Browse content similar to 13/02/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :00:00. | :00:08. | |
For the first time pensioners are better off | :00:09. | :00:10. | |
a new wave of older people are more likely to work, | :00:11. | :00:16. | |
own their home and have generous private pensions. | :00:17. | :00:29. | |
Good morning, it's Monday the 13th of February. | :00:30. | :00:34. | |
Tens of thousands of residents of a town in northern California | :00:35. | :00:39. | |
have been ordered to leave their homes because of fears | :00:40. | :00:42. | |
that the tallest dam in the US could collapse. | :00:43. | :00:46. | |
Major security failings in one of Britain's biggest jails. | :00:47. | :00:49. | |
A BBC investigation exposes widspread drug use, a lack | :00:50. | :00:51. | |
Tesco under fire for out of date promotions | :00:52. | :01:01. | |
that leave shoppers out of pocket. | :01:02. | :01:04. | |
The supermarket giant says it will investigate. | :01:05. | :01:10. | |
In sport, Claudio Ranieri admits he may have been too loyal | :01:11. | :01:13. | |
The Premier League champions are facing a relegation battle this | :01:14. | :01:18. | |
morning following their 2-0 defeat at fellow strugglers Swansea. | :01:19. | :01:23. | |
And the BAFTA is awarded to... Lala land! | :01:24. | :01:27. | |
Political discussion might have | :01:28. | :01:28. | |
but La La Land waltzes off with five awards at the Baftas. | :01:29. | :01:35. | |
It was also a winning night for Adele at the Grammys, | :01:36. | :01:38. | |
I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I need to start again. I can't do it | :01:39. | :01:54. | |
again like last year, I'm sorry for swearing and starting again, can we | :01:55. | :01:57. | |
please start again? You know that feeling when you just | :01:58. | :01:59. | |
want to start again! Will get milder through the week but | :02:00. | :02:08. | |
once again it will be a cold day and the main feature will be the wind | :02:09. | :02:11. | |
especially in the west and south-west, touching gale force wind | :02:12. | :02:15. | |
than severe gales. Today some will see some sunshine and I'll tell you | :02:16. | :02:17. | |
where in 15 minutes. Pensioners are, on average, | :02:18. | :02:18. | |
better off than people of working The think tank the | :02:19. | :02:22. | |
Resolution Foundation It says pensioner households are now | :02:23. | :02:26. | |
?20 a week better off than working age households because they are more | :02:27. | :02:34. | |
likely to own their home, have generous private pensions | :02:35. | :02:37. | |
and still be working, It's those who retired recently who | :02:38. | :02:45. | |
are enjoying higher incomes according to the study. The rising | :02:46. | :02:50. | |
pensioner incomes comes as working households are seeing their income | :02:51. | :02:54. | |
squeezed. The Resolution Foundation says the typical pensioner household | :02:55. | :02:58. | |
is now ?20 a week better off than one with people of working age after | :02:59. | :03:02. | |
housing costs are taken into account. 15 years ago the average | :03:03. | :03:07. | |
pensioner was ?70 a week worse off than younger working households. The | :03:08. | :03:12. | |
changes are attributed to a number of factors, the proportion of | :03:13. | :03:15. | |
pensioner households in which at least one person still works has | :03:16. | :03:20. | |
grown from one in eight in 2001 to nearly one in five. Many newly | :03:21. | :03:25. | |
retired people also have generous occupational pensions and own their | :03:26. | :03:29. | |
own homes, and all have enjoyed a rise in pension benefits. At the | :03:30. | :03:33. | |
same time working age households have experienced a low income | :03:34. | :03:37. | |
growth. But the report also reveals a sharp divide. The poorest fifth of | :03:38. | :03:42. | |
pensioner households rely solely on welfare payments. And it says future | :03:43. | :03:47. | |
generations will be less likely to own their own homes or enjoy such | :03:48. | :03:51. | |
generous workplace pensions. Keith Doyle, BBC News. | :03:52. | :03:52. | |
Britain's biggest supermarket has pledged to take immediate action | :03:53. | :03:54. | |
following a BBC investigation revealed overcharging. | :03:55. | :03:56. | |
Over three months a team from BBC Inside Out visited 50 | :03:57. | :03:59. | |
branches across England and found multi-buy deals | :04:00. | :04:01. | |
still being advertised days, weeks and in some cases months | :04:02. | :04:04. | |
after the deductions were no longer valid at the till. | :04:05. | :04:06. | |
When we see a special offer on the supermarket shelves, | :04:07. | :04:16. | |
we expect to pay that price at the till. | :04:17. | :04:23. | |
But it's not always the case at Tesco. | :04:24. | :04:33. | |
The BBC visited 50 Tesco stores across England, | :04:34. | :04:43. | |
Tesco did not want to do an interview, but after reviewing | :04:44. | :04:58. | |
Following our investigation, Britain's biggest supermarket has | :04:59. | :05:14. | |
said it will be doublechecking the accuracy of every price | :05:15. | :05:17. | |
That's more than 3,500 stores across Britain. | :05:18. | :05:25. | |
How do you even know you're paying the wrong price? That's what many | :05:26. | :05:40. | |
people don't know, they get to the till, they see something advertised | :05:41. | :05:43. | |
on a shelf that says 2-for-1, you get to the till and if you're | :05:44. | :05:46. | |
putting everything else through the till you don't notice that one | :05:47. | :05:51. | |
thing. Then you think maybe you made the mistake and you bought something | :05:52. | :05:54. | |
not part of the offer and that's what is so confusing. As far as | :05:55. | :05:58. | |
Tesco is concerned, there's no indication this is on purpose but | :05:59. | :06:02. | |
the speed at which they change the offers is such that they're not able | :06:03. | :06:05. | |
to change the signage on the shelf. You all here in that piece that some | :06:06. | :06:11. | |
of the staff in the store said there's not enough staff to keep | :06:12. | :06:15. | |
changing the shelf labels, and some of the figures are interesting. As | :06:16. | :06:19. | |
you said, two thirds of the stores that were visited in this enquiry | :06:20. | :06:23. | |
were found to have the wrong prices on the shelves. That's over the | :06:24. | :06:28. | |
course of three months. Even after the BBC investigation and the | :06:29. | :06:31. | |
reporter pointed it out to staff at those stores that these prices and | :06:32. | :06:35. | |
advertisements on the shelves are wrong, they hadn't changed. Tesco | :06:36. | :06:44. | |
said it takes this very seriously and it will review how it does it. | :06:45. | :06:48. | |
We should say further indication that this is only a store only | :06:49. | :06:51. | |
problem, none of this was reported on the website, that is done | :06:52. | :06:54. | |
automatically because when they change things the website is updated | :06:55. | :06:57. | |
automatically. This is old tech against new tech, labels on the side | :06:58. | :07:00. | |
of the shelves meeting the new technology and the speed at which | :07:01. | :07:02. | |
these offers go through the shelves. The full investigation can be seen | :07:03. | :07:04. | |
in most English regions tonight on Inside Out at 7:30pm on BBC One, | :07:05. | :07:07. | |
and on the BBC iPlayer. Let us know what you think about | :07:08. | :07:15. | |
that story as well via the usual channels. | :07:16. | :07:15. | |
Tens of thousands of people in Northern California have been | :07:16. | :07:18. | |
told to evacuate their homes after the tallest dam in America | :07:19. | :07:21. | |
Officials say the emergency spillway of the Oroville Dam | :07:22. | :07:29. | |
experienced such an emergency in its near 50 year history. | :07:30. | :07:35. | |
The Oroville dam, which is about 150 miles north-east of San Francisco, | :07:36. | :07:47. | |
is the tallest in the US. Over the weekend and after weeks of | :07:48. | :07:51. | |
historically heavy rain in California, residents in the | :07:52. | :07:54. | |
surrounding towns were ordered to evacuate. The dam itself is not at | :07:55. | :07:58. | |
risk of bursting, the authorities said, but one contingency measure to | :07:59. | :08:02. | |
prevent flooding failed last week and on Sunday afternoon the | :08:03. | :08:07. | |
emergency backup plan was about to fail too. The emergency spillway, | :08:08. | :08:12. | |
which has until now never been needed, began to rapidly erode when | :08:13. | :08:16. | |
water was channelled through it, creating a 30 foot deep hole. At one | :08:17. | :08:20. | |
point residents were told the spillway could fail within an hour, | :08:21. | :08:24. | |
provoking thousands to take to their cars and head away from affected | :08:25. | :08:29. | |
areas. On Sunday evening authorities said the pace of the erosion had | :08:30. | :08:33. | |
slowed and its plan to plug the hole by dropping in large rocks appeared | :08:34. | :08:37. | |
to be working for the time being. More rain is expected this week. | :08:38. | :08:39. | |
Dave Lee, BBC News. We will keep you up to date on that | :08:40. | :08:42. | |
through the morning. A BBC investigation has found | :08:43. | :08:45. | |
evidence of major security failings at a privately-run prison | :08:46. | :08:48. | |
in the north-east of England. A reporter from the Panorama | :08:49. | :08:50. | |
programme filmed undercover at the jail in Morpeth while working | :08:51. | :08:53. | |
as a prison officer; he discovered that alarms on two doors didn't | :08:54. | :08:56. | |
work, searches weren't conducted properly and there was | :08:57. | :08:59. | |
a hole in a fence. And after 7am we'll | :09:00. | :09:01. | |
get reaction to this from the Prison | :09:02. | :09:04. | |
Officers Association. Firefighters in Australia | :09:05. | :09:07. | |
are still battling around eighty Many properties have been destroyed | :09:08. | :09:13. | |
but so far there are no However, forecasters are warning | :09:14. | :09:19. | |
conditions could become dangerous The United States, Japan | :09:20. | :09:22. | |
and South Korea have requested an urgent meeting of | :09:23. | :09:31. | |
the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's | :09:32. | :09:34. | |
latest missile test. Yesterday it was confirmed | :09:35. | :09:35. | |
a ballistic missile was fired. The state is already subject | :09:36. | :09:38. | |
to a range of sanctions over its missile and | :09:39. | :09:41. | |
nuclear bomb tests. Analysts believe the country | :09:42. | :09:42. | |
is still years away from developing A bit of a shock there we're all a. | :09:43. | :09:45. | |
-- we're all OK. The number of people having cosmetic | :09:46. | :10:01. | |
surgery in the UK has fallen to its lowest level | :10:02. | :10:04. | |
in almost a decade. The British Association | :10:05. | :10:06. | |
of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons says there was a drop of nearly 40% | :10:07. | :10:08. | |
in the number of procedures carried out last year after a record | :10:09. | :10:12. | |
high the year before. The number of people undergoing | :10:13. | :10:22. | |
cosmetic surgery has been on a general upward trend for many years | :10:23. | :10:26. | |
and 2015 was a record year but figures for 2016 show a sharp | :10:27. | :10:30. | |
downturn. There were over 28,000 operations on women last year, | :10:31. | :10:35. | |
that's a drop of 39%. Men have always been less likely to go under | :10:36. | :10:40. | |
the knife. They had just over 2400 operations last year, that's an even | :10:41. | :10:46. | |
greater fall of 47.8%. The Association of aesthetic plastic | :10:47. | :10:49. | |
surgeons blames the fall on a climate of global unrest. It says | :10:50. | :10:53. | |
people may be opting for less expensive procedures which don't | :10:54. | :10:58. | |
involve surgery, like Botox, cheek fillers or brow threadless. On the | :10:59. | :11:02. | |
whole the association says the downturn in figures can be seen as a | :11:03. | :11:06. | |
good thing because it shows the public regards cosmetic surgery as a | :11:07. | :11:11. | |
serious commitment, not a quick fix. Andy Moore, BBC News. | :11:12. | :11:15. | |
It was a big awards night, the Grammys and the Baftas! Let's start | :11:16. | :11:20. | |
with the Baftas. La La Land has dominated the Baftas, | :11:21. | :11:22. | |
scooping five awards, including Best Film | :11:23. | :11:27. | |
and Best Actress for Emma Stone. There were also awards for Lion, | :11:28. | :11:34. | |
including Best Supporting Actor for Dev Patel, | :11:35. | :11:36. | |
and Ken Loach's I, Daniel Blake, which was named outstanding British | :11:37. | :11:39. | |
film at the London ceremony. Thank you to the academy for | :11:40. | :11:45. | |
endorsing the truth of what the film says, which hundreds of thousands of | :11:46. | :11:49. | |
people in this country know, and that is the most vulnerable and the | :11:50. | :11:54. | |
poorest people are treated by this government with a callous brutality | :11:55. | :11:55. | |
that is disgraceful. It was a successful night for Adele | :11:56. | :12:00. | |
at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, she went home with all five awards | :12:01. | :12:03. | |
she was nominated for including It didn't all go well | :12:04. | :12:07. | |
for the singer though, she apologised for swearing | :12:08. | :12:11. | |
after she restarted her tribute She stopped mid-way through her | :12:12. | :12:13. | |
rendition of Fast Love, before telling the audience, | :12:14. | :12:22. | |
"I can't mess this up for him." I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I | :12:23. | :12:34. | |
need to start again, I can't do it again like last year. I'm sorry for | :12:35. | :12:39. | |
swearing and I'm sorry for starting again. Can we please start again? | :12:40. | :12:41. | |
There aren't many people that do it, you bus away and everyone says | :12:42. | :12:48. | |
you're terribly out of tune, she knew she was out of tune. She knew | :12:49. | :12:54. | |
when to quit, she knew when to pull out. Start again. Don't you think it | :12:55. | :13:00. | |
adds to the magic of Adele? Because she's brilliant and she knows that | :13:01. | :13:04. | |
she's brilliant, she can sing beautifully, why get it wrong? Quite | :13:05. | :13:12. | |
right. I that's great. A bit like my sport. If you make any mistakes in | :13:13. | :13:16. | |
this one! The pressure, the pressure, the pressure! The pressure | :13:17. | :13:24. | |
is on that man, Claudio Ranieri. I don't want to see Leicester | :13:25. | :13:28. | |
allocated. Lots of genuine football fans after the wonderful fairytale | :13:29. | :13:32. | |
season last year, it would be the saddest end. You've still got the | :13:33. | :13:36. | |
memories, we'll never forget what happened to Leicester that season. | :13:37. | :13:40. | |
Claudio Ranieri admits he may have been too loyal | :13:41. | :13:43. | |
The Premier League champions are facing a relegation | :13:44. | :13:46. | |
battle this morning following their 2-0 defeat | :13:47. | :13:48. | |
They remain one point above the relegation zone | :13:49. | :13:51. | |
and are without a league goal this year | :13:52. | :13:53. | |
Chelsea meanwhile are ten points clear at the top despite being held | :13:54. | :13:57. | |
Robbie Brady with the spectacular equaliser. | :13:58. | :14:00. | |
Rangers are through to the last eight of the Scottish Cup. | :14:01. | :14:03. | |
They came from behind to beat Greenock Morton 2-1 | :14:04. | :14:05. | |
since Mark Warburton's departure last week. | :14:06. | :14:11. | |
And in the 6 Nations there was heartbreak for Scotland | :14:12. | :14:14. | |
but were eventually beaten by France. | :14:15. | :14:22. | |
Quite cruelly at this point I know what's coming next. Its carol with | :14:23. | :14:31. | |
the weather. She was probably watching Scotland. I'm sure she had | :14:32. | :14:35. | |
her eye on it, I was going to try not to mention it but now you have! | :14:36. | :14:41. | |
Good morning, I think they did really well, which is more than you | :14:42. | :14:47. | |
can say for the weather, ding dong! It has been called, some of us have | :14:48. | :14:51. | |
seen some snow, and you will find out that it will slowly turn that | :14:52. | :14:55. | |
bit milder, back into double figures. You certainly wouldn't say | :14:56. | :14:59. | |
that about this morning's weather because it is called to start with | :15:00. | :15:06. | |
three degrees in Coventry, Aberdeen and Hull, four degrees, and into | :15:07. | :15:09. | |
Cardiff and Southampton, between four and eight, but because it is | :15:10. | :15:14. | |
windy, it is cold coming from the east, it will feel even colder than | :15:15. | :15:18. | |
it suggests. This morning, cloud around, it is broken up by the wind, | :15:19. | :15:23. | |
although we hang onto across eastern areas. The wind will be a feature in | :15:24. | :15:29. | |
the west and south-west, blowing a gale, possibly even gusting to | :15:30. | :15:32. | |
severe gale force. Through the course of the afternoon it's going | :15:33. | :15:37. | |
to be bright across western Scotland with some sunshine. For the rest of | :15:38. | :15:41. | |
Scotland fairly cloudy and damp. For Northern Ireland it is the east that | :15:42. | :15:45. | |
is brightest and the west has more cloud. It is the opposite for | :15:46. | :15:48. | |
northern England. North-west England has sunshine but down the east coast | :15:49. | :15:53. | |
to the wash and East Anglia there is more cloud and dampness around as | :15:54. | :15:57. | |
well. The cloud will break up and it will be a lovely sunny day but it | :15:58. | :16:01. | |
will be cold despite the fact that some of us will see temperatures in | :16:02. | :16:05. | |
double figures because of the wind. As I mentioned blowing a gale in | :16:06. | :16:09. | |
some parts with gusts of 60 or 70 mph in the hills under exposure of | :16:10. | :16:16. | |
Wales. The south-western approaches, it will be very windy. Watch out for | :16:17. | :16:20. | |
branches on roads. You might find some road closures. That kind of | :16:21. | :16:25. | |
thing. And of course a ferry crossings as well. Through the | :16:26. | :16:31. | |
evening and overnight the wind veers from an easterly to south-easterly | :16:32. | :16:34. | |
and we have a weather front coming from the Atlantic pushing to the | :16:35. | :16:37. | |
south-west introducing rain into Cornwall at the end of the night. | :16:38. | :16:41. | |
There will be a lot of cloud and hill fog around. Possibly we might | :16:42. | :16:46. | |
see some frost in some pockets, for example across eastern England under | :16:47. | :16:50. | |
the clear skies and that means we will have clear skies first thing in | :16:51. | :16:55. | |
the morning with some sunshine. More sunshine in other areas than we are | :16:56. | :16:58. | |
looking at today. As our weather front pushes slowly northwards it | :16:59. | :17:04. | |
will introduce cloud around it and patchy rain for Northern Ireland, | :17:05. | :17:09. | |
Wales and southern counties. You can see the temperatures in the south | :17:10. | :17:13. | |
slowly starting to come up. Sunshine in Glasgow and a high of seven. And | :17:14. | :17:18. | |
then for Tuesday night into Wednesday, the fund continues to | :17:19. | :17:21. | |
drift north eastwards, taking cloud and patchy rain with it. And then | :17:22. | :17:26. | |
later on we have another one coming in across the south-west. The impact | :17:27. | :17:30. | |
on the temperatures you will notice because on Wednesday and Thursday we | :17:31. | :17:33. | |
are back into double figures although there will be one or two | :17:34. | :17:39. | |
showers around. You are so smiley on Monday, thank you. And thank you for | :17:40. | :17:44. | |
the weather. We will do that papers in the moment. | :17:45. | :17:45. | |
You're watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :17:46. | :17:47. | |
The main stories this morning: A study's found that for the first | :17:48. | :17:50. | |
time, pensioners are, on average, better off than working age people. | :17:51. | :17:58. | |
More than 100,000 people living below America's tallest dam have | :17:59. | :18:04. | |
been ordered to evacuate their homes over fears it could be about to | :18:05. | :18:12. | |
collapse. And Ben and Sally have joined us on the sofa. Hello. That | :18:13. | :18:22. | |
was a lovely bit of sofa. We like this sofa. My apology is to do with | :18:23. | :18:28. | |
the fact that I have had peanut butter on toast early this morning | :18:29. | :18:32. | |
and I got it all over the papers, including the fun of the Guardian, | :18:33. | :18:36. | |
and there is the offending peanut butter right on the beach of Emma | :18:37. | :18:40. | |
Stone. Lots of pictures from the batters and the Grammys on the front | :18:41. | :18:46. | |
pages. Whistleblowers face for frontal onslaught with organisations | :18:47. | :18:51. | |
affected by a change in the law -- Baftas. That is the main story on | :18:52. | :18:57. | |
the front of the Gordian. The Mail talking about blunders costing | :18:58. | :19:03. | |
taxpayers fight when ?5 billion and they say ?80 a second was wasted on | :19:04. | :19:13. | |
failed projects -- fight -- 5.5 billion pounds. And the Daily Mail | :19:14. | :19:20. | |
is BAFTAing as well. And talking about the Shannon Matthews plot. My | :19:21. | :19:26. | |
pal wasn't a kidnapped mastermind, says a friend, on the front of the | :19:27. | :19:31. | |
Mirror. The prison minister will be talking later about prisons. Forget | :19:32. | :19:37. | |
Jail numbers, criminals will do time. She is talking about we get | :19:38. | :19:44. | |
offenders not being released. And the Baftas again with the Duke and | :19:45. | :19:52. | |
Duchess. Apparently they went straight in. And I think that Ben | :19:53. | :19:57. | |
was moaning about it. You didn't really see very much. They got out | :19:58. | :20:02. | |
of a car that was like a normal car and then they went to the red carpet | :20:03. | :20:06. | |
without any chitchat. Most of the TV cameras saw them from behind out of | :20:07. | :20:11. | |
focus. You wanted a little bit more pomp? I sort of expected a little | :20:12. | :20:16. | |
ceremony. The fun of the Times, Emma Stone, and the high street result | :20:17. | :20:21. | |
over the rent rise, and the Express, theory at bid to wreck the EU | :20:22. | :20:26. | |
Brexit. There is a big chill or a big thaw somewhere on the Express. | :20:27. | :20:32. | |
LAUGHTER one of the two. And the front of the Telegraph sport section | :20:33. | :20:38. | |
have a great picture. Yes, exactly, the picture says everything. His | :20:39. | :20:45. | |
head in his hands. And we talked about how Leicester's season going | :20:46. | :20:50. | |
the wrong way. I don't want to dwell on it. I want to mention inside, | :20:51. | :20:58. | |
come on. Here we go. Talking about Scotland, didn't we, but England's | :20:59. | :21:05. | |
win. What a match. It is all down to their training, apparently. In the | :21:06. | :21:08. | |
last minutes they were apparently less tired, all down to a man | :21:09. | :21:13. | |
brought in to revolutionise the way that England train. Eddie Jones | :21:14. | :21:18. | |
calls it tactical period I is a shame. Every day we train moments of | :21:19. | :21:26. | |
the game -- periodisation. The next day they train it all 60% faster. | :21:27. | :21:31. | |
Like in superhigh speed. They don't do any other training. So when they | :21:32. | :21:36. | |
play the game it is quite relaxed. The other thing he has introduced is | :21:37. | :21:40. | |
when you go to the floor you can only stay down for two seconds and | :21:41. | :21:44. | |
you have to get up. OK. Can I show you this, because I know what you | :21:45. | :21:49. | |
have for breakfast, it is all over the papers, the peanut butter, but | :21:50. | :21:52. | |
apparently we are creatures of habit and many high streets it says are | :21:53. | :21:59. | |
awash with sushi and tacos but apparently one in six of us eat the | :22:00. | :22:03. | |
same thing every day for lunch. It is asking the question, ham butty | :22:04. | :22:09. | |
per day? What is your lunch of toys? I don't really have lunch. Scrambled | :22:10. | :22:18. | |
it. -- choice. Lunch? I have to get up at 3:30am. Ham sandwich, number | :22:19. | :22:25. | |
one, cheese sandwich number two, no mention of ham and cheese and which. | :22:26. | :22:31. | |
We are at number six. Can we talk about this one, I want to stand up | :22:32. | :22:35. | |
for labradors, apparently they have long time been... The top dog. In | :22:36. | :22:41. | |
terms of breeds in the UK. Not any more. They might have a new best | :22:42. | :22:48. | |
friend, French Bulldogs, on course to take the favourite breed in | :22:49. | :22:51. | |
Britain because celebrities go around cuddling... Look, Lady Gaga | :22:52. | :22:57. | |
with her French Bulldogs. Despite Brexit! I am going to have a | :22:58. | :23:03. | |
revolution. I am going to put pictures of my labrador over | :23:04. | :23:06. | |
everything. What colour is your labrador? Golden. OK. What colour is | :23:07. | :23:15. | |
yours? I don't have one. Apparently black labradors are the most | :23:16. | :23:19. | |
intelligent. And then the brown ones and then the golden ones. Really? | :23:20. | :23:24. | |
Not saying anything. Why would you mention that? Louise and her dumb | :23:25. | :23:33. | |
dog. A military dog trainer told me to get a black one. You have ruined | :23:34. | :23:38. | |
it. I am glad you have cleared it up. I think she is clever. Thank you | :23:39. | :23:40. | |
very much. Widespread drug use, | :23:41. | :23:41. | |
door alarms that didn't work and a hole in a perimeter fence - | :23:42. | :23:44. | |
just some of the discoveries made by an undercover reporter | :23:45. | :23:47. | |
at a privately-run prison The BBC's Panorama programme | :23:48. | :23:50. | |
discovered evidence of major security failings during secret | :23:51. | :23:53. | |
filming at HMP Northumberland which holds more than 1,000 men | :23:54. | :23:55. | |
and is run by the firm Sodexo. Undercover in one of our biggest | :23:56. | :24:11. | |
jails. For two months BBC Panoram filmed at the drugs feeding | :24:12. | :24:14. | |
addiction inside. And staff pushed to their limits. HMP Northumberland | :24:15. | :24:23. | |
is a private jail run by the French company Sodexo and home to more than | :24:24. | :24:31. | |
1300 inmates. On the undercover reporter's first day inside to .5 | :24:32. | :24:37. | |
kilograms of Spice, and a legal high with a present value of a quarter of | :24:38. | :24:41. | |
?1 million was found in two cells. Despite this Panoram was told there | :24:42. | :24:45. | |
was no lockdown, so the block would be completely searched. We have | :24:46. | :24:54. | |
drugs. They will search everywhere. You know what I mean? The BBC | :24:55. | :25:03. | |
secretly filmed inmates high on drugs. This man had taken Spice. And | :25:04. | :25:13. | |
then there is the violence. You have blood all over your nice carpet. | :25:14. | :25:18. | |
CCTV cameras recorded an inmate being stamped on. It has happened | :25:19. | :25:28. | |
and I can't react to it because there is not the backup. I don't | :25:29. | :25:33. | |
ever feel safe. At one point Panoram's undercover reporter was | :25:34. | :25:36. | |
threatened by an inmate. Move away from me. I will use it on you. I | :25:37. | :25:42. | |
would prefer you doing. Can you move away? I will step over here. During | :25:43. | :25:50. | |
filming the BBC discovered a serious security breach - alarms on two | :25:51. | :25:55. | |
doors were not working. Two of them work, two of them don't. Nearby, | :25:56. | :26:00. | |
officers found wire cutting tools and later a halt in an inner | :26:01. | :26:07. | |
security fence. -- a hole. It meant drugs could have been passed into | :26:08. | :26:11. | |
the jail. The reporter asked the governor what went wrong? | :26:12. | :26:28. | |
Sodexo, the company that runs the prison, said the safety of staff and | :26:29. | :26:35. | |
inmates is their top priority. The Ministry of Justice said it would | :26:36. | :26:40. | |
urgently investigate the BBC's footage and that the government is | :26:41. | :26:42. | |
determined to reform our prisons. We will be discussing that a little | :26:43. | :26:46. | |
bit later. Panorama Behind Bars: | :26:47. | :26:49. | |
Prison Undercover is on BBC One Time now to get the news, | :26:50. | :26:51. | |
travel and weather where you are. Hello, this is Breakfast | :26:52. | :30:19. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. We'll have the latest news | :30:20. | :30:31. | |
and sport in just a moment. We'll find out why legislation | :30:32. | :30:34. | |
targeting illegal migrants is making it difficult for Britons | :30:35. | :30:41. | |
and those with a right to be Adele, | :30:42. | :30:43. | |
Beyonce and Justin Bieber were just some of the music acts battling it | :30:44. | :30:55. | |
out for best album at this year's Find out who was victorious | :30:56. | :30:59. | |
when we bring you all the gossip Former England cricket captain | :31:00. | :31:02. | |
Andrew 'Freddie' Flintoff will be here with Robbie Savage | :31:03. | :31:07. | |
and Matthew Syed to talk about what we can expect from | :31:08. | :31:10. | |
the trio's new Radio 5Live podcast. But now a summary of this | :31:11. | :31:14. | |
morning's main news: For the first time, pensioners are, | :31:15. | :31:17. | |
on average, better off than people of working age according | :31:18. | :31:21. | |
to a new study. The think tank the | :31:22. | :31:23. | |
Resolution Foundation says pensioner households are now | :31:24. | :31:24. | |
?20 a week better off than working age households because they are more | :31:25. | :31:27. | |
likely to own their home, have generous private pensions | :31:28. | :31:31. | |
and still be working. It's those who retired recently | :31:32. | :31:33. | |
who are enjoying higher incomes The rise in pensioner incomes comes | :31:34. | :31:41. | |
as working households The Resolution Foundation says | :31:42. | :31:51. | |
the typical pensioner household is now ?20 a week better off | :31:52. | :31:55. | |
than one with people of working age after housing costs | :31:56. | :31:59. | |
are taken into account. 15 years ago, the average pensioner | :32:00. | :32:01. | |
was ?70 a week worse off The change is attributed | :32:02. | :32:04. | |
to a number of factors, the proportion of pensioner | :32:05. | :32:12. | |
households in which at least one person still works has grown | :32:13. | :32:15. | |
from one in eight in 2001 to nearly Many newly retired people also have | :32:16. | :32:18. | |
generous occupational pensions and own their own homes, | :32:19. | :32:22. | |
and all have enjoyed a rise At the same time, working age | :32:23. | :32:25. | |
households have experienced But the report also | :32:26. | :32:32. | |
reveals a sharp divide. The poorest fifth of pensioner | :32:33. | :32:36. | |
households rely solely And it says future generations | :32:37. | :32:38. | |
will be less likely to own their own homes or enjoy such generous | :32:39. | :32:44. | |
workplace pensions. Britain's biggest supermarket has | :32:45. | :32:46. | |
pledged to take immediate action after a BBC investigation revealed | :32:47. | :33:03. | |
two thirds of deals on the shelves were out of date, and didn't | :33:04. | :33:06. | |
work at the checkout. Over three months a team from BBC | :33:07. | :33:09. | |
Inside Out visited 50 branches across England | :33:10. | :33:12. | |
and found multi-buy deals still being advertised days, | :33:13. | :33:14. | |
weeks and in some cases months after the deductions were no | :33:15. | :33:17. | |
longer valid at the till. The supermarket says | :33:18. | :33:19. | |
it's working to make More than 130,000 people | :33:20. | :33:21. | |
in Northern California have been told to evacuate their homes | :33:22. | :33:31. | |
after the tallest dam in America Officials say part of | :33:32. | :33:34. | |
the Oroville Dam could collapse at any moment and it is the first | :33:35. | :33:38. | |
time the lake has experienced such an emergency in its | :33:39. | :33:42. | |
near 50-year history. We will keep you up with what's | :33:43. | :33:44. | |
going on there through the morning. A BBC investigation has found | :33:45. | :33:48. | |
evidence of major security failings at a privately-run prison | :33:49. | :33:50. | |
in the north-east of England. A reporter from the Panorama | :33:51. | :33:53. | |
programme filmed undercover at the jail in Morpeth | :33:54. | :33:55. | |
while working as a prison officer; he discovered that alarms | :33:56. | :33:58. | |
on two doors didn't work, searches weren't conducted properly | :33:59. | :34:00. | |
and there was a hole in a fence. And after 7am we'll | :34:01. | :34:09. | |
get reaction to this from The Prison | :34:10. | :34:11. | |
Officers Association. Firefighters in Australia | :34:12. | :34:12. | |
are still battling around eighty Many properties have been destroyed | :34:13. | :34:14. | |
but so far there are no However, forecasters are warning | :34:15. | :34:19. | |
conditions could become dangerous The United States, Japan | :34:20. | :34:22. | |
and South Korea have requested an urgent meeting of | :34:23. | :34:29. | |
the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's | :34:30. | :34:32. | |
latest missile test. Yesterday it was confirmed | :34:33. | :34:34. | |
a ballistic missile was fired. The state is already subject | :34:35. | :34:36. | |
to a range of sanctions over its missile and | :34:37. | :34:39. | |
nuclear bomb tests. Analysts believe the country | :34:40. | :34:45. | |
is still years away from developing La La Land dominated last | :34:46. | :34:48. | |
night's BAFTA film awards, scooping five trophies, | :34:49. | :34:59. | |
including Best Film and Best Actress There were also awards for Lion, | :35:00. | :35:02. | |
including Best Supporting Actor for Dev Patel, | :35:03. | :35:09. | |
and Ken Loach's I, Daniel Blake, which was named Outstanding British | :35:10. | :35:14. | |
Film at the London ceremony. And it wasn't just the Grammys last | :35:15. | :35:24. | |
night, we'll have a full report from the Baftas in | :35:25. | :35:28. | |
about 20 minutes time. It was a successful night for Adele | :35:29. | :35:32. | |
at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, she went home with all five awards | :35:33. | :35:36. | |
she was nominated for including It didn't all go well | :35:37. | :35:39. | |
for the singer, though. She apologised for swearing | :35:40. | :35:43. | |
after she restarted her tribute She stopped mid-way through her | :35:44. | :35:46. | |
rendition of Fast Love, before telling the audience, | :35:47. | :35:49. | |
"I can't mess this up for him." I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, | :35:50. | :35:56. | |
I need to start again, I'm sorry for swearing and I'm | :35:57. | :36:00. | |
sorry for starting again. She rarely makes a mistake... . I | :36:01. | :36:17. | |
know that feeling, you think you could start a sentence again, start | :36:18. | :36:20. | |
the news again. She gets away with it. Totally. It is cringeworthy but | :36:21. | :36:27. | |
she drags it back. I think Claudio Ranieri would like to start the | :36:28. | :36:31. | |
season again," I've got it wrong, I can't do this to Leicester, let's | :36:32. | :36:36. | |
start again". A tricky time, it would be so sad to see them | :36:37. | :36:40. | |
relegated. Not the end to the fairy we expected. | :36:41. | :36:41. | |
Claudio Ranieri admits he may need to change things at Leicester. | :36:42. | :36:44. | |
The Premier League champions are facing a relegation battle this | :36:45. | :36:47. | |
morning following their 2-0 defeat at fellow strugglers Swansea. | :36:48. | :36:49. | |
Alfie Mawson's volley gave the home side the lead. | :36:50. | :36:52. | |
Then just before half-time, Martin Olsson | :36:53. | :36:53. | |
The win moves them up to 15th but it's a fifth defeat in a row | :36:54. | :36:58. | |
for Leicester, and after the match Ranieri was asked if he's been too | :36:59. | :37:02. | |
Could be. Could be. Of course it's difficult, no? When you achieve | :37:03. | :37:15. | |
something so good you want to give them one chance, to chance, three | :37:16. | :37:17. | |
chance, maybe now it's too much. Chelsea are now ten points clear | :37:18. | :37:18. | |
at the top of the Premier League but they could only | :37:19. | :37:22. | |
manage a draw at Burnley. It took just seven minutes | :37:23. | :37:25. | |
for them to take the lead. But a brilliant freekick | :37:26. | :37:28. | |
from Burnley's new signing Robbie Brady levelled | :37:29. | :37:31. | |
the game at 1-1. On reflection is it one point gain | :37:32. | :37:42. | |
or two points lost today? I don't know. I don't know, it felt | :37:43. | :37:46. | |
important for me. We have one more point in the table. This is the most | :37:47. | :37:56. | |
important thing for them. Of for you, one point is losing two points. | :37:57. | :37:58. | |
In the future you can see this. Rangers are into the last | :37:59. | :38:00. | |
eight of the Scottish Cup after coming from behind to beat | :38:01. | :38:03. | |
Greenock Morton 2-1. in what was their first match | :38:04. | :38:05. | |
following the departure of manager Scottish Cup holders, | :38:06. | :38:10. | |
Hibernian will face a fifth a goalless draw by Edinburgh rivals | :38:11. | :38:14. | |
Hearts. The best chance fell | :38:15. | :38:18. | |
to Bjorn Johnsen, but that was saved by | :38:19. | :38:19. | |
Hearts keeper Marciano. In the 6 Nations, Scotland | :38:20. | :38:22. | |
were narrowly beaten It's their 10th successive defeat | :38:23. | :38:24. | |
in the French capital. Scotland twice took the lead | :38:25. | :38:28. | |
through tries from Stuart Hogg But five penalties from | :38:29. | :38:31. | |
Camille Lopez did the damage. The French eventually | :38:32. | :38:39. | |
hung on to win 22-16. It was a physical encounter and | :38:40. | :38:55. | |
quite a few times we came off second best. But I thought the boys stuck | :38:56. | :38:58. | |
in really well defensively and defended our line well and scored a | :38:59. | :39:03. | |
couple of tries, but at critical times perhaps we weren't accurate | :39:04. | :39:08. | |
enough and will have a good look at that before moving to the next game. | :39:09. | :39:10. | |
Ireland lead the way after they beat Italy. | :39:11. | :39:13. | |
In the second half Ireland dominated, | :39:14. | :39:15. | |
This effort, right at the end of the game, the best of the bunch | :39:16. | :39:21. | |
by Hannah Tyrell to give them a 27-3 victory. | :39:22. | :39:23. | |
This score also ensuring their bonus point. | :39:24. | :39:25. | |
Barry Hawkins won snooker's World Grand Prix, he beat Ryan Day | :39:26. | :39:32. | |
Hawkins made five century breaks in the final and survived a late | :39:33. | :39:36. | |
It's the third ranking title for the world number 12 | :39:37. | :39:40. | |
and he picked up prize money of ?100,000. | :39:41. | :39:44. | |
Quite pleased about that. Before I go, a little story from the papers, | :39:45. | :39:53. | |
spoiler alert, fans of The Jump, it's been spoiled by the man himself | :39:54. | :39:57. | |
so we asked set to share it, Bradley Wiggins is out of The Jump. Another | :39:58. | :40:04. | |
break? Another break. Here it is, a small fracture in his make, not a | :40:05. | :40:09. | |
massive break, nothing dramatic, he needs to rest for three to six | :40:10. | :40:14. | |
weeks, no surgery, small training injury means he can't compete, no | :40:15. | :40:20. | |
cast, just rest, so disappointing. He was so determined to win that. | :40:21. | :40:24. | |
And one of the characters. He will be in the show for another couple of | :40:25. | :40:29. | |
weeks but not doing anything more. The list of injuries in that | :40:30. | :40:33. | |
programme. Terrifying! Thanks very much. | :40:34. | :40:35. | |
We've all stood in the supermarket aisle, tempted by special offers, | :40:36. | :40:38. | |
buy one, get one free or three for the price of two. | :40:39. | :40:42. | |
You know the stickers, you've seen them all. | :40:43. | :40:44. | |
But how often have you checked your receipt to see if a deal | :40:45. | :40:47. | |
A BBC investigation has discovered shoppers at some Tesco | :40:48. | :40:51. | |
branches in England have been left out of pocket by old promotions that | :40:52. | :40:55. | |
Consumer expert Sally Francis joins us now. | :40:56. | :41:02. | |
Sally, what seems to happen is in some of these stores, and they are | :41:03. | :41:08. | |
dealing with it, you take something off the shelf but when you get to | :41:09. | :41:13. | |
the till the bargain you had or think you have doesn't appear on the | :41:14. | :41:18. | |
Ra seat? Know. These stores aren't going to tell you that, they will | :41:19. | :41:22. | |
charge you the price, it's generally automated systems. If you don't | :41:23. | :41:25. | |
check your receipt you could walk out of stall without knowing what | :41:26. | :41:29. | |
you've paid but the point is your contract with the retailer doesn't | :41:30. | :41:32. | |
happen until you've handed over the money to the shop assistant. That's | :41:33. | :41:36. | |
when your contract becomes binding so to speak. They've given New | :41:37. | :41:40. | |
Yorkers, you've given them the money, you have a contract in place | :41:41. | :41:45. | |
then -- they've given New Yorkers. Is the onus on the customer, on us? | :41:46. | :41:55. | |
-- they've given you your goods. How much responsibility should Tesco be | :41:56. | :42:00. | |
taking for this? Tesco should take responsibility, you should go to a | :42:01. | :42:04. | |
shelf and see the price of the item you want and paying back at the | :42:05. | :42:09. | |
till. It is the ultimate responsibility falling on Tesco but | :42:10. | :42:13. | |
if it gets missed, taking a scan of your receipt as you walk out of the | :42:14. | :42:17. | |
shop after paying, if it's not quite right then take a look at it, go to | :42:18. | :42:22. | |
customer services and see what they can do. Presumably, though, you've | :42:23. | :42:26. | |
got to remember as you go to the till what prices were being promised | :42:27. | :42:32. | |
at the beginning. Which is why the ultimate responsibility should be | :42:33. | :42:35. | |
Tesco and they should be looking at this. This was potentially in a | :42:36. | :42:39. | |
number of their stores so they should address the policy in those | :42:40. | :42:43. | |
individuals stores so consumers don't lose out. Listening to this | :42:44. | :42:48. | |
this morning, I know Tesco has reacted and said they will sort it | :42:49. | :42:52. | |
out. But millions of customers could well have been overcharged for | :42:53. | :42:55. | |
things that they should have paid less for when they walked out of the | :42:56. | :43:00. | |
shop. Do you ever check your receipt ? Sometimes but I wouldn't remember | :43:01. | :43:06. | |
the bargains. Sometimes they are lower-priced items and there's lots | :43:07. | :43:10. | |
of them at once, if you bought some clothes, you picked up a jumper, you | :43:11. | :43:14. | |
thought it was ?40 and it goes through as ?50, you will notice | :43:15. | :43:18. | |
straightaway because it's one bigger priced item. But if it's lots of | :43:19. | :43:23. | |
smaller priced items you won't necessarily notice. Tesco should be | :43:24. | :43:26. | |
doing something about this but if you can and you notice something | :43:27. | :43:31. | |
isn't what you think you should pay for, go back and address the issue. | :43:32. | :43:36. | |
Tesco have said they take great care to achieve accurate price staples | :43:37. | :43:41. | |
for our customers so they can make informed decisions, we're | :43:42. | :43:44. | |
disappointed errors occurred and we will be working with the stores to | :43:45. | :43:48. | |
reinforce our responsibilities to customers. Is it a case of old | :43:49. | :43:54. | |
technology, labels, and the new technology, sophisticated tales, | :43:55. | :43:58. | |
don't work together yet? I think so and also prices are put on the | :43:59. | :44:02. | |
shelves by people so human error comes into play. That is something | :44:03. | :44:06. | |
Tesco needs to look at at the store getting it wrong consistently. If | :44:07. | :44:10. | |
you go into a store and noticed the price is wrong then report it, then | :44:11. | :44:16. | |
it still still shows up wrong a day or a couple of weeks later, that's | :44:17. | :44:21. | |
the issue. Discounting is a massive part of the major supermarket | :44:22. | :44:26. | |
chains, every end of an aisle, wherever you go, some food is | :44:27. | :44:30. | |
discounted through the year, so it's a big part of how supermarkets work. | :44:31. | :44:34. | |
And it's how people make decisions about what they buy, if they're | :44:35. | :44:38. | |
buying something based on an offer that then doesn't apply and they're | :44:39. | :44:41. | |
not noticing that, they're paying more than they should, which is a | :44:42. | :44:46. | |
problem. Sally, thank you very much. We will be looking very closely at | :44:47. | :44:48. | |
our receipts! The full investigation can be seen | :44:49. | :44:52. | |
in most English regions tonight on Inside Out at 7:30pm on BBC One, | :44:53. | :44:55. | |
and then on the BBC iPlayer. of dry weather around but there is | :44:56. | :44:58. | |
still rather a lot of cloud. OK, shall we have some snow? If | :44:59. | :45:05. | |
there is some. Where is that, Carol? Oh, I knew you were going to ask me. | :45:06. | :45:11. | |
It is from the Highlands. No one has sent a speech is just yet but when | :45:12. | :45:16. | |
they do I will put them out. Some of us have seen scenes like this | :45:17. | :45:19. | |
through the weekend but today it is going to start to get a bit warmer, | :45:20. | :45:23. | |
though you won't feel it today, tomorrow into the next day you will | :45:24. | :45:26. | |
notice mild conditions coming back. You won't feel it today because we | :45:27. | :45:31. | |
have a strong wind. Current temperatures are three in Coventry, | :45:32. | :45:35. | |
Aberdeen and Hull at four degrees at the moment, and Cardiff also at four | :45:36. | :45:39. | |
degrees, Southampton and Plymouth at six or eight, which doesn't look bad | :45:40. | :45:43. | |
but you factor in the wind and if you are stepping out wrap up warmly | :45:44. | :45:47. | |
because it is bitter. Through the morning we hang onto some sunshine, | :45:48. | :45:52. | |
cloud in southern counties, in through Wales, and quite a bit of | :45:53. | :45:56. | |
cloud for eastern Scotland and England. For Northern Ireland you | :45:57. | :45:59. | |
are also looking at some sunshine and you're probably noticing the | :46:00. | :46:02. | |
word gales on the chart. I will come back to that in a second. This | :46:03. | :46:05. | |
afternoon for western Scotland you hang on to the sunshine but for | :46:06. | :46:09. | |
central and eastern areas you hang on to the cloud. It will be quite | :46:10. | :46:14. | |
damp at times. A beautiful afternoon but a cold one in Northern Ireland | :46:15. | :46:17. | |
and through the Pennines into eastern England a lot of cloud | :46:18. | :46:20. | |
around. In the Pennines we have strong wind and snow, so some nasty | :46:21. | :46:26. | |
travelling conditions. And for southern England and Wales we are | :46:27. | :46:30. | |
back into the sunshine. Despite the fact we have double-digit | :46:31. | :46:33. | |
temperatures it will feel cold when you add on the wind. The strongest | :46:34. | :46:37. | |
winds will be in the west and the south-west but particularly so | :46:38. | :46:41. | |
across the north and the west Wales. Across the hills and with exposure | :46:42. | :46:44. | |
we could have gusts of wind at 70 mph. The western approaches, the | :46:45. | :46:49. | |
south-western approaches, not as windy but still pretty windy and | :46:50. | :46:52. | |
those wind speeds could bring down branches of trees, anything around | :46:53. | :46:57. | |
the roads, that kind of thing, and it could cause disruption on ferry | :46:58. | :47:02. | |
crossings as well. Through this evening and overnight the easterly | :47:03. | :47:05. | |
wind we have today will move to the south-easterly and then we start to | :47:06. | :47:09. | |
see a weather front coming in. And by the end of the night that will be | :47:10. | :47:13. | |
introducing some rain into Cornwall. There is also a lot of cloud around | :47:14. | :47:16. | |
and hill fog. Perhaps under clear skies in eastern England we could | :47:17. | :47:20. | |
see a touch of frost. It means under the clear skies tomorrow first thing | :47:21. | :47:25. | |
they will also be some sunshine, as there will be further north into | :47:26. | :47:28. | |
north-west England and western Scotland. Meanwhile the weather | :47:29. | :47:33. | |
front here progress is slowly north eastwards, taking in all of this | :47:34. | :47:36. | |
cloud with it and also some dampness and patchy rain. Look at those | :47:37. | :47:41. | |
temperatures. With the wind coming from the south-east, it won't feel | :47:42. | :47:45. | |
as cold. And then that weather front here the rest of Tuesday and into | :47:46. | :47:50. | |
Wednesday morning continues to move up through Scotland, into eastern | :47:51. | :47:53. | |
England as well. And then another one comes in hot on its heels | :47:54. | :47:57. | |
bringing patchy rain so that by the time you get on Wednesday and | :47:58. | :48:00. | |
Thursday we will all be feeling that little bit milder can head to how it | :48:01. | :48:04. | |
felt through the weekend and also today. -- can head to how it felt. | :48:05. | :48:09. | |
Thank you, Carol, and sorry for stitching you up. I saw that look of | :48:10. | :48:13. | |
fear on your face thinking, don't ask me where it is from. I will give | :48:14. | :48:18. | |
you a clue, it is as the name, I know where it is from, otherwise it | :48:19. | :48:23. | |
is a library picture. I will try to not make that mistake. That is very | :48:24. | :48:25. | |
good. Thank you. Legislation designed to target | :48:26. | :48:26. | |
illegal immigrants in Britain is penalising legitimate tenants | :48:27. | :48:29. | |
trying to rent a home. I do, thank you. Good morning to | :48:30. | :48:32. | |
you. This is the Right to Rent scheme, | :48:33. | :48:37. | |
introduced by the last It puts the onus on landlords | :48:38. | :48:40. | |
and letting agencies to vet the immigration status of everyone | :48:41. | :48:46. | |
wishing to rent a property. But research today shows that half | :48:47. | :48:49. | |
of landlords are reluctant to rent to any foreign national, | :48:50. | :48:52. | |
even if they're entitled to be here. Within the law they are requiring | :48:53. | :49:06. | |
everyone that rents in the UK that doesn't have a UK passport to | :49:07. | :49:09. | |
provide some documentation but the issue is that it is a UK law and in | :49:10. | :49:16. | |
European law at and have to provide anything, I just need to provide my | :49:17. | :49:20. | |
marriage certificate and my husband's passport because I am | :49:21. | :49:23. | |
married to an EU citizen. I automatically have rights in the UK. | :49:24. | :49:28. | |
The real estate agency about 48 hours before we were about to move | :49:29. | :49:32. | |
and said Hull e-mail us and there they were not going to release the | :49:33. | :49:36. | |
keys to us even though we signed a release and paid our deposits and | :49:37. | :49:39. | |
paid us the money and said they wouldn't pay us back anything | :49:40. | :49:43. | |
because I couldn't prove I was legal in the UK. It is stressful enough | :49:44. | :49:46. | |
having to move but then having someone say to you that you are not | :49:47. | :49:51. | |
legal and we are not renting to you and no Woody in the UK is going to | :49:52. | :49:55. | |
rent to you is just heartbreaking. -- nobody. That is just one example. | :49:56. | :49:58. | |
Sarah Grant is from the Joint Council for the Welfare | :49:59. | :50:00. | |
of Immigrants, who did this research. | :50:01. | :50:02. | |
Good morning. So this essentially, landlords throwing the baby out with | :50:03. | :50:09. | |
the half water. They are actually penalise in people who have a | :50:10. | :50:15. | |
legitimate right to be here. -- bathwater. That can involve people | :50:16. | :50:18. | |
without a passport who are entitled to be here. That is right and our | :50:19. | :50:23. | |
research has earned that citizens are being discriminated against if | :50:24. | :50:26. | |
they don't have a passport. So UK and be white and British, but | :50:27. | :50:32. | |
without a passport, you know, almost half of landlords are refusing you. | :50:33. | :50:36. | |
If you are a British ethnic minority the stats get worse. So what we've | :50:37. | :50:41. | |
seen is the fear we have at the start of the scheme are that it | :50:42. | :50:45. | |
would lead to discrimination against those it wasn't intended to | :50:46. | :50:48. | |
discriminate against. That is what is happening. So the onus is on who, | :50:49. | :50:53. | |
tenants to prove a right to be hit, or for landlords to make sure they | :50:54. | :50:57. | |
get it right, it is probably somewhere in between? The landlord | :50:58. | :51:01. | |
must conduct the check under the scheme and they must conduct a | :51:02. | :51:04. | |
cheque for every prospective tenant. If he doesn't do so that landlord | :51:05. | :51:09. | |
could actually be fined up to ?3000 if he rents to an irregular migrant | :51:10. | :51:15. | |
or even after December, jailed for up to five years. You can see why | :51:16. | :51:20. | |
landlords are being risk-averse. What can they do if they are so | :51:21. | :51:23. | |
worried about those penalties and the government says they want to | :51:24. | :51:27. | |
clamp down on this, what position to landlords find themselves in, it is | :51:28. | :51:32. | |
difficult for them? Absolutely, landlords are in an impossible | :51:33. | :51:36. | |
position. Landlords are not border guards, they are not immigration | :51:37. | :51:39. | |
officials. And what the scheme is doing is it is really dividing | :51:40. | :51:44. | |
people. It is causing burdens on landlords which they don't deserve | :51:45. | :51:47. | |
and discriminating against tenants in a housing market with such | :51:48. | :51:51. | |
Zordich. What has to change? The government has an amazing | :51:52. | :51:57. | |
opportunity right now to abandon this failed experiment. We don't | :51:58. | :52:01. | |
need the right to rent scheme, we don't need this division in our | :52:02. | :52:05. | |
society and post Brexit there is the chance to rethink the entire policy. | :52:06. | :52:10. | |
This is a John for the government to abandon the hostile environment and | :52:11. | :52:13. | |
create a new immigration system that does not punish British citizens and | :52:14. | :52:19. | |
is fair to those who live here. The government says the right to rent | :52:20. | :52:22. | |
scheme deters people from staying when they have no right to do so. | :52:23. | :52:28. | |
They say this is vital to protect our borders. It doesn't deter it. It | :52:29. | :52:34. | |
has not met the aims, which was to deter. According to government | :52:35. | :52:37. | |
figures only 31 people have been made to leave the country, have been | :52:38. | :52:45. | |
removed from here. 31. You know, these are their figures. The scheme | :52:46. | :52:49. | |
is not proportionate. It is not achieving stated aims and in the | :52:50. | :52:53. | |
wake of it is causing hardship and discrimination for legitimate | :52:54. | :52:57. | |
tenants in the UK. Absolutely, like the one we heard. Thank you. More | :52:58. | :53:06. | |
from me after 7am. Thank you very much. See you later. | :53:07. | :53:08. | |
The American musical, La La Land, waltzed its way to winning a string | :53:09. | :53:12. | |
of BAFTA awards in London last night, where the Duke and Duchess | :53:13. | :53:15. | |
of Cambridge stepped onto the red carpet with Holywood royalty. | :53:16. | :53:18. | |
The Ken Loach drama about the UK's welfare system I, | :53:19. | :53:23. | |
Daniel Blake was named Best British Film. | :53:24. | :53:24. | |
Our entertainment correspondent Liza Mzimba was there. | :53:25. | :53:26. | |
His report contains some flash photography. | :53:27. | :53:34. | |
On the red carpet there was acting royalty like Meryl Streep and Eddie | :53:35. | :53:41. | |
Redmayne, writing royalty like J K Rowling and actual loyalty, all to | :53:42. | :53:45. | |
see which film would be crowned the big winner. La La Land. Yes, the | :53:46. | :53:55. | |
musical set in Los Angeles 15 awards including Best Film, Best Director | :53:56. | :53:58. | |
and Best Actress for Emma Stone. Right now this country and the US | :53:59. | :54:01. | |
and the world seems to be And in a time that's so divisive, | :54:02. | :54:04. | |
I think it's really special that we were all able to come | :54:05. | :54:17. | |
together tonight thanks to BAFTA. Benefits drama, I, Daniel Blake, | :54:18. | :54:22. | |
winning Outstanding British Film, prompting another poltical | :54:23. | :54:28. | |
speech from its director, Thank you to the Academy | :54:29. | :54:30. | |
for endorsing the truth of what the film says, | :54:31. | :54:34. | |
which hundreds of thousands of people in this country know, | :54:35. | :54:37. | |
and that is that the most vulnerable and the poorest people are treated | :54:38. | :54:41. | |
by this government with a callous one of two awards for grief-filled | :54:42. | :54:44. | |
drama, Manchester by the Sea. My mother would take me to the Al | :54:45. | :55:15. | |
Anon meeting. It was therapy, but it was acting. And acting has been out | :55:16. | :55:23. | |
for me ever since. Best Supporting Actress, viol Viola Davis, four | :55:24. | :55:33. | |
Fences, and she said the real issue is Hollywood and the films it | :55:34. | :55:38. | |
decides to make. It is about the films that are being produced in | :55:39. | :55:42. | |
Hollywood, you know. Like I said, if there are no films that are being | :55:43. | :55:46. | |
produced, there is nothing to nominate. One year cannot solve a | :55:47. | :55:50. | |
problem. We will see if it is a trend and not just an exception. | :55:51. | :55:54. | |
Best Supporting Actor, British star, Dev Patel. | :55:55. | :55:57. | |
For the true life story Lion. He was clearly overwhelmed to have one. | :55:58. | :56:02. | |
Well, that just happened. What was it like when they read out | :56:03. | :56:12. | |
your name? I was completely gobsmacked. I truly wasn't expecting | :56:13. | :56:17. | |
anything. And every cell of my body is still vibrating with pure joy. | :56:18. | :56:22. | |
All of this isn't just about the glory of winning and BAFTA because | :56:23. | :56:27. | |
voting will soon be under way in the all-important Oscars. Even before | :56:28. | :56:30. | |
tonight La La Land looked likely to win best picture and this evening's | :56:31. | :56:33. | |
strong showing underlines its position as favourite to win Best | :56:34. | :56:37. | |
Film for the Oscars in Los Angeles in two weeks' time. | :56:38. | :56:43. | |
And we will also have more from the Grammys. Gas, Adele won the big | :56:44. | :56:49. | |
five. Grammys. Gas, Adele won the big | :56:50. | :00:09. | |
star John Vida walking away with the prize last year. | :00:10. | :00:10. | |
I'm back with the latest from the BBC London newsroom | :00:11. | :00:13. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :00:14. | :00:17. | |
For the first time pensioners are better off | :00:18. | :00:19. | |
a new wave of older people are more likely to work, | :00:20. | :00:25. | |
own their home and have generous private pensions. | :00:26. | :00:41. | |
Good morning, it's Monday the 13th of February. | :00:42. | :00:46. | |
Major security failings in one of Britain's biggest jails. | :00:47. | :00:55. | |
A BBC investigation exposes widspread drug use, a lack | :00:56. | :00:57. | |
Tens of thousands of residents of a town in northern California | :00:58. | :01:08. | |
have been ordered to leave their homes because of fears | :01:09. | :01:11. | |
that the tallest dam in the US could collapse. | :01:12. | :01:13. | |
Tesco under fire for out of date promotions | :01:14. | :01:15. | |
that leave shoppers out of pocket. | :01:16. | :01:17. | |
The supermarket giant says it will investigate. | :01:18. | :01:25. | |
Political discussion might have dominated some of the speeches | :01:26. | :01:33. | |
but La La Land waltzes off with five awards at the Baftas. | :01:34. | :01:36. | |
It was also a winning night for Adele at the Grammys, | :01:37. | :01:39. | |
I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I need to start again. | :01:40. | :01:50. | |
I can't do it again like last year, I'm sorry for swearing and starting | :01:51. | :01:54. | |
On sorry, I can't miss this up for him! -- I'm sorry. | :01:55. | :02:04. | |
In sport, Claudio Ranieri admits he may have been too loyal | :02:05. | :02:07. | |
The Premier League champions are facing a relegation battle this | :02:08. | :02:11. | |
morning following their 2-0 defeat at fellow strugglers Swansea. | :02:12. | :02:14. | |
Will get milder through the week but once again it will be a cold day | :02:15. | :02:20. | |
and the main feature will be the wind | :02:21. | :02:22. | |
especially in the west and south-west, touching gale force | :02:23. | :02:25. | |
But some sunshine in the forecast and I'll tell you where it is in 15 | :02:26. | :02:31. | |
minutes. Pensioners are, on average, | :02:32. | :02:33. | |
better off than people of working The think tank the | :02:34. | :02:37. | |
Resolution Foundation It says pensioner households are now | :02:38. | :02:40. | |
?20 a week better off than working age households because they are more | :02:41. | :02:45. | |
likely to own their home, have generous private pensions | :02:46. | :02:48. | |
and still be working, It's those who retired recently | :02:49. | :02:50. | |
who are enjoying higher incomes The rise in pensioner incomes comes | :02:51. | :02:58. | |
as working households The Resolution Foundation says | :02:59. | :03:05. | |
the typical pensioner household is now ?20 a week better off | :03:06. | :03:09. | |
than one with people of working age after housing costs | :03:10. | :03:13. | |
are taken into account. 15 years ago, the average pensioner | :03:14. | :03:14. | |
was ?70 a week worse off The change is attributed | :03:15. | :03:18. | |
to a number of factors, the proportion of pensioner | :03:19. | :03:25. | |
households in which at least one person still works has grown | :03:26. | :03:28. | |
from one in eight in 2001 to nearly Many newly retired people also have | :03:29. | :03:32. | |
generous occupational pensions and own their own homes, | :03:33. | :03:35. | |
and all have enjoyed a rise At the same time, working age | :03:36. | :03:38. | |
households have experienced But the report also | :03:39. | :03:47. | |
reveals a sharp divide. The poorest fifth of pensioner | :03:48. | :03:50. | |
households rely solely And it says future generations | :03:51. | :03:52. | |
will be less likely to own their own homes or enjoy such generous | :03:53. | :03:57. | |
workplace pensions. later we will be speaking to the | :03:58. | :04:15. | |
Resolution Foundation, who are behind that study. | :04:16. | :04:16. | |
Britain's biggest supermarket has pledged to take immediate action | :04:17. | :04:18. | |
following a BBC investigation revealed overcharging. | :04:19. | :04:20. | |
Over three months a team from BBC Inside Out visited 50 | :04:21. | :04:23. | |
branches across England and found multi-buy deals | :04:24. | :04:25. | |
still being advertised days, weeks and in some cases months | :04:26. | :04:27. | |
after the deductions were no longer valid at the till. | :04:28. | :04:30. | |
When we see a special offer on the supermarket shelves, | :04:31. | :04:36. | |
we expect to pay that price at the till. | :04:37. | :04:39. | |
But it's not always the case at Tesco. | :04:40. | :04:53. | |
The BBC visited 50 Tesco stores across England | :04:54. | :05:07. | |
Tesco didn't want to do an interview, but after reviewing | :05:08. | :05:19. | |
Following our investigation, Britain's biggest supermarket has | :05:20. | :05:33. | |
said it will be doublechecking the accuracy of every price | :05:34. | :05:35. | |
That's more than 3,500 stores across Britain. | :05:36. | :05:41. | |
You pick something up, you think you've got a bargain deal and it | :05:42. | :05:58. | |
doesn't materialise at the till? Exactly. If you're going to a shop | :05:59. | :06:03. | |
and you buy a jumper or a scarf, it's one thing and you can tell if | :06:04. | :06:07. | |
it's not what you thought it was, but if you go through all those | :06:08. | :06:11. | |
things, a 2-for-1 offer, you thought the second one would be freed, it | :06:12. | :06:15. | |
didn't turn out like that, and when you have paid and done it all, it's | :06:16. | :06:19. | |
only after you realise what happened. What Tesco have said is | :06:20. | :06:24. | |
they don't think it is intentional and they aren't trying to mislead | :06:25. | :06:28. | |
but the labels on the shelves aren't being updated as quickly as that | :06:29. | :06:34. | |
Hills. There's a limited time when a 2-for-1 offer is on but the labels | :06:35. | :06:38. | |
on the shelves aren't being updated -- as quickly on that Hills. People | :06:39. | :06:45. | |
have said frankly it's because they don't have enough staff. -- as | :06:46. | :06:51. | |
quickly on the tills. The computers do it automatically, the shops need | :06:52. | :06:55. | |
to be done by people and that could be the problem. Two thirds of stores | :06:56. | :06:59. | |
visited in this investigation were found guilty of doing this, Tesco | :07:00. | :07:03. | |
have said they either best thing, we're sorry and we're going to make | :07:04. | :07:05. | |
sure it doesn't happen again. The full investigation can be seen | :07:06. | :07:06. | |
in most English regions tonight on Inside Out at 7:30pm on BBC One, | :07:07. | :07:09. | |
and on the BBC iPlayer. Nearly 190,000 people | :07:10. | :07:17. | |
in Northern California have been told to evacuate their homes | :07:18. | :07:19. | |
after the tallest dam in America Officials say the emergency | :07:20. | :07:22. | |
spillway of the Oroville Dam experienced such an emergency | :07:23. | :07:26. | |
in its near 50 year history. The Oroville Dam, which is about 150 | :07:27. | :07:32. | |
miles north-east of San Francisco, Over the weekend and after weeks | :07:33. | :07:40. | |
of historically heavy rain in California, residents | :07:41. | :07:44. | |
in the surrounding towns The dam itself is not | :07:45. | :07:46. | |
at risk of bursting, the authorities said, | :07:47. | :07:51. | |
but one contingency measure to prevent flooding | :07:52. | :07:56. | |
failed last week. And on Sunday afternoon it looked | :07:57. | :08:02. | |
like the emergency backup plan The emergency spillway, | :08:03. | :08:05. | |
which has until now never been needed, began to rapidly erode | :08:06. | :08:09. | |
when water was channelled through it, creating | :08:10. | :08:11. | |
a 30 foot deep hole. At one point residents were told | :08:12. | :08:14. | |
the spillway could fail within an hour, provoking thousands | :08:15. | :08:16. | |
to take to their cars and head away On Sunday evening authorities said | :08:17. | :08:20. | |
the pace of the erosion had slowed and its plan to plug the hole | :08:21. | :08:24. | |
by dropping in large rocks appeared A BBC investigation has found | :08:25. | :08:28. | |
evidence of major security failings at a privately-run prison | :08:29. | :08:43. | |
in the north-east of England. A reporter from the Panorama | :08:44. | :08:46. | |
programme filmed undercover at the jail in Morpeth while working | :08:47. | :08:48. | |
as a prison officer; he discovered that alarms on two doors didn't | :08:49. | :08:51. | |
work, searches weren't conducted properly and there was | :08:52. | :08:54. | |
a hole in a fence. Later we'll get reaction to this | :08:55. | :09:05. | |
from the Prison Officers Firefighters in Australia | :09:06. | :09:08. | |
are still battling around 80 Many properties have been destroyed | :09:09. | :09:10. | |
but so far there are no However, forecasters are warning | :09:11. | :09:14. | |
conditions could become dangerous The United States, Japan | :09:15. | :09:18. | |
and South Korea have requested an urgent meeting of | :09:19. | :09:25. | |
the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's | :09:26. | :09:28. | |
latest missile test. Yesterday it was confirmed | :09:29. | :09:30. | |
a ballistic missile was fired. The state is already subject | :09:31. | :09:32. | |
to a range of sanctions over its missile and | :09:33. | :09:35. | |
nuclear bomb tests. Analysts believe the country | :09:36. | :09:43. | |
is still years away from developing The number of people having cosmetic | :09:44. | :09:46. | |
surgery in the UK has fallen to its lowest level | :09:47. | :09:52. | |
in almost a decade. The British Association | :09:53. | :09:54. | |
of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons says there was a drop of nearly 40% | :09:55. | :09:56. | |
in the number of procedures carried out last year, after a record | :09:57. | :10:00. | |
high the year before. It was a successful night for Adele | :10:01. | :10:22. | |
but also not so successful for Adele at the Grammys. | :10:23. | :10:26. | |
She went home with all five awards she was nominated for including | :10:27. | :10:30. | |
It didn't all go well for the singer though, | :10:31. | :10:34. | |
she apologised for swearing after she restarted her tribute | :10:35. | :10:36. | |
She stopped mid-way through her rendition of Fast Love, | :10:37. | :10:40. | |
I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I need to start again, | :10:41. | :10:43. | |
I'm sorry for swearing and I'm sorry for starting again. | :10:44. | :10:48. | |
I think she got away with it! Because when she sang it she sang it | :10:49. | :10:58. | |
perfectly. Sometimes in life you need to just start again. She's got | :10:59. | :11:05. | |
15 Grammys in total, staggering. One Sirius mantelpiece. The first artist | :11:06. | :11:09. | |
to Windsong, record an album of the year twice. -- song. -- one Sirius. | :11:10. | :11:17. | |
The album of the year award she thinks should have gone to Beyonce | :11:18. | :11:22. | |
for Lemonade, she said she didn't deserve it when she made her speech | :11:23. | :11:29. | |
-- one serious. She said she can't win this but I am going to take it | :11:30. | :11:34. | |
away and put it on the mantelpiece! Carol have the weather in just five | :11:35. | :11:38. | |
minutes time. Apparently it is set to warm up later this week. | :11:39. | :11:45. | |
Widespread drug use, door alarms that didn't work | :11:46. | :11:47. | |
and a hole in a perimeter fence, just some of the discoveries made | :11:48. | :11:51. | |
by a BBC undercover reporter at a prison | :11:52. | :11:53. | |
Panorama discovered evidence of major security failings | :11:54. | :11:56. | |
during secret filming at HMP Northumberland which holds more | :11:57. | :11:59. | |
than 1,000 men and is run by the firm Sodexo. | :12:00. | :12:01. | |
Undercover in one of our biggest jails. For two months ABC Panorama | :12:02. | :12:14. | |
filmed the drugs feeding addiction inside. And staff pushed to their | :12:15. | :12:17. | |
limits. HMP Northumberland is a private jail | :12:18. | :12:21. | |
run by the French company Sodexo On the undercover reporter's first | :12:22. | :12:24. | |
day inside, 2.5 kilograms of Spice, a legal high with a present value | :12:25. | :12:30. | |
of a quarter of a million was found Despite this, Panorama was told | :12:31. | :12:34. | |
there was no lockdown, so the block could be | :12:35. | :12:41. | |
completely searched. The BBC secretly filmed | :12:42. | :12:58. | |
inmates high on drugs. CCTV cameras recorded | :12:59. | :13:00. | |
an inmate being stamped on. At one point, Panorama's undercover | :13:01. | :13:30. | |
reporter was threatened During filming, the BBC discovered | :13:31. | :13:32. | |
a serious security breach - Nearby, officers found | :13:33. | :13:47. | |
wire cutting tools and, later, a hole in an | :13:48. | :13:56. | |
inner security fence. It meant drugs could have been | :13:57. | :14:01. | |
passed into the jail. The reporter asked | :14:02. | :14:15. | |
the governor what went wrong? Sodexo, the company that runs | :14:16. | :14:25. | |
the prison, said the safety of staff The Ministry of Justice said it | :14:26. | :14:28. | |
would urgently investigate the BBC's footage and that the government | :14:29. | :14:36. | |
is determined to reform our prisons. To discuss this we are joined | :14:37. | :14:41. | |
by Glynn Travis who is the Assistant General Secretary | :14:42. | :14:48. | |
of the Prison Officers Association. So many different kinds of problems | :14:49. | :14:59. | |
highlighted there. Do you think some of them at least are echoed in | :15:00. | :15:06. | |
prisons across England? Allowed I think the story you've seen this | :15:07. | :15:10. | |
morning is mirrored in almost every single prison across England, Wales, | :15:11. | :15:16. | |
Scotland and Northern Ireland. It's a real epidemic within our prison | :15:17. | :15:21. | |
system, a real crisis that needs to be addressed very quickly. Is it an | :15:22. | :15:25. | |
issue of overcrowding and too many prisoners, leading to all these | :15:26. | :15:29. | |
additional problems? It's more than that, it's the chronic staff | :15:30. | :15:33. | |
shortfalls, the number of staff leaving because of the violence and | :15:34. | :15:37. | |
the level of drugs freely being made available in prisons because | :15:38. | :15:40. | |
prisoners are using technology as well as the simple failings of | :15:41. | :15:43. | |
security we've seen today. Let's talk about the particular | :15:44. | :15:51. | |
issue of drugs because there seems to be a different version of drugs | :15:52. | :15:55. | |
within prisons. There is a drug called spice, what is that and is it | :15:56. | :16:00. | |
getting into all prisons? The new illegal highs as they work, they | :16:01. | :16:04. | |
used to be called legal highs, spice, black member, is a | :16:05. | :16:08. | |
psychoactive drug which has terrible effects on prisoners and staff -- | :16:09. | :16:14. | |
mamba. This drug is a new drug and is very difficult to trace it is | :16:15. | :16:18. | |
becoming the currency in all prisons. We believe it is leading to | :16:19. | :16:22. | |
the high volume of self-inflicted injuries and deaths within our | :16:23. | :16:27. | |
prisons. Let me tell you what the response of the Ministry of Justice | :16:28. | :16:32. | |
to this film was, they say they are serious allegations, that levels of | :16:33. | :16:35. | |
violence and self harm in our prisons are too high. They say they | :16:36. | :16:39. | |
will invest an extra ?100 million annually to ensure that every | :16:40. | :16:45. | |
officer will be responsible for a caseload of just six offenders, and | :16:46. | :16:48. | |
they are long-standing issues which will not be resolved in weeks or | :16:49. | :16:52. | |
months but they are determined to make prisons safer places for both | :16:53. | :17:01. | |
safety and reform. We expect Liz truss to make a speech as well -- | :17:02. | :17:08. | |
Trust. We have lost almost 7000 frontline staff since 2010, to date. | :17:09. | :17:16. | |
We have a real problem of retention. This is a long-term problem but what | :17:17. | :17:20. | |
we need to see this technology being employed to prevent drugs coming in. | :17:21. | :17:26. | |
We need prisons to be non-smoking, which will deter the use of spice, | :17:27. | :17:30. | |
and we need them to accept that drugs and violence within prisons is | :17:31. | :17:35. | |
totally unacceptable, and it has got to be a priority from the Secretary | :17:36. | :17:39. | |
of State for Justice as we move forward with prison reform. Let's | :17:40. | :17:43. | |
talk about rehabilitation and whether or not there are... The | :17:44. | :17:47. | |
schemes in place within prisons to make sure that is happening, or is | :17:48. | :17:51. | |
there pressure on that as well? There are massive pressures on | :17:52. | :17:54. | |
rehabilitation, there is insufficient staff to deliver the | :17:55. | :17:58. | |
training programmes, so we are seeing more prisoners detained in | :17:59. | :18:01. | |
prisons. Prisoners, because they have nothing to do, colouring | :18:02. | :18:07. | |
pictures of Peppa Pig, which is totally unacceptable. We need | :18:08. | :18:11. | |
structured, proper education programmes and we need to make sure | :18:12. | :18:19. | |
that prisoners lead -- Gleave prisons able to live fulfilling | :18:20. | :18:30. | |
lives -- leave. Thank you very much. And HMP Northumberland say they are | :18:31. | :18:34. | |
proud of their staff who do professional work in difficult | :18:35. | :18:37. | |
circumstances, they say the safety of all prisoners and staff at the | :18:38. | :18:44. | |
top priority. Panorama is on BBC One tonight if you want to watch it. | :18:45. | :18:48. | |
Five minutes ago you promised we would have Carol in five minutes, | :18:49. | :18:54. | |
and look at that. I am going to ask you where that picture is from, | :18:55. | :18:59. | |
Carol. I don't know where it is from. Good morning. And it is a | :19:00. | :19:03. | |
beautiful one. If you are sick of all this cold weather as we go | :19:04. | :19:06. | |
through this week, temperatures are going to be on the rise. It is going | :19:07. | :19:11. | |
to feel much milder than it has done last week or through the course of | :19:12. | :19:15. | |
the weekend, or today, for that matter. To show you the kind of | :19:16. | :19:18. | |
temperature values we have today, three in Birmingham, four in | :19:19. | :19:23. | |
Edinburgh and London, and as we come that little bit further south into | :19:24. | :19:28. | |
Cardiff, five, and into Plymouth, eight. Those temperatures are not | :19:29. | :19:32. | |
too bad but when you add in the wind it will feel colder than that, so if | :19:33. | :19:36. | |
you are just heading out, wrap up warmly. We have a brisk easterly | :19:37. | :19:40. | |
wind across our shores, particularly strong out towards the west, where | :19:41. | :19:44. | |
we are looking at Gailes. The wind is breaking up the cloud, | :19:45. | :19:47. | |
particularly in southern areas across eastern parts of Scotland, | :19:48. | :19:53. | |
and also the eastern parts of northern England, where we will hang | :19:54. | :19:56. | |
on to that cloud through the day and there will be drizzle on the hills. | :19:57. | :20:00. | |
Western Scotland a fine afternoon. A beautiful day across much of | :20:01. | :20:03. | |
Northern Ireland, but in the Irish Sea and areas adjacent to the Irish | :20:04. | :20:06. | |
Sea it will be particularly windy, especially around Wales and the | :20:07. | :20:09. | |
south-western approaches. Inland, look at all that sunshine that we | :20:10. | :20:13. | |
have. Temperatures at seven to ten in the south, so that is higher than | :20:14. | :20:17. | |
they have been but it won't feel like that. It will feel much colder. | :20:18. | :20:24. | |
To focus on the wind, we are looking at gusts up to gale force, even | :20:25. | :20:27. | |
severe gales on the coast, especially with exposure and | :20:28. | :20:30. | |
especially across the north and west of Wales, where we will have gusts | :20:31. | :20:34. | |
of up to 70 miles an hour. That is enough to cause travel disruption. | :20:35. | :20:39. | |
You might find closures of fairies and that kind of thing, there than | :20:40. | :20:45. | |
in mind if you are setting out. Through the evening and overnight | :20:46. | :20:48. | |
the wind, rather than coming from the east, slowly veers to the | :20:49. | :20:51. | |
south-east as you can tell from the movement of the isobars and we have | :20:52. | :20:54. | |
another weather front coming in producing some rain across parts of | :20:55. | :20:58. | |
south-west England I the end of the night. There will be quite a lot of | :20:59. | :21:02. | |
cloud around, some hill fog, but under clear skies, for example in | :21:03. | :21:05. | |
eastern England, we could well see a touch of frost. Those clear skies in | :21:06. | :21:09. | |
the morning in sunshine will extend into parts of northern England and | :21:10. | :21:12. | |
western Scotland. Meanwhile, here is our weather front across Northern | :21:13. | :21:14. | |
Ireland Wales, down into the south-west, edging north eastwards | :21:15. | :21:20. | |
and taking patchy rain with it. It won't feel as cold and the | :21:21. | :21:24. | |
temperature is rising. Nine to 11, six to about seven or eight as we | :21:25. | :21:28. | |
push further north. As we had only to Tuesday, the weather front | :21:29. | :21:32. | |
continues to push northwards, taking cloud with it. The next system comes | :21:33. | :21:38. | |
in from the south-west. So as we had only to Wednesday we will see some | :21:39. | :21:42. | |
rain in some western areas. There will be some sunshine but the main | :21:43. | :21:45. | |
thing you will notice that tempt you. Many of us in double figures, | :21:46. | :21:49. | |
and it will feel much milder than it has done. Thank you very much. We | :21:50. | :22:08. | |
will talk about La La Land, which dominated the BAFTA. There were wins | :22:09. | :22:18. | |
for Lion, and Ken Loach's I, Daniel Blake picked up an award. | :22:19. | :22:31. | |
It has won five awards including best film and Best Actress for Emma | :22:32. | :22:37. | |
Stone. Right now this country and the US in the world seems to be | :22:38. | :22:41. | |
going through a bit of a time, a time that is so divisive. I think it | :22:42. | :22:45. | |
is really special that we were all able to come together tonight. | :22:46. | :22:49. | |
Benefits drama by, Daniel Blake won outstanding British film, prompting | :22:50. | :22:53. | |
another political speech from its director, Ken Loach. Thank you to | :22:54. | :22:59. | |
the Academy for endorsing the truth of what the film says, which | :23:00. | :23:02. | |
hundreds of thousands of people in this country know, and that is that | :23:03. | :23:06. | |
the most vulnerable and the poorest people are treated by this | :23:07. | :23:10. | |
government with a callous brutality that is disgraceful. Casey Affleck | :23:11. | :23:16. | |
one best actor, for the Manchester by the sea. Best Supporting Actor | :23:17. | :23:25. | |
was British star Dev Patel. And Best Supporting Actress went to Violet | :23:26. | :23:32. | |
Davies for family drama Fences. All of this is not just about the glory | :23:33. | :23:39. | |
of winning a BAFTA. Voting will soon be under way in the all-important | :23:40. | :23:45. | |
Oscars. Even before the night, La La Land looked likely to win Best | :23:46. | :23:49. | |
Picture, and is favourite to win in Los Angeles in two years' time. And | :23:50. | :24:05. | |
we will be joined by guests. He has promised us it will be on BBC | :24:06. | :24:10. | |
Breakfast later on, but obviously he had a late night. He said he will be | :24:11. | :24:13. | |
wearing sunglasses, we will see. Last year the number of people | :24:14. | :24:15. | |
in Britain deciding to have cosmetic surgery was the lowest in nearly | :24:16. | :24:18. | |
a decade, and down 40% But the new figures don't reveal | :24:19. | :24:21. | |
the number of people choosing to have non-surgical treatments, | :24:22. | :24:25. | |
such as Botox injections and chemical peels, | :24:26. | :24:27. | |
which generally cost less Here to discuss these | :24:28. | :24:29. | |
trends is Gerard Lambe, from the British Association | :24:30. | :24:33. | |
of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, What do you put it down to? It is | :24:34. | :24:52. | |
difficult to know exactly what it is. The association believe that | :24:53. | :24:55. | |
because there is uncertainty in the world at the moment, I think we are | :24:56. | :24:59. | |
aware of that, and being in the media you would know, the threat of | :25:00. | :25:05. | |
terrorist attacks, Brexit, changing identity, people don't feel as | :25:06. | :25:08. | |
confident about making such big investments, big decisions, life | :25:09. | :25:13. | |
changing decisions. When there is economic prosperity people tend to | :25:14. | :25:16. | |
continue to do these types of investments. So that is our working | :25:17. | :25:20. | |
hypothesis at the moment. So maybe we should use this as a way of | :25:21. | :25:24. | |
testing how positive people feel financially. We were talking a few | :25:25. | :25:28. | |
weeks ago about when you see cranes in the sky you know that the | :25:29. | :25:31. | |
building industry is booming. Maybe we should look carefully at cosmetic | :25:32. | :25:36. | |
surgery figures. I have seen that across Manchester, as the cranes | :25:37. | :25:40. | |
disappeared and came back. It is not the only predictor of economic | :25:41. | :25:43. | |
recovery, but we know when times are booming and people are feeling | :25:44. | :25:47. | |
positive and want to invest and make his decisions, it is a big and | :25:48. | :25:50. | |
important decision and people need to think about it very carefully. If | :25:51. | :25:53. | |
they are not feeling confident they are much less likely to go ahead | :25:54. | :25:59. | |
with it. And 47.8% drop in the amount of cosmetic surgery on men, | :26:00. | :26:04. | |
for example, and there seems to be a difference, doesn't it, between men | :26:05. | :26:07. | |
and women, how many are now not taking it up. Men traditionally make | :26:08. | :26:14. | |
up a very small percentage of the people undergoing procedures. The | :26:15. | :26:17. | |
vast majority are women. I was looking at the figures carefully | :26:18. | :26:22. | |
before I came on, and men are still having tummy tucks, and we think | :26:23. | :26:26. | |
when there is no good nonsurgical alternative that people still look | :26:27. | :26:31. | |
into it, research it, and still go down that line. The non-invasive | :26:32. | :26:38. | |
stuff like Botox is proving popular as well. Are you concerned about a | :26:39. | :26:42. | |
lack of regulation in the industry? Is it safe? The association is very | :26:43. | :26:47. | |
concerned about a lack of regulation and we have pushed the regulation. | :26:48. | :26:50. | |
We know that there are people out there who are not as well-trained as | :26:51. | :26:55. | |
they be. We know there are good cosmetic doctors, but there are some | :26:56. | :26:59. | |
working in salons who are injecting and are not as well trained, and the | :27:00. | :27:04. | |
association is very keen to have regulation, and says everybody who | :27:05. | :27:07. | |
is considering these treatments really needs to do their research | :27:08. | :27:11. | |
and go and see someone who is medically trained and registered, | :27:12. | :27:14. | |
and that is how you know you will be safe. Have you had the correct work? | :27:15. | :27:19. | |
I have. I don't see that much of it, but I have had a couple of ladies, | :27:20. | :27:23. | |
who have had fillers and do not like them. I have had to dissolve them, | :27:24. | :27:28. | |
and redo procedures after unsatisfactory results. Some of | :27:29. | :27:31. | |
those are done by people who are good practitioners, and so people | :27:32. | :27:37. | |
need to be aware of what can and cannot be done. You say it is down | :27:38. | :27:42. | |
to people feeling concerned about what is going on. You could look at | :27:43. | :27:46. | |
it in a positive light and think they are feeling better about | :27:47. | :27:50. | |
themselves. It is hard to know whether people are feeling better | :27:51. | :27:54. | |
about themselves, and we want people to feel better about themselves, but | :27:55. | :27:58. | |
we want people who are considering these major operations to do their | :27:59. | :28:02. | |
research, think carefully, to take time, not to be pressured by | :28:03. | :28:05. | |
salespeople, and to make sure that anyone they see as a reputable | :28:06. | :28:11. | |
surgeon. Can you still spot low, as a professional? I don't want you to | :28:12. | :28:18. | |
pick anyone out, but from the Grammys and the Baftas, can you say | :28:19. | :28:23. | |
work here, work there? Good surgery should be invisible. Always, not | :28:24. | :28:28. | |
sometimes. Still to come this morning: He found | :28:29. | :28:29. | |
fame as the lobby boy in the film Tony Revolori will be | :28:30. | :28:34. | |
here as he prepares to take to the stage as a misfit | :28:35. | :28:38. | |
in the comedy Speech and Debate. Time now to get the news, | :28:39. | :28:44. | |
travel and weather where you are. I'm back with the latest | :28:45. | :32:06. | |
from the BBC London newsroom Hello, this is Breakfast | :32:07. | :32:10. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. For the first time, pensioners are, | :32:11. | :32:19. | |
on average, better off than people of working age according | :32:20. | :32:23. | |
to a new study. The think tank the | :32:24. | :32:26. | |
Resolution Foundation says pensioner households are now | :32:27. | :32:28. | |
?20 a week better off than working age households because they are more | :32:29. | :32:33. | |
likely to own their home, have generous private pensions | :32:34. | :32:36. | |
and still be working. But it warns future generations will | :32:37. | :32:52. | |
be less likely to receive the same benefits. | :32:53. | :32:53. | |
Britain's biggest supermarket, Tesco has pledged to take immediate | :32:54. | :32:56. | |
action after a BBC investigation revealed two thirds of deals | :32:57. | :32:58. | |
on the shelves were out of date, and didn't work at the checkout. | :32:59. | :33:02. | |
Over three months a team from BBC Inside Out visited 50 | :33:03. | :33:05. | |
branches of Tesco across England and found multi-buy deals | :33:06. | :33:07. | |
still being advertised days, weeks and in some cases months | :33:08. | :33:10. | |
after the deductions were no longer valid at the till. | :33:11. | :33:13. | |
The supermarket says it's working to make | :33:14. | :33:15. | |
In the last hour the Co-Op Bank has announced it's up for sale | :33:16. | :33:25. | |
and the high street bank has over four million customers | :33:26. | :33:27. | |
but almost collapsed in 2013 after a series | :33:28. | :33:30. | |
Since then it's been run by private investment companies who they've now | :33:31. | :33:34. | |
made considerable progress in turning the business around. | :33:35. | :33:41. | |
Nearly 190,000 people in Northern California have been | :33:42. | :33:44. | |
told to evacuate their homes after the tallest dam in America | :33:45. | :33:47. | |
Officials feared the Oroville Dam could be | :33:48. | :33:50. | |
It is the first time the lake has experienced such an emergency | :33:51. | :33:54. | |
A BBC investigation has found evidence of major security failings | :33:55. | :34:03. | |
at a privately-run prison in the north-east of England. | :34:04. | :34:05. | |
A reporter from the Panorama programme filmed | :34:06. | :34:07. | |
undercover at the jail in Morpeth while working as a prison officer. | :34:08. | :34:10. | |
He discovered that alarms on two doors didn't work, | :34:11. | :34:13. | |
searches weren't conducted properly and there was a hole in a fence. | :34:14. | :34:28. | |
Sodexo who run the prison says the safety of staff and inmates | :34:29. | :34:31. | |
The Ministry of Justice says it will investigate the footage | :34:32. | :34:35. | |
and the government is committed to reforming prisons. | :34:36. | :34:37. | |
Firefighters in Australia are still battling around 80 | :34:38. | :34:40. | |
Many properties have been destroyed but so far there are no | :34:41. | :34:44. | |
However, forecasters are warning conditions could become dangerous | :34:45. | :34:47. | |
The United States, Japan and South Korea have requested | :34:48. | :34:52. | |
an urgent meeting of the United Nations Security Council | :34:53. | :34:55. | |
to discuss North Korea's latest missile test. | :34:56. | :34:57. | |
Yesterday it was confirmed a ballistic missile was fired. | :34:58. | :34:59. | |
The state is already subject to a range of sanctions | :35:00. | :35:02. | |
over its missile and nuclear bomb tests. | :35:03. | :35:04. | |
Analysts believe the country is still years away from developing | :35:05. | :35:06. | |
La La Land dominated last night's Bafta film awards, | :35:07. | :35:15. | |
scooping five trophies, including Best Film and Best Actress | :35:16. | :35:17. | |
There were also awards for Lion, including Best Supporting | :35:18. | :35:30. | |
Actor for Dev Patel, and Ken Loach's I, Daniel Blake, | :35:31. | :35:33. | |
which was named Outstanding British Film at the London ceremony. | :35:34. | :35:39. | |
We will be speaking to the star of that film, Dave Johns, a little bit | :35:40. | :35:46. | |
later. Carol will be here in a moment. | :35:47. | :35:51. | |
Also the Grammys, James Gordon presented, he fell over down the | :35:52. | :35:57. | |
stairs, but it was all planned! Blackstar by David Bowie won best | :35:58. | :36:02. | |
alternative music album, Best Rock Performance, and best rock song for | :36:03. | :36:08. | |
the single Blackstar. And also Adele had to do a restart, which you will | :36:09. | :36:14. | |
be able to see later. The start of the restart? | :36:15. | :36:14. | |
Sally is here with the sport. I'm going to start with the champions | :36:15. | :36:23. | |
really starting to panic. They started a while ago, though, things | :36:24. | :36:28. | |
not going well for Leicester. Is it because people are more wise to | :36:29. | :36:34. | |
them? Everyone says that they are not working hard enough? Big-money | :36:35. | :36:36. | |
perhaps? Lots of factors. Claudio Ranieri admits he may need | :36:37. | :36:39. | |
to change things at Leicester. The Premier League champions | :36:40. | :36:43. | |
are facing a relegation battle this morning following their 2-0 defeat | :36:44. | :36:46. | |
at fellow strugglers Swansea. Alfie Mawson's volley gave | :36:47. | :36:49. | |
the home side the lead. Then just | :36:50. | :36:51. | |
before half-time, Martin Olsson The win moves them up to 15th | :36:52. | :36:53. | |
but it's a fifth defeat in a row for Leicester, and after the match | :36:54. | :37:01. | |
Ranieri was asked if he's been too Could be. | :37:02. | :37:04. | |
Could be. When you achieve something | :37:05. | :37:07. | |
so good you want to give them one chance, two chance, | :37:08. | :37:12. | |
three chance, maybe now Chelsea are now ten points clear | :37:13. | :37:14. | |
at the top of the Premier League but they could only | :37:15. | :37:22. | |
manage a draw at Burnley. It took just seven minutes | :37:23. | :37:24. | |
for them to take the lead. But a brilliant freekick | :37:25. | :37:27. | |
from Burnley's new signing Robbie Brady levelled | :37:28. | :37:31. | |
the game at 1-1. On reflection is it one point gain | :37:32. | :37:37. | |
or two points lost today? I don't know, it felt | :37:38. | :37:43. | |
important for me. This is the most | :37:44. | :37:49. | |
important thing for them. For you, one point | :37:50. | :37:58. | |
is losing two points. Rangers are into the last | :37:59. | :38:00. | |
eight of the Scottish Cup after coming from behind to beat | :38:01. | :38:05. | |
Greenock Morton 2-1. in what was their first match | :38:06. | :38:07. | |
following the departure of manager Scottish Cup holders, | :38:08. | :38:12. | |
Hibernian will face a fifth a goalless draw by Edinburgh rivals | :38:13. | :38:17. | |
Hearts. The best chance fell | :38:18. | :38:21. | |
to Bjorn Johnsen, but that was saved by | :38:22. | :38:23. | |
Hearts keeper Marciano. In the 6 Nations, Scotland | :38:24. | :38:25. | |
were narrowly beaten It's their 10th successive defeat | :38:26. | :38:27. | |
in the French capital. Scotland twice took the lead | :38:28. | :38:31. | |
through tries from Stuart Hogg But five penalties from | :38:32. | :38:34. | |
Camille Lopez did the damage. The French eventually | :38:35. | :38:38. | |
hung on to win 22-16. It was a physical encounter | :38:39. | :38:42. | |
and quite a few times we came But I thought the boys stuck | :38:43. | :38:45. | |
in really well defensively and defended our line well | :38:46. | :38:56. | |
and scored a couple of tries, but at critical times | :38:57. | :38:59. | |
perhaps we weren't accurate enough and we'll have a good look | :39:00. | :39:04. | |
at that before moving Ireland lead the way after they beat | :39:05. | :39:07. | |
Italy. In the second | :39:08. | :39:11. | |
half Ireland dominated, This effort, right at the end | :39:12. | :39:13. | |
of the game, the best of the bunch by Hannah Tyrell to give | :39:14. | :39:19. | |
them a 27-3 victory. This score also ensuring | :39:20. | :39:21. | |
their bonus point. At the British indoor athletics | :39:22. | :39:25. | |
trials, Katrina Johnson-Thompson has qualified for next month's European | :39:26. | :39:28. | |
championships in the long jump. Johnson-Thompson is best known | :39:29. | :39:34. | |
as a multi-event athlete, but she won't defend her pentathlon | :39:35. | :39:40. | |
title in Serbia after she changed She didn't just changed her coach, | :39:41. | :39:53. | |
she moved to France, changed her focus completely, her new coach has | :39:54. | :39:59. | |
her walking taller, more confident. Why did you do that? It's all about | :40:00. | :40:06. | |
the posture. I can tell you before you go and leave me that Sir Bradley | :40:07. | :40:10. | |
Wiggins is out of Channel 4's The Jump. It's a break of lake, it's a | :40:11. | :40:16. | |
fracture, not overly serious, but he can't ski. It was going to be a | :40:17. | :40:21. | |
great story in that programme. A big miss. How long will he take to get | :40:22. | :40:27. | |
better? Three to six weeks recovery. Listen to me with the medical | :40:28. | :40:33. | |
advice. You answered every question! Don't ask me anything else! | :40:34. | :40:35. | |
For the first time, pensioners are, on average, better off than people | :40:36. | :40:38. | |
of working age according to a new study. | :40:39. | :40:41. | |
The think tank, the Resolution Foundation, | :40:42. | :40:42. | |
says pensioner households are now ?20 a week better off | :40:43. | :40:45. | |
Its Executive Chair David Willetts joins us | :40:46. | :40:48. | |
Good morning to you and thank you very much indeed. When did this | :40:49. | :40:57. | |
turnaround and how significant is it? The turnaround happened in about | :40:58. | :41:01. | |
the last five years. At the beginning of this century it was the | :41:02. | :41:05. | |
case working age households were still ?70 a week better off than | :41:06. | :41:10. | |
pensioners and the crossover happened in around 2011 and now | :41:11. | :41:13. | |
pensioner households are around ?20 a week better off than working age | :41:14. | :41:18. | |
households. It's a big change. Very simplistically but is it a good | :41:19. | :41:22. | |
thing for those households that have this money? It's good when anybody | :41:23. | :41:27. | |
becomes more prosperous and it's great we are tackling the problem of | :41:28. | :41:30. | |
pensioner poverty, that's the good news but the challenge is to ensure | :41:31. | :41:35. | |
successive generations enjoy the same affluence and opportunities in | :41:36. | :41:39. | |
life because one of the reasons this is happening is these younger | :41:40. | :41:41. | |
pensioners who are becoming pensioners now, we have very good | :41:42. | :41:45. | |
company pensions, they own their own house with the mortgage paid off. It | :41:46. | :41:49. | |
will be harder for the younger generation to enjoy those two | :41:50. | :41:55. | |
fantastic assets. Could this be a 1-off generation of pensioners who | :41:56. | :41:59. | |
have this added affluence? That's the danger, you put it right. It's | :42:00. | :42:04. | |
this group of baby boomers born between about 1945 and 1965 who | :42:05. | :42:10. | |
benefited from good company pensions Keynes and now companies are closing | :42:11. | :42:13. | |
those schemes to younger workers and who have also benefited from the | :42:14. | :42:17. | |
surge in owner to patient -- pension schemes. They are pushing up | :42:18. | :42:22. | |
pensioner incomes. The challenge is to ensure our kids and grandchildren | :42:23. | :42:27. | |
have those opportunities as well. For example, looking at younger | :42:28. | :42:32. | |
workers, how will they be able to save for pensions like that? Is it | :42:33. | :42:37. | |
going to even be possible? Allowed their saving a bit through the new | :42:38. | :42:41. | |
nest scheme and in other ways but at the moment their savings are much | :42:42. | :42:49. | |
lower. Companies aren't putting money into pension schemes like they | :42:50. | :42:53. | |
did so they're not saving enough and also their finding it harder to get | :42:54. | :42:57. | |
started on the housing ladder. We're used to the idea of a lot of | :42:58. | :43:01. | |
pensioners owning their own homes, we have to make an effort to get | :43:02. | :43:04. | |
those houses built so younger generations can do that as well. | :43:05. | :43:09. | |
Looking to the future, do you think the state pension, who gets it, | :43:10. | :43:15. | |
would you advocate looking at that? I'm sharing as a commission as a | :43:16. | :43:19. | |
whole looking at it but for me personally I think it raises a | :43:20. | :43:23. | |
question about the generosity of the triple lock in the future, that's | :43:24. | :43:26. | |
something the government will have to look at and we will look at in | :43:27. | :43:30. | |
the commission. Because when money is tight, while of course there are | :43:31. | :43:34. | |
some pensions on low incomes, but when money is tight you have to be | :43:35. | :43:37. | |
fair between the different age groups so everyone gets a fair crack | :43:38. | :43:43. | |
at the whip. How do you do that, age, means testing? I think one | :43:44. | :43:52. | |
question is whether the full-blown triple lock, which is increasing the | :43:53. | :43:55. | |
pension by either prices or earnings or 2.5%, whichever is the highest, | :43:56. | :43:59. | |
now that we've got this success with pensioner incomes going up, whether | :44:00. | :44:02. | |
that remains a priority for the use of public spending, that must be a | :44:03. | :44:07. | |
question. So many questions, David Willets from the Resolution | :44:08. | :44:08. | |
Foundation, thank you. You're watching | :44:09. | :44:11. | |
Breakfast from BBC News. time, pensioners are, on average, | :44:12. | :44:13. | |
better off than working age people. Nearly 190,000 people living below | :44:14. | :44:25. | |
America's tallest dam have been ordered to evacuate their homes | :44:26. | :44:28. | |
over fears it could be Here is Carol with a look | :44:29. | :44:31. | |
at this morning's weather. Amazing pictures, that is because of | :44:32. | :44:45. | |
heavy rainfall. With the weather a little closer to home: it is a cold | :44:46. | :44:51. | |
start. Exacerbated by the wind. A beautiful picture of Snowdonia and | :44:52. | :44:55. | |
although it will be cold today, as we go through the next few days it | :44:56. | :44:59. | |
is slowly going to turn that it milder. Many of us back into double | :45:00. | :45:02. | |
figures, and although some of us will be in double figures today, as | :45:03. | :45:06. | |
I mentioned, the wind will make it feel colder than that. This morning | :45:07. | :45:10. | |
there will be cloud around, that will break up as the wind gets | :45:11. | :45:14. | |
going, and it is going already. Cloud from the North Sea into parts | :45:15. | :45:17. | |
of north-east England and Scotland. Out to the west it is the wind which | :45:18. | :45:21. | |
will be the feature of today's weather. This afternoon across | :45:22. | :45:25. | |
western Scotland we hang on to the sunshine. For the rest of Scotland | :45:26. | :45:28. | |
it is fairly cloudy and there will be some drizzle on those hills. For | :45:29. | :45:32. | |
Northern Ireland, a beautiful day ahead, but windy. Across north-east | :45:33. | :45:36. | |
England we have the cloud again. There is snow here, and with that | :45:37. | :45:39. | |
combination there could be some nasty travelling conditions on the | :45:40. | :45:43. | |
tops of the Pennines, for example. For the rest of England and all of | :45:44. | :45:47. | |
Wales, into the south-west, a good amount of sunshine through the | :45:48. | :45:50. | |
course of the day with the cloud continuing to break up at the wind | :45:51. | :45:54. | |
will be the feature. The strongest winds through the Irish Sea and | :45:55. | :45:57. | |
across the south-western approaches. Particularly so in the hills and | :45:58. | :46:01. | |
with exposure across the north and west of Wales where we could have | :46:02. | :46:06. | |
gust of wind up to 70 miles an hour. That will take down branches of | :46:07. | :46:09. | |
trees, for example, and could well lead to some travel disruption on | :46:10. | :46:14. | |
ferries and bridges. Worth checking out before you set out. As we head | :46:15. | :46:17. | |
on through the evening and overnight, the wind veers to the | :46:18. | :46:25. | |
south-easterly as the day progresses, and spots of rain in the | :46:26. | :46:29. | |
south-west of England by the end of the night. Where we have clear skies | :46:30. | :46:33. | |
will be cold enough for some pockets of frost. There will also be a | :46:34. | :46:36. | |
little bit of hill fog as well. Where we have the clear sky 's first | :46:37. | :46:40. | |
thing in the morning is where we will see the sunshine. A bad start | :46:41. | :46:44. | |
today. The wind tomorrow will not be as strong as today and a weather | :46:45. | :46:48. | |
front from the south-west will continue to push north eastwards, | :46:49. | :46:52. | |
wringing more cloud across southern areas through the Midlands, Wales | :46:53. | :46:55. | |
and Northern Ireland as well. Patchy bits and pieces of rain. | :46:56. | :46:59. | |
Temperatures climbing a little bit, 11 in Plymouth and London, and also | :47:00. | :47:05. | |
St Helier, and in the light winds that will feel rather nice. Through | :47:06. | :47:09. | |
Tuesday night and into Wednesday our weather front continues to push | :47:10. | :47:13. | |
north eastwards, taking cloud and spots of rain, only to be replaced | :47:14. | :47:17. | |
by another one coming in from the south-west later on in the night. We | :47:18. | :47:20. | |
start off Wednesday with that reigned in the west. Showers as we | :47:21. | :47:24. | |
push further west, again into the north-west. The header that some | :47:25. | :47:30. | |
brighter skies. One thing you will notice is the temperatures, ten, 11 | :47:31. | :47:35. | |
or 12. Thursday will not be bone dry, by any stretch, there will be | :47:36. | :47:40. | |
rain cloud around. We start to see double figures moving across the UK, | :47:41. | :47:45. | |
up as far north as Stornoway, so after such a cold spell it is going | :47:46. | :47:50. | |
to turn that it milder. I am just going to say positively toasty! | :47:51. | :48:00. | |
Thank you. Quite right. You may have gone overboard. It was just this | :48:01. | :48:01. | |
yesterday. -- bitter yesterday. Fewer people from the European Union | :48:02. | :48:12. | |
are coming to the UK to work, and it means some companies are | :48:13. | :48:16. | |
struggling to fill job vacancies. It is a report that looks at hiring | :48:17. | :48:19. | |
and firing across the country. They looked at official | :48:20. | :48:23. | |
immigration stats. They show 30,000 people from the EU | :48:24. | :48:25. | |
came to work in Britain That is about half the usual number, | :48:26. | :48:28. | |
and that is having an impact Almost half of current vacancies | :48:29. | :48:33. | |
in areas like retail, manufacturing or the restaurant | :48:34. | :48:37. | |
industry rely on EU workers. Gerwyn Davies is from the CIPD, | :48:38. | :48:39. | |
which compiled the figures. On the face of it, it | :48:40. | :48:42. | |
looks like a big fall. Have some people | :48:43. | :48:51. | |
just stopped coming? Explain these figures. You have | :48:52. | :49:01. | |
looked at them very closely. It is almost too soon to get a measure of | :49:02. | :49:09. | |
what Brexit means, as far as workers are concerned. On the face of it | :49:10. | :49:13. | |
that is a fair challenge but our members tell us that Brexit is | :49:14. | :49:16. | |
already having a recruitment challenge in sectors which imply a | :49:17. | :49:26. | |
-- employ a high number of EU nationals. The main one which comes | :49:27. | :49:30. | |
across our members is the fall in the value of the pound which | :49:31. | :49:34. | |
effectively means a pay cut for EU nationals who want to live and work | :49:35. | :49:39. | |
in the UK. So there is a direct financial difference, and you are | :49:40. | :49:42. | |
right to point out that you are sort of one, 2... Sides of this debate. | :49:43. | :49:45. | |
Businesses trying to hire workers, this is bad news for you but a lot | :49:46. | :49:49. | |
of people with the anti-immigrant sentiment say that those jobs should | :49:50. | :49:53. | |
be going to UK nationals anyway. There could be a hidden benefit to | :49:54. | :49:57. | |
Brexit in the sense that employers are already starting to think about | :49:58. | :50:01. | |
how they can widen their recruitment channels, target specific groups | :50:02. | :50:05. | |
whose potential is not being maximised, such as older workers, | :50:06. | :50:08. | |
women returning from maternity leave. Employers need to make those | :50:09. | :50:14. | |
jobs more attractive to applicants and we know that one of the key | :50:15. | :50:18. | |
challenges they face in attracting these applicants is providing a | :50:19. | :50:21. | |
flexible working options, which we know generates more interest, of | :50:22. | :50:26. | |
course as part of the package we need to improve the progression | :50:27. | :50:29. | |
routes so that they can often stimulate more interest, and pay and | :50:30. | :50:33. | |
employment conditions will be a factor. Of course, that is down to | :50:34. | :50:40. | |
affordability. That is an important point, and if you look at the | :50:41. | :50:45. | |
specific industry is likely to be affected, retail, manufacturing and | :50:46. | :50:48. | |
the restaurant industry, is there a sense, and you touched on this as | :50:49. | :50:51. | |
well, that businesses are thinking they need to think about how and | :50:52. | :50:55. | |
where they recruit, and that could work out better in the long run? We | :50:56. | :50:59. | |
do, and the one thing which comes across very forcefully when we speak | :51:00. | :51:03. | |
to employers in those sectors is that big financial challenges, | :51:04. | :51:06. | |
especially at the moment when you consider the increases in the | :51:07. | :51:10. | |
National living wage, the apprentice levy coming into force in April, | :51:11. | :51:14. | |
impacting on the overall wage bill, there are big challenges and that is | :51:15. | :51:19. | |
another reason why we think that the pay-out looks somewhat bearish in | :51:20. | :51:23. | |
the future. Not for those at the bottom end of the pay distributions | :51:24. | :51:27. | |
such as minimum wage recipients or high performers, but those in the | :51:28. | :51:31. | |
middle who will be subject to a modest basic pay award which will | :51:32. | :51:35. | |
feel a lot less this year in the face of rising inflation. Does it | :51:36. | :51:38. | |
follow that some people will have to be paid more if there is not so much | :51:39. | :51:43. | |
cheap migrant Labour coming in, and prices will go up as a result? The | :51:44. | :51:47. | |
first result, according to our members, is to absorb the cost, in | :51:48. | :51:52. | |
terms of the National living wage and increasing wages. Of course, | :51:53. | :51:57. | |
this is a long-run effect, and what we might see in the long run is more | :51:58. | :52:02. | |
employers having to pass on the cost to the consumer. Of course, we are | :52:03. | :52:09. | |
talking some way ahead and a lot of variables make it very uncertain to | :52:10. | :52:13. | |
make a reasonable and confident prediction. Rachel for your time, | :52:14. | :52:22. | |
thank you so much. More from me after 8am, including news that the | :52:23. | :52:26. | |
Co-op Bank is looking for a new owner. They will have the details | :52:27. | :52:28. | |
for you in about 15 minutes. Adele has triumphed at the Grammys | :52:29. | :52:31. | |
in Los Angeles, becoming the first person to take the top three awards | :52:32. | :52:34. | |
for the second time, She won five awards in total, | :52:35. | :52:37. | |
including Song and Record of the Year for Hello, | :52:38. | :52:42. | |
and album of the year for 25. David Bowie was also | :52:43. | :52:45. | |
honoured posthumously, From Los Angeles, | :52:46. | :52:47. | |
James Cook reports. Could Adele beat Beyonce, and if she | :52:48. | :53:03. | |
did, would the Grammys end up like last year's Oscars, in a controversy | :53:04. | :53:07. | |
over favouring white talent? The answers to these questions were yes | :53:08. | :53:14. | |
and yes. 25, Adele. Adele herself look far from comfortable with her | :53:15. | :53:18. | |
five awards, and dedicated album of the year to be onset. I can't | :53:19. | :53:24. | |
possibly accept this award -- to Beyonce. And this album for me, the | :53:25. | :53:29. | |
Lemonade album was just so monumental. And the way that you | :53:30. | :53:33. | |
made me and my friends feel, the way you make my black friends feel is | :53:34. | :53:39. | |
empowering. The performance by the proudly pregnant megastar was | :53:40. | :53:48. | |
stunning. There is a curse. At this most consequential of artists really | :53:49. | :53:56. | |
was only winning consolation prizes. The night was not all Adele's. For | :53:57. | :54:02. | |
the second year in a row she had performance problems. I know it is | :54:03. | :54:07. | |
live TV, I need to start again. Sorry for swearing, typically start | :54:08. | :54:13. | |
again. It was a good decision. The second take of her tribute to George | :54:14. | :54:30. | |
Michael was flawless. Chance the Rapper won best new album and Best | :54:31. | :54:35. | |
Newcomer award. David Bowie one more Grammys in death than in life. The | :54:36. | :54:41. | |
host poked fun at himself and that President Trump. Right, all I will | :54:42. | :54:50. | |
say is any negative tweets that you see are fake tweets. Persist was the | :54:51. | :54:56. | |
word on Kenny Perry's palm, a political statement from an artist | :54:57. | :55:03. | |
to campaign for Hillary Clinton. Busta Rhymes was even less subtle, | :55:04. | :55:08. | |
calling Mr Trump agent Orange. I just want to thank President agent | :55:09. | :55:13. | |
Orange for perpetuating all the evil that has been perpetuated throughout | :55:14. | :55:16. | |
the United States. This was billed as a battle between Beyonce and | :55:17. | :55:23. | |
Adele, but behind that was an even deeper layer of questions, not least | :55:24. | :55:27. | |
about race in a country where cultures continue to clash. | :55:28. | :55:33. | |
And a little bit of an update on Adele and her Grammy for album of | :55:34. | :55:44. | |
the year. She says that Beyonce should have got it, so she broke the | :55:45. | :55:49. | |
award in half. I think she gave half of that to Beyonce, and took half | :55:50. | :55:56. | |
home herself. Do you think she gave her the trumpet it or the base. What | :55:57. | :56:03. | |
would you go for? Keep the base, you can always add a new bit on the top. | :56:04. | :56:08. | |
That is a way of sharing the prize, just snap it and share it. | :56:09. | :59:31. | |
I'm back with the latest from the BBC London newsroom | :59:32. | :59:34. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :59:35. | :00:17. | |
For the first time pensioners are better off | :00:18. | :00:20. | |
a new wave of older people are more likely to work, | :00:21. | :00:25. | |
own their home and have generous private pensions. | :00:26. | :00:40. | |
Good morning, it's Monday 13th February. | :00:41. | :00:44. | |
Tens of thousands of residents of a town in northern California | :00:45. | :00:49. | |
have been ordered to leave their homes because of fears | :00:50. | :00:52. | |
that the tallest dam in the US could collapse. | :00:53. | :00:57. | |
Major security failings in one of Britain's biggest jails. | :00:58. | :01:00. | |
A BBC investigation exposes widspread drug use, a lack | :01:01. | :01:04. | |
Britain's biggest supermarket chain Tesco says it is taking immediate | :01:05. | :01:20. | |
action after a discovery that shoppers are left out of pocket by | :01:21. | :01:25. | |
out-of-state promotions. The Co-op bank itself up for sale, it almost | :01:26. | :01:31. | |
collapsed four years ago, says its fortunes are on the up but who would | :01:32. | :01:32. | |
buy it? In sport, Claudio Ranieri admits | :01:33. | :01:35. | |
he may have been too loyal The Premier League champions | :01:36. | :01:38. | |
are facing a relegation battle this morning following their 2-0 defeat | :01:39. | :01:41. | |
at fellow strugglers Swansea. Political discussion might | :01:42. | :01:43. | |
have but La La Land waltzed off with five | :01:44. | :01:47. | |
awards at the Baftas. It was also a winning night | :01:48. | :01:55. | |
for Adele at the Grammys, I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I | :01:56. | :01:57. | |
need to start again. I can't do it again like last year, I'm sorry for | :01:58. | :02:07. | |
swearing and starting again, can we And now to someone who never needs a | :02:08. | :02:18. | |
restart. Carol issue with the weather. Good morning. It will start | :02:19. | :02:28. | |
mild, gales in the West, there's also some sunshine and I will tell | :02:29. | :02:39. | |
you where in about 15 minutes. I was paying attention! | :02:40. | :02:42. | |
Pensioners are, on average, better off than people of working | :02:43. | :02:47. | |
The think-tank the Resolution Foundation | :02:48. | :02:53. | |
Says pensioner households are 20p a week better off than working age | :02:54. | :02:59. | |
households because they are more likely to own their own home, have | :03:00. | :03:02. | |
generous Private pensions and still be working. | :03:03. | :03:19. | |
It's those who retired recently who are enjoying higher incomes | :03:20. | :03:23. | |
according to the study. The rising pensioner incomes comes as working | :03:24. | :03:25. | |
households are seeing their income squeezed. The Resolution Foundation | :03:26. | :03:28. | |
says the typical pensioner household is now ?20 a week better off than | :03:29. | :03:31. | |
one with people of working age after housing costs are taken into | :03:32. | :03:34. | |
account. 15 years ago the average pensioner was ?70 a week worse off | :03:35. | :03:37. | |
than younger working households. The changes are attributed to a number | :03:38. | :03:39. | |
of factors, the proportion of pensioner households in which at | :03:40. | :03:42. | |
least one person still works has grown from one in eight in 2001 to | :03:43. | :03:45. | |
nearly one in five. Many newly retired people also have generous | :03:46. | :03:48. | |
occupational pensions and own their own homes, and all have enjoyed a | :03:49. | :03:52. | |
At the same time working age households | :03:53. | :03:58. | |
have experienced a low income growth. But the report also reveals | :03:59. | :04:01. | |
a sharp divide. The poorest fifth of pensioner households rely solely on | :04:02. | :04:03. | |
welfare payments. And it says future generations will be less likely to | :04:04. | :04:07. | |
own their own homes or enjoy such generous workplace pensions. Keith | :04:08. | :04:09. | |
Tens of thousands of people in Northern California have been | :04:10. | :04:22. | |
told to evacuate their homes after the tallest dam in America | :04:23. | :04:24. | |
Roads below the Oroville dam filled with traffic as residents heeded the | :04:25. | :04:33. | |
warnings to leave their homes for higher ground. The authorities say | :04:34. | :04:37. | |
there is no more water going over the emergency spill well but the | :04:38. | :04:40. | |
emergency warning is still in place. The Oroville dam, which is about 150 | :04:41. | :04:45. | |
miles north-east of San Francisco, is the tallest in the US. Over the | :04:46. | :04:50. | |
weekend and after weeks of historically heavy rain in | :04:51. | :04:53. | |
California, residents in the surrounding towns were ordered to | :04:54. | :04:55. | |
evacuate. The dam itself is not at risk of bursting, the authorities | :04:56. | :04:58. | |
said, but one contingency measure to prevent flooding failed | :04:59. | :05:10. | |
last week, and on Sunday afternoon it looked | :05:11. | :05:12. | |
like the emergency backup plan was about to | :05:13. | :05:13. | |
fail too. The emergency spillway, which has until now never been | :05:14. | :05:15. | |
needed, began to rapidly erode when water was channelled through it, | :05:16. | :05:19. | |
creating a 30-foot deep hole. point residents were told the | :05:20. | :05:22. | |
spillway could fail within an hour, provoking thousands to take to their | :05:23. | :05:25. | |
cars and head away from affected Helicopters dropped rocks to plug | :05:26. | :05:35. | |
the damage until things could be brought under control. We need to | :05:36. | :05:43. | |
drop it 50 feet, 5-0, if we can continue to do that that brings a | :05:44. | :05:46. | |
bit of calm to what we are trying to accomplish here. Again we are | :05:47. | :05:52. | |
dealing with mother nature and a very dynamic situation that is | :05:53. | :05:58. | |
ongoing and moving. By Sunday evening the level of the lake had | :05:59. | :06:02. | |
decreased enough, taking pressure off the freeways. The full extent of | :06:03. | :06:06. | |
the damage can now be assessed ahead of more rain expected this week. | :06:07. | :06:09. | |
A BBC investigation has found evidence of major security failings | :06:10. | :06:18. | |
at a privately-run prison in the north-east of England. | :06:19. | :06:20. | |
A reporter from the Panorama programme filmed undercover | :06:21. | :06:23. | |
at the jail in Morpeth while working as a prison officer; he discovered | :06:24. | :06:26. | |
that alarms on two doors didn't work, searches weren't conducted | :06:27. | :06:28. | |
properly and there was a hole in a fence. | :06:29. | :06:30. | |
The Ministry of Justice says it will investigate the footage and that the | :06:31. | :06:36. | |
government is committed to reforming prisons. Some breaking business news | :06:37. | :06:39. | |
in the last hour. The Co-op is putting itself up for sale. This is | :06:40. | :06:45. | |
specifically the bank arm of the Co-op. It is looking for a new | :06:46. | :06:51. | |
buyer. In 2030 it had huge financial problems, all sorts of issues, there | :06:52. | :06:54. | |
was a huge black hole in its finances, the bank had got too big | :06:55. | :07:01. | |
too quickly, had bought up some of its rivals, so American hedge funds | :07:02. | :07:05. | |
came in and bought 80% of it, just 20% of it is owned by the Co-op | :07:06. | :07:10. | |
group we know. The Americans say things are looking up and they are | :07:11. | :07:14. | |
now in a position to sell it also is looking for a new buyer. Who might | :07:15. | :07:19. | |
be interested in buying it? Someone like TSB. Remember that they were | :07:20. | :07:24. | |
split off from Lloyds to try to create a challenge. So you get a | :07:25. | :07:38. | |
branch network and a lot of loyal customers, they would get access to | :07:39. | :07:40. | |
that network. The Co-op bank sold itself on all that ethical stance, | :07:41. | :07:44. | |
the caring, sharing attitude. That taken a hit lately but it could be | :07:45. | :07:48. | |
in the market and if someone is interested in buying and they will | :07:49. | :07:51. | |
get access. The challenge for the rank is that it has been a tough | :07:52. | :07:57. | |
time, it has cost a lot to turn around its fortunes and interest | :07:58. | :07:59. | |
rates have been so low for so long they haven't made much money because | :08:00. | :08:04. | |
of the interest rate is low we are not paying much to borrow, they are | :08:05. | :08:08. | |
not paying much on savings and loans so they haven't made a huge profit. | :08:09. | :08:12. | |
Tough times, they are now looking for an owner. Thank you. | :08:13. | :08:16. | |
Firefighters in Australia are still battling around 80 | :08:17. | :08:18. | |
Many properties have been destroyed but so far there are no | :08:19. | :08:24. | |
However, forecasters are warning conditions could become dangerous | :08:25. | :08:27. | |
We could see things like this happening again in the next few | :08:28. | :08:35. | |
days. The United States, Japan | :08:36. | :08:37. | |
and South Korea have requested an urgent meeting of | :08:38. | :08:39. | |
the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's | :08:40. | :08:42. | |
latest missile test. Yesterday it was confirmed | :08:43. | :08:45. | |
a ballistic missile was fired. The state is already subject | :08:46. | :08:48. | |
to a range of sanctions over its missile and | :08:49. | :08:50. | |
nuclear bomb tests. Analysts believe the country | :08:51. | :08:53. | |
is still years away from developing The number of people having cosmetic | :08:54. | :08:56. | |
surgery in the UK has fallen to its lowest level | :08:57. | :09:07. | |
in almost a decade. The British Association | :09:08. | :09:09. | |
of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons says there was a drop of nearly 40% | :09:10. | :09:11. | |
in the number of procedures carried out last year, after a record | :09:12. | :09:14. | |
high the year before. The number of people undergoing | :09:15. | :09:20. | |
cosmetic surgery has been on a general upward trend for many | :09:21. | :09:22. | |
years and 2015 was a record year but figures for 2016 | :09:23. | :09:33. | |
show a sharp downturn. There were over 28,000 | :09:34. | :09:35. | |
operations on women last year, Men have always been less likely | :09:36. | :09:37. | |
to go under the knife. They had just over 2,400 | :09:38. | :09:41. | |
operations last year, that's an even greater | :09:42. | :09:43. | |
fall of 47.8%. The Association of Aesthetic Plastic | :09:44. | :09:47. | |
Surgeons blames the fall It says people may be opting | :09:48. | :09:51. | |
for less expensive procedures which don't involve surgery, | :09:52. | :09:57. | |
like Botox, cheek fillers On the whole, the association says | :09:58. | :10:04. | |
the downturn in figures can be seen as a good thing because it shows | :10:05. | :10:08. | |
the public regards cosmetic surgery as a serious | :10:09. | :10:11. | |
commitment, not a quick fix. Engineers are assessing damage | :10:12. | :10:13. | |
to a passenger ferry which collided with a pier in strong winds | :10:14. | :10:25. | |
on the Isle of Man. The Ben-my-Chree ferry | :10:26. | :10:27. | |
crashed as it came into Its owners are working to bring | :10:28. | :10:29. | |
another ferry back into service I was trying to see what was going | :10:30. | :10:42. | |
on, we will try to show you more of that later. | :10:43. | :10:46. | |
La La Land dominated last night's Bafta film awards, | :10:47. | :10:48. | |
scooping five trophies - including best film and best | :10:49. | :10:50. | |
There were also awards for Lion, including best supporting | :10:51. | :11:02. | |
actor for Dev Patel, who was very surprised, | :11:03. | :11:04. | |
which was named outstanding British film at the London ceremony. | :11:05. | :11:08. | |
And thank you to the Academy for endorsing the truth of what the film | :11:09. | :11:15. | |
says, which hundreds of thousands of people in this country know. And | :11:16. | :11:19. | |
that is, that the most vulnerable and the poorest people are treated | :11:20. | :11:23. | |
by this government with a callous brutality that is disgraceful. The | :11:24. | :11:29. | |
start of that film, Dave Johns. A charming man. He has promised us | :11:30. | :11:35. | |
that he will be on, hopefully at five minutes to nine although he had | :11:36. | :11:40. | |
a late night. He did promise that he would be wearing sunglasses. I'm | :11:41. | :11:43. | |
looking forward to it, could be one of the highlights of the programme! | :11:44. | :11:49. | |
The BAFTAs here, and last night the Grammys in Los Angeles. | :11:50. | :11:56. | |
She went home with all five awards she was nominated for including | :11:57. | :12:02. | |
It didn't all go well for the singer though, | :12:03. | :12:05. | |
she apologised for swearing after she restarted her tribute | :12:06. | :12:08. | |
She stopped mid-way through her rendition of Fast Love, | :12:09. | :12:27. | |
before telling the audience, "I can't mess this up for him." | :12:28. | :12:30. | |
I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, I need to start again, | :12:31. | :12:33. | |
I'm sorry for swearing and I'm sorry for starting again. | :12:34. | :12:37. | |
She nailed it. And she said that she thought Beyonce should have won for | :12:38. | :12:45. | |
Best album. And she managed to snap the award in half and gave the award | :12:46. | :12:51. | |
to Beyonce so she won four and a half Grammys. She won 15 Grammys, | :12:52. | :12:56. | |
amazing. Very popular. We'll have more about those awards later. As | :12:57. | :13:02. | |
Mike mum and dad would say, she's very popular, that girl! She's top | :13:03. | :13:07. | |
of the pop charts! Carol will have the weather. She has so many awards, | :13:08. | :13:15. | |
she probably would share them. Carol probably has more awards than Adele! | :13:16. | :13:21. | |
We've all stood in the supermarket aisle, tempted by special offers, | :13:22. | :13:24. | |
buy one, get one free or three for the price of two. | :13:25. | :13:27. | |
But how often have you checked your receipt to see | :13:28. | :13:29. | |
A BBC investigation has discovered shoppers at some Tesco branches | :13:30. | :13:33. | |
in England have been left out of pocket by old promotions that | :13:34. | :13:36. | |
When we see a special offer on the supermarket shelves, | :13:37. | :13:44. | |
we expect to pay that price at the till. | :13:45. | :13:46. | |
But it's not always the case at Tesco. | :13:47. | :13:53. | |
The gingerbread is? They are on offer but it hasn't come off. And | :13:54. | :13:59. | |
the cat food, the deal was three for ?8. | :14:00. | :14:02. | |
This one is one month out of date, the other one is three weeks out of | :14:03. | :14:09. | |
date! The BBC visited 50 Tesco | :14:10. | :14:12. | |
stores across England Tesco didn't want to do | :14:13. | :14:14. | |
an interview, but after reviewing Following our investigation, | :14:15. | :14:39. | |
Britain's biggest supermarket has said it will be doublechecking | :14:40. | :14:45. | |
the accuracy of every That's more than 3,500 | :14:46. | :14:47. | |
stores across Britain. Independent retail analyst | :14:48. | :14:50. | |
Teresa Wickham is here This morning. Thank you for joining | :14:51. | :15:09. | |
us. On the Tesco issue, how did they defend this and do other | :15:10. | :15:14. | |
supermarkets do the same thing? I think for Tesco it is indefensible | :15:15. | :15:18. | |
because they have a new chief executive, and what he has done is | :15:19. | :15:22. | |
put the customer at the heart of his shopping experience which Tesco used | :15:23. | :15:26. | |
to be good at and has lost its way so he will feel particularly Bruce | :15:27. | :15:31. | |
about it. What they do at Christmas is, they have a lot of casual people | :15:32. | :15:37. | |
coming in to help soak Christmas works very well and then after | :15:38. | :15:41. | |
Christmas they cut those store numbers down and it seems to me it | :15:42. | :15:45. | |
is purely a stuffing thing that people haven't noticed. | :15:46. | :15:51. | |
As a customer, how difficult is it to shop. It might be 20 minutes | :15:52. | :15:56. | |
before you get to the till. Will you remember? No, you won't remember | :15:57. | :16:03. | |
particularly if you're doing a big trolley shop, but what you can do, | :16:04. | :16:07. | |
when you get your till receipt and you're standing at the till look at | :16:08. | :16:11. | |
the bottom because that's where the promotions are listed. So after you | :16:12. | :16:15. | |
pay, you see your final sum and that's the bit that technology is | :16:16. | :16:19. | |
working on and the technology hasn't been translated to the shelves yet. | :16:20. | :16:25. | |
So if you bought two toothpaste? I always do. It takes half a minute. | :16:26. | :16:29. | |
Don't wore quid if there are people behind you. Then you can say to the | :16:30. | :16:34. | |
girl on the till, "Look, don't quite understand this." It is worth | :16:35. | :16:40. | |
spending time and if they get two or three things, they will soon wake up | :16:41. | :16:44. | |
to it. If you look at the receipt it is flagged up, buy three packs of | :16:45. | :16:48. | |
chicken breasts and you're meant to get three for two? The problem is it | :16:49. | :16:53. | |
works with the technology on the tills, but the old-fashioned taking | :16:54. | :16:56. | |
the ticket off and putting it back hasn't been done, but a lot of the | :16:57. | :17:00. | |
promotions are going. People prefer every day low price because it leads | :17:01. | :17:05. | |
to food waste and it leads to all sorts of things like that. I'm | :17:06. | :17:09. | |
surprised Tesco's are doing a lot of those. I was going to ask you about | :17:10. | :17:15. | |
that. Does it still work the process of having, is the primary thing | :17:16. | :17:19. | |
making sure that people go into a supermarket and they get the lowest | :17:20. | :17:23. | |
possible price? They want every day low prices, but you will find | :17:24. | :17:27. | |
particularly vek tables, fruit and vegetables at the moment they will | :17:28. | :17:30. | |
be doing a special offer on a particular special fruit and veg, it | :17:31. | :17:33. | |
will be cheaper for this and that will face you as you go in. So you | :17:34. | :17:37. | |
know quickly, you know, it is the oranges, the carrots or something | :17:38. | :17:40. | |
like that. So it has shifted slightly. It used to be two or three | :17:41. | :17:44. | |
years ago, 40% of everything on the shelves was on some form of price | :17:45. | :17:51. | |
promotion. 40% seems a staggering amount. If you're buying online, | :17:52. | :17:55. | |
technology it works there? It works there because it is done with the | :17:56. | :17:58. | |
technology side and this is the bit where Tesco's has fallen apart. It | :17:59. | :18:03. | |
is human error in the store. They haven't replaced the tickets. They | :18:04. | :18:06. | |
haven't got the staff to do it. They have got huge list, we are talking | :18:07. | :18:10. | |
about over 20,000 products in a basic store, not a small convenience | :18:11. | :18:16. | |
store, but the next one. It is a lot to keep up with, but technology is | :18:17. | :18:21. | |
meant to make it easier for the customer. You can see why they are | :18:22. | :18:29. | |
disappointed. They have appointed a new customer relations director who | :18:30. | :18:32. | |
doesn't start until March, but this is key to their brand because | :18:33. | :18:36. | |
otherwise people will think, I don't think I'm being treated well and the | :18:37. | :18:40. | |
retrail industry is so competitive now. The big four or battling all | :18:41. | :18:47. | |
the time against discounters. They said we're double-checking the | :18:48. | :18:50. | |
accuracy of the price labels and we've asked all colleagues to focus | :18:51. | :18:55. | |
on ensuring price label routines are always followed. Whatever you're | :18:56. | :18:58. | |
buying, wherever you're buying it from, check your receipt. Check your | :18:59. | :19:01. | |
receipt and it is easy. That's an easy thing to do. They have made | :19:02. | :19:06. | |
that easy for you. I once got charged for four cheese things and I | :19:07. | :19:14. | |
only bought one. What did you do about it? I said hold on a minute, I | :19:15. | :19:18. | |
haven't got four big blocks of cheese. They said, "Sorry sir, let's | :19:19. | :19:22. | |
refund you for those." The full investigation can be seen | :19:23. | :19:34. | |
in most English regions tonight on Inside Out at 7.30pm on BBC One, | :19:35. | :19:36. | |
or later on the BBC iPlayer. It's 8.19am and you're | :19:37. | :19:43. | |
watching Breakfast. A study has found | :19:44. | :19:48. | |
that for the first time, pensioners are, on average, | :19:49. | :19:51. | |
better off than working age people. Nearly 190,000 people living below | :19:52. | :19:54. | |
America's tallest dam have been ordered to evacuate their homes over | :19:55. | :19:56. | |
fears it could be about to collapse. Here's Carol with a look | :19:57. | :19:59. | |
at this morning's weather. We need to talk to you about your | :20:00. | :20:11. | |
awards. You can out award Adele? Oh no, nothing like that. I know it is | :20:12. | :20:15. | |
at least eight I can remember? It is eight! I'm lucky to have had eight! | :20:16. | :20:22. | |
Swiftly moving on. Do you want more? That's it. Good morning. This | :20:23. | :20:26. | |
morning it is a cold start to the day and if you're tired of the cold | :20:27. | :20:30. | |
weather then over the next few days it will turn milder. Despite the | :20:31. | :20:33. | |
fact that some of us today are already in double figures, when you | :20:34. | :20:37. | |
add on the effects of the wind it really does feel quite bitter | :20:38. | :20:40. | |
outside. So the current temperatures at the moment in London, it is only | :20:41. | :20:48. | |
three. In London, Hull four, in St Mary's it is ten Celsius on the | :20:49. | :20:52. | |
Isles of Scilly, but it won't feel like it is ten. What is happening | :20:53. | :20:55. | |
today we have a cold easterly wind across our shores. It is blowing in | :20:56. | :21:00. | |
a lot of cloud across northern parts of England and also Scotland. But | :21:01. | :21:03. | |
out towards the west we've got brighter skies and the cloud we have | :21:04. | :21:07. | |
got across southern areas continuing to break up and turn over in the | :21:08. | :21:10. | |
wind so we will see more sunshine. But the wind will be a feature in | :21:11. | :21:13. | |
the west and the south-west through the day. So across Scotland this | :21:14. | :21:16. | |
afternoon it is the west that's best in terms of sunshine. For the rest | :21:17. | :21:19. | |
of Scotland, fairly cloudy with drizzle on the hills. A fine day | :21:20. | :21:23. | |
ahead across Northern Ireland, but a cold one. And across north-east | :21:24. | :21:27. | |
England and the Pennines we've got the cloud. There is lying snow on | :21:28. | :21:31. | |
the Pennines and strong winds so that could lead to tricky travelling | :21:32. | :21:34. | |
conditions. But for north-west England and Southern England and | :21:35. | :21:37. | |
through the Midlands and Wales and into the south-west, there will | :21:38. | :21:41. | |
abfair bit of sunshine, but it will feel cold. The temperature really | :21:42. | :21:45. | |
exacerbated by this strong wind. Now, it will be particularly strong | :21:46. | :21:48. | |
through the Irish Sea, but especially so across the north and | :21:49. | :21:51. | |
the west of Wales and the south-western approaches. With | :21:52. | :21:54. | |
exposure in and around the hills in Wales for example, we could have | :21:55. | :21:58. | |
gusts up to 70mph of the that's enough to bring down small branches | :21:59. | :22:01. | |
and to cause some travel disruption. So check your ferries and your | :22:02. | :22:05. | |
bridges perhaps before you set out. Through this evening and overnight, | :22:06. | :22:09. | |
look how the isobars veer to a south easterly. As we go through the | :22:10. | :22:12. | |
night, we've got a weather front coming in from the south-west | :22:13. | :22:17. | |
introducing some rain. Now, there will be hill fog, but under clear | :22:18. | :22:20. | |
skies, it will be cold enough just for a touch of frost. And that means | :22:21. | :22:24. | |
first thing tomorrow morning under clear skies we will see some | :22:25. | :22:28. | |
sunshine. Our old friend is back! So you can see across parts of southern | :22:29. | :22:32. | |
and south-eastern England, into the north of England and also Western | :22:33. | :22:35. | |
Scotland, these are the areas favoured for the sunshine. Our | :22:36. | :22:39. | |
weather front continues to push north-east wards taking its cloud | :22:40. | :22:42. | |
with it and some patchy bits and pieces of rain. Temperatures | :22:43. | :22:46. | |
starting to come up and if you factor in the change of wind | :22:47. | :22:49. | |
direction tomorrow for south easterly and it won't be as strong | :22:50. | :22:53. | |
that won't feel too bad. Then as we head on in Tuesday night and into | :22:54. | :22:56. | |
Wednesday, our weather front goes north taking its cloud with it. | :22:57. | :22:59. | |
Maybe the odd spot of rain. Another one comes into the south-west. By | :23:00. | :23:03. | |
the end of the night, so for Wednesday, there will be rain in the | :23:04. | :23:07. | |
south-west and Wales. Showers across Western Scotland and Northern | :23:08. | :23:10. | |
Ireland. Dry, more or less everywhere else, but the | :23:11. | :23:13. | |
temperatures are continuing to climb and will continue to do so into | :23:14. | :23:17. | |
Thursday as well, Dan and Lou. OK, thank you very much. | :23:18. | :23:21. | |
Positively warm and toasty. Thank you very much, Carol. | :23:22. | :23:30. | |
Widespread drug use, door alarms that didn't work | :23:31. | :23:32. | |
and a hole in a perimeter fence - just some of the discoveries | :23:33. | :23:35. | |
made by a BBC undercover reporter at a prison | :23:36. | :23:37. | |
Panorama discovered evidence of major security failings | :23:38. | :23:40. | |
during secret filming at HMP Northumberland which holds more | :23:41. | :23:42. | |
than one thousand men and is run by the firm Sodexo. | :23:43. | :23:45. | |
Undercover in one of our biggest jails. | :23:46. | :23:51. | |
For two months, BBC Panorama filmed the drugs feeding addiction inside. | :23:52. | :23:53. | |
HMP Northumberland is a private jail run by the French company Sodexo | :23:54. | :24:04. | |
On the undercover reporter's first day inside, 2.5 kilograms of Spice, | :24:05. | :24:20. | |
a legal high with a present value of ?250,000 | :24:21. | :24:23. | |
Despite this, Panorama was told there was no lockdown, so the block | :24:24. | :24:27. | |
The BBC secretly filmed inmates high on drugs. | :24:28. | :24:42. | |
CCTV cameras recorded an inmate being stamped on. | :24:43. | :25:09. | |
At one point, Panorama's undercover reporter | :25:10. | :25:11. | |
During filming, the BBC discovered a serious security breach, | :25:12. | :25:27. | |
Nearby, officers found wire cutting tools and later, | :25:28. | :25:37. | |
It meant drugs could have been passed into the jail. | :25:38. | :25:46. | |
The reporter asked the governor what went wrong? | :25:47. | :26:05. | |
Sodexo, the company that runs the prison, said the safety of staff | :26:06. | :26:10. | |
The Ministry of Justice said it would urgently investigate the BBC's | :26:11. | :26:15. | |
footage and that the government is determined to reform our prisons. | :26:16. | :26:26. | |
Panorama - Behind Bars: Prison Undercover is | :26:27. | :26:28. | |
Coming up on the BBC News Channel is Business Live. | :26:29. | :26:38. | |
But here on Breakfast in a few moments, we'll have a summary | :26:39. | :26:41. | |
of the morning's news and Sally will have the sport. | :26:42. | :26:43. | |
Still to come, La La Land dominated the BAFTAs last night | :26:44. | :26:46. | |
Our Entertainment Correspondent, Colin Paterson was there | :26:47. | :26:55. | |
No trophy smashing here at the BAFTAs, but it was a great night for | :26:56. | :27:06. | |
La La Land and I, Daniel Blake. It was quite a night for the man who | :27:07. | :27:11. | |
played the title role. I will be speaking to him. | :27:12. | :30:43. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :30:44. | :30:59. | |
It is exactly 8:30am. We will get through the main stories and then | :31:00. | :31:04. | |
bring you the sport as well. Pensioners are, on average, | :31:05. | :31:07. | |
better off than people of working The think-tank, the Resolution | :31:08. | :31:09. | |
Foundation, which campaigns for lower earners says pensioner | :31:10. | :31:13. | |
households are now ?20 a week better off than working age households, | :31:14. | :31:16. | |
because they are more likely to own their home, have | :31:17. | :31:19. | |
generous private pensions They say it raises questions | :31:20. | :31:21. | |
about current benefits. The commission as a whole | :31:22. | :31:37. | |
is looking at it. But for me, personally, | :31:38. | :31:39. | |
I do think this raises a question about the generosity of the triple | :31:40. | :31:42. | |
lock in the future. That's something that the government | :31:43. | :31:44. | |
is going to have to look at and will be looking | :31:45. | :31:47. | |
at in the Commission. Because when money is tight, | :31:48. | :31:49. | |
whilst of course there are some pensioners on low incomes, | :31:50. | :31:51. | |
when money is tight, you have to be fair between the different age | :31:52. | :31:54. | |
groups so that everybody gets a fair Britain's biggest supermarket, | :31:55. | :31:57. | |
Tesco has pledged to take immediate action after a BBC investigation | :31:58. | :32:01. | |
revealed two thirds of deals on the shelves were out of date, | :32:02. | :32:03. | |
and didn't work at the checkout. Over three months a team from BBC | :32:04. | :32:06. | |
Inside Out visited 50 branches of Tesco across England and found | :32:07. | :32:09. | |
multi-buy deals still being advertised days, | :32:10. | :32:11. | |
weeks and in some cases months after the deductions were no | :32:12. | :32:14. | |
longer valid at the till. The supermarket says | :32:15. | :32:18. | |
it's working to make Nearly 190,000 people | :32:19. | :32:21. | |
in Northern California have been told to evacuate their homes | :32:22. | :32:27. | |
after the tallest dam in America Roads below the Oroville Dam filled | :32:28. | :32:30. | |
with traffic as residents heeded warnings to leave their homes | :32:31. | :32:38. | |
for higher ground. Authorities say there is no | :32:39. | :32:40. | |
more water going over the emergency spillway, | :32:41. | :32:44. | |
but that the evacuation In the last hour, the Co-Op Bank has | :32:45. | :32:48. | |
announced it's up for sale. The high street bank has over | :32:49. | :32:56. | |
4 million customers but almost collapsed in 2013 after a series | :32:57. | :32:59. | |
of financial problems. Since then it's been run by private | :33:00. | :33:05. | |
investment companies who they've now made "considerable progress" | :33:06. | :33:07. | |
in turning the business around. A BBC investigation has found | :33:08. | :33:12. | |
evidence of major security failings at a privately-run prison | :33:13. | :33:14. | |
in the North East of England. A reporter from Panorama filmed | :33:15. | :33:18. | |
undercover at the jail in Morpeth, discovered a number of issues, | :33:19. | :33:22. | |
including inmates using drugs. Sodexo who run the prison says | :33:23. | :33:27. | |
the safety of staff and inmates The Ministry of Justice says it | :33:28. | :33:31. | |
will investigate the footage and the government is committed | :33:32. | :33:36. | |
to reforming prisons. Fire fighters in Australia | :33:37. | :33:45. | |
are still battling around 80 Many properties have been destroyed | :33:46. | :33:47. | |
but so far there are no reports However, forecasters are warning | :33:48. | :33:52. | |
conditions could become dangerous The United States, Japan | :33:53. | :33:55. | |
and South Korea have requested an urgent meeting | :33:56. | :34:01. | |
of the United Nations Security Council to discuss North Korea's | :34:02. | :34:03. | |
latest missile test. Yesterday, it was confirmed | :34:04. | :34:05. | |
a ballistic missile was fired. The state is already subject | :34:06. | :34:09. | |
to a range of sanctions over Analysts believe the country | :34:10. | :34:12. | |
is still years away from developing Engineers are assessing damage | :34:13. | :34:17. | |
to a passenger ferry that collided with a pier in strong winds | :34:18. | :34:27. | |
on the Isle of Man. The ferry crashed as it came | :34:28. | :34:34. | |
into Douglas Harbour last night. It's owners are working | :34:35. | :34:36. | |
to bring another ferry back into service today | :34:37. | :34:39. | |
to replace the damaged vessel. A number of viewers have contacted | :34:40. | :34:48. | |
us saying how important it is because it is the only means of | :34:49. | :34:51. | |
getting to the Isle of Man at this time of year. Lanky for getting in | :34:52. | :34:58. | |
touch. -- thank you for getting in touch. | :34:59. | :35:00. | |
And coming up here on Breakfast this morning, Carol will have the weather | :35:01. | :35:03. | |
But also coming up on Breakfast this morning: | :35:04. | :35:06. | |
Former England cricket captain Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff will be | :35:07. | :35:09. | |
here with Robbie Savage and Matthew Syed to talk about | :35:10. | :35:12. | |
what we can expect from the trio's new Radio 5Live podcast. | :35:13. | :35:14. | |
Ken Loach's I, Daniel Blake, was named outstanding British film | :35:15. | :35:17. | |
We'll speak to the star of the film, the comedian, writer | :35:18. | :35:21. | |
And after nine, he found fame as the lobby boy in the film | :35:22. | :35:25. | |
Tony Revolori will be here as he prepares to take | :35:26. | :35:29. | |
to the stage as a misfit in the comedy Speech And Debate. | :35:30. | :35:33. | |
But first let's get the sport with Sally. | :35:34. | :35:44. | |
I am going to then run away! I think Mr Savage would have | :35:45. | :35:51. | |
something to say about your first story Leicester. Did you ever think | :35:52. | :35:57. | |
we would be debating if Claudio Ranieri wanted to change things | :35:58. | :36:02. | |
little bit? Tinkering? That didn't work! | :36:03. | :36:05. | |
Claudio Ranieri admits he may need to change things at Leicester. | :36:06. | :36:09. | |
The Premier League champions are facing a relegation battle this | :36:10. | :36:12. | |
morning following their 2-0 defeat at fellow strugglers Swansea. | :36:13. | :36:14. | |
Alfie Mawson's volley gave the home side the lead. | :36:15. | :36:16. | |
Then just before half-time, Martin Olsson | :36:17. | :36:17. | |
The win moves them up to 15th, but it's a fifth defeat | :36:18. | :36:22. | |
After the match, Ranieri was asked if he's been too loyal | :36:23. | :36:26. | |
When you achieve something so good you want to give them one chance, | :36:27. | :36:36. | |
two chance, three chance, maybe now it's too much. | :36:37. | :36:41. | |
Chelsea are now ten points clear at the top of the Premier League, | :36:42. | :36:44. | |
but they could only manage a draw at Burnley. | :36:45. | :36:46. | |
It took just seven minutes for them to take the lead. | :36:47. | :36:49. | |
But a brilliant free kick from Burnley's new signing | :36:50. | :36:53. | |
Robbie Brady levelled the game at 1-all. | :36:54. | :36:56. | |
On reflection is it one point gained or two points lost today? | :36:57. | :36:59. | |
I don't know, it's not important for me. | :37:00. | :37:10. | |
This is the most important thing for them. | :37:11. | :37:15. | |
Or for you, one point is losing two points. | :37:16. | :37:17. | |
Rangers are into the last eight of the Scottish Cup, | :37:18. | :37:21. | |
after coming from behind to beat Greenock Morton 2-1. | :37:22. | :37:23. | |
Martyn Waghorn won it for Rangers, in what was their first match | :37:24. | :37:26. | |
following the departure of manager Mark Warburton last week. | :37:27. | :37:32. | |
In the Six Nations, Scotland were narrowly beaten | :37:33. | :37:34. | |
It's their tenth successive defeat in the French capital. | :37:35. | :37:38. | |
Scotland twice took the lead through tries from Stuart Hogg | :37:39. | :37:41. | |
But five penalties from Camille Lopez did the damage. | :37:42. | :37:47. | |
The French eventually hung on to win 22-16. | :37:48. | :37:54. | |
Quite a few times we came off second best. | :37:55. | :37:59. | |
I thought the boys stuck in well defensively and defended our line | :38:00. | :38:02. | |
But we just, at critical times, perhaps we were not accurate enough. | :38:03. | :38:08. | |
We will have a good look that that before | :38:09. | :38:11. | |
In the women's Six Nations, Ireland lead the way | :38:12. | :38:16. | |
In the second half, Ireland dominated, running in | :38:17. | :38:18. | |
This effort, right at the end of the game, the best of the bunch | :38:19. | :38:24. | |
by Hannah Tyrell to give them a 27-3 victory. | :38:25. | :38:27. | |
This score also ensuring their bonus point. | :38:28. | :38:32. | |
At the British indoor athletics trials, Katrina Johnson-Thompson has | :38:33. | :38:35. | |
qualified for next month's European Championships in the long jump. | :38:36. | :38:40. | |
This jump, which meant she finished second behind Lorraine Ugen. | :38:41. | :38:43. | |
Johnson-Thompson is best known as a multi-event athlete, | :38:44. | :38:46. | |
but she won't defend her pentathlon title in Serbia after she changed | :38:47. | :38:49. | |
She moved to France and decided it was time to do things differently. | :38:50. | :39:03. | |
And on that theme... Yes! Well done for concentrating. I | :39:04. | :39:10. | |
don't know how I got through that without giggling! They tried their | :39:11. | :39:15. | |
best to put you off. Mr cat macro savage and Mr Flintoff have joined | :39:16. | :39:19. | |
us. Sally has got to leg it while we get our other podcast star in. He is | :39:20. | :39:29. | |
coming in now. You will be forgiven for thinking the worlds of cricket, | :39:30. | :39:34. | |
football and table tennis might not necessarily lend together | :39:35. | :39:34. | |
beautifully. But former cricketer | :39:35. | :39:36. | |
Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff and former footballer | :39:37. | :39:38. | |
Robbie Savage are firm friends . Why have you got the scarf? Look | :39:39. | :40:00. | |
at the scarf! We know you have worked on the hair. You have teamed | :40:01. | :40:05. | |
up for a new podcast. And bringing order and no doubt some | :40:06. | :40:08. | |
peace to the proceedings will be Olympian ping-pong player | :40:09. | :40:11. | |
and journalist, Matthew Syed. They have labelled do the ping-pong | :40:12. | :40:20. | |
man. It is marginally better than with wax. I looked up with it. | :40:21. | :40:27. | |
Robbie told me that he once beat Freddie at table tennis so we will | :40:28. | :40:32. | |
have a head-to-head match on the show. I am like a lot -- I am like | :40:33. | :40:43. | |
an onion with a lot of layers. Football, cricket, chests. This will | :40:44. | :40:49. | |
be highbrow. Robbie said ask Matthew what the show was about because he | :40:50. | :40:54. | |
is clever. It is to take the big sporting issues of the week and to | :40:55. | :41:01. | |
have a debate to get inside psychology, morality, celebrity, the | :41:02. | :41:05. | |
biggest talking points we can and we are going to debate them, as | :41:06. | :41:09. | |
outspoken as we possibly can. We have two great athletes here. And | :41:10. | :41:17. | |
me! Sport has such a wide tapestry of things to potentially go out. We | :41:18. | :41:21. | |
talk about Leicester and the art of captaincy. We talk about Beckham, | :41:22. | :41:26. | |
celebrity and whether or not he pushed the board is too far for | :41:27. | :41:33. | |
wanting the night had -- whether he pushed the border too far for | :41:34. | :41:37. | |
wanting a knighthood for what he did for charity. We will have some | :41:38. | :41:41. | |
controversial opinions and some insight from Robbie. Where shall we | :41:42. | :41:49. | |
start? Start with Robbie. What is the most important point? The | :41:50. | :41:53. | |
greatest ever captains in any sport. I have gone for Diego Maradona. | :41:54. | :41:59. | |
White? Matthew is laughing over there! I think the Napoli side he | :42:00. | :42:04. | |
led to the Serie A title was the best and then to captain Argentina, | :42:05. | :42:09. | |
to win the Golden Ball is the best player as well, and to have the team | :42:10. | :42:16. | |
performances, Diego Maradona. Cricket but not English. Allan | :42:17. | :42:23. | |
border, the great Aussie captain. He took Australia when they were not | :42:24. | :42:28. | |
very good. He did not just score all the runs and do well, he changed the | :42:29. | :42:32. | |
culture of Australian cricket and put it to where it is now. Who gets | :42:33. | :42:38. | |
to judge? Do you have the deciding vote? Are you the Len Goodman? | :42:39. | :42:46. | |
LAUGHTER We were going to do the best table | :42:47. | :42:49. | |
tennis player but we cannot think of many! We have been talking about | :42:50. | :42:56. | |
this on social media this morning. People have not suggested Maradona. | :42:57. | :43:05. | |
I have a problem with the ethics of these two. Maradona, I think the | :43:06. | :43:09. | |
captain has to elevate the team and not just be a great individual. | :43:10. | :43:13. | |
Maradona was a fantastic player, no doubt about that at all. There is an | :43:14. | :43:17. | |
issue with ethics, look at that handball and other things he did in | :43:18. | :43:22. | |
his life. And what troubles me with Border, he was a great captain but | :43:23. | :43:26. | |
he brought sledging into Australian cricket. He said it does not matter | :43:27. | :43:30. | |
how you win as long as you win. You want | :43:31. | :43:41. | |
a captain who can elevate the team but also have a great set of values. | :43:42. | :43:46. | |
Does that mean a body set me as a great captain?! Am I out of the | :43:47. | :43:51. | |
running. Look at Marcus Brearley. England was on its knees. He came in | :43:52. | :43:56. | |
and was a great psychologist. He came into cricket captaincy late | :43:57. | :44:00. | |
because he was studying for a fee degree. He had a real insight. -- he | :44:01. | :44:08. | |
was studying for a philosophy degree. You have lost me with | :44:09. | :44:14. | |
philosophy! You know each other well, are you training buddies as | :44:15. | :44:16. | |
well? Wii has been wanting to do something | :44:17. | :44:21. | |
for a while. -- we had been wanting. I had not done too much in sport | :44:22. | :44:36. | |
since retiring. A lot of it has been entertaining. You look at what | :44:37. | :44:40. | |
Matthew mentions in the news and everybody has an opinion. Myself and | :44:41. | :44:44. | |
Robbie attack it from a different angle, like the man in the street's | :44:45. | :44:50. | |
view. Did you have an inside edge? A little bit, when it comes to some | :44:51. | :44:54. | |
things that some of the things we are talking about, social media in | :44:55. | :45:00. | |
sport, whether it is good or bad. You see sport people get in trouble | :45:01. | :45:04. | |
for posting things that and it does some good. Jermain Defoe visited | :45:05. | :45:11. | |
somebody in hospital. Things against racism. And how to lose a dressing | :45:12. | :45:27. | |
room. Plenty of insight into that. And your dress sense, which has got | :45:28. | :45:33. | |
worse. Once you have lost the dressing room, is there any way | :45:34. | :45:38. | |
back? Not from my point of view. In Australia, it got worse. Can anybody | :45:39. | :45:45. | |
get it back once they have lost the dressing room? It will be a big test | :45:46. | :45:49. | |
now. I do not know if Claudio Ranieri has lost the dressing room. | :45:50. | :45:55. | |
Matthew might know more. It is difficult. It becomes contagious | :45:56. | :45:59. | |
when people doubt, it starts to spread. A great galvanising ability. | :46:00. | :46:04. | |
It will be tough for them now. Talking about great leaders. We talk | :46:05. | :46:10. | |
about Ingham's next potential great leader. Alastair Cook stepping down, | :46:11. | :46:15. | |
does it have to be Joe Root? Alastair Cook has been brilliant and | :46:16. | :46:20. | |
I am sad to see him go, I would like to see him carry on another year. I | :46:21. | :46:25. | |
do not know what is going on in the dressing room, but from the outside, | :46:26. | :46:28. | |
Joe Root is probably the only candidate, the way he plays, goes | :46:29. | :46:33. | |
about his business, you would imagine would lend itself to being a | :46:34. | :46:37. | |
great captain. If you look at Virat Kohli for India, Joe Root is similar | :46:38. | :46:42. | |
as a player and a person. He would get my backing. You would beat them | :46:43. | :46:51. | |
at ping-pong? I am embarrassed that Robbie is confident. Raising his | :46:52. | :46:54. | |
eyebrows now that it could not happen. You said I could not get six | :46:55. | :47:01. | |
points. I do not think you will get one point. On Leicester, Claudio | :47:02. | :47:09. | |
Ranieri deserves a statue in Leicester. Do you think they are | :47:10. | :47:14. | |
going down? It is tough to call and I cannot call it. Get off the fence. | :47:15. | :47:20. | |
Yes or no macro. I think they will just stay up. Just. Thanks for | :47:21. | :47:27. | |
pushing him. You make a good team. Ten o'clock on Radio 5. I am just | :47:28. | :47:30. | |
getting to that. Flintoff, Savage and the Ping Pong | :47:31. | :47:33. | |
Guy is available to download as a podcast this afternoon | :47:34. | :47:39. | |
and a shorter version will air Happy with that? Excellent. We can | :47:40. | :47:57. | |
get some weather with Carol. Finally a picture with a name in it. | :47:58. | :48:01. | |
Fabulous weather watchers have sent in pictures. This is in Cheshire | :48:02. | :48:06. | |
with the cloud breaking. Sunshine coming through, albeit hazy. And in | :48:07. | :48:13. | |
East Sussex, lovely blue sky, but do not be fooled, it is a cold start, | :48:14. | :48:18. | |
but over the next days, it will slowly turn milder than it was last | :48:19. | :48:25. | |
week and through the weekend. This morning, we have sunshine, across | :48:26. | :48:30. | |
southern areas, Wales, north-west England, parts of Scotland, Northern | :48:31. | :48:34. | |
Ireland. It is windy particularly in the west. We have cloud in the North | :48:35. | :48:42. | |
Sea coming across. Over the Pennines and North East and Central and | :48:43. | :48:47. | |
eastern Scotland. It will carry on into the afternoon. Brighter skies | :48:48. | :48:52. | |
in the west of Scotland. Cloud thick enough to bring drizzle. Lovely | :48:53. | :48:57. | |
across Northern Ireland albeit cold. North-west England seeing sunshine | :48:58. | :49:01. | |
and around Cheshire, but still heading towards the Wash, eastern | :49:02. | :49:06. | |
parts handing onto the cloud. We are looking at a fair bit of sunshine | :49:07. | :49:11. | |
for the rest of England and Wales, with temperatures up to ten. But it | :49:12. | :49:17. | |
will not feel warm. The chill will be accentuated by the wind. Through | :49:18. | :49:21. | |
the Irish Sea, very windy, particularly across the hills and | :49:22. | :49:27. | |
the headlands of Wales and south-west England. In the north and | :49:28. | :49:31. | |
west of Wales across the hills, we could have gusts up to 70 mph, which | :49:32. | :49:37. | |
could ring down branches. We could have disruption to travel. Whether | :49:38. | :49:42. | |
checking before you set out. Watch how the isobars swing round to more | :49:43. | :49:48. | |
of a south-easterly direction. We also have another weather front | :49:49. | :49:53. | |
coming in from the south-west introducing rain. Over the night | :49:54. | :49:57. | |
will be cold under clear skies and we could see a touch of frost. Rain | :49:58. | :50:03. | |
until fog, that is how we start tomorrow morning. With clear skies | :50:04. | :50:07. | |
we will have sunshine from the word go. Migrating north east, taking | :50:08. | :50:14. | |
cloud and patchy rain with it. Temperatures tomorrow up to 11 | :50:15. | :50:18. | |
degrees. With lighter wind and coming from a different direction, | :50:19. | :50:24. | |
from the south-east, it will not feel as cold. Tuesday into Wednesday | :50:25. | :50:28. | |
we have a weather front continuing to push up into Scotland, north-east | :50:29. | :50:32. | |
England and eastern England generally. Only to be replaced in | :50:33. | :50:38. | |
the south-west by another one. Wednesday, west in southern parts of | :50:39. | :50:43. | |
England and Wales, showers in other parts of western England, Scotland | :50:44. | :50:48. | |
and Northern Ireland, but a lot of dry weather. Note how the | :50:49. | :50:52. | |
temperature is creeping up. Thursday will not be bone dry, we will see | :50:53. | :50:59. | |
bright skies, and they're will be a feathered cloud. But in the northern | :51:00. | :51:04. | |
Scotland, temperatures in double figures. If you are fed up with a | :51:05. | :51:07. | |
cold, good news on the horizon. See you tomorrow. | :51:08. | :51:16. | |
800 a week are being returned , because people who were previously | :51:17. | :51:20. | |
It is since the personal independent payment replaced the old Disability | :51:21. | :51:34. | |
Living Allowance. Jon Cuthill has been meeting | :51:35. | :51:36. | |
some of those affected. Leah Debus lost her leg in | :51:37. | :51:42. | |
a motorbike accident five years ago. She has a prosthetic but finds | :51:43. | :51:47. | |
it too uncomfortable She used to have a Motability car, | :51:48. | :51:49. | |
but had to hand it back after her The decision was that I am not | :51:50. | :51:57. | |
entitled to any mobility at all. With no mobility benefit, | :51:58. | :52:10. | |
Leah lost the ?55 a week payment She can no longer work | :52:11. | :52:13. | |
because she can no longer get there and is now totally | :52:14. | :52:17. | |
dependent on benefits. I had to turn down the new | :52:18. | :52:19. | |
job I managed to get. Due to the location, I couldn't get | :52:20. | :52:22. | |
there without my vehicle. I think the most frustrating thing | :52:23. | :52:29. | |
is how hard I've pushed myself How hard I've worked to walk, | :52:30. | :52:32. | |
to go back to work, to live my life. And I feel like I've | :52:33. | :52:41. | |
been penalised for that. They've taken it away from me | :52:42. | :52:43. | |
and now they've made it impossible Becky Lewis fears she could lose | :52:44. | :52:46. | |
her specially adapted car because she too has | :52:47. | :52:52. | |
an artificial leg. Even though like Leah, | :52:53. | :52:59. | |
she cannot always use it. They think I might not be disabled | :53:00. | :53:02. | |
enough because I can walk leg as awalking aid. | :53:03. | :53:04. | |
classify a prosthetic Wheelchairs, anything like that | :53:05. | :53:12. | |
are classified as a walking aid, Now I walk more than 20 metres it | :53:13. | :53:14. | |
means I have to hand the car back. Atos said its assessments are done | :53:15. | :53:21. | |
by health professionals. The Department for Work and Pensions | :53:22. | :53:27. | |
says decisions for Pip are made after considering all evidence | :53:28. | :53:31. | |
from the claimant and their GP. And that anyone who disagrees | :53:32. | :53:35. | |
with the decision can appeal. I just don't understand how they can | :53:36. | :53:38. | |
say that I don't have But it's just one more battle | :53:39. | :53:42. | |
thousands of disabled That appeal process, you have | :53:43. | :54:09. | |
started it. I have. Where are you at the moment? You had to leave one | :54:10. | :54:15. | |
job. I resigned from a full-time job for health reasons. I decided to go | :54:16. | :54:21. | |
to a new part-time job and I was due to take my new position at the end | :54:22. | :54:25. | |
of November and unfortunately I had to turn it down because my car was | :54:26. | :54:29. | |
taken back the following week and I was unable to get to and from the | :54:30. | :54:34. | |
job. The government said people who lose their cars, they have been | :54:35. | :54:38. | |
given a payment to help the transition. Did that help? Has that | :54:39. | :54:46. | |
eased things? Yes, they give you ?2000, but unfortunately, it is not | :54:47. | :54:51. | |
enough to purchase your own car, cover insurance costs, long-term | :54:52. | :54:57. | |
maintenance of the vehicle. Plus, while the appeal goes on and the | :54:58. | :55:01. | |
decision is made, you have a loss of income from the DLA payments. It is | :55:02. | :55:08. | |
only a short-term fix, not a long-term option. You cannot buy a | :55:09. | :55:13. | |
reliable car for that money. You try to make it better by moving house. I | :55:14. | :55:19. | |
moved into the town centre in the hope I can find a local job I can | :55:20. | :55:24. | |
get to but, as I say, with prospective legs, it is not | :55:25. | :55:30. | |
guaranteed. You might end up with sores, uncomfortable, not able to | :55:31. | :55:35. | |
walk far. One day you might be able to walk further than another? Yes. | :55:36. | :55:41. | |
And also weather conditions. Amputees understand the difficulty | :55:42. | :55:45. | |
of walking in windy, wet, icy, snowy weather. It is not something I am | :55:46. | :55:49. | |
prepared to do and I will not go out if the weather is that bad. You are | :55:50. | :55:53. | |
trying to be self-sufficient and this has almost forced to you and | :55:54. | :55:59. | |
others in your situation back onto the benefits system? Yes, I worked | :56:00. | :56:06. | |
really hard to get myself back to as normal a life as I could get. A | :56:07. | :56:10. | |
full-time job, working in an office, there are challenges you have to | :56:11. | :56:14. | |
overcome, like confidence and self-esteem. I battled over those | :56:15. | :56:20. | |
and got myself a job and was enjoying it and enjoying being back | :56:21. | :56:23. | |
out there. From a government perspective, I am sure you | :56:24. | :56:27. | |
appreciate budgets are tight and there is not enough money for | :56:28. | :56:31. | |
everybody to be on the benefits you were enjoying with the car scheme. I | :56:32. | :56:38. | |
do understand that, but at the same time it feels those of us who really | :56:39. | :56:42. | |
needed in order to not be on benefits, which is therefore saving | :56:43. | :56:47. | |
money, are being penalised. And back on the benefit system, having to | :56:48. | :56:52. | |
have everything paid for. You are appealing. When do you think that | :56:53. | :56:58. | |
appeal will be heard? You have 28 days to lodge an appeal. I do not | :56:59. | :57:03. | |
know how long it will take. I spoke to a fellow amputee recently and | :57:04. | :57:10. | |
their appeal took nine months. And in the meantime you will try to find | :57:11. | :57:14. | |
more work? Something part-time lately. I have always been reliable | :57:15. | :57:19. | |
when I go to work and hopefully I can maintain that and get to work | :57:20. | :57:21. | |
each time. Thanks for talking to us. Viewers in the south | :57:22. | :57:25. | |
can watch more on this The programme will be | :57:26. | :57:28. | |
on the BBC iPlayer soon after. We have been talking about the | :57:29. | :57:39. | |
awards. Grammy awards, Baftas. Shall we talk about the Bafta 's first? La | :57:40. | :57:46. | |
La Land won a string of awards in London where the Duke and Duchess of | :57:47. | :57:50. | |
Cambridge stepped onto the red carpet with Hollywood royalty. The | :57:51. | :57:56. | |
Ken Loach film about the welfare system, I, Daniel Blake, was named | :57:57. | :58:00. | |
best British film. Our entertainment correspondent was there. Watch out | :58:01. | :58:02. | |
for flash photography. On the red carpet, there was acting | :58:03. | :58:05. | |
royalty, like Meryl Streep and Eddie Redmayne, writing royalty, | :58:06. | :58:08. | |
like JK Rowling, and actual royalty, all to see which film would be | :58:09. | :58:14. | |
crowned the big winner. Yes, the musical set | :58:15. | :58:16. | |
in Los Angeles won five awards, including Best Film, | :58:17. | :58:24. | |
Best Director and Best Right now, this country and the US | :58:25. | :58:26. | |
and the world seems to be And in a time that's so divisive, | :58:27. | :58:33. | |
I think it's really special that we were all able to come | :58:34. | :58:44. | |
together tonight thanks to Bafta. Hers wasn't the only | :58:45. | :58:53. | |
political speech. Ken Loach took to the stage after | :58:54. | :59:03. | |
his film one outstanding British film. | :59:04. | :59:06. | |
Thank you to the Academy for endorsing the truth | :59:07. | :59:08. | |
of what the film says, which hundreds of thousands | :59:09. | :59:10. | |
of people in this country know, and that is that the most vulnerable | :59:11. | :59:13. | |
and the poorest people are treated by this government with a callous | :59:14. | :59:16. | |
Casey Affleck won Best Actor, for a grief-filled | :59:17. | :59:27. | |
My mother would take me to the Al Anon meetings. | :59:28. | :59:36. | |
There would be children there who would re-enact the person at their | :59:37. | :59:39. | |
home they were trying to understand. And acting has been | :59:40. | :59:43. | |
that for me ever since. Best Supporting Actress, Viola | :59:44. | :59:53. | |
Davis, for the family drama, Fences. She said diversity might have | :59:54. | :00:04. | |
improved this year's award ceremonies but the real issue is | :00:05. | :00:06. | |
Hollywood and the films it decides to make. | :00:07. | :00:16. | |
It's about the films that are being produced | :00:17. | :00:18. | |
Like I said, if there are no films that are being produced, | :00:19. | :00:22. | |
We'll see if it's a trend and not just an exception. | :00:23. | :00:27. | |
Best Supporting Actor for British star Dev Patel, | :00:28. | :00:29. | |
for the true life story, Lion. | :00:30. | :00:30. | |
He was clearly overwhelmed to have won. | :00:31. | :00:32. | |
What was it like when they read out your name? | :00:33. | :00:39. | |
And every cell of my body is still vibrating with pure joy. | :00:40. | :00:48. | |
All of this isn't just about the glory of winning a Bafta, | :00:49. | :00:51. | |
because voting will soon be under way in the all-important Oscars. | :00:52. | :00:54. | |
Even before tonight, La La Land looked likely | :00:55. | :00:56. | |
to win Best Picture, and this evening's strong showing | :00:57. | :00:59. | |
underlines its position as favourite to win Best Film for the Oscars | :01:00. | :01:02. | |
We were promising you earlier we would speak to the start of I, | :01:03. | :01:26. | |
Daniel Blake Dave Johns but he is not answering his phone. But | :01:27. | :01:30. | |
thankfully, he was going to speak to our entertainment correspondent | :01:31. | :01:33. | |
Colin Paterson. He is outside the Royal Albert Hall for us this | :01:34. | :01:37. | |
morning. It was a good night for an a la land, Colin and there they are. | :01:38. | :01:43. | |
There they are indeed. Breakfast set me the challenge of going to the | :01:44. | :01:47. | |
after show party and coming back with something. Every table had a | :01:48. | :01:51. | |
huge display relating to one of the films. This is part of what they had | :01:52. | :01:57. | |
for the La La Land on. This is from the freeway and this is from the | :01:58. | :02:01. | |
opening of the film. This was from Manchester By The Sea, a table with | :02:02. | :02:11. | |
a very nautical theme. We have not brought you the star of I, Daniel | :02:12. | :02:14. | |
Blake but I did manage to steal part of the table display, one of the | :02:15. | :02:17. | |
protest signs so I have managed to rise to the challenge. La La Land | :02:18. | :02:23. | |
were up for a number of awards, they won five, does it go down as another | :02:24. | :02:29. | |
great night for the film? Absolutely. They won seven Golden | :02:30. | :02:34. | |
Globes. The bottled it might be a real sweep here. In the end, the | :02:35. | :02:38. | |
first 14 awards of the night went to 14 different film so people were | :02:39. | :02:42. | |
wondering is La La Land going to be shut out in some way but towards the | :02:43. | :02:46. | |
end of the night it started to pick them up. It won cinematography, best | :02:47. | :02:51. | |
director for Damien Chazelle, best actress for Emma Stone and then the | :02:52. | :02:57. | |
big one at the end of the night, big picture. La La Land was already | :02:58. | :03:00. | |
clear favourite to win at the Oscars, now it is even more so. We | :03:01. | :03:05. | |
have had the Golden Globes, the BAFTAs last night, looking ahead to | :03:06. | :03:09. | |
the Oscars, how much of what we saw at the BAFTAs will give us an | :03:10. | :03:12. | |
indication of how things will go at the Oscars? Well, voting for the | :03:13. | :03:18. | |
Oscars opens today said people in Hollywood will be waking up, picking | :03:19. | :03:22. | |
up the trade papers where they look for their next job is, that is where | :03:23. | :03:28. | |
they will get their next job. They will see pictures of people with | :03:29. | :03:32. | |
BAFTAs in their hands so it cannot help but influence them in some way. | :03:33. | :03:36. | |
For 16 years the BAFTAs have been before the Oscars and seven times | :03:37. | :03:42. | |
what has won Best Best picture at the BAFTAs has gone on to win the | :03:43. | :03:47. | |
Oscars and I am certain that La La Land will. Were there any other | :03:48. | :03:51. | |
moments of magic from last night you need to tell us about? We heard the | :03:52. | :03:55. | |
Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were there. There were reports that they | :03:56. | :03:59. | |
would steal the limelight but they were in and out without being seen | :04:00. | :04:05. | |
by many people. They shut down the red carpet when they arrived. Star | :04:06. | :04:09. | |
Michelle Williams from Manchester By The Sea was about to arrive and do | :04:10. | :04:13. | |
her big interviews that she was told she was not allowed on the red | :04:14. | :04:16. | |
carpet because they were there. She had to wait for ten minutes standing | :04:17. | :04:20. | |
in the cold because the Royals were there and she was late so she could | :04:21. | :04:25. | |
not do any interviews so she just had to run in. Michelle Williams | :04:26. | :04:31. | |
lost out to the Royals last night. We know that feeling, standing in | :04:32. | :04:37. | |
the rain shivering waiting to get into the national television awards | :04:38. | :04:44. | |
carpet. We know our place. The BAFTAs were not the only big awards | :04:45. | :04:47. | |
last night. Adele has triumphed at the Grammys | :04:48. | :04:49. | |
in Los Angeles, becoming the first person to take the top three awards | :04:50. | :04:52. | |
for the second time, She won five awards in total, | :04:53. | :04:54. | |
including song and record of the year for Hello, | :04:55. | :04:58. | |
and album of the year for 25. And if she did, would the Grammys | :04:59. | :05:01. | |
end up like last year's Oscars in a controversy over | :05:02. | :05:06. | |
favouring white talent? The answers to these | :05:07. | :05:08. | |
questions were yes and yes. Adele herself looked far | :05:09. | :05:10. | |
from comfortable with her five awards and dedicated album | :05:11. | :05:13. | |
of the year to Beyonce. My artist of my life is Beyonce | :05:14. | :05:15. | |
and this album to me, the Lemonade album, | :05:16. | :05:24. | |
was so monumental and the way you made me and my friends feel, | :05:25. | :05:28. | |
the way you make my black friends The performance by the proudly | :05:29. | :05:32. | |
pregnant megastar was stunning. But this most consequential | :05:33. | :05:42. | |
of artists really was only For the second year in a row she had | :05:43. | :05:54. | |
performance problems. I know it's live TV, I'm sorry, | :05:55. | :06:03. | |
I need to start again. I'm sorry for swearing and I am | :06:04. | :06:06. | |
sorry for starting again. The second take of her tribute | :06:07. | :06:14. | |
to George Michael was flawless. CHEERING Chance the rapper won | :06:15. | :06:19. | |
Best Rap Album and for big While David Bowie won more | :06:20. | :06:32. | |
Grammys in death than life. Host James Corden poked fun | :06:33. | :06:36. | |
at himself and at President Trump. What I will say is any negative | :06:37. | :06:43. | |
tweets that you see are fake tweets. Persist was the word | :06:44. | :06:49. | |
on Katie Perry's arm, a political statement from an artist | :06:50. | :06:51. | |
who campaigned for Hillary Clinton. Busta Rhymes was even less subtle, | :06:52. | :07:02. | |
calling Mr Trump Agent Orange. I just want to thank | :07:03. | :07:06. | |
President Agent Orange This was billed as a battle | :07:07. | :07:15. | |
between Beyonce and Adele but behind that simple summary was a deeper | :07:16. | :07:22. | |
layer of questions, not least about race and a country | :07:23. | :07:24. | |
where cultures continue to clash. Time now for a last look | :07:25. | :07:33. | |
at the headlines where Despite sunny spells it | :07:34. | :09:11. | |
will still feel on the cold Maximum Temperature: | :09:12. | :09:13. | |
7 degrees Celsius. Our next guest rose to fame | :09:14. | :09:23. | |
in the critically acclaimed film The Grand Budapest Hotel | :09:24. | :09:30. | |
playing the lobby boy Zero the silver screen for the stage | :09:31. | :09:33. | |
in a new comedy Speech And Debate, which revolves around three | :09:34. | :09:38. | |
teenagers as they try to get through a scandal that involves | :09:39. | :09:40. | |
one of their teachers. Good morning to you. Good morning. | :09:41. | :09:56. | |
Tell us about the story and what is different about this production? I | :09:57. | :10:03. | |
think it is a wonderful story about these three sort of misfit | :10:04. | :10:12. | |
teenagers. I say misfits but they are still, you know, people who are | :10:13. | :10:16. | |
led to Bill, kids who are later blog and I think it is wonderful, the | :10:17. | :10:23. | |
story of these three misfits who aren't really friends and don't | :10:24. | :10:26. | |
really like each other, but are forced together due to this sex | :10:27. | :10:35. | |
scandal that happens. My character kind of perpetuates them meeting and | :10:36. | :10:39. | |
staying in touch and forcing interaction between the three. What | :10:40. | :10:43. | |
is different in this iteration of the play is I think you have | :10:44. | :10:52. | |
wonderful actors and besides that, coming here to do it for an English | :10:53. | :10:57. | |
audience changes what we are doing and also it is a very political | :10:58. | :11:07. | |
heavy play. In terms of talking about things like that. It is | :11:08. | :11:11. | |
wonderful to do that kind of play now with everything going on. So you | :11:12. | :11:16. | |
are 20 and you are playing a 16-year-old. You remember those | :11:17. | :11:21. | |
days. Is it quite interesting to play somebody who was on the verge | :11:22. | :11:25. | |
of adult Ed? I have been playing that for the last four or five years | :11:26. | :11:34. | |
now stop it is great. It is the thing that happens very often is | :11:35. | :11:39. | |
what we forget is kids want to be adults. So it is not very hard to | :11:40. | :11:46. | |
play a 16-year-old. You just play someone trying to be an adult, which | :11:47. | :11:53. | |
I think is all of us. That is a very good point. | :11:54. | :11:58. | |
This is your UK theatre debut. Is it true you were told that the UK | :11:59. | :12:02. | |
theatre audience are harsh, they don't laugh, it will be really | :12:03. | :12:07. | |
difficult for you. They don't clap, they don't laugh, they don't smile. | :12:08. | :12:16. | |
My cast-mate and our director, they'll decided it would be a good | :12:17. | :12:22. | |
joke to let me know that nobody would be laughing, nobody would be | :12:23. | :12:25. | |
smiling and you would only know if you did a good job at the very end, | :12:26. | :12:30. | |
if they clapped. And apparently they also made the joke that everyone | :12:31. | :12:35. | |
claps in unison so it is a weird thing. You have enjoyed it. You are | :12:36. | :12:40. | |
also in the new Spiderman which comes out in July. You play a | :12:41. | :12:49. | |
baddie? Identify a bad by the stop I play the belief. Tom Holland plays | :12:50. | :12:54. | |
Spiderman. Congratulations, Tom Holland for your win. I am playing | :12:55. | :13:01. | |
Flash Thompson who is the bully to Tom Holland's Peter Parker and it is | :13:02. | :13:07. | |
good. I get to be mean and kind of act out things that you normally | :13:08. | :13:11. | |
would not be socially acceptable. Was that way you feel more | :13:12. | :13:16. | |
comfortable, in a film than onstage? Absolutely. But I think it is an | :13:17. | :13:21. | |
actor's duty to be uncomfortable because that is how you get better, | :13:22. | :13:25. | |
learning different experiences, doing different things. Tony, it is | :13:26. | :13:32. | |
lovely to see you, thank you. He is performing in Speech And Debate | :13:33. | :13:33. | |
which opens later this month. Time now for Countryfile Winter | :13:34. | :13:36. | |
Diaries, which this week will be celebrating the season | :13:37. | :13:40. | |
in all its chilly glory. JOHN CRAVEN: | :13:41. | :13:44. | |
This is the toughest time of year. But it can also be the most | :13:45. | :13:48. | |
spectacular season | :13:49. | :13:52. |