30/05/2016 The One Show


30/05/2016

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 30/05/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

Hello and welcome to the One Show with Matt Baker.

:00:14.:00:15.

And tonight we're bringing you the Bank Holiday headlines.

:00:16.:00:22.

Miranda Krestovnikoff finds strange creatures buried on a British beach.

:00:23.:00:26.

Richard Jones becomes the first magician to win

:00:27.:00:36.

And tonight he performs live for the first time since his win

:00:37.:00:43.

And finally, pretend newsreaders on The One Show upstaged by real

:00:44.:00:49.

We'll leave the news reading to you for now,

:00:50.:01:02.

We are going to do this, it's inspired in homage with this that

:01:03.:01:15.

you were dog with Bill. What is happening here and why on earth were

:01:16.:01:18.

you doing this? Was this every morning? It was every morning, we

:01:19.:01:23.

did it every morning, 15 seconds to going on air, don't we look

:01:24.:01:25.

ridiculous. Thank you for showing that to the nation. There is a

:01:26.:01:30.

certain well-known presenter, before he went on air, he used to go,

:01:31.:01:40.

pfffttt". Who was that? Andrew Marr. I didn't say that, did that pop out

:01:41.:01:43.

of my mouth. He probably doesn't do that so don't sue me, but Bill and I

:01:44.:01:48.

started to do it, so 15 seconds to going on air, the director would say

:01:49.:01:58.

15 and we'd go 15 and we'd both go "pfftt" we never did the "thing"

:01:59.:02:02.

with anyone else. This morning he sent me an e-mail because I'm going

:02:03.:02:06.

on a walk for charity, it's a very long way and he said before you go

:02:07.:02:10.

on the walk, do the "thing" so I might just do it. Is it just a Bill

:02:11.:02:14.

thing or can it be a Channel 5 thing? There's nobody else to do it

:02:15.:02:18.

with on Channel 5 because it's just me reading the news so that would be

:02:19.:02:22.

a little sad to do it alone. It's just a Bill thing. Maybe if we are

:02:23.:02:30.

ever reunited on a sofa anywhere, the 15-second thing would be good to

:02:31.:02:34.

do. Sian, later on, we'll be talking about the news that you decided to

:02:35.:02:38.

share with the nation over the weekend. Yes.

:02:39.:02:42.

Tomorrow marks the 100th anniversary of the only major naval

:02:43.:02:45.

battle of World War I - the Battle of Jutland, in

:02:46.:02:48.

Their final resting places are supposed to have been left

:02:49.:02:53.

undisturbed, but Joe's investigated shocking new evidence that suggests

:02:54.:02:55.

The single biggest loss of life came when HMS Queen Mary, a British

:02:56.:03:07.

battle cruiser, was shelved by two German warships. -- shelled. She

:03:08.:03:13.

exploded and sank to the bottom of the North Sea, taking 1266 lives

:03:14.:03:23.

with her. Chris Ashton's great great-grandfather, am election ander

:03:24.:03:26.

Gardner-Smith died that day. And here is my great grand-father,

:03:27.:03:32.

Alexander Gardner-Smith. He was a stoker, he was responsible for

:03:33.:03:36.

shovelling coal into the boilers. I'm quite proud of him. Lost his

:03:37.:03:41.

life on that day, but so did other thousands of men, Brits and Germans.

:03:42.:03:45.

How important do you think the wreck of the Queen Mary is in terms of

:03:46.:03:48.

that memory? As far as we are concerned, they are still there. The

:03:49.:03:53.

remains might not be, but they are still there and should be respected.

:03:54.:04:00.

A century on, salvage crews have disturbed the maritime graves of

:04:01.:04:07.

Alexander and his fallen ship mates. Despite being protected by an

:04:08.:04:09.

international convention, evidence has come to light which suggests HMS

:04:10.:04:14.

Queen Mary has been plundered on an industrial scale.

:04:15.:04:20.

We've obtained and e-mail with these photos which appears to show salvage

:04:21.:04:25.

crewmen posing with items taken from the Queen Mary. The e-mail and

:04:26.:04:30.

photos originally from a crew member of the salvage vessel owned by a

:04:31.:04:34.

company and it was forwarded to us bay British man who just last week

:04:35.:04:39.

was himself convicted of illegally salvaging from a 19th century wreck.

:04:40.:04:44.

One of the crew in the photos also appeared on friendship offshore's

:04:45.:04:48.

official website, though his picture has since been removed. Conflict

:04:49.:04:54.

archaeologist Andy Brockman has been ininvestigating thefts from the

:04:55.:04:57.

Jutland wrecks. The latest evidence is that there's been some

:04:58.:05:01.

catastrophic changes to the wreck which can't be accounted for by

:05:02.:05:04.

natural processes like corrosion by seawater. Human intervention?

:05:05.:05:10.

Definitely, yes. Experts, including Andy, believe the

:05:11.:05:14.

salvage operators were looking to make thousands from the illicit

:05:15.:05:19.

sales of metals and other artefacts. How does the salvage take place? You

:05:20.:05:25.

put down a mechanical grab and pull out the goodies. They have CCTV to

:05:26.:05:29.

light up what they are doing. So it's tearing apart the war graves

:05:30.:05:32.

and taking whatever they want? The technical term we have to use is

:05:33.:05:37.

maritime military grave. People might find it odd, but there's no

:05:38.:05:42.

such thing as a war grave at sea. Along with others, Andy fears unique

:05:43.:05:45.

historical evidence is being destroyed. It's like interfering

:05:46.:05:50.

with a crime scene, you are interfering with the evidence of

:05:51.:05:53.

what happened and once that evidence is gone, you can't reinvent it. That

:05:54.:05:58.

information's lost forever. This foot annal from more than ten

:05:59.:06:02.

years ago shows the Queen Mary untouched for decades. This, taken

:06:03.:06:06.

two years ago, shows much of her wreckage, scattered across the sea

:06:07.:06:12.

bed by industrialised salvage. We have rung and e-mailed friendship

:06:13.:06:16.

offshore to ask about their alleged involvement in the salvage from the

:06:17.:06:19.

Jutland wrecks but so far they have not responded. Protecting the ships

:06:20.:06:24.

sunk 100 years ago isn't just about preserving history. There are many

:06:25.:06:30.

of us descendants that feel quite proud of that little spot in the

:06:31.:06:35.

North Sea that should be left alone. The fact that somebody's taking

:06:36.:06:40.

things off that without permission is just disgraceful, in my opinion,

:06:41.:06:44.

absolutely disgraceful. So why aren't we doing something to stop

:06:45.:06:49.

it? I feel strongly about this heritage crime, this illicit

:06:50.:06:52.

salvage. We'd never dream of letting this happen to war graves on land

:06:53.:06:56.

and perhaps now, 100 years on from the Battle of Jutland, it's time to

:06:57.:07:01.

reassess our priorities and find a better way of protecting the honour

:07:02.:07:07.

and the memory of those who served this country at sea.

:07:08.:07:12.

Joe is with us now. We are going to talk about this a little bit more.

:07:13.:07:18.

Whose job sit then to stop the looters and what's being done about

:07:19.:07:23.

it? When it comes down to British wrecks, Royal Naval wrecks, it's our

:07:24.:07:25.

Government, the Ministry of Defence. It's very hard, there are many, many

:07:26.:07:29.

wrecks across the world, it's difficult to police exactly what is

:07:30.:07:32.

happening to all of them, but the Government says they don't condone

:07:33.:07:36.

the unauthorised disturbance of any wreck containing war dead and they

:07:37.:07:40.

say as well, when they are aware of items coming on sale from some of

:07:41.:07:43.

the wrecks and they do intervene and try and take them back into British

:07:44.:07:48.

custody, they've done that successfully in Australia, in this

:07:49.:07:52.

case they say because of the time scale they haven't been able to get

:07:53.:07:57.

the Ministry of Defence police involved, although campaigners,

:07:58.:07:59.

including those in the film you would criticise that because they

:08:00.:08:02.

say they would be making the Ministry of Defence aware of the

:08:03.:08:06.

Queen Mary for some time. We have heard about graves being

:08:07.:08:09.

disturbed but we have got a lovely story now about a grave that's been

:08:10.:08:14.

protected even more than it was? Yes, exactly. This is the story of

:08:15.:08:24.

John or Jack Cornwell, 16 years old, 100 years ago today, he was very

:08:25.:08:28.

badly injured when his shape came under attack from some German

:08:29.:08:33.

warships. He was Lauded as a hero, a young teenage hero because,

:08:34.:08:37.

throughout the action, he stayed at his post, bravely and defiantly.

:08:38.:08:41.

There is a picture of him there. He was very badly injured and sadly

:08:42.:08:47.

died three days later. He was awarded posthumously the Victoria

:08:48.:08:51.

Cross, he was buried but then reburied with full naval honours as

:08:52.:08:54.

well. That photo, because this was a great story and because he was a

:08:55.:09:00.

shining example of doing your duty in courage under fire, it made the

:09:01.:09:04.

papers and they campaigned for him to have the honours but they didn't

:09:05.:09:07.

have a picture of him. All good stories need a picture so they used

:09:08.:09:10.

that and we think that was his younger brother. No? ! He looks so

:09:11.:09:16.

young. Yes, they were all young but he does look very young, yes. Going

:09:17.:09:20.

back to the vessels, they are all over the world here, so what is the

:09:21.:09:24.

situation of protection when it's in foreign waters? We've two things,

:09:25.:09:29.

the protection of military remains Act 1986 controlling UK borders,

:09:30.:09:33.

making looting or criminal salvage a criminal offence. When it's further

:09:34.:09:38.

at sea, it's very difficult to police it. The jurisdiction is

:09:39.:09:44.

confused, we can't have criminal acts for international water. We do

:09:45.:09:49.

have, and this is accepted in international law, sovereign

:09:50.:09:52.

immunity, which basically means any Royal Naval wreck belongs to the

:09:53.:09:55.

British Government, to the Ministry of Defence so you would need express

:09:56.:09:59.

permission from this Government to then salvage. These companies, the

:10:00.:10:02.

one we saw and talked about in the film, they are not getting that

:10:03.:10:05.

permission because they wouldn't give permission on a wreck where

:10:06.:10:09.

there are war dead so they are breaking the rules. You can watch

:10:10.:10:16.

live coverage from the Orkney Islands tomorrow morning at 10. 45

:10:17.:10:18.

on BBC One. Thanks, Joe. As it's a Bank Holiday,

:10:19.:10:23.

we thought we'd treat one of our presenters to an all-expenses

:10:24.:10:25.

paid trip to the heart And all it cost us was a return

:10:26.:10:28.

ticket to Hertfordshire. It's that time of year again when

:10:29.:10:42.

our minds turn to fresh Chrisle summer salads ideal for a perfect

:10:43.:10:50.

British drink. I've come to the Lee Valley which produces three quarters

:10:51.:10:54.

of the British cucumbers and half of our peppers.

:10:55.:11:00.

But if you want to talk salad here, you'd better brush up your Italian!

:11:01.:11:10.

Pepperoni por favour. This corner of Hertfordshire has always been famous

:11:11.:11:15.

for its market gardens. In the '30s, greenhouses covered 1300 acres of

:11:16.:11:17.

land around here, providing thousands of jobs for the locals.

:11:18.:11:22.

But after World War II, British workers were enticed into nearby

:11:23.:11:27.

factories with promises of shorter hours and higher wages.

:11:28.:11:32.

Help for the farmers came from an unlikely source, Sicily. The British

:11:33.:11:36.

Government's solution to the labour shortage was the introduction of

:11:37.:11:40.

so-called cucumber permits for foreign workers. Once one Sicillian

:11:41.:11:44.

family came over, they sent word back and more followed. Today, the

:11:45.:11:49.

vast majority of the veg produced in this part of the world comes from

:11:50.:11:55.

the same handful of Sicillian families who came over 60 years ago.

:11:56.:12:06.

Bonjourno, it's The One Show! Michael's family has 14 acres of

:12:07.:12:10.

greenhouses all producing peppers. Where did this all begin? It began

:12:11.:12:16.

65 years ago. My father and mother came over from Sicily on a work

:12:17.:12:21.

permit to work in glass houses. Why did they leave Sicily? Sicily was a

:12:22.:12:26.

very poor country. They wanted to go somewhere where they could make

:12:27.:12:29.

themselves not just welcome but actually earn a better lifestyle.

:12:30.:12:33.

They came to this country and built up this empire? We are standing on

:12:34.:12:38.

the land which they bought and since then we have expanded it to what it

:12:39.:12:40.

is at the moment. I would like one of your family

:12:41.:12:44.

peppers. I'm going to pick one for you. A sweet one, please? We'll pick

:12:45.:12:49.

you one now. Allow me just to break it for you. Oh, look at that. There

:12:50.:12:54.

we are. It's like biting into an apple. Bellissimo!

:12:55.:13:08.

The Sicillians are now such an important part of the local

:13:09.:13:13.

community, they even have an honorary consul for the Italian

:13:14.:13:17.

government. I'm joining him for a essential evening of Sicillian food

:13:18.:13:22.

and entertainment. So you are Mr Italy for this area? Yes, because we

:13:23.:13:31.

have about 36,000 people whose paperwork I look after, passports,

:13:32.:13:36.

identity cards. What's this? That's my official badge. Look at that!

:13:37.:13:41.

I've got diplomatic immunity as well! "If found, please return to

:13:42.:13:49.

the Italian President, RomaI". Which village do you come from? ... These

:13:50.:13:56.

families come - from three villages in rural Sicily. Now there are more

:13:57.:14:00.

of them here than there are back home. The owner of the restaurant is

:14:01.:14:04.

Sicillian too. Joe, where does your family come from? Well, my parents

:14:05.:14:12.

came over 55 years ago from Sicily and we have a restaurant which is

:14:13.:14:19.

called Sicillian. How many people are here now? 800. Migration, you

:14:20.:14:28.

are probably talking up to 9,000 people. Superb. What is this?

:14:29.:14:36.

Pepperanata. The famous peppers? Yes, grown locally. Mmm... I want

:14:37.:14:44.

you to know, I am British but I'm turning Sicillian as I sit here! By

:14:45.:14:50.

the end of the evening I will issue you an Italian passport. The

:14:51.:14:55.

consul's promised me an Italian passport before the night is over

:14:56.:15:01.

and if you had this meal, you would want to be Sicillian too!

:15:02.:15:06.

And some of the Sicilians of the Lea Valley are in

:15:07.:15:11.

APPLAUSE. And they have got some lovely

:15:12.:15:23.

vegetables! Cucumbers and tomatoes. That is a very big ratatouille! That

:15:24.:15:33.

is very generous. The family we were wet in the Lea Valley are here

:15:34.:15:36.

tonight and they gave me a tip about buying cucumbers, it is the curly

:15:37.:15:42.

ones that are tastiest. Honestly! The Currier, the better. I have

:15:43.:15:55.

always gone straight! See! Curly! The commentary you can get from the

:15:56.:16:00.

One Show! In August we shall take the One Show on the road from the

:16:01.:16:05.

special show. Thank you to everybody he has nominated their village

:16:06.:16:10.

because we are sifting through them at this moment. The good news is

:16:11.:16:13.

there is still time to get your entry in. Send us your pitch to the

:16:14.:16:21.

usual address. We shall decide shortly. We need somewhere to stay,

:16:22.:16:29.

you can be the guest editor of the One Show, deciding what goes into

:16:30.:16:37.

the programme. Absolutely. It is fair to say that we were shocked

:16:38.:16:42.

over the weekend to discover that you have been diagnosed with breast

:16:43.:16:46.

cancer in 2014. And nobody knew about that. It is all in this book.

:16:47.:16:54.

How are you feeling? I was diagnosed at the end of December. 2014. Just

:16:55.:17:02.

before Christmas. I had a double mastectomy for the cancer in January

:17:03.:17:06.

20 15. And subsequently, I had surgery, but I was very lucky

:17:07.:17:12.

because I was told from the beginning that while it was breast

:17:13.:17:14.

threatening, it was not life threatening. Many of us have lost

:17:15.:17:21.

people to cancer. I lost my auntie to breast cancer and my mother died

:17:22.:17:25.

of cancer and one of my best friends died of breast cancer. And about

:17:26.:17:30.

56,000 people are diagnosed in the same year as I was of the same

:17:31.:17:38.

disease. So, I feel so grateful that I'm here. And I am well. My last

:17:39.:17:44.

three-month check was clear, which is fabulous, and I feel very

:17:45.:17:50.

positive. There is a bit more surgery... You are always popping

:17:51.:17:56.

back into hospital because things happen and our other bumps that you

:17:57.:18:01.

worry about and there is always a risk of the cancer returning but you

:18:02.:18:05.

have to live with that risk. One of the things I have learned with is

:18:06.:18:09.

you must live with some degree of uncertainty and you cannot worry

:18:10.:18:12.

about it all of the time the cause that would drive you mad. You need

:18:13.:18:17.

to be thankful and positive and I am in a better position right now

:18:18.:18:20.

because of what I have learned over the past year. If it comes back, I

:18:21.:18:26.

know of one of the tools and strategies and coping mechanisms I

:18:27.:18:33.

can use. Is it because of what you learned that you want to go public?

:18:34.:18:37.

But kept it to yourselves for a very long time so we decided to put it

:18:38.:18:46.

out there? Well, I thought I knew how to deal about trauma because I

:18:47.:18:51.

had a Masters in psychology and only about trauma from assessing other

:18:52.:18:57.

people and I thought, I am OK physically, letting the targets,

:18:58.:19:01.

sometimes you slip, but emotionally I was not progressing as fast as I

:19:02.:19:05.

hoped and I thought, I am not doing it properly, look at all these

:19:06.:19:12.

people coping, why am I not? I just thought, what I wanted to do was

:19:13.:19:16.

develop a psychological first aid kit for me but also anyone who is

:19:17.:19:22.

going through something very challenging so people that I talk to

:19:23.:19:27.

for the book, they have gone through losses, health loss, or somebody

:19:28.:19:31.

they loved or even the loss of their mind, if they had mental health

:19:32.:19:35.

problems. That is about loss of control, a life that we thought was

:19:36.:19:39.

stable and all of the assumptions we had our shattered and we have to

:19:40.:19:44.

reconfigure that in some way and a psychologist told me it is like a

:19:45.:19:51.

vase that chatters on the floor and you add a piece of back together, it

:19:52.:19:55.

will never be the same, or you make something different from the pieces,

:19:56.:19:58.

something beautiful, like Mosaic or a picture frame. What I wanted to do

:19:59.:20:05.

was to know how to do this well and to help other people, whatever

:20:06.:20:10.

difficulties they are going through, to just... They may not take any of

:20:11.:20:16.

the strategies but some of the tools might be useful for them. Somebody

:20:17.:20:19.

said, I would not be here without all of the outstretched hands. That

:20:20.:20:25.

is what we need and we need to know when they are and this book is about

:20:26.:20:31.

ceiling, -- saying, these are the outstretched hands, this is what you

:20:32.:20:35.

can do. So when the next thing comes along, Orchard will do, inevitably,

:20:36.:20:41.

you are better equipped. One of the things you're interested in, and you

:20:42.:20:45.

have a documentary on Radio 4 tomorrow, is brain resilience and

:20:46.:20:49.

how some people cope better with trauma. Is that something we can

:20:50.:20:57.

train our brains to do? What was interesting is whether there are

:20:58.:21:00.

some people who are more resilient because they are just built like

:21:01.:21:05.

that, it is in their DNA, they have the right genes to be resilient, or

:21:06.:21:11.

whether we can fix this ourselves. A neuroscientist said up to 50% of how

:21:12.:21:17.

we react to difficult things is in our genes but it is a jerk obligated

:21:18.:21:24.

interplay. And he has identified resilience gene markers, there is a

:21:25.:21:31.

DNA test and I have had that test in my bag, do I want to take it?

:21:32.:21:38.

Because if you have that gene, you are less sensitive to negative

:21:39.:21:41.

things in life but also less sensitive to the positive things.

:21:42.:21:47.

And actually, it is not a bad thing being sensitive. Being from trouble.

:21:48.:21:52.

There is a strength in that vulnerability. You need to know how

:21:53.:21:58.

to work with it. And another thing I learnt, which was very interesting,

:21:59.:22:03.

is how children are being taught the skills in how to manage their own

:22:04.:22:07.

emotions. With so many mental health issues at the moment amongst

:22:08.:22:11.

teenagers, I thought that was really interesting thing, maybe the next

:22:12.:22:15.

generation will be able to manage emotions and challenge their

:22:16.:22:19.

thinking. What is the evidence for me feeling frightened and anxious?

:22:20.:22:25.

OK, use that therapy. And this is in the documentary tomorrow. And Sian's

:22:26.:22:35.

look, Rise, is out on Thursday. If you have been affected by any of

:22:36.:22:38.

these things, there is information on the website.

:22:39.:22:41.

In many parts of the country it hasn't exactly been sunbathing

:22:42.:22:43.

weather, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't go down to the beach.

:22:44.:22:46.

Here's Miranda with a whole host of wildlife you could see

:22:47.:22:49.

Over the summer months, people flock to the UK's beautiful seaside. But

:22:50.:23:01.

we're not the only ones enjoying the beaches. The sad Annie Power feed is

:23:02.:23:06.

alive with amazing wildlife. If you know where to look. We are setting

:23:07.:23:12.

up a pop-up filming studio in Devon with a range of specialist camera

:23:13.:23:16.

equipment to reveal the microscopic world hidden in the sand. Helping us

:23:17.:23:23.

find the wildlife is Doctor Matthew Frost, who spent years putting sand

:23:24.:23:27.

under the microscope. If I come here, I normally go to rock pools

:23:28.:23:31.

and seaweed but you are fascinated about the sand? For that reason,

:23:32.:23:36.

everybody knows about rocks, where the sand this effort required and it

:23:37.:23:41.

is rich, the results there but most people would not think about that,

:23:42.:23:45.

it would not even realise that all of these species are beneath their

:23:46.:23:49.

feet. In your typical sand castle, how many species? 50p on the tablets

:23:50.:23:58.

and, where you are, some beaches can have 30 speeches -- species living

:23:59.:24:03.

in the sand. That is quite a lot. One a beach like this, is any

:24:04.:24:06.

difference from one end to the other? Towards the bottom of the

:24:07.:24:10.

beach it is better and there will be more species. That is where we

:24:11.:24:14.

should go. Definitely. That is perfect. We are starting the search

:24:15.:24:21.

at the low tide mark and collecting samples to date back to the studio.

:24:22.:24:28.

You have to be quite hardy to live in their speech. The creatures here

:24:29.:24:32.

have to cope with the sound living around, it is very dynamic. Entire

:24:33.:24:37.

beaches can disappear over the season so the things we are likely

:24:38.:24:41.

to find your are very specialised organisms. Our findings are passed

:24:42.:24:46.

over to the cameraman, who was taking a closer look under his macro

:24:47.:24:55.

lens. But it is not only the animals. Even the Greens of sand

:24:56.:24:59.

look fascinating under magnification because to the naked eye they look

:25:00.:25:05.

ordinary but close-up images tell us the story of the beach. We are

:25:06.:25:10.

inviting beach-goers to the studio to take a look at when the cameras

:25:11.:25:13.

have captured. They look like crystals. Sand from this speech is

:25:14.:25:18.

made up of fragments of shells mixed in with quartz crystal and rock

:25:19.:25:25.

fragments. Created by years of waves pounding on the shore. Sand from

:25:26.:25:28.

every beach will look different depending on the local geology. They

:25:29.:25:35.

look like systems. They maintain that determines what lives the beach

:25:36.:25:41.

is the size of the sand. One animal you can find on most beaches is the

:25:42.:25:47.

San topper, a shrimp like creature in a few millimetres long that

:25:48.:25:51.

scavengers on seaweed. They can travel one metre with their

:25:52.:25:56.

signature jumping. You think, oh, look, and then they have gone. And

:25:57.:26:02.

more unusual findings... What do you think that is? A monster! It is a

:26:03.:26:16.

very small monster. It is actually a polycete worm. Those are the gills.

:26:17.:26:22.

When you are working -- walking round the beach, you are walking

:26:23.:26:28.

over thousands of these. You just do not imagine there are so much in

:26:29.:26:32.

there. To be honest. I would have put that down to just being

:26:33.:26:41.

sandhoppers. This is a crustacean, you can see the speed it disappears

:26:42.:26:45.

into the sand, they have very long back legs. Is that cool? Gas? I have

:26:46.:26:52.

never seen any of these in the sand. And they are right there, in front

:26:53.:26:57.

of you. You do not necessarily see them went digging. Maybe the next

:26:58.:27:02.

time you shall notice them. Well, from the magical world of the

:27:03.:27:05.

beaches to the new Britain's Got Talent when! Richard Jones! -- when!

:27:06.:27:15.

I have a trick to end the show. A very quick prediction. If you can

:27:16.:27:25.

hold out your hand flat. We shall come back to this in a moment. Alex,

:27:26.:27:30.

I need you to think of a playing card in your mind. Free choice. Have

:27:31.:27:37.

you got one? I will name that card! Just out of thin air. I will call at

:27:38.:27:43.

Lucy! I have a pack of playing cards. I have named every card

:27:44.:27:52.

individually. We have got Arr, we have also got Jade and Rose and

:27:53.:28:00.

Rita. Edna... What is your card? Shall I tell you? The Queen of

:28:01.:28:04.

hearts. That is a good choice. If I go through, what are they call your

:28:05.:28:10.

card? Lucy? If I can find the Queen of hearts... Can you take that and

:28:11.:28:17.

turn it over. Shall the cameras! Wow! That is brilliant. The next

:28:18.:28:26.

level, if we have time. Matt, just named one of these cards. Just named

:28:27.:28:35.

one of these as we go through. They're all Lady's names. Jean. --

:28:36.:28:47.

June. We have a forum spades. I made a prediction, if I show you the one

:28:48.:28:57.

card! That is out of this world! Join us tomorrow! We shall be here

:28:58.:28:59.

with Buzz Aldrin! Goodbye!

:29:00.:29:03.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS