19/09/2016 The One Show


19/09/2016

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Hello and welcome to The One Show, with Matt Baker...

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With this year's Strictly dancers just five days away from their first

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We'll be getting into the mood with Joanne and Ore,

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who has suffered an embarrassing injury which, we're told,

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Well, when tonight's first guest realised Ore and Jo

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were bringing the glitter, there was no way she was

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Yes, she's in position. Let's say, come on down to Michelle Keegan!

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Unbelievable! Hello and welcome! The timing of that was just

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unbelievable! We have never had an entrance like it. Quite something.

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So we are three weeks into Our Girl, which is doing incredibly well. But

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you haven't been very well, have you? I've been a bit run down. I was

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in Our Girl literally two weeks ago, and then I was in promotion for Our

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Girl, and then I stopped a week ago. It's when you stop, isn't it? Yes,

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you crash. Someone else who wasn't feeling too well this week was Jonny

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Brownlee, seen here being carried over the finish line I his brother,

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Alistair. What a hero! So today, we are asking you what is the best

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thing you and your brother or sister have ever done for each other. Send

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us pictures of you and your supportive sibling, and we will show

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your pictures later on. There is a dark side to this. If you would like

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to apologise to your sibling for something you have done... Like my

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sister shaved my girls wild! Let's leave it there.

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For thousands of parents and grandparents up and down

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the country, today is the day they've been coming to terms

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with empty bedrooms, empty laundry baskets,

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If you were on the toaster and duvet run this weekend,

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did you keep a stiff upper lip, or did you let it wobble

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He's been to Reading University, just for the day. Look at all this

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stuff. How many students are moving in here? I'm coming too. Dad, it's

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your baby! Don't start me off. And last night was York last evening

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together. How was it? I wasn't nervous until yesterday, but then I

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was like, I'm going tomorrow. How are you going to feel when you wake

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up and she's not there? Not so good, definitely. What will happen to the

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bedroom at home? In my opinion, it will be an office, but my wife has

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different ideas. Definitely a shrine, with photos all over the

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walls. You are dropping off your baby at university. Is she OK? I'm

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OK. You are OK with her going to university? Why is that? Because

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then I will have my house to myself. I've been waiting 19 years for this.

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I will finish off my life. Now it is over. I'm excited! I am free! What

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is in the car? Has she got a wok? She has. Are you a stir-fry Queen?

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Not really. They are making you do all the heavy work! Stop right here!

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Is this boy ready to go out on his own? I hope so, but we shall see. I

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have been given recipe books and stuff. He has been spoiled. This

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will do him good. Clearly Hay has been spoilt! Mum is pushing the

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trolley! Where are you from? Romania. So this is an incredible

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moment for you. We came in the car. Four days on the road. An incredible

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journey! How is it going to be without her at home with you? She

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will have an incredible life. I hope. What have you packed? What is

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essential? Hair products. Make up! Who is more nervous out of the two

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review about you starting university? I don't know. I think we

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are both quite chilled. We have both agreed there will be no tears. And

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are you doing the journey home on your own? What is that going to be

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like? I am genuinely happy and excited for her, but I will be

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like... I am literally 20 minutes away! It will be fine! She was

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really upset, wasn't she? We have got Charys, who we saw at the

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beginning of the film here. That was Friday. How has it been going, two

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days in? Good. I have met loads of people. It is very, very manic. It

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is good fun, though. Have you eaten anything yet? Last night I went

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round my friend Zoe's, and she cooked meat dinners. We had a Sunday

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roast. What? I cook myself pasta because it is easier. We hear that

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your mum and dad couldn't decide what to do with your bedroom. Your

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dad wanted to turn it to an office, but your mum wanted to keep it as a

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shrine to you. She would never let him! It is probably too early to

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tell. I will have to go back for summers and Christmas, so where am I

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going to stay? Due wouldn't think they had done anything this soon,

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would you? Or would you? Let's look here. Let's move back a bit. There

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is your dad! It looks like there is a bit of an office. Look at all of

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the Charys files there. He is missing you. We have a Charys clock.

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Basically, it's half and half. It is an office and a shrine. Dad is

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getting on with his work. Look at this inspirational poster here. And

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there is mum, obviously. A bit of help from us! Natalie, how is the

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last two days been for you as a mum? Quite tough. I really, really miss

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Charys. I have had to put all her mugs to the back of the cupboard,

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because I get sad whenever I open the cupboard. I missed dancing round

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the kitchen with my baby girl, and the chats. It is quite lonely.

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Natalie, we will make her call you after the show. Students don't ring

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home for at least a month! So as a special treat, we will make sure

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that she calls you. Can I just apologise for embarrassing you in

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front of the nation and all of your new friends? And thanks to your mum

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and dad as well. We have no doubt that Charys is going to be extremely

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well-behaved, that some rules are easier to follow than others. Yes,

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Public Space Protection Orders and allow councils to ban any behaviour

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they deem anti-social, and as Dom has been finding out, not everyone

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is happy about it. Did you know that carrying golf

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equipment round in this town in North East Derbyshire could get you

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find ?100? Or that drinking a cup of tea in the wrong part of North Wales

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could come with a ?1000 penalty? Chalking on Swindon's pavements

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could a criminal record. Welcome to the world of Public Space Protection

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Orders. It is a fairly new way that councils are trying to control an

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ever expanding list of behaviour that they don't like. Introduced two

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years ago, Public Space Protection Orders and allow councils to ban

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specific activities in defined areas. Supporters say they are

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brilliant for clamping down on anti-social behaviour, while critics

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dubbed them... The tranquillity of this rural countryside is being

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transformed by an epic battle of man versus sheep. Since the 12th

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century, local shepherds have had the right to let their sheep roam

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freely in the village and 11,000 acre forest. Jeremy is one of them,

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and the council has long fought his sheep are trouble. Jeremy, how long

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have you been tending the sheep? 47 years. The Council are kicking up

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now that they don't want them wandering around the villages. They

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say they are making a mess in the village. They are saying that they

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can walk to the village, but they mustn't stop. Well, you can't tell a

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sheep where to stop. It doesn't look like a huge amount of sheep to me.

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It isn't. People see the same sheep three times, and they think they are

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different sheep. In 2008, Jeremy was given an ASBO after complaint over

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noise. Now this council wants to use a PSPO to ban sheep from loitering

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in the centre altogether. Do people need protecting from sheep? It isn't

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that they need prayer acting from sheep, but they need protecting from

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what comes out of the back end of a sheep. This is a photograph of the

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effects of the sheep, that leave their droppings behind, and that is

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outside a local school. Another local shepherds thinks that a ban

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would have wider consequences. These sheep are the very creatures that

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have created the forest as it is today. The complaint, they say,

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there was sheep bleating in the night last night. They have the

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right to be vocal. If they have the right to be here, they have the

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right to make a noise. If you live in London, you have aeroplanes,

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Symons, people shouting... It is an ancient tradition, and one that

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could be could tail altogether. The PSPO is currently at the

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consultation stage, but others are enforced around the country, and

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some critics say they are being misused. We have seen some

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ridiculous examples of PSPOs and it is possible to find them funny

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because they seem quite observed, but we are worried where PSPOs have

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been used against homeless people and so one. Those issues are not

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solved by fining people. They can seem trivial, but there is an

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undertone to the way these orders I'd use that can have a significant

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impact on our rights and freedoms. Since the power was introduced, over

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130 PSPOs been passed by 79 local authorities. In Wrexham, the council

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has banned sleeping during the hours of darkness in some public areas. In

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Oxford, the council has cracked down on nuisance busking, to the anger of

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this musician. I have been busking for 16 years. What do you think of

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PSPOs? I think they offer a misnomer. They don't protect anybody

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because they allow local authorities to criminalise any activity that

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they claim is having a detrimental impact on the locality. I have a

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problem with redefining whole aspects of human life as

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anti-social, when I would say that busking is a social activity. A

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local government Association told us that anti-social behaviour is a

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serious national issue, and that PSPOs just one of a number of

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effective weapons used by councils. Back in this village, we find out in

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October whether the PSPO come into force. The trouble is, your pet hate

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might be someone else's pet passion. Isn't that right, girls?

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I don't understand that. Why would you ban having a cup of tea? There

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is an order on stimulants, and T is a stimulant. But only specific ones.

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They are not going to cut you off to jail in Wrexham if you drink a cup

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of tea! You may have noticed we have an addition to our sofa. This is

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Sergeant Victoria Bruce from Royal Army Medical Corps. It is time to

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talk about Our Girl. We are coming up to the third episode. For anyone

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who has missed the first two, what is happening?

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It is about a female medic in the army on a mission in Kenya. I long

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the way, I don't want to say too much, things don't go to plan and it

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is sort of like her story of how to get out of that and who is involved

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and you get a lot... I'm scared what to say. It is her journey. We will

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see a clip. You have been kidnapped. I can say that? Yes. It is what

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happens then. You were paired up with Victoria to do some research.

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What was the first thing that you wanted to know? It was just hearing

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it first hand, her experiences and being a female medic, it is

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different from being a male, do the lads treat you different and like

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Victoria said, you become one of the lads. That is what we need to talk

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about. What was Michelle like as a trainee squaddie? I feel lucky to

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get the chance to meet her, she is a proper northern lass. That is away

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from the training camp... What about... The first question was how

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do you get your hair so tight. That is a problem. How do you do your bun

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to how do you hold your gun. We call it a rifle. And how do I handle the

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bant we are the lads when I'm teaching and how... Getting used to

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the military lingo and understanding the words. You have to face that,

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your cashing term has to Fay o' e - character has to face that. How do

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you cope with that banter? You have to give as good as you get. If

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someone says something, you have to dish it right back, whether they're

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male or female. That earns you the respect of your peers. I was with

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all lads and that helped me, because I walked into a room of 12 lads and

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I was the only female on the job. That really helped. Instantly you

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were in that environment. I know it is a cliche, but we became such a

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family that we became best mates. And in the army you connect with

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people. It is real is tick to assume -- realistic to assume you may be

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the only female. You get involved and become one of the boys. At the

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end of the last episode, Georgie was rescued from kidnappers and this

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week 2 section turn their attention to catching the man responsible. You

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would recognise him. Intelligence said he is from London. Yes. All

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surveillance has been scrutinised. He will be found. It is a matter of

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time. Exactly. Time. We need to get him before he gets us. I would

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recognise him, Sir. Without a doubt. Another big theme in the series is

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post-traumatic stress disorder. In the medical Corps it must be

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something you come up against. Yes you see it with soldiers. On a

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personal level, I struggled with adjusting back into normal life.

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You're living in a high octane environment and to come back to

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reality is difficult. That is something most soldiers go through.

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And we treat each soldier as an individual. But I know for me, it

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was hard to come back, come back home to my parents and they want to

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do so much for me and cook for me and I'm used to be so independent

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and it was hard for me and it must have been hard for my family. They

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have over the past six months from any deployment they have changed and

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got used to living without me and worrying. I think that period of

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normalisation is something that most if not all soldiers struggle with.

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Our Girl continues on Wednesday. If you have missed the first episodes,

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you can catch up on iPlayer. We haven't said happy birthday. It is

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your birthday, Victoria. She decided to spend her 28th birthday with us

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tonight. Lovely. We love a birthday on the show and this year a true

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British icon bridging the gap between England and Wales turned 50.

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Is it Aled Jones? No. Shirley Bassey zm No.

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A constant part of my life in a Welsh band has been the crossing of

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the Severn Bridges between England and Wales. I don't know how we would

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have coped without the bridge. We were travelling through the night,

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any hours of the morning. We would have been stuck on the banks. Even

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up to the mid 60s, driving between Bristol and Wales involved a 60 mile

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track. A track Tim knew well. I remember in the back of the car as a

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kid, feeling sick, the car overheating, my dad having missed

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the last ferry and over heating himself. It is a big feeling of

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remoteness. It was like looking abroad. The alternative route is via

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the Severn car ferry. That was fraught with challenges of its own.

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Ben Brown was the skipper in charge of turn tables for the cars. As he

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son Tony remembers. He had about 12 ropes, as the cars come up the ramp,

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they drive on to that and the crew would grasp the ropes and turn it.

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That is heavy. Turn it until they pointed in the right direction. And

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they drive up there. The next one would come and they would line them

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up. They were like sardines on the boat. Every inch was covered with

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cars or people. Every penny counted. The last of the ferries, the Severn

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Princess fell into disrepair after her working days were over. But she

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has been restored by a group of enthusiasts. What were the journeys

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like. When it was a choppy day for instance? It was... Well the boats

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weren't made for choppy weather. It was like a sliding feeling. They

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reckon people were sea sick on there. They couldn't get out of

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their cars? No, if anything happened, that was them, they were

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finished. If the boat sunk, they would go down too. Each crossing

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took 15 minutes and carried 19 cars. But the ferry was intermittent

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because of tides. There was chaos, there was so much Kays, it would --

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traffic. Did anyone lose their temper. Oh yes. One of most famous

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passengers, Bob Dylan had more than the ferry queue on his mind. He had

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the booing of a hostile crowd in his ears. It was the time he took the

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folk revival and threw it up in the air and plugged in. He played

:22:47.:22:52.

Bristol the night before. Played the first half acoustic. Came on played

:22:53.:22:55.

electric and they booed him off stage. It that is Judas moment. Yes

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and he was off to Cardiff the next time. # The times they are a

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changing... We are on the spot where Dylan posed for this picture. But

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the terminal here has been long abandoned. It is a remarkable

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photograph, because for Dylan, it was preelectric, post electric and

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in the picture, although they're travelling by ferry, you can see the

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bridge. It was the old world with the new world. I suspect that is

:23:31.:23:33.

very much the case. I don't think di-Lynne did anything without there

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being a reason for it. Times were changing for Dylan and the ferry.

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The opening of first Severn Bridge in September 1966 also marked the

:23:43.:23:47.

final day of the car ferry. Life would have been very different had

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this bridge not been built. Specially as a touring musician from

:23:52.:23:55.

South Wales, but I must admit the idea of walking in Bob Dylan's foot

:23:56.:24:02.

steps on that ferry is an alluring one! Fond memories. Not Aled Jones.

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No. From Bob Dylan to the music that will be ringing in everybody's ears,

:24:12.:24:21.

go on Steve. Putten -- put it on. MUSIC: Strictly Come Dancing theme.

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Time to talk Strictly. That is what that sound does. We hear that all

:24:29.:24:34.

the celebrities have started a what's app group. Yes. What is the

:24:35.:24:40.

gossip. What is the feeling. In truth it is all supportive. The

:24:41.:24:47.

first thing I noticed when we got involved is that everybody's got

:24:48.:24:54.

each other's back. But Will Young likes buying hoovers. Everyone is

:24:55.:25:04.

lovely. Lisa sends audio messages. Why don't you message them and say

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you're on the show. See if they're awake. They're all dancing now.

:25:09.:25:16.

They're all training. You weren't training today. I couldn't believe

:25:17.:25:21.

how relaxed you were. You have got to relax sometimes. And then she

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will tell me I have got to get back in training. She is very militant.

:25:26.:25:32.

When we don't train, I get him to send pictures of him training. It

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consumes you, you go to bed with it, you wake up with it. And we are

:25:38.:25:44.

still talking accuse dancing. Michelle -- We are still talking

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about dancing. You know as his wife it is full on. Yes, you train every

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day. I remember that from starting in the morning to the end of the

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evening, he was out training. It whizz life. We don't stop training.

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When we're in it is morning until night. We practice from 10 to 5 each

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day. The first day he didn't want lunch. I said, do you want a break.

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He said no. No, I'm dancing. You look good. Jo, you must be pleased

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with what you have got to work with? I'm proud and he is the perfect

:26:27.:26:30.

student, he wants to do well. We have full, but I can get tough with

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you and you take it. You do get tough and I do take it. Those are

:26:35.:26:42.

both true. What are you finding hardest, cha-cha threw me. OK.

:26:43.:26:49.

Mini-exclusive we have, we kick off with ballroom and it is important to

:26:50.:26:56.

keep your whole. Now I'm doing everything wrong, my posture is

:26:57.:27:01.

terrible. Sit up. She goes with me every where popping me up. Now this

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injury, it is not dance-related. What's happened? Jo comes and trains

:27:06.:27:12.

with me in Manchester. Where we live. You're welcome to come as

:27:13.:27:18.

well. She comes up and we went out for a night out and went bowling.

:27:19.:27:28.

But instead of bowling, but I incorporated the dance steps and had

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a ball into the back of my ankle. I was pleased, we worked on having

:27:34.:27:38.

your feet turned out and so his foot was turned out. It is not too

:27:39.:27:44.

serious? I will dance one-legged. But you know, it can be done. That

:27:45.:27:50.

was a bad moment. Did you win? You didn't. I won. But nothing like a

:27:51.:27:58.

bit of rivalry. Spending time with this wonderful human, this glamorous

:27:59.:28:02.

being has been incredible and we are getting on so well. You are spending

:28:03.:28:10.

so much time together, but I get up and I go, today I'm dancing. It is

:28:11.:28:17.

such fun. Moving on to sibling partnerships, inspired by the

:28:18.:28:19.

Brownlee brothers. You were watching. Yes. This is James and

:28:20.:28:25.

Henry, the new Brownlees, they think. Helping, I think after a

:28:26.:28:31.

triathlon. Jo. Have you got a picture? This is Barbara and her

:28:32.:28:38.

sister Anna, both completing the pink ribbon walk while Anna was

:28:39.:28:47.

being treated for breast cancer. Chris and John, who donated his

:28:48.:28:52.

kidney to Chris last year. That is true love. Talk about sharing.

:28:53.:28:58.

Michelle. George and his brother, he is going to university next week. So

:28:59.:29:04.

good luck. Is that a thank you for go? These are twins, Annie and Erin

:29:05.:29:12.

supporting each other in their first day at school. What a show it has

:29:13.:29:18.

been. I think your lift is here. Is that Elvis again? Our Girl continues

:29:19.:29:28.

on Wednesday. And you can see Strictly Come Dancing on Friday and

:29:29.:29:37.

Saturday. We are back tomorrow with Paralympians. Good night.

:29:38.:29:52.

# Doo-wa, doo-wa, doo-wa, doo-wa, doo-wa! #

:29:53.:29:55.

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