18/07/2014 The One Show


18/07/2014

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other One Show has ever been before. We are joined by a British

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other One Show has ever been before. who is going to live on the

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International Space Station. And he has recruited a very special friend

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to make sure he does not go hungry when he is there. Who on earth could

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that be? And we are back on terra firma! It

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is your Friday One Show with Alex Jones. And Chris Evans. Bill Bailey

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will be telling us about a star-studded concert on BBC One

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tomorrow night at 8:30pm. It does look sunny there. But first, this

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astronaut is cooking up plans for an historic journey into space. And

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helping Tim Peake with the recipe is Heston Blumenthal. It is all right.

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How are you? Welcome to the Heston Blumenthal. It is all right.

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programme. , please. Make way. This is not some elaborate joke. What is

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going on with you? We are testing walking apparatus for the moon! No,

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I had a hip replacement. You are only 47! 23! It is because you have

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been doing too much of something? Just to clarify, I broke my leg when

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I was nine, fell off a roof, got in traction when they stretch your

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bones, this lake was longer than this one, I did kick boxing for 15

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years, knackered my back, back operation and this is the hangover

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from that. Getting better? Yes, surprisingly quickly actually. They

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are there to slow you down, I was told today! Tim is also here.

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Britain's astronaut. Welcome to the programme. Exciting to have you on.

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Hot today but what about in space? Yes, really hot and really cold

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depending on if you are in the sunshine or the shadow. You can go

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from plus 152-150 just by going into the shade. There is shade in space?

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-- from plus 150 at 2-150. There are so many things you don't realise

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about space but you are too afraid to ask. You know when you see an

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astronaut moving slowly? That atmosphere is not why. It is the

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suit. You are basically freefalling at 17,000 mph. If you let go of the

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spaceship, you are in trouble. He is going into space. How crazy is that!

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We might go to the pub this weekend but he is going to space. We have so

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many questions for him later. What about in the kitchen, how hot? Is

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there a legal limit for temperatures in the kitchen? I measured it at 60

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degrees and the kitchen strip light started to melt once. Luckily now,

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you can add condition the kitchen but that is a bad conductor of heat.

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Think about a hot oven. Any cold air you pump in gets hot like that so

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you need to suck out the hot air. You need a good extraction system

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and then it is not too bad. Still tough. Your chefs are saying, all

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right, thanks! We want to know your secrets for keeping cool. Sent in

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your pictures and we will show them later. Earlier we sent Iwan Thomas

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on a mission to cool down overheated Britain. While thousands escape to

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beaches around the country, spare a thought for those sweating it out at

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work. Help is at hand. The One Show team are on the move. How hot is it

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in there? Very hot. I can offer you a squirt with my pistol, a go in the

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paddling pool, a bottle of water or and ice pop. Ice pop! I would like a

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squirt, please. I go for the water. Keep up the good work and have a

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happy day. You must be boiling. Health and safety, isn't it? I would

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like an ice lolly. Thank you. Do you fancy some water pistol? Open wide.

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Have a great day. You must be really hot. Would you like some

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refreshments? Yes, some water. Enjoyed it. I fancy the water

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pistol. So hot today and you are working in a kitchen which is even

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hotter. Can I have an ice lolly? Thank you! Hang on, I am working on

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sweating, what are you lot doing? Get back to the office! Thank you.

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Would you choose the ice lolly or the squirt? Squirt. You? I would

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rather not answer! Next week the Games get under way in Glasgow but

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the party starts this weekend with a concert featuring Jessie J and the

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Kaiser Chiefs all hosted by this one. Yes, live on BBC One tomorrow

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night at one artist I am particularly looking forward to

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seeing is Bill Bailey, who is in Edinburgh now. It will be a

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fantastic evening tomorrow night. You are appearing three times on the

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stage. What exactly have you got planned for the Edinburgh and BBC

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One audience? Well, some musical items that I have been rehearsing

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with the orchestra. One of the things I am going to be doing is

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attempting to play the car horns with the orchestra in the castle,

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which has never been done before. And they tell me you are doing some

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theme tunes? That is right. I am going to try and get the audience

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involved. We are trying to get the audience to replicate the sound of

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bagpipes as I attempt to play the BBC News 24 theme. I don't know how

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that will pan out! Try out something live on television with thousands of

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people. No pressure. We mentioned Kaiser Chiefs, Smokey Robinson,

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Jessie J. Who are you particularly looking forward to seeing? As you

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say, it is a fantastic line-up and there are some great live artists

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that. I think Culture Club are getting back together for the first

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time in years. It will be a great night for bands and live artists. We

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have just been listening to Smokey Robinson rehearse and it is just

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fantastic. The atmosphere has been brilliant playing these wonderful

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old songs. We had Tears of a Clown. That will be amazing. What are you

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going to do after this beautiful night in Edinburgh? I think I might

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stroll around town. It is gearing up for the festival. Lots of street

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performers, somebody dressed as a Stormtrooper which I was

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particularly taken by. I might take a selfie with him. All right. We

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will see you tomorrow for the big event. Goodbye. You have got to have

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your LAN yard! We will go back to Edinburgh at the end of the show

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because the BBC Symphony Orchestra have rehearsed something that might

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just work, hopefully. This man here, Tim Peake, you are heading off to

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the International Space Station to live there. For how long? What is

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your mission? I will be going up with the Russians on a rocket and I

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will be living there for six months on board the space station. That

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sounds like a long time but it is the standard length of time that

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astronauts spending on board at the moment. The space station took ten

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years to build so now we are focusing on using it as a scientific

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laboratory and we are into the operational phase of getting good

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science back. So six months of science experiments. Can you vote

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somebody out if you don't like them? Probably a bit late for that! How

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come you are the chosen one? I am really fortunate. I went to a

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selection process five years ago and 8000 people applied for the job. Six

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of us across Europe were chosen to become new members of the astronaut

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course and I was really fortunate to get the job. What about the Russian

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aspect of things because you have had to learn to speak Russian. How

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is it going? Still learning! We have to be fairly fluent in technical

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language. Give us a bit. SPEAKS RUSSIAN. No need for that on BBC

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One! Your mission is a first but the first what? Clarify. I am not the

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first British person in space. That is Helen Sharman and I have had the

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pleasure of meeting her a couple of times and I got some good advice

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from her. A wonderful lady. This is the first time the British

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Government has become involved in human space flight. I am the first

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official British astronaut, if you like, sponsored by the British

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Government. It does affect people in different ways. Post space syndrome.

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You have to train for what he will do while you are there and what

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happens when you come back. Lots of astronauts have turned to God.

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happens when you come back. Lots of does the training for that kick in?

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Not for turning to God! The decompression, if you like.

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Not for turning to God! The selection process has changed over

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the years. Thinking back to the original NASA Mercury seven, now we

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are looking towards six-month missions. Two astronauts will be

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are looking towards six-month finishing off a year-long stay on

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the space station and we are looking forward to the Mars missions of

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maybe two years and longer. It has shifted towards psychological

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profiling. We are looking for people who can live and work together in

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confined spaces for long periods of time and can get on well. They train

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is very well for those circumstances. Speaking of getting

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on with people. Buzz Aldrin said he saw a UFO on Apollo 11. Is there any

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specific training if somebody comes knocking? What happens? You call

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ground and ask what to do! I have seen Alien so I will not be opening

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the door! You must have watched all these movies by now. I went to see

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Gravity with my Hollywood head on. Somebody told me to go and enjoy it

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as a great movie. If you go with a professional I come you can pick

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holes all over the place. Of course and you can without your

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professional eyes as well. But the photography was brilliant and it

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depicted how beautiful planet earth is from space. What does your wife

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think about this? I have put them through the mill for many years. I

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joined the army at 19 and I was a test pilot for the last five years

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of my career so I have always done high-risk activity. This is the next

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step in the adventure. You come home from work and your wife says, what

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did you do today? I became an astronaut! You talk with a constant

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smile. Have you always or is it because you can't believe it? It

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hasn't really sunk in yet. Sometimes I pinch myself when I realised what

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I am going to do. When I am at training locations and getting on

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with the job it is easy to forget that in less than a year and a half

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I will be heading up in that rocket. You are involved in the mission.

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When did your fascination with space start? I actually remember seeing

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one of the Apollo moon landings. It must have been 69. You would have

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been three years old? I remember it. I think my grandad gave me one of

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those first envelopes with stamps on which I have kept ever since. One of

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those things that as a kid, you know, going into space... Talking of

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kids, Phil Tufnell is going to tell us about one of the greatest wartime

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artists. A series of murals by Stanley Spencer have been unveiled

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and will be on show to the public from August but as always we got in

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first. In this quiet village in Hampshire, sits one of the treasures

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of British art. This is Sandham Memorial Chapel, built in the 1920s

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especially to how was a series of paintings by artist Stanley Spencer,

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commemorating the First World War. -- to house. He painted 19 items to

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commemorate his experience, first as a hospital orderly and then on the

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front line in Macedonia. The chapel has recently undergone conservation

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work but before it reopens to the public, the curator gave The One

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Show a sneak preview of this hidden gem. Tell us about these amazing

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paintings. These paintings are very moving. They are not what you would

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imagine wall paintings to be about. It's not hand-to-hand combat,

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misery, blood and guts and death. It's about those little details of

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everyday life like sorting laundry, carrying tea canisters. Washing your

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hair. And these are the little things that helped Standley get

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through what was a grim time. And then, we move onto this, which just

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amazing. This is a buzz of ancient altarpiece. That resurrection

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altarpiece. It's about the resurrection of the soldiers. This

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symbolises the end of the conflict. It is very much about Stanley

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Spencer's very eccentric faith. He wasn't your standard Christian. He

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said God is in all things I love. The men are rising in a place in a

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happy place. He lived in the village for six years while he worked on the

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chapel and soon became a part of local life. John atrocious portraits

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Spencer drew of his grandfather. How did your grandfather no Stanley

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Spencer? He built the chapel and this house behind us for Stanley

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Spencer to live in. They got an extremely well. Digital grandfather

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tell you about how the sketch came about? Stanley Spencer said, I will

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do a drawing of you. It took five minutes and that was it. Do you

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think he got a good likeness? Very good. He was very proud of the

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chapel. After finishing the chapel, Spencer returned to his home town 40

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miles away where he lived for the rest of his life painting the people

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of the time he loved so much. One was Hillary's mother. Just behind us

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is where Stanley Spencer painted your mum. It's one of the village

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memorials, and she was taking part in the memorial service. He painted

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so many villagers in Cookham. In fact, we believe two of the young

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men beside the war memorial are my uncles. Practically the whole family

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got in on the act somehow! These are photographs my mother took of him,

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he was only five foot two, and he looked very scruffy. He walked

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around with a very old pram to transport all his artistic

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agreement. I can remember the last time I saw him, he spoke to my

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mother at a bus stop and she said, is it cold enough for you? It was a

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very cold day. The opened his overcoat and there was his dressing

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gown on underneath. Cookham is where he belonged. Cookham is a kind of

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newspaper to me. Through the pages of which I'm anxiously glancing in

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hope of finding something about myself in it. To understand what I

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mean, I find something of myself all over the place. He left his mark on

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the village but Spencer left a monument to his talent 40 miles away

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at Oriel chapel. More about space and food in space but first of all,

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Heston, a treat from space. Gathering information for the

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development work, the American guy up there now said "just

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development work, the American guy thumb into an orange and overwhelmed

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my Spencer 's -- senses. " why did he wait so long? Maybe he forgot

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about it. The challenges for creating space food? There are few

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challengers, the psychological thing, you cannot be more plucked

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out of society, your family, your friends, than being in space. Night

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and day, days of the week, it's completely different. The fact you

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have zero gravity, your body's awareness of your limbs, etc, you

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are freefalling. All of your food, everything is falling a long way

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down but food comes up, so you need to eat more to get the nutrients and

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to strengthen your bones, however, you get... Is he right? Here's

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absolutely right. It's fascinating, you realise a glass of water, there

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is a point where food becomes viscous enough that it will stick to

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the spoons up tomato ketchup is OK. You like sticky food in space.

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Sticky toffee pudding? Fantastic. Crumbs, they can get stuck

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everywhere. No crumbs, you look after that space Station. It doesn't

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look very appetising. This is a drink, apparently. Some nuts. This,

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well, now then. Mushroom sauce. Stir through with heat up or add hot

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water to. This is an Italian lady's food. You all get your own diets.

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That is for Samantha Christopher, who launches later this year. It

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looks like Keane were -- quinoa. With tomatoes. It's OK. I mean, it's

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actually... You question what makes that space food? Freeze dried stuff

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is very successful. We have got to do what your competition because

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there is a condition for schoolchildren to create food and

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this food will go with you. We have a winner. Chloe. She is with us.

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Come in. APPLAUSE

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What did you create pretty much lamb APPLAUSE

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curry with yoghurt and rice. And a ploughman 's lunch with

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relish. You found out he And a ploughman 's lunch with

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curry. The entries were amazing. You can choose one win in the end and

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there were three winners from the senior two from the juniors. This

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looks fantastic. Everyone put in so much effort. I love curries. This

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includes cheddar, tomatoes, onions. Anything. This is pickle. I hope the

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Italian lady isn't watching because this food is much better. This just

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goes on the side with the quinoa. Space curry. One of the things we

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wanted to do, Tim is representing Britain, multinational, around the

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dining table, we want the others to go, " I want what you have got. "

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well done. You want to be a chef? Yes. Can my family have table in

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your restaurant? We will talk later! Even Heston can't get a table at his

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own restaurant. Well done, Chloe. APPLAUSE

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Well done to everyone who took part and all the winners. As well as

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Chloe, they are KF Space Girls, Astro Foodies, Archie Luckett and

:22:51.:22:51.

Joseph Drennan. APPLAUSE

:22:52.:23:02.

What does corona mean to you? It's an eclipse and you get to see

:23:03.:23:07.

the sun and there was an aura of plasma. For me, cold beer. The same,

:23:08.:23:15.

but less alcoholic. Yes, it was a fizzy drink. In a glass bottle. If

:23:16.:23:23.

you're over 30, you will pull you have fond of Corona. -- proverb we

:23:24.:23:31.

have fond memories of Corona. Corona, every bubble has passed its

:23:32.:23:39.

physical. You may not realise that behind those flashy television ads,

:23:40.:23:44.

was a drink born of the temperance movement, in an attempt to entice

:23:45.:23:46.

people away from alcohol and drunkenness. It all began in South

:23:47.:23:56.

Wales. It was here in the 1880s, two grocers bottled their first pop. It

:23:57.:24:07.

didn't prevent locals from drinking alcohol, but children loved it. The

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soft drink giant Corona was born. In 1943, 114-year-old became a delivery

:24:17.:24:26.

boy for Corona. His name, Les Moulden. Nice to meet you. I brought

:24:27.:24:33.

the Corona bottles to deliver. I guess we are ready to go delivering,

:24:34.:24:39.

are we? Yes, why not? What was it like being a delivery boy?

:24:40.:24:45.

Fantastic. I had my own uniform, tailor-made to me. And the customers

:24:46.:24:50.

loved me. We would serve approximately 250 customers during

:24:51.:24:58.

the day. In one day? Just me. This would be a typical delivery? The

:24:59.:25:05.

family would have four bottles. Four bottles for one shilling and a penny

:25:06.:25:10.

deposit on each bottle. We had a great relationship with the horse.

:25:11.:25:14.

And the memories of the horse are just unbelievable. They knew when it

:25:15.:25:19.

was a last call and they knew when it was going home time. The Corona

:25:20.:25:26.

man became a familiar sight on the streets of Britain. When Les

:25:27.:25:30.

joined, 60 million bottles were being delivered each year in the UK.

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How long did it work for the company? 44 years. I was Corona

:25:37.:25:41.

through and through. They used to say, if they cut my veins, dandelion

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and Burdock would come out. My father was involved and my four

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brothers and two sisters were all involved with the company. Start

:25:53.:25:57.

delivery boy, became a supervisor, than a company sales manager. You go

:25:58.:26:03.

from delivery man in your teens, two senior manager Richard Mark yes, we

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were Corona man. Something different to everybody else. I hear you have a

:26:09.:26:19.

song in you. # Corona, Corona, the famous family drink # Corona,

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Corona, it is the drink you must have, Corona, Corona #. It feels

:26:25.:26:35.

fantastic to be back on my horse and cart. It enabled the founder to

:26:36.:26:43.

donate a park to the people of the village but with the rise of

:26:44.:26:46.

supermarkets, door-to-door deliveries were phased out and the

:26:47.:26:52.

Corona man disappeared. By 1987, Britvic owned the company and the

:26:53.:26:59.

Corona brand name vanished. When Corona finally disappeared, how did

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you feel? It was a very sad day, not only for me, personally, but for my

:27:04.:27:08.

family and the many other families that worked their lifetime for

:27:09.:27:13.

Corona. It says here, this bottle is a property of Thomas Evans limited.

:27:14.:27:20.

This is the statue of William Evans himself, so I think the time has

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come for the Corona man to make one last delivery.

:27:26.:27:31.

A toast to Corona, to all those who worked there, so much more than just

:27:32.:27:40.

fizzy pop, a Welsh legend. To William Evans, Cheers. God bless

:27:41.:27:47.

him. Thank you, Corona man. Best of luck it. I used to work in a

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factory. Let's look at some of the ways you been keeping cool in the

:27:56.:28:00.

heat today. In the North, backpacking their close and putting

:28:01.:28:05.

it in the freezer. Good idea. This is her children keeping cool in the

:28:06.:28:09.

pool. Madeleine McCann keeping cool in the paddling pool with a nice bit

:28:10.:28:16.

of product placement there. Brian says work in Shepton, it is

:28:17.:28:21.

freezing. Good luck in space. Good luck with your new hip. Remember,

:28:22.:28:30.

tomorrow live from Glasgow, the Commonwealth Games, but now bigger

:28:31.:28:34.

back to Edinburgh where the BBC Scotland Symphony Orchestra has

:28:35.:28:36.

prepared something very special just for us. Thank you very much.

:28:37.:28:41.

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