
literally came out of nowhere. Apparently, the asteroid which is | :09:39. | :09:44. | |
going to miss at 7:24pm, NASA did not know about that and they were | :09:44. | :09:53. | |
told by amateur astronomers. That is right. A group of amateur | :09:53. | :10:00. | |
astronomers used robotic telescopes. They picked out this one that is | :10:00. | :10:04. | |
passing by, and NASA took over in the sense of looking for a better | :10:04. | :10:08. | |
look at the audit of this asteroid, how close it will get, to hone in | :10:08. | :10:15. | |
on the details. But there are statistics we are worried about. | :10:15. | :10:21. | |
You know about 90%, but there is this extra 10% of. It is the 10% | :10:21. | :10:26. | |
you do not know about which worries us. What are you going to do about | :10:26. | :10:34. | |
these asteroids, comets, meteorites coming towards us? There are five | :10:34. | :10:37. | |
to 10% that we are looking for. The thing that gives me more confidence | :10:37. | :10:42. | |
is that in the 1980s we knew about 50,000 asteroids. Today, we know | :10:42. | :10:46. | |
there are over half a million. Being able to track them is getting | :10:46. | :10:54. | |
better. If we wanted to divert disaster at... Do we have a plan? | :10:54. | :10:58. | |
Two ideas people have come up with, and I love both of them. One of | :10:58. | :11:02. | |
them is to paint an asteroid, to paint it white, to drive it off | :11:02. | :11:07. | |
course, just using the light of the Sun to push it off course. You have | :11:07. | :11:14. | |
to get there in time. You have to park beside it and paint it with | :11:14. | :11:18. | |
special paint that would survive the impact and coat it. This is the | :11:18. | :11:26. | |
plan! But aren't they going pretty fast? The wonderful thing is that | :11:26. | :11:30. | |
we have intercepted these objects before. There was a satellite | :11:30. | :11:33. | |
called Stardust that went to way, it and actually gathered some | :11:33. | :11:38. | |
material from it and brought it back to earth. We have done it | :11:38. | :11:45. | |
before. What is the second one? park a really big spacecraft, so | :11:45. | :11:51. | |
massive that its gravity can pull things of course very slowly. | :11:51. | :11:56. | |
you paint them, or you park a gravity tractor next to them! We | :11:56. | :12:03. | |
will be fine! You have been brilliant. Let's move to Robert | :12:03. | :12:07. | |
Winston. The professor and Lord who has pioneered treatments | :12:07. | :12:14. | |
infertility and genetic disease. But what a life for him before he | :12:14. | :12:19. | |
was professor, a Lord, or before he had a moustache. | :12:19. | :12:22. | |
I am Robert Winston, going back to the street where I used to live | :12:22. | :12:32. | |
until the age of 18 in north London. In the centre of the circle is the | :12:32. | :12:36. | |
green. This was completely open, and it was our cricket pitch. The | :12:36. | :12:40. | |
neighbours hated us. They used to complain about the fact that we ran | :12:40. | :12:44. | |
into the road with the ball, and our parents were always told off | :12:44. | :12:47. | |
for letting the children be complete be dangerous. We are | :12:47. | :12:57. | |
:12:57. | :13:07. | ||
That used to make the most dreadful noise, that bell. This is the | :13:07. | :13:14. | |
dining room. It seems so small now. My father had amazing interests, | :13:14. | :13:19. | |
which he would take up and then drop, including archery. He would | :13:19. | :13:24. | |
put on the sideboard over there, a straw target. That wall was | :13:24. | :13:32. | |
complete the market. It had massive One afternoon, won the early | :13:32. | :13:41. | |
evening, my mother and father had the most ferocious quarrels. And my | :13:41. | :13:45. | |
father chased my mother round this table. My mother, who was pretty | :13:45. | :13:48. | |
agile, a good tennis player, was always able to keep quite a | :13:48. | :13:52. | |
distance from him. Finally, in frustration, he got here and he | :13:52. | :13:59. | |
picked up his mug of cocoa, like this, and he hurled it. It hit the | :13:59. | :14:02. | |
wall. The wall was then complete the splattered with brown stains. | :14:02. | :14:06. | |
The following morning he was in here having breakfast and there was | :14:06. | :14:12. | |
complete silence. And then my father looked up from his porridge | :14:12. | :14:16. | |
and he said, I have been thinking, it is about time we had this room | :14:16. | :14:23. | |
redecorated. They had a very open way of quarrelling. They shouted at | :14:23. | :14:28. | |
each other. But they were deeply in love, and I never had any doubt of | :14:28. | :14:34. | |
the positive relationship my mother and father had. My mother was a | :14:34. | :14:38. | |
brilliant public speaker with a phenomenal memory. She had this | :14:38. | :14:42. | |
rather endearing eccentricity. She only had three children but she | :14:42. | :14:47. | |
could never remember our names. She used to call me what sets. She | :14:47. | :14:55. | |
never called me by my name. My father was the most amazing man. He | :14:55. | :15:01. | |
was full of interest in anything that was new. The most wonderful | :15:01. | :15:06. | |
father. At the age of 42, he had been ill for about nine months. He | :15:06. | :15:11. | |
then got an abscess on his lung. I remember him sitting in this chair, | :15:11. | :15:17. | |
facing the fireplace. My mother dressed the drainage hole in his | :15:17. | :15:21. | |
chest. I remember seeing them do that. And then he got an abscess in | :15:22. | :15:27. | |
the brain. Rather extraordinary that this brilliant man should die | :15:27. | :15:35. | |
as a result of something affecting his brain like that. It did change | :15:35. | :15:40. | |
my life, because I became responsible for my younger siblings. | :15:40. | :15:46. | |
My mother had to go out to work. So that was very significant. It meant | :15:46. | :15:49. | |
that I used to spend much more time with my grandparents. That helped | :15:50. | :15:55. | |
my learning experience the great deal. It also put great pressure on | :15:55. | :16:02. | |
me at school. I do not think I really understood the loss of my | :16:02. | :16:06. | |
father at the time. The presence of my grandparents and my mother | :16:06. | :16:12. | |
protected all of us to a great extent from much genuine, deep | :16:12. | :16:22. | |
:16:22. | :16:47. | ||
grief. I probably miss him more as The roots of a genius. Naomie, you | :16:47. | :16:51. | |
are the new Miss Moneypenny, and Skyfall was an amazing success. The | :16:51. | :16:54. | |
DVD and Blu-ray are out on Monday, but most of us have probably seen | :16:54. | :17:01. | |
it. So why should people buy the DVD? Be cost of the amazing extras. | :17:01. | :17:11. | |
:17:11. | :17:12. | ||
Let's have a look. This is my ideal job. You would | :17:13. | :17:17. | |
kill for this. I would literally kill. | :17:18. | :17:23. | |
And then this, down the escalator. Did you do your own stunts? And I | :17:23. | :17:33. | |
:17:33. | :17:33. | ||
would like to say yes, but no, I didn't. It was mainly stunt men, | :17:33. | :17:38. | |
because the guy who played me in the car was a guy with a wig on who | :17:38. | :17:43. | |
was blacked up to look like me. Very flattering. You were played by | :17:43. | :17:47. | |
men. Skyfall was the biggest box- office smash of all time in Great | :17:47. | :17:53. | |
Britain. You have a theory as to why? I think it was following on | :17:53. | :17:57. | |
from all that pro-British feeling we had because of the Olympics and | :17:57. | :18:02. | |
Paralympics. It is not very British to be pro-British, but it was a | :18:02. | :18:06. | |
special time when everyone was feeling so happy and proud to be | :18:06. | :18:11. | |
British, and that followed on with James Bond. And the role of Miss | :18:11. | :18:14. | |
Moneypenny is bigger than ever in this filmed. Would you have taken | :18:14. | :18:19. | |
it anyway, even if she was still sitting behind a desk? I would, to | :18:19. | :18:24. | |
be honest. I should probably say no, but I would. Did you know at the | :18:24. | :18:28. | |
time that it was going to be bigger? I did, because during the | :18:28. | :18:33. | |
final audition, they told me there was a bit more to my character. | :18:33. | :18:38. | |
bit?! What was your reaction when you were told you had got the role? | :18:38. | :18:42. | |
Are kept screaming and saying, no way! I could not believe it. But | :18:42. | :18:47. | |
for three months after I was told, I was not allowed to tell anybody. | :18:47. | :18:51. | |
So you have this amazing secret you want to shout from the rooftops, | :18:51. | :19:01. | |
:19:01. | :19:37. | ||
and I couldn't. But your first OK, obviously there one not any | :19:37. | :19:42. | |
rooftops there, but there were before that. There were. Earlier, | :19:42. | :19:48. | |
you spoke about having to train. You must have had to do loads of | :19:48. | :19:53. | |
training. Loads. It was more training than I have ever done. It | :19:53. | :19:58. | |
is so physical. I had no idea, because they had me out with a | :19:58. | :20:02. | |
personal trainer the five days a week, three hours a day. And then | :20:02. | :20:06. | |
there was kick boxing and going on the gun range, doing the stunt | :20:06. | :20:11. | |
driving. I thought, this is a bit much. Is it really that hard? And | :20:11. | :20:14. | |
acting, I am not really doing the stuff. I thought they were really | :20:14. | :20:18. | |
training me as an MI6 agent. And then I realised why when they | :20:18. | :20:22. | |
started filming, because it is so knackering to do it time and time | :20:22. | :20:28. | |
again. You need the stamina. It has given you amazing arms. If it has, | :20:28. | :20:33. | |
actually! And they have lasted, even though I have not kept up with | :20:33. | :20:37. | |
the training. Being a member of the ongoing James Bond family, it is | :20:37. | :20:41. | |
like being a secret agent, because there are things you cannot tell us. | :20:41. | :20:45. | |
Like how many more films you have been signed up for. Being a Bond | :20:45. | :20:49. | |
girl is one thing, because the Bond girls used to have it over Miss | :20:49. | :20:53. | |
Moneypenny because she just sat behind a desk. Now, most Bond girls | :20:53. | :21:01. | |
get killed, but you get to come back. Maybe. Let's see. I could not | :21:01. | :21:07. | |
possibly say. It is awards season now, and it is busy. How many | :21:07. | :21:13. | |
dresses do you need? Can a lot of dresses. Do you get to keep them? | :21:14. | :21:17. | |
And no. I am like Cinderella. I wear the lovely dresses, and then I | :21:17. | :21:21. | |
have to give them back. Time now for a woman who did not | :21:21. | :21:24. | |
have to fight any Bond villains, but she did have to fight prejudice | :21:24. | :21:31. | |
and became a huge star as a result. The eye-popping opening ceremony | :21:31. | :21:39. | |
for London 2012 was a celebration of everything British. It featured | :21:39. | :21:44. | |
an exclusive playlist of 86 songs, including black and white rag, | :21:44. | :21:50. | |
performed by Winifred Atwell. For a generation, this was the theme tune | :21:50. | :21:55. | |
to the BBC's long-running snooker show, Pot Black. But in the 1950s, | :21:55. | :21:58. | |
its performer was one of the biggest stars in Britain. Not only | :21:58. | :22:02. | |
did she have a ground-breaking music career, she also opened one | :22:02. | :22:06. | |
of the most important British Hamas salons. Winifred Atwell was born in | :22:06. | :22:11. | |
Trinidad and Tobago in 1915. From an early age, a middle-class | :22:11. | :22:15. | |
parents recognise that she had a gift. She was a child prodigy. By | :22:15. | :22:20. | |
the age of six, she was performing Chopin piano recitals. With her | :22:20. | :22:24. | |
family's support, she pursued her dream of becoming a classical | :22:24. | :22:29. | |
pianist by first studying in New York. Then in 1946, she moved to | :22:29. | :22:33. | |
London, where she attended the Royal Academy of Music. To support | :22:33. | :22:39. | |
herself, she played the club circuit and in 1947, she married | :22:39. | :22:45. | |
Leveson, who gave up his career to become his -- her manager. But it | :22:45. | :22:49. | |
would take a dramatic shift to a more popular style of music to make | :22:49. | :22:55. | |
her a star. What was it like in post-war Britain around the time | :22:55. | :23:01. | |
when Winifred Atwell came about? Britain was very miserable. People | :23:01. | :23:08. | |
need something that was joyful. did she get spotted? | :23:08. | :23:12. | |
substituted for an artist who was sick at a charity show at the | :23:12. | :23:17. | |
London casino in 1948. That was the first event that propelled her to | :23:17. | :23:22. | |
stardom. A rise to fame gained momentum after a savvy junk-shop | :23:22. | :23:28. | |
purchase. That sounded slightly posh. Isn't there another piano | :23:28. | :23:35. | |
that is not so Prof? Go, yes. Legend has it that she found at | :23:35. | :23:40. | |
this battered old other piano, as she called it, in a Battersea junk | :23:40. | :23:47. | |
shop. She paid about �4 for it. A she played Rachmaninov on a grand | :23:47. | :23:50. | |
piano, and this would be wheeled on afterwards, and she would just do | :23:50. | :23:54. | |
this honky-tonk music underlie them the whole thing up. One of it was | :23:54. | :23:57. | |
the first British artist to have three consecutive million-selling | :23:57. | :24:06. | |
hits. In the 1950s, her mainstream popularity was unprecedented. | :24:06. | :24:10. | |
Britain was in flux. With the war over, immigration was encouraged, | :24:10. | :24:15. | |
to boost the economy. Jobs were easy to come by, but integration | :24:15. | :24:21. | |
was not. Ethnic minorities were often met with prejudice. That | :24:21. | :24:25. | |
prejudice extended as far as where a woman could or could not get her | :24:25. | :24:30. | |
hair done. For that reason, in 1956, Winifred Atwell opened what is | :24:30. | :24:34. | |
believed to be the first hair salon specifically designed for black | :24:34. | :24:39. | |
women, here on this very spot. The building has long since gone, but | :24:39. | :24:44. | |
the legacy lives on. Errol Douglas, an Afro hair specialist, | :24:44. | :24:48. | |
appreciates how important the Winifred Atwell salon must have | :24:48. | :24:55. | |
been. Instead of being hidden away and depressed, she had a high | :24:55. | :25:00. | |
street shop. It was unheard of. It pulled the community together. It | :25:00. | :25:04. | |
was just like a watering hole. If you have a place to go to get your | :25:04. | :25:09. | |
hair done, he can talk about politics, you can get your children | :25:09. | :25:16. | |
and husbands together. It is a good community base. The 1960s, | :25:16. | :25:20. | |
rock'n'roll was dominating the charts. Honky Tonk piano playing | :25:20. | :25:25. | |
had become unfashionable. Winifred moved to Australia with her husband. | :25:25. | :25:30. | |
But even then, she remained a pioneer. Such was her celebrity | :25:30. | :25:33. | |
status that the Australian government made an exception to | :25:33. | :25:36. | |
their whites-only immigration policy and let her in. Her husband | :25:36. | :25:41. | |
sadly died in 1978, and although she performed for the next few | :25:41. | :25:46. | |
years, she never really got over the shock of his death, and she | :25:46. | :25:56. | |
:25:56. | :25:57. | ||
died in 1983. Top lady. Now, we are going to put | :25:57. | :26:04. | |
a clock on our screen in a moment which will count us down to 7.24 | :26:04. | :26:12. | |
exactly, G&T. The asteroid is on its way. We will have a countdown | :26:12. | :26:15. | |
from ten seconds to go. Let's see if we are safe. Ten, nine, eight, | :26:15. | :26:25. | |
:26:25. | :26:29. | ||
seven, six, five, four, three, two, Did anybody feel anything? Aberdeen | :26:29. | :26:39. | |
:26:39. | :26:44. | ||
OK? We have survived! The asteroid that is passing by... At 9.30, if | :26:44. | :26:48. | |
you look between the Plough handle and a pan in the sky, you should | :26:48. | :26:52. | |
see a faint white light in your binoculars, and that will be the | :26:52. | :26:57. | |
asteroid. The listen to Professor Brian Cox here! If I am having a | :26:57. | :27:03. | |
go! For it will be the size of an Olympic swimming pool, and it will | :27:03. | :27:10. | |
be as heavy as this. That is a real meteorite. Wow. That is pretty | :27:10. | :27:20. | |
:27:20. | :27:21. | ||
major. Steve pass more's daughter Sophie is holding part of a | :27:21. | :27:26. | |
meteorite from North Africa. this is Ellie, holding a space | :27:26. | :27:32. | |
treasure found by her great-great grandfather in 1907. Here we have | :27:32. | :27:38. | |
got Mark Ford from West Sussex. This is a 3.6 kilogram chunk of | :27:38. | :27:45. | |
iron meteorite. Philip from Southampton is holding a meteorite | :27:45. | :27:49. | |
a bit bigger than a warm-up. He knew all these One Show viewers had | :27:49. | :27:56. | |
bits of space? Andy found this in his back garden in Clydebank. | :27:56. | :27:59. | |
Naomie, thanks for being on the programme. We look forward to you | :27:59. | :28:04. | |
in the next Bond film, which you are not allowed to tell us about. | :28:04. | :28:09. | |
And you are playing Winnie as well. Winnie Mandela? At Winnie Mandela, | :28:09. | :28:16. | |
which is out later this year. It is already done. Skyfall is out on | :28:16. | :28:20. | |
Blu-ray and D B D. Have a lovely weekend. That is all for tonight. | :28:20. | :28:24. |