27/02/2017 Breakfast


27/02/2017

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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

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Confusion at the Oscars as the Best Picture award is handed

:00:07.:00:10.

La La Land was initially named the winner. The producers started their

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acceptance speeches but they were interrupted with an announcement

:00:28.:00:30.

that Moonlight was in fact the best picture. It appears the warrant 80

:00:31.:00:36.

and Faye Dunaway it were handed the wrong envelope, the most dramatic

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twist in the Oscar's final scene. Good morning, it's

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Monday 27th February. the Independent Inquiry

:00:50.:00:52.

into Child Sexual Abuse finally holds its first public hearings more

:00:53.:00:57.

than two and a half years Sales of Fairtade products hit

:00:58.:01:00.

?1.6bn last year but does the buying I'll meet a farmer

:01:01.:01:10.

from Malawi to find out. In sport, Manchester United snatch

:01:11.:01:19.

victory from Southampton in the EFL The 3-2 win saw Jose Mourinho become

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the first United manager to win a trophy in his first

:01:23.:01:26.

season with the club. Good morning. A day of sunshine and

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showers and be showers will be a sundry with hail and possible sleet

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and snow. Wherever you worry it will be windy. More details later in the

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programme. -- wherever you are. The Oscars ceremony has ended

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in confusion, after the wrong film In a farcical ending,

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La La Land was announced as the winner, before the award

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eventually went to Moonlight. We were here at work. Extraordinary

:02:02.:02:10.

scenes as everybody tried to work it out.

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Let's cross to our Los Angeles correspondent James Cook,

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who's at the Vanity Fair after-show party which all the stars attend.

:02:14.:02:17.

There will be only one subject. What an extraordinary thing to happen.

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Can you tell us what happened and how it happened? What happened was

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that the award ceremony had been running smoothly and there had been

:02:31.:02:35.

more than a liberal sprinkling of politics throughout with criticisms

:02:36.:02:40.

of Donald Trump especially from the host who joked at the start if he

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did not know if he would make a good job at hosting. We will come to that

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in a moment because what happened at the end was that as they handed the

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best picture award to La La Land, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were

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opening the envelope. The name La La Land was read out but then the

:03:08.:03:11.

producers came on stage, they began to make an acceptance speech. They

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were quite a long way into them before it became apparent that there

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was a mistake. There was confusion and a kerfuffle on stage and

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eventually one of the producers snatch the envelope, held it up to

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the camera to reveal that Moonlight was the winner. He handled it quite

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class Lee. John Floyd, just a few moments ago, even he was saying that

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when he won his Oscar back in 1978 he could not have imagined what it

:03:41.:03:45.

would feel like if someone had taken a moment away from him. There is a

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mistake. Moonlight, are you guys won Best Picture. This is not a joke. I

:03:52.:04:00.

am afraid they read the wrong thing. This is not a joke. Moonlight is a

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won. Moonlight. Best picture. Server was the producer of La La Land. He

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had made an acceptance speech and quite graciously said that he will

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hand over the Oscar to the true winners. It was the most

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extraordinary moment. Quite incredible and what had happened in

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the run-up to that was that La La Land had done quite well. Not

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sweeping the board as some had expected and it had done quite well.

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Emma Stone had won. The director had one as well. -- had won as well.

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Hello, sir. This is the BBC. What did you think about the moment at

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the end? I thought it was an honest mistake. Something that happens. It

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is live and so anything can go wrong. It is not the first time this

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has happened. I have probably been involved in something like this

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before. Could you imagine, you would have won plenty of awards in your

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time. If you had won something of that calibre and it was taken from

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you at the last moment... The people were very gracious and they handled

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it quite well. What is your view about the whole aspect of racial

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diversity? That is what we would be talking about were it not for this

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last-minute kerfuffle. Has there been an advance this year, do you

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think? Something that we constantly need to work on. We constantly need

:05:45.:05:55.

to try to improve upon it. Because it is the most stupid idea that man

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can have, to be prejudiced against each other of colour or belief. We

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are all human beings. And we saw the first Muslim advert to win for best

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supporting actor, Marshela Ali. Not to mention Viola Davis for best

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supporting actress. It is not the first time a black person has won an

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Oscar. It is ongoing. There is improvement but we are making

:06:34.:06:37.

progress. There is a lot of politics in this show. A lot of criticism,

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criticism of the policies of Donald Trump. Was the appropriate? What did

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you feel? It is America. That is what this country is. You can say

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what you want to, that is what this is about. Thank you very much. There

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is some reaction from the celebrities arriving here for the

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Vanity Fair party. I don't know how much you can hear. Let's have a look

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at the line at the photographers down the yen, camera crews at this

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end. Stars arriving with right and centre and as you rightly say, there

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is only one thing they will be discussing. Huge congratulations to

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Moonlight. We had the director here last week. It was beyond his wildest

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dreams. Fantastic news for them. What else should we be talking

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about, if anything? When I was just talking about there I think is

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relevant. The first Muslim actor, we believe, to win acting award at the

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Oscars have got to be a significant moment. The Koran was quoted one

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moment, invoking Islam is a religion of peace. There was a victory for

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the White Helmet and its producer. That is significant. A film about

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the civil war in Syria and there were, at various points, please do

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not build walls between the United States and other countries and to

:08:08.:08:12.

remain united. One of the big question is, however that has only

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intensified as result of these Oscars, I have to say was

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brilliantly hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, at least it was brilliantly hosted

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if you take a certain political persuasion. Maybe you could support

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President Trump and enjoyed as well that there will certainly be a

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significant slice of the United States of America who felt that Mr

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Kimmel was harsh on the President, effectively suggesting that he was a

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racist, among other things. I think that is a dilemma for producers of

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award shores. There is nowhere more liberal in the world than this, than

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Hollywood. So to what extent of these people preach to the converted

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and to what extent is the other house of the United States simply

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turn off the television? Thank you very much. We will return throughout

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the programme. We need more reaction on the people involved in that

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enormous mistake. The wrong envelope, that is all came down to.

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She initially read the nominations. If you look at the picture he

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actually has Best actress in her leading role, which is Emma Stone,

:09:20.:09:23.

La La Land. He gave it to Faye Dunaway because he thought was a

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mistake. They read the one and there you go. There were only two people

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in the room who knew the truth and they came up onto the stage. Yes.

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The people come in under high security, nobody knows who has won

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because they are in suitcases, the winners, they go in separate routes.

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Someone said that was the wrong envelope and... There you go.

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Anyway, Moonlight, best picture. Let us know what you think about that.

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We will be speaking about this later on in the morning as well.

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The independent inquiry into child sexual abuse will hold its first

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public hearings today, more than two and a half years

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after it was set up by the government.

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It'll begin by examining the mistreatment of British children

:10:10.:10:11.

in care or from poor families, who were sent to Australia

:10:12.:10:14.

in the years after the Second World War.

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The inquiry will be told that the scale of abuse

:10:17.:10:19.

they suffered was much wider than previously thought.

:10:20.:10:21.

Here's our home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds.

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NEWSREEL: They arrive at Fremantle from Great Britain with 931

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New lives in the sunshine. That is what children in care, or from poor

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families were promised. But 70 years old, some like Clifford Walsh, are

:10:49.:10:52.

still affected by the beatings and sexual abuse they suffered instead.

:10:53.:10:56.

His Catholic children's home near Perth in Australia has become

:10:57.:11:01.

notorious. For the next two weeks the televised public enquiry will

:11:02.:11:05.

consider new evidence about the extent of the abuse, claims that

:11:06.:11:09.

children were picked by paedophiles to travel aboard and allegations of

:11:10.:11:14.

a cover-up. You want to know what happened, we want to know who did it

:11:15.:11:19.

and we want to know who covered it up for so long. Of course we need to

:11:20.:11:23.

know about it. There were consequences for children today. We

:11:24.:11:26.

also need to look at why it has taken 30 years to bring about this

:11:27.:11:33.

enquiry into the horrific abuse of hundreds, if not thousands of young

:11:34.:11:38.

children. The enquiry rejects suggestions that it is reaching too

:11:39.:11:43.

far back in history. Many of the migrants are still alive. Getting to

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the bottom of what happened to them and why, it says, is still relevant.

:11:48.:11:56.

Later on we will be speaking to somebody who was sent to Australia

:11:57.:12:02.

as a young boy and is now a campaigner.

:12:03.:12:02.

The Labour MP and former minister, Sir Gerald Kaufman, has died

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He was an MP in Manchester for 47 years, and a Shadow Minister

:12:06.:12:10.

In 2015, as the longest continuously serving MP,

:12:11.:12:14.

The BBC has ordered an investigation into TV licence collectors

:12:15.:12:18.

following reports that they're deliberately targeting vulnerable

:12:19.:12:20.

The Daily Mail claims enforcement officers,

:12:21.:12:26.

who are employed by the private company Capita, are ordered to catch

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28 evaders every week and promised financial incentives

:12:30.:12:31.

Head teachers and school governors are calling on the Chancellor

:12:32.:12:39.

to make schools a priority in the budget.

:12:40.:12:41.

The National Association of Head Teachers and the National

:12:42.:12:43.

Association of Governors have written an open letter

:12:44.:12:45.

to Philip Hammond to say that they're being forced to make

:12:46.:12:49.

Here's our Education correspondent, Gillian Hargreaves.

:12:50.:12:59.

More than a third of small businesses expect their rates

:13:00.:13:01.

to rise this April, according to the Federation of Small

:13:02.:13:04.

The Federation says many face unsustainable and unaffordable

:13:05.:13:07.

increases, and are planning to cut the amount they invest

:13:08.:13:09.

The government has promised help for those worst hit.

:13:10.:13:19.

The mobile phone company Nokia is bringing back one of its most

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The company has struggled to compete in the smartphone era,

:13:23.:13:26.

but it hopes there'll be a demand for a simple phone with a battery

:13:27.:13:30.

The handset was first launched in the year 2000,

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You loved that game. I still love it. I think I would purchase one of

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those phones just for the game. If Snake on it? If not then they made a

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hideous mistake. Chefs from a town in Russia have

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tried for the eleventh time to make Despite it measuring

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three metres in diameter, it didn't get the award because it

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wasn't flipped properly, Apparently it also

:14:06.:14:08.

tasted a bit too salty. It really was not slept properly.

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Look at this. You don't cut a pancake like that, do you?

:14:22.:14:26.

Everything about that is wrong. Disappointing on so many different

:14:27.:14:27.

levels. We will try to about other things on

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the programme apart from the Oscars. Oh, really? Do we have to. How about

:14:37.:14:42.

Southampton... No, Manchester, winning the cup. Good morning,

:14:43.:14:47.

everybody. Manchester United beat Southampton

:14:48.:14:48.

3-2 to win the EFL Cup at Wembley. Southampton will consider themselves

:14:49.:14:52.

unlucky after Zlatan Ibrahimovic ended their fight back by winning

:14:53.:14:54.

the match with less than five Spurs go second in the Premier

:14:55.:14:57.

League after they demolished Stoke One goal from Dele Alli and three

:14:58.:15:05.

from Harry Kane did the damage - although Spurs are still ten

:15:06.:15:10.

points behind Chelsea. It's now 17 wins in a row

:15:11.:15:13.

for Eddie Jones' England side. They survived a scare from Italy

:15:14.:15:16.

before winning their Six Nations match 36-15 and picking up a bonus

:15:17.:15:19.

point at Twickenham. And Great Britain's Mark Cavendish

:15:20.:15:25.

has won the sprinters prize at the Tour of Abu Dhabi,

:15:26.:15:28.

after finishing second Australia's Caleb Ewan

:15:29.:15:30.

beat him to win Stage Four, but Cavendish had accumulated enough

:15:31.:15:35.

points to win the green jersey. Things might be going wrong in the

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world, chaos everywhere, everyone making bad decisions and saying the

:15:52.:15:55.

wrong thing, but we are about to hand over to someone who has it all

:15:56.:15:59.

under control. You have built it up now! Let's ring her in. What have

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you got for us, Carol Kirkwood. I wondered if someone had walked in

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behind me. For many of us we will be seeing scenes like this lovely

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Weather Watcher's picture. It will be wet and cold. You can see the

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cold are coming in and the showers we are looking at will be as sleet

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and snow in some parts of the country, especially in the north. As

:16:26.:16:28.

the cold air filter south we will see some of that as well. Some

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showers will be heavy but the very nature of showers means we won't all

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see one. Across Scotland, sunshine and showers but some of those will

:16:37.:16:40.

be sleet and snow, some will be heavy and have hail in them as well.

:16:41.:16:44.

For Northern Ireland, a similar story. You can expect some showers,

:16:45.:16:51.

Fleet, snow, hail and thunder. As we come further south across England

:16:52.:16:54.

and Wales there are a lot of showers, any wintry showers will be

:16:55.:16:58.

around south-west England, around the Moors, for example. In between

:16:59.:17:03.

we will see brighter skies but there will be a lot of showers. It is

:17:04.:17:07.

windy at the moment, the peak of the winds around the Northern Isles and

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there is the risk of ice on cold, untreated surfaces which have also

:17:12.:17:15.

been damp. Increasingly through the day we will see snow at lower

:17:16.:17:18.

levels. Through Scotland and northern England, we will also have

:17:19.:17:22.

some more showers coming in on the wind because it will be a windy day,

:17:23.:17:26.

across Wales in south-west England, and again we will see a wintry

:17:27.:17:31.

flavour from them, primarily on the hills. These are our maximum

:17:32.:17:34.

temperatures, nothing to be writing home about. As we head on through

:17:35.:17:39.

the evening and overnight it will be windy, gales for some of us. Some

:17:40.:17:42.

snow coming out of the showers, and perhaps even more of the risk of ice

:17:43.:17:46.

on untreated surfaces this coming night. These are the temperatures

:17:47.:17:51.

you can expect in towns and cities. In rural areas it will be a lot

:17:52.:17:56.

lower than this, -6 in parts of Scotland, -2 in parts of England and

:17:57.:18:02.

Wales. As we go into tomorrow we start off on the cold note with the

:18:03.:18:06.

risk of ice. Low pressure not to far away. This is the remnants of what

:18:07.:18:13.

was storm Ewan at the weekend. It will be wintry on its south-western

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flank and as it does so it will drive him a lot of showers and some

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of those are likely to be wintry in nature. More dry weather than wet

:18:22.:18:24.

weather across much of the UK tomorrow, and temperatures between

:18:25.:18:28.

about seven and eight or nine. As we had from Tuesday into Wednesday we

:18:29.:18:31.

say goodbye to that system which moves off onto the near continent. A

:18:32.:18:35.

ridge of high pressure building in behind it, but the next set of front

:18:36.:18:40.

are not too far away. On Wednesday a quieter day for most, and a dry day,

:18:41.:18:46.

with some bright spells and even some sunshine. We do have a set of

:18:47.:18:50.

front scooting across the South but here it is still mild, at 10

:18:51.:18:54.

Celsius, around six or seven as we push further north. Thank you very

:18:55.:19:01.

much. We're all trying to get things especially right today. We guarantee

:19:02.:19:07.

it. And we can't do much worse. We are talking about the Oscars, where

:19:08.:19:14.

there was a big mistake at the end of the night where La La Land was

:19:15.:19:18.

announced as the winner of Best Picture, but actually it was

:19:19.:19:21.

Moonlight. We will get to all of that in a minute. That show you some

:19:22.:19:26.

of the front pages. From Moonlight to limelight, Naomi Harris in

:19:27.:19:31.

California nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role in

:19:32.:19:35.

Moonlight. Just that moment when you think you haven't won and then you

:19:36.:19:39.

have one. Extraordinary for everybody. Their main story is a

:19:40.:19:44.

curb on migrants. And the front page of the Times, lots to talk about.

:19:45.:19:49.

Manchester United winning the League Cup against Southampton and Scots to

:19:50.:19:55.

demand a new referendum, Number Ten fears. We will get some more Oscars

:19:56.:19:59.

reaction. The highest representatives we have in this

:20:00.:20:03.

industry, so you have to give them credit. That was Colin Paterson

:20:04.:20:12.

speaking to Miles Taylor about what happened. We just missed it, and we

:20:13.:20:17.

can speak a bit more about what happened. This is what most people

:20:18.:20:21.

will be talking about this morning. We are aware there is other news

:20:22.:20:26.

around but when something of this scale happens at such a huge global

:20:27.:20:30.

ceremony, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were on stage to give away

:20:31.:20:34.

the Best Picture award and this is what happened. La La Land!

:20:35.:20:47.

APPLAUSE Guys, I am sorry. There is a

:20:48.:20:52.

mistake. Moonlight, you guys won Best Picture. This is not a joke. I

:20:53.:20:59.

am afraid they read the wrong thing. This is not a joke. Moonlight has

:21:00.:21:04.

won Best Picture. Moonlight, Best Picture. So the way that all

:21:05.:21:15.

happened essentially is the guy who is explaining that Moonlight one

:21:16.:21:19.

Best Picture is one of the producers of La La Land, and he had to

:21:20.:21:26.

interrupt a co-producer, making a speech, thanking various members of

:21:27.:21:32.

his family. Jimmy Kimmel tries to sort it out, and Warren Beatty is

:21:33.:21:37.

given an envelope which says Best Actress in a leading role, which is

:21:38.:21:41.

Emma Stone, and she has been speaking in the last few minutes.

:21:42.:21:45.

She has been doing a press conference they all do afterwards,

:21:46.:21:49.

and she says she is interested in how it all happened, because she was

:21:50.:21:53.

holding her card the entire time. So when you get your statue, you also

:21:54.:21:58.

get a card which has a winner on it, because you probably want to frame

:21:59.:22:02.

that. She says she had it all the time. There must be a second card.

:22:03.:22:06.

What is interesting about the clip is how you see Warren Beatty

:22:07.:22:10.

basically passed the buck to Faye Dunaway. He opens it, and clearly he

:22:11.:22:16.

is looking at it, and he sees Emma Stone, La La Land, we think. He is

:22:17.:22:20.

confused why her name is on that, passes it over and leaves her to

:22:21.:22:24.

make the announcement. I felt sorry for Faye Dunaway in that moment, it

:22:25.:22:29.

was what else was she going to do except to read what was on the wrong

:22:30.:22:35.

card? The wonderful thing is that immediately, we have made a mistake,

:22:36.:22:39.

let's handed over. Moonlight, congratulations. Yes, eventually. We

:22:40.:22:46.

will have to be careful we don't make a mistake today!

:22:47.:22:48.

As the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse finally gets

:22:49.:22:51.

under way, the first case to be investigated is the story

:22:52.:22:54.

of the so-called "lost children" who were sent to Australia.

:22:55.:22:57.

Thousands of youngsters were sent Down-Under after the Second World

:22:58.:22:59.

Many went on to be beaten and sexually abused

:23:00.:23:06.

Our home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds reports.

:23:07.:23:13.

Margaret Humphreys uncovered the scandal of Britain's lost children,

:23:14.:23:19.

sent abroad without parents in the years following the Second World War

:23:20.:23:23.

for what they were promised would be a better life. They are now elderly.

:23:24.:23:27.

But finally, a public enquiry is about to start considering the

:23:28.:23:31.

damage it has done to their lives, in particular the impact of sexual

:23:32.:23:35.

abuse. We want to know what happened, we want to know who did

:23:36.:23:39.

it, and we want to know who covered up for so long. Of course we need to

:23:40.:23:43.

know about it. There are consequences for children today. We

:23:44.:23:47.

also need to look at why it has taken 30 years to bring about this

:23:48.:23:53.

enquiry into what is the horrific abuse of hundreds if not thousands

:23:54.:23:54.

of young children. NEWSREEL: The liner Asturias arrives

:23:55.:23:57.

at Fremantle from Great Britain with 931 new migrants

:23:58.:24:00.

for this country. I've lived for 60-odd

:24:01.:24:03.

years with this hate. They sent us to a place

:24:04.:24:07.

that was a living hell. All we did was do as we were told,

:24:08.:24:10.

and suffered immensely for it. Clifford Walsh was nine

:24:11.:24:21.

when he arrived here at Fremantle, He ended up at Bindoon, run

:24:22.:24:26.

by the Catholic Christian Brothers, where barefoot children

:24:27.:24:34.

built their own accommodation These Brothers, these

:24:35.:24:37.

paedophiles, must have thought

:24:38.:24:49.

they were in hog heaven. The public enquiry will hold new

:24:50.:24:58.

hearings, into claims that children were picked by paedophiles to go

:24:59.:25:03.

abroad, and allegations of a cover-up. David Hill left Tilbury

:25:04.:25:08.

docks, near London, for Australia 58 years ago, and grew up at the

:25:09.:25:11.

Fairbridge farm school north of Sydney. He has written a book on

:25:12.:25:15.

what went on, and estimates 60% of the children were sexually abused.

:25:16.:25:20.

He will be a key witness at what has been a much criticised enquiry. What

:25:21.:25:26.

can best achieve? From my point of view, only good can come of it.

:25:27.:25:31.

Because the truth will be known. It seems to me that the greater the

:25:32.:25:37.

evil, the stronger the conspiracy to keep it a secret and keep it covered

:25:38.:25:39.

up. So, if this inquiry is capable

:25:40.:25:40.

of opening some of that truth, It takes painstaking work to link

:25:41.:25:52.

children sent abroad with the families they always had in Britain.

:25:53.:25:57.

That work happens here at the child migrants trust in Nottingham, and

:25:58.:26:00.

this is the result. Thousands of long-awaited reunion is. The

:26:01.:26:05.

government's scheme which pays for these reunions pays for elderly

:26:06.:26:12.

child migrants to visit Britain is about to finish. The trust is

:26:13.:26:15.

demanding it continues. At the end of their lives, it says, it is the

:26:16.:26:20.

least the country of their birth can do.

:26:21.:26:20.

And a little bit later on BBC Breakfast we will be talking to a

:26:21.:26:32.

man who as a young boy, aged 12, was sent to Australia. He will talk to

:26:33.:26:38.

us about his experiences, and his giving evidence as well.

:26:39.:26:40.

You are watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:26:41.:26:42.

Coming up in the next half-hour, we will be getting reaction

:26:43.:26:45.

James Cook is at the Vanity Fair after-show party.

:26:46.:26:50.

Where everyone is all a flutter about the last minutes of the

:26:51.:26:57.

Oscars, which were astonishingly dramatic. The Oscar was handed to La

:26:58.:27:03.

La Land. The Best Picture Oscar, the last of the night, the crowning

:27:04.:27:07.

glory of the 89th Academy Awards, or so it seemed. Within just a few

:27:08.:27:11.

minutes, after the producers had come onto the stage and were making

:27:12.:27:15.

their speeches, it became clear that the wrong envelope had been handed

:27:16.:27:21.

over, and that in fact the winner of Best Picture was the coming-of-age

:27:22.:27:25.

drama Moonlight, directed by Barry Jenkins. There was astonishment in

:27:26.:27:30.

the room, I can tell you. There was astonishment here as well. People

:27:31.:27:33.

were standing watching the telecast with their mouths Agape and the

:27:34.:27:37.

stars coming down this red carpet have been astonished by what

:27:38.:27:39.

happened. We will Vanessa Feltz will have more on the

:27:40.:31:09.

Oscars and what is going on. Goodbye for now.

:31:10.:31:11.

Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:31:12.:31:14.

We'll bring you all the latest news and sport in a moment,

:31:15.:31:28.

A dramatic and farcical ending to the Oscars. La La Land was announced

:31:29.:31:36.

as the winner before the award eventually went to Moonlight. To

:31:37.:31:40.

explain this, we crossed to Los Angeles and James Cook who was at

:31:41.:31:44.

the after show party. There will be all sorts of madness going on behind

:31:45.:31:46.

you. Can you explain to us what happened?

:31:47.:31:52.

We are expecting to talk this morning about diversity and some of

:31:53.:31:58.

the things that Jimmy Kimmel was saying, but there is only one

:31:59.:32:03.

awkward thing to discuss. We will probably address some of those other

:32:04.:32:07.

things as well but there is only one headline and that is the

:32:08.:32:10.

unbelievable drama in the final minutes of the Oscars. A plot twist

:32:11.:32:16.

that no-one could have predicted. Surely one of the most extraordinary

:32:17.:32:20.

farces in the history of the Academy Awards. This was the 89th Academy

:32:21.:32:25.

award. Let's have a look at how the moment unfolded. Come on. La La

:32:26.:32:27.

Land. I'm sorry, no. There has been a

:32:28.:32:43.

mistake. Moonlight, you guys won best picture. This is not a joke. I

:32:44.:32:52.

am afraid they read the wrong thing. This is not a joke. Moonlight has

:32:53.:32:57.

won best picture. Moonlight. Best picture. I believe I should keep it

:32:58.:33:16.

anyway. No, sorry. Guys... This is very unfortunate what happened.

:33:17.:33:21.

Personally I blame Steve Harvey for this. I would like you to have an

:33:22.:33:31.

Oscar anyway. I will be proud to hand this to my friends from

:33:32.:33:35.

Moonlight. So that was stored in horror bits and Jimmy Kimmel trying

:33:36.:33:41.

to explain what happened there. Do we know more about what went on? Was

:33:42.:33:45.

it just a case of the wrong envelope? I think it was the wrong

:33:46.:33:49.

envelope and I think the suggestion is that it may have been the

:33:50.:33:53.

envelope that contained the award that had just been handed to Best

:33:54.:33:57.

actress, that is that Emma Stone, one of the stars of La La Land. I

:33:58.:34:02.

have reaction just here in the past few minutes from the director of

:34:03.:34:08.

Moonlight. He says that it was extraordinary, the moment that

:34:09.:34:14.

happened there. He said that he had never before seen anything like that

:34:15.:34:18.

happen. He said the last 20 minutes of his life have been insane. He

:34:19.:34:22.

really wanted to see the card for himself and why and 80 showed it to

:34:23.:34:27.

him and then he felt better about what had happened. He said that the

:34:28.:34:31.

people involved with La La Land had been so generous, that he could not

:34:32.:34:35.

imagine being in their position and having to do that. Of course, you

:34:36.:34:41.

know, it was an amazing thing to hear La La Land. I think we would

:34:42.:34:47.

have loved to have one best picture. But we are so excited for Moonlight.

:34:48.:34:52.

It is one of the best films of all time so I was beside myself. I was

:34:53.:34:56.

also holding my best actress in a leading role card that entire time.

:34:57.:35:03.

So I don't mean to start stuff but whatever story that was... I had

:35:04.:35:08.

that card. I don't know what happened. I wanted to talk to you

:35:09.:35:14.

guys first. Well, that was Emma Stone. What a moment. What drama and

:35:15.:35:19.

we will hear a lot more about that and some of the other issues that

:35:20.:35:22.

featured in the ceremony which included some attacks on criticism

:35:23.:35:27.

of President Trump and his policies and also increased diversity after

:35:28.:35:32.

two years in which only white actors were nominated. He glossed over some

:35:33.:35:37.

of the other main awards of the night. It has, hasn't it. Best

:35:38.:35:45.

Director, Damian for La La Land. Best act ever Casey Affleck. We will

:35:46.:35:52.

remind you, of course, and tell you who won at what the quite an

:35:53.:35:56.

extraordinary story. There is other news as well, however. Yes. And it

:35:57.:35:58.

is quite right, and important. The independent inquiry into child

:35:59.:36:00.

sexual abuse will hold its first public hearings today,

:36:01.:36:03.

more than two and a half years after it was set up

:36:04.:36:06.

by the government. It'll begin by examining

:36:07.:36:08.

the mistreatment of British children in care or from poor families,

:36:09.:36:11.

who were sent to Australia in the years after

:36:12.:36:14.

the Second World War. The inquiry will be told

:36:15.:36:16.

that the scale of abuse they suffered was much wider

:36:17.:36:19.

than previously thought. The Labour MP and former minister,

:36:20.:36:21.

Sir Gerald Kaufman, has died He was an MP in Manchester for 47

:36:22.:36:24.

years, and a Shadow Minister In 2015, as the longest

:36:25.:36:29.

continuously serving MP, Downing Street has dismissed

:36:30.:36:53.

discussion that Theresa May will end free movement of EU migrants. The

:36:54.:36:57.

report is that it could be the 15th of March,. Anyone arriving in the UK

:36:58.:37:04.

after that point will no longer have the automatic right to stay

:37:05.:37:07.

permanently. Downing Street has said that node decision has been taken.

:37:08.:37:10.

Let's have a break, shall we? Sally. I'm pretty sure that Southampton

:37:11.:37:23.

fans wished that had happened to them yesterday. I think we are

:37:24.:37:32.

talking about Ibrahimovic. Jose Mourinho has become the first

:37:33.:37:33.

Manchester United manager to win a trophy in his first season

:37:34.:37:36.

at the club after guiding his side to a 3-2 win over

:37:37.:37:39.

Southampton in the EFL Cup. Saints fans will consider their side

:37:40.:37:42.

to have been unlucky as Manolo Gabbiadini saw a goal

:37:43.:37:45.

contentiously ruled out. United then went two nil up

:37:46.:37:47.

through Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse Gabbiadini struck either side

:37:48.:37:50.

of the interval to bring But Ibrahimovic snatched victory

:37:51.:37:53.

with just a few minutes left to secure the first domestic

:37:54.:37:57.

silverware of the season. They gave us a beautiful final. A

:37:58.:38:15.

beautiful football match. So I want to have these words for them. I feel

:38:16.:38:22.

happy with our victory and very happy with the fact that I did it

:38:23.:38:32.

four times, the same as the biggest one, the same as Mr Clough.

:38:33.:38:34.

Harry Kane scored his third hat-trick in nine games as Tottenham

:38:35.:38:37.

thrashed Stoke 4-0 at White Hart Lane.

:38:38.:38:39.

All the goals came in the first half, with Delle Alli scoring

:38:40.:38:42.

It's Kane's third hat-trick in nine games.

:38:43.:38:45.

Spurs go second in the Premier League -

:38:46.:38:47.

but they're still ten points behind Chelsea.

:38:48.:38:55.

Ten points is a big gap to be behind. But we need to keep going. I

:38:56.:39:08.

believe that is important. We need to put pressure on trade be there.

:39:09.:39:13.

-- and try to be there. England made it seventeen wins

:39:14.:39:15.

in a row after beating Italy 36- 15 in their Six Nations

:39:16.:39:18.

match at Twickenham. England weren't at their best

:39:19.:39:20.

and had to come from behind to claim the bonus point victory as Italy

:39:21.:39:24.

led by five points at half time, but five second-half tries,

:39:25.:39:28.

including this from Elliot Daly, ensured England top the Six Nations

:39:29.:39:30.

table but coach Eddie Jones was critical of Italy's

:39:31.:39:33.

unusual breakdown tactic. It was not rugby, let's face facts.

:39:34.:39:47.

You must have an offside line to play the game. Italy was smart and

:39:48.:39:51.

congratulations to their coaching staff and their players, they

:39:52.:39:54.

executed their plan brilliantly but it was not brilliantly. If I were

:39:55.:39:58.

the BBC I would be asking for my money back because we have no rugby

:39:59.:40:02.

game. We need to go outside and train now so we get some proper

:40:03.:40:04.

rugby. Wasps extended their lead at the top

:40:05.:40:04.

of the English Premiership At the other end of the table,

:40:05.:40:07.

Gavin Henson kicked all the points for bottom club Bristol as they beat

:40:08.:40:13.

local rivals Bath 12-11. Bristol stay bottom,

:40:14.:40:16.

two points behind Worcester, but it's a win that gives them

:40:17.:40:18.

great hope of staying up. Meanwhile Opsreys are up

:40:19.:40:21.

to second in the Pro 12. They came from behind to win

:40:22.:40:24.

26-15 at home to Glasgow, Great Britain's Mark Cavendish has

:40:25.:40:27.

won the green jersey at the Tour of Abu Dhabi, after finishing second

:40:28.:40:32.

on an unusual final stage. After 27 laps around

:40:33.:40:35.

the Yas Marina Grand Prix circuit in torrential rain, Cavendish

:40:36.:40:38.

was beaten to the line by Australia's Caleb Ewan,

:40:39.:40:40.

but he'd accumulated enough points Portugal's Rui Costa

:40:41.:40:42.

won the overall race. That Eddie Jones clip there, I know

:40:43.:41:01.

he is known for saying what he thinks but it is unusual for him to

:41:02.:41:06.

have such a jab at the opposition. Obviously, I do not have the paper

:41:07.:41:11.

with me, there is a brilliant bit in the paper, a brilliant photo of him

:41:12.:41:15.

in the back of the times where they captured that moment where he is

:41:16.:41:18.

watching the game unfold and you can see him thinking "What on earth?! "

:41:19.:41:24.

That is it. What on earth is going on here. Can we see his face there.

:41:25.:41:28.

Look at that eyebrow. He is trying to work out... It is reckless rugby

:41:29.:41:36.

and he does not quite know how to respond to it. That is exactly what

:41:37.:41:40.

the players were thinking as well. They did a good job at half-time to

:41:41.:41:44.

get their heads together but he was really not happy. But, Italy, they

:41:45.:41:50.

did not break the rules. Exactly. You can go change in the tournament,

:41:51.:41:56.

can we? Certainly not at this point. If you are just waking up this

:41:57.:42:00.

morning it really is a storyline worthy of an Oscar itself. Chaos at

:42:01.:42:05.

the Academy Awards last night in the last few hours after the wrong film

:42:06.:42:10.

was announced as best picture. In a moment we will speak to James Cook

:42:11.:42:14.

but this is the moment that everyone will be talking about this morning.

:42:15.:42:18.

Warrant 80 and Faye Dunaway are on stage to give out the final award of

:42:19.:42:23.

the night, a big moment. Best picture. The actual winner was

:42:24.:42:29.

Moonlight but this is what went wrong. La La Land.

:42:30.:42:41.

I'm sorry. No. There has been a mistake. Moonlight, you won Best

:42:42.:42:51.

picture. This is not a joke. This is not a joke. I am afraid they read

:42:52.:42:57.

the wrong thing. This is not a joke. Moonlight has won best picture.

:42:58.:43:03.

Moonlight. This picture. And there is a close-up just -- to prove. Just

:43:04.:43:15.

to prove that Moonlight won, not La La Land. Quite extraordinary scenes.

:43:16.:43:20.

There is only one place to go to talk about it, the after party at

:43:21.:43:24.

Vanity Fair where I can imagine there is little talk of anything

:43:25.:43:28.

else. Our correspondent is there for us. Extraordinarily awkward. Good

:43:29.:43:36.

morning. Everything else... Yes, everything else. I mean, have you

:43:37.:43:41.

ever seen anything like that? I don't think anyone in the room had

:43:42.:43:44.

ever seen anything like that and they have been to a few of these

:43:45.:43:48.

things over the years. That leaves many of the actors and actresses in

:43:49.:43:53.

that room had been to many of these events and no-one can remember

:43:54.:43:56.

seeing a moment like this. I must say, the producers of La La Land,

:43:57.:44:00.

who were well into their speeches before it became apparent that they

:44:01.:44:04.

had not in fact won the crowning prize of the night, they handled it

:44:05.:44:10.

with considerable grace and class. They really weren't classy. They

:44:11.:44:13.

handed over the Oscar, they went off the stage and... , you know, their

:44:14.:44:20.

moment was over. They had had their moment, it is not as if anyone

:44:21.:44:23.

watching would have suspected anything because it is hardly a

:44:24.:44:27.

surprise. La La Land had been tipped to win Best picture. Sure people

:44:28.:44:32.

were saying it was a tight race with Moonlight but La La Land was the

:44:33.:44:36.

favourite. One of the stars here at the Vanity Fair awards, what do they

:44:37.:44:48.

make of it? I spoke to Jon Voigt. You put it well. I had not thought

:44:49.:44:56.

of that. If it had been me, I got halfway up the stairs and he says

:44:57.:44:59.

excuse me, there was a mistake. Oh, my God. It would break me into.

:45:00.:45:10.

Would you have kept going? No. But, you know... You can imagine the

:45:11.:45:17.

emotions that wherein it. When La La Land was announced the kids, they

:45:18.:45:23.

would have felt so much emotion and then it was taken away and given to

:45:24.:45:31.

Moonlight. They did handle with class, didn't they? La La Land is a

:45:32.:45:35.

wonderful team of people. I have known a few of them. They are to

:45:36.:45:39.

refit people. As are all of these people. And Moonlight is a

:45:40.:45:47.

spectacular piece. And so they get a little more attention but just

:45:48.:45:54.

because of this. That is good. The John the making the age-old point

:45:55.:45:59.

that all publicity is good publicity -- John Voigt. Everything very noisy

:46:00.:46:07.

down there. Film critic James King is with us now. It is the takeaway

:46:08.:46:12.

moment, this extraordinary thing when they announced the wrong film.

:46:13.:46:16.

I have never seen anything like it. I have been watching the Oscars are

:46:17.:46:20.

long time and I have never seen anything like this. It started at

:46:21.:46:26.

1:30am UK time and I tweeted at 1:35am saying that Justin Timberlake

:46:27.:46:30.

has opened the show and it will not get any better, this is the

:46:31.:46:33.

highlight. Little did I know that there would be something that

:46:34.:46:36.

everybody would be talking about. It is a standout moment but elsewhere

:46:37.:46:41.

in the awards, La La Land was up for many. It won seven at one point, but

:46:42.:46:49.

6.5! Was up to 14, a record number of nominations, and I don't think

:46:50.:46:53.

anybody expected it to win everything because that is highly

:46:54.:46:57.

unlikely. Emma Stone had won, they had won an award for cinematography,

:46:58.:47:02.

and it looked like it would all be La La Land. Forgetting the mistake,

:47:03.:47:05.

even if the envelope had been right from the start, and Moonlight had

:47:06.:47:11.

won, that would have been a surprise because Moonlight was not expected

:47:12.:47:17.

to win. Wonderful news for Moonlight, we spoke to the director

:47:18.:47:22.

last week and they made it for $1.5 million. I can't even remember if it

:47:23.:47:26.

was dollars or pounds, but a tiny Budget. Tiny Budget, no major stars,

:47:27.:47:32.

small-scale, intimate drama, not the kind of thing you would think would

:47:33.:47:38.

eat the bigger movies. It was a surprise anyway to see it win but

:47:39.:47:41.

the way in which it won was obviously an even bigger surprise.

:47:42.:47:45.

And Best Actor went to Casey Affleck for Manchester by the C, and we may

:47:46.:47:50.

see him in some far more prominent roles. -- Sea. I don't think we as

:47:51.:47:58.

film fans have entirely known what to do with Casey Affleck. He has

:47:59.:48:02.

been in lots of different styles of movies, and perhaps hasn't found his

:48:03.:48:08.

niche, but in Manchester By The Sea, another very serious drama, he has

:48:09.:48:12.

shown he can do in tents and small very well. It is a small-scale,

:48:13.:48:16.

subtle performance, up against Denzel Washington who is very weak

:48:17.:48:22.

and loud in his movie. Casey Affleck is much more small-scale, and it is

:48:23.:48:25.

great to see him win. Best Supporting Actor, Moonlight. It was

:48:26.:48:39.

doing very well anyway, and really the night was already between La La

:48:40.:48:49.

Land and moonlight. I am happy with either winning, but it depends if

:48:50.:48:53.

you want song and dance and something frothy, or do you want a

:48:54.:48:58.

more intimate drama? You can't really compare the two. In recent

:48:59.:49:05.

years, Oscars So White has been a talking point. If this hadn't

:49:06.:49:09.

happened at the very end we would be talking about diversity because of

:49:10.:49:12.

the winners of the supporting actor roles. It certainly felt like a more

:49:13.:49:18.

inclusive ceremony, aside from movies like Hidden Figures and lion,

:49:19.:49:26.

and things like that, and how art can unite people. So the whole event

:49:27.:49:31.

actually felt... I know we expected it to be quite angry and vitriolic

:49:32.:49:36.

but it felt quite optimistic and hopeful, the whole ceremony. And

:49:37.:49:42.

this wonderful peaceful handover of one Oscar... Maybe it works with the

:49:43.:49:46.

mood of the night, about being kind to people and understanding one

:49:47.:49:50.

another. That was the theme of the evening, so in a way, it kind of

:49:51.:49:57.

works. Although Warren Beatty did throw Faye Dunaway under the bus a

:49:58.:50:03.

little bit. I thought he was playing the time, a bit of dramatic or

:50:04.:50:08.

comedy fracture, which was why they were not announcing it immediately,

:50:09.:50:11.

but for him it didn't look right on the cards. He saw Emma Stone, La La

:50:12.:50:17.

Land, the card for the previous award. Although Emma Stone says she

:50:18.:50:22.

had that previous award. Maybe they were two cards, we don't know. Here

:50:23.:50:29.

is the weather with Matt Taylor. Hold on a minute, it is Carol

:50:30.:50:35.

Kirkwood! Thanks, Charlie. You will find a cold start for many parts,

:50:36.:50:39.

except in the south, turning colder as we go through the day. We have

:50:40.:50:43.

the combination of heavy showers and some will have hail and thunder and

:50:44.:50:47.

snow embedded in them as well. The cold air filters further south as we

:50:48.:50:51.

go through the course of the day. Really it is the far south of

:50:52.:50:56.

England that hangs on to the milder conditions. For Scotland this

:50:57.:50:59.

morning it is cold. We have the showers, some of them falling as

:51:00.:51:04.

sleet and snow and a lot of dry weather, some sunshine. For Northern

:51:05.:51:08.

Ireland, watch out for ice on untreated surfaces. There are

:51:09.:51:12.

showers coming your way, if you don't already have them. For England

:51:13.:51:17.

and Wales, frequent showers. Some of those heavy and thundery. There will

:51:18.:51:21.

be some wintry mess, but the moors of south-west England as well, and

:51:22.:51:27.

as we go through the day and the cold air cuts in, we will see more

:51:28.:51:31.

snow showers heading further south. Watch out for ice on untreated

:51:32.:51:35.

surfaces. Drying up through the course of the day across northern

:51:36.:51:38.

Scotland. The peak of the winds across the Northern Isles and it

:51:39.:51:41.

will be quite a blustery day wherever you are, more showers being

:51:42.:51:45.

driven in on that wind through the day. In between, drier and brighter

:51:46.:51:51.

spells but as is the way with showers, not all of us will see

:51:52.:51:55.

them. More wintry sleet and snow coming out at lower levels but they

:51:56.:51:58.

will be fairly sporadic. For southern Scotland and northern

:51:59.:52:01.

England we will see more heavy snow across these areas. Again, even at

:52:02.:52:06.

lower levels. Through the evening and overnight, the wind remains

:52:07.:52:11.

strong in the south and also the north-west. There will be a lot of

:52:12.:52:15.

dry weather, a greater risk of ice on untreated surfaces through the

:52:16.:52:19.

course of the coming night and these temperatures you can see are

:52:20.:52:22.

indicative of towns and cities. In rural areas they are more likely to

:52:23.:52:26.

be in Scotland and Northern Ireland between -4 and -6, and in England

:52:27.:52:31.

and Wales between -2 and freezing. Bear that in mind, a cold start to

:52:32.:52:38.

the day. What will happen tomorrow is storm Ewan, named by the Irish

:52:39.:52:42.

Met service on Saturday, is going to come back again. It will still be

:52:43.:52:46.

windy around it and we will still see some wintry temperatures, quite

:52:47.:52:49.

cold for some parts of the country but for many of us it is actually

:52:50.:52:54.

going to be dry. Some rain across the southern counties and quite a

:52:55.:52:58.

bit of sunshine, temperatures seven to about eight Celsius. As we move

:52:59.:53:02.

from Tuesday into Wednesday, off goes the low pressure onto the near

:53:03.:53:06.

continent. A region of high pressure builds in behind it and we have

:53:07.:53:10.

another set of fronts coming our way so on Wednesday itself, a lot of dry

:53:11.:53:16.

weather. One or two showers, except in the south where we have a band of

:53:17.:53:20.

wintry weather coming. Sales of Fairtrade products rose

:53:21.:53:23.

to ?1.6 billion last year, but could more of us be supporting

:53:24.:53:26.

the charity's efforts? You may know, or buy already

:53:27.:53:28.

products, with the Fairtrade mark. It has been going for

:53:29.:53:36.

more than 20 years. Originally associated with things

:53:37.:53:39.

like coffee and tea, the mark can be seen

:53:40.:53:42.

on a whole range of products Products with the mark

:53:43.:53:45.

are guaranteed to have been produced with internationally agreed

:53:46.:53:50.

standards on things like pay Charles Chavi is a sugar

:53:51.:53:52.

cane grower from Malawi. Tell us a bit about the poverty

:53:53.:54:00.

in Malawi before Fairtrade. Talk me through the difference. What

:54:01.:54:11.

is it like working with Fairtrade? What difference does it make for you

:54:12.:54:17.

as a farmer, day-to-day? Fairtrade has the power to transform lives,

:54:18.:54:20.

making a huge difference in the lives of families. We have done

:54:21.:54:28.

quite a number of projects through Fairtrade, and these projects have

:54:29.:54:32.

transformed the lives of our farmers and the communities. For example, we

:54:33.:54:35.

brought electricity to the villagers. For Fairtrade, farmers

:54:36.:54:41.

never had access to electricity but now most households have been

:54:42.:54:46.

connected to electricity. We built a school, and over 900 children can go

:54:47.:54:50.

to this school. Before this school was built, children had to walk a

:54:51.:54:55.

distance of eight to ten kilometres to the nearest school. But because

:54:56.:54:58.

of this school, children can attend school at a tender age. We have also

:54:59.:55:08.

invested quite a lot in clean water, constructed many boars, we built

:55:09.:55:14.

taps, we built a clinic, we have also invested part of the premium

:55:15.:55:18.

back in the business, just to postproduction -- bores. And I think

:55:19.:55:22.

we can see some pictures of the school built with the proceeds as

:55:23.:55:26.

well. While we have a look at those let's talk about the farmers

:55:27.:55:29.

themselves. Those are the ones who, by getting a fair price for their

:55:30.:55:33.

products, with a bananas, or sugar, or those sorts of things, they make

:55:34.:55:38.

a difference day to day to farmers. Like I said, before Fairtrade it

:55:39.:55:42.

wasn't easy for farmers to provide for their families. They could not

:55:43.:55:46.

be able to afford basic needs. But Fairtrade has enabled them to earn

:55:47.:55:52.

more and as a result of that they are able to assist their families,

:55:53.:55:55.

they are able to provide for their families. They are able to buy food,

:55:56.:56:00.

school fees for their children, have access to electricity, at a minimum.

:56:01.:56:07.

Talk me through how the process works. If somebody is buying with

:56:08.:56:12.

this logo on it what does that mean to you day-to-day? It means you will

:56:13.:56:16.

get a fair price for what you pay, but standards of production as well.

:56:17.:56:21.

Sure, the Fairtrade mark in my opinion is a widely respected mark.

:56:22.:56:24.

It guarantees the fact that a farmer receives a fair deal for what they

:56:25.:56:28.

grow. What was life like before that? Before the Fairtrade mark on

:56:29.:56:35.

your product, what did that mean? Farmers were not being paid fairly

:56:36.:56:39.

for their product, but with Fairtrade, they do have more income.

:56:40.:56:44.

They do have supplementary income as a result of Fairtrade. Before we

:56:45.:56:51.

become Fairtrade accredited, it was so hard for a farmer, like I say, to

:56:52.:56:57.

afford basic needs. It is good to talk to you, and thank you for

:56:58.:57:01.

explaining that. Time is tight, but you are right, it proves what a

:57:02.:57:05.

difference it makes. Thank you for joining us, and I will have more

:57:06.:57:10.

after 7am about energy. Time now to get the news,

:57:11.:57:14.

travel and weather where you are. Film critic Jason Solomons is

:57:15.:00:39.

speaking to Vanessa Feltz about all that is happening at the Oscars in

:00:40.:00:41.

LA. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:00:42.:00:45.

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. Confusion at the Oscars

:00:46.:00:48.

as the Best Picture award is handed La La Land was initially

:00:49.:00:51.

named the winner. The producers started

:00:52.:00:55.

their acceptance speeches. But they were interrupted

:00:56.:00:56.

with an announcement that Moonlight Moonlight, you guys

:00:57.:00:59.

won best picture. It appears that warrant 80 and Faye

:01:00.:01:21.

Dunaway had been handed the wrong envelope in one of the most dramatic

:01:22.:01:23.

plot twists in Oscars history. Good morning, it's

:01:24.:01:41.

Monday 27th February. The Independent Inquiry

:01:42.:01:42.

into Child Sexual Abuse finally holds its first public hearings

:01:43.:01:45.

as it looks at the treatment of British children

:01:46.:01:48.

who were sent to Australia. The number of us switching energy

:01:49.:01:51.

suppliers has hit a six year high I'm looking at why it's still worth

:01:52.:01:56.

shopping around for cheaper deals In sport, Manchester United beat

:01:57.:02:02.

Southampton in the EFL Cup final. The 3-2 win saw Jose Mourinho become

:02:03.:02:09.

the first United manager to win a trophy in his first

:02:10.:02:13.

season with the club. Red and yellow, green and blue. Is

:02:14.:02:29.

this rainbow of bins and box is the best way to get us campaigning? Is

:02:30.:02:35.

it the best way -- to get as recycling.

:02:36.:02:39.

Heavy showers with thunder and pale. It will be windy and feel colder.

:02:40.:02:46.

More details on 15 minutes. The Oscars ceremony has ended

:02:47.:02:48.

in confusion, after the wrong film In a dramatic and farcical ending,

:02:49.:02:53.

La La Land was announced as the winner, before the award

:02:54.:02:59.

eventually went to Moonlight. Let's cross to our Los Angeles

:03:00.:03:02.

correspondent James Cook, who's at the Vanity Fair after-show

:03:03.:03:04.

party which all the stars attend. There's only one topic they will

:03:05.:03:29.

discuss tonight. What did happen? Yes. There is only one thing on the

:03:30.:03:33.

minds of people as they arrived and that is the extraordinary plot

:03:34.:03:38.

twisted the end of the night, the moment when the best picture was

:03:39.:03:43.

awarded to the wrong film. It was dramatic and left people astonished.

:03:44.:03:47.

To begin with a lot of people did not know whether it was a joke will

:03:48.:03:51.

not be but it became clear quickly that it was not a joke. Let us look

:03:52.:03:54.

at what happened. And the Academy Awards... For best

:03:55.:04:08.

picture... Moonlight, you guys

:04:09.:04:15.

won best picture. I am afraid they read

:04:16.:04:29.

the wrong thing. Not a joke. Congratulations to

:04:30.:04:55.

Moonlight and it was an extraordinary thing to happen. What

:04:56.:05:00.

have people been saying about it? Up until that point it had been going

:05:01.:05:05.

well if not brilliantly for Moonlight. They had won best

:05:06.:05:14.

director, Emma Stone had won best actress. They won in some of the

:05:15.:05:22.

below the line categories as well. It really was stunning and we will

:05:23.:05:26.

hear a little later on about the reaction in detail from some of the

:05:27.:05:30.

people involved. I'm just having a look around to see who is on the red

:05:31.:05:35.

carpet at the moment. People are flooding in right now. I don't think

:05:36.:05:39.

there is anyone right now we need to speak to. It was incredible. The

:05:40.:05:44.

director of Moonlight, Barry Jenkins, said afterwards that he

:05:45.:05:51.

thought that La La Land and the producers who were most of the way

:05:52.:05:55.

through their speeches before this happened, that they handled the

:05:56.:06:00.

situation with considerable grace. Mahershala Ali, who won best

:06:01.:06:04.

supporting actor, the first Muslim, incidentally, to won and acting

:06:05.:06:09.

category we believe that the Academy Awards has also been reacting. He

:06:10.:06:13.

has been saying that La La Land has done so well and resonated with so

:06:14.:06:17.

many people. When the name was read he was not surprised that he was

:06:18.:06:21.

happy for them. And then he got worried when security came and said.

:06:22.:06:28.

People are concerned in these tense times about what was happening. But

:06:29.:06:33.

Mahershala Ali said that when he heard that they had won he did not

:06:34.:06:37.

want to go up there and take something from somebody. He said it

:06:38.:06:41.

was hard to take joy from a moment like that. I think that has probably

:06:42.:06:46.

passed now for the cast and crew of Moonlight. I think they will be

:06:47.:06:51.

enjoying their success now. We will be with you throughout the morning.

:06:52.:06:55.

We will come back you a little later. A difficult gig, trying to

:06:56.:06:59.

look both ways at the same time. But as mentioned there, the of Emma

:07:00.:07:05.

Stone. And after she had been on stage, they came off and she spoke

:07:06.:07:10.

about her own award because she won best actress for her role in La La

:07:11.:07:12.

Land. She spoke about the mixup. Of course, you know,

:07:13.:07:15.

it was an amazing thing to hear I think we would have loved

:07:16.:07:18.

to have won best picture. It is one of the best films

:07:19.:07:22.

of all time so I was beside myself. I was also holding

:07:23.:07:28.

my Best Actress in a So I don't mean to start stuff

:07:29.:07:31.

but whatever story that was... Well... As it developed, there is

:07:32.:07:53.

more information coming out, there are apparently two cards, a producer

:07:54.:07:57.

on either side of the stage and they have identical cards. What happened,

:07:58.:08:01.

what they think happened anyway was that the previous award was given

:08:02.:08:06.

out by Leonardo DiCaprio, came off one side of the stage and then

:08:07.:08:10.

Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway came on the other side of stage and

:08:11.:08:13.

instead being handed the card for best picture they were handed a

:08:14.:08:16.

duplicate card for best actress and that seems to be root of the

:08:17.:08:20.

problem. It is does, every time you see it is still awkward. Any people

:08:21.:08:26.

are talking about it. Jane Fonda describing it as a jawdropping

:08:27.:08:32.

mistake. Jimmy Kimmel blamed it on Steve Harvey, a reference to Miss

:08:33.:08:36.

universe a few years ago when he was the host and he wrongly gave the

:08:37.:08:41.

wrong contestant the award of Miss universe and then had to correct

:08:42.:08:43.

himself. Another actress has tweeted that she feels bad that for the La

:08:44.:08:49.

La Land produces. Add a reference to Barry Jenkins. He tweeted a picture

:08:50.:09:00.

of the card saying still speechless. We spoke to him last week on BBC

:09:01.:09:04.

breakfast. And now his dream is coming true. We have more in Oscars

:09:05.:09:11.

and what did happen and the late R. There is plenty of other news around

:09:12.:09:12.

this morning as well. The independent inquiry into child

:09:13.:09:14.

sexual abuse will hold its first public hearings today,

:09:15.:09:17.

more than two and a half years after it was set up

:09:18.:09:20.

by the government. It'll begin by examining

:09:21.:09:22.

the mistreatment of British children who were in care or from poor

:09:23.:09:25.

families, who were sent to Australia in the years after

:09:26.:09:28.

the Second World War. The inquiry will be told

:09:29.:09:30.

that the scale of abuse they suffered was much wider

:09:31.:09:33.

than previously thought. Here's our home affairs

:09:34.:09:35.

correspondent Tom Symonds. NEWSREEL: They arrive at Fremantle

:09:36.:09:38.

from Great Britain with 931 That is what children

:09:39.:09:42.

in care, or from poor But 70 years on some,

:09:43.:09:51.

like Clifford Walsh, are still affected

:09:52.:09:55.

by the beatings and His Catholic children's home,

:09:56.:09:59.

Bindoon, near Perth in Australia For the next two weeks the televised

:10:00.:10:03.

public enquiry will consider new evidence about the extent

:10:04.:10:10.

of the abuse, claims that children were picked by paedophiles to travel

:10:11.:10:13.

aboard and allegations We want to know what happened,

:10:14.:10:17.

we want to know who did it and we want to know

:10:18.:10:26.

who covered it up for so long. There were consequences

:10:27.:10:29.

for children today. We also need to look at why it has

:10:30.:10:33.

taken 30 years to bring about this enquiry into the horrific abuse

:10:34.:10:37.

of hundreds, if not thousands The enquiry rejects suggestions

:10:38.:10:40.

that it is reaching too Many of the migrants

:10:41.:10:45.

are still alive. Getting to the bottom

:10:46.:10:50.

of what happened to them We will speak to somebody in a few

:10:51.:11:06.

minutes it was sent to Australia when he was 12 to ask his thoughts.

:11:07.:11:10.

-- The BBC ordered an investigation into TV licence collectors

:11:11.:11:19.

following reports that they're deliberately targeting vulnerable

:11:20.:11:21.

The Daily Mail claims enforcement officers,

:11:22.:11:23.

who are employed by the private company Capita, are ordered to catch

:11:24.:11:27.

28 evaders every week and promised financial incentives

:11:28.:11:29.

Head teachers and school governors are calling on the Chancellor

:11:30.:11:32.

to make schools a priority in the budget.

:11:33.:11:35.

The National Association of Head Teachers and the National

:11:36.:11:37.

Association of Governors have written an open letter

:11:38.:11:39.

to Philip Hammond to say that they're being forced to make

:11:40.:11:42.

They have warned that lessons will need to be cut and class sizes

:11:43.:11:49.

reduced. More than a third of small

:11:50.:11:52.

businesses expect their rates to rise this April, according

:11:53.:11:54.

to the Federation of Small The Federation says many face

:11:55.:11:57.

unsustainable and unaffordable increases, and are planning to cut

:11:58.:11:59.

the amount they invest The government has promised help

:12:00.:12:02.

for those worst hit. In about ten minutes time will have

:12:03.:12:14.

the latest from Los Angeles where the Oscars ceremonies ended in

:12:15.:12:17.

confusion with the wrong film being given the award for best picture.

:12:18.:12:23.

Moonlight eventually won La La Land for they had received their seventh

:12:24.:12:28.

of the night. An extraordinary story. Painfully and wonderfully

:12:29.:12:32.

awkward. One of those moments you will see for many years to come. It

:12:33.:12:36.

is 12 minutes past seven and there is plenty of other news around as

:12:37.:12:38.

well. In the years following thousands of British children

:12:39.:12:39.

in care or from poor families were sent to start

:12:40.:12:44.

new lives in Australia. Many went on to be beaten and abused

:12:45.:12:46.

in homes or institutions. Their stories will be told today

:12:47.:12:49.

at the first public hearings of the Independent Inquiry

:12:50.:12:52.

into Child Sexual Abuse. One of those children was David Hill

:12:53.:12:54.

and he's in our London newsroom. thank you for joining us. Can you

:12:55.:13:04.

take us back, you were 12 when you were sent to Australia with two of

:13:05.:13:09.

your brothers. And you are part of the decision. Tell us why you went.

:13:10.:13:15.

We went because we, like most migrants, were extremely poor. Mum

:13:16.:13:19.

was a single parent and struggling and there was no way she could keep

:13:20.:13:27.

us at school and a society, one of the child migrant scams promised us

:13:28.:13:31.

opportunity and education in Australia that we had no hope of

:13:32.:13:34.

getting here. Persuaded us to sign up and that is how we went. I was 12

:13:35.:13:40.

with a twin brother and a 14-year-old brother. We were luckier

:13:41.:13:46.

than most child migrants because later my mother was able to follow

:13:47.:13:50.

us out and we got back together as a family. We reunited as a family

:13:51.:13:55.

where as most of these are the kids, some as young as four never saw

:13:56.:14:00.

their parents again and spend an entire loveless childhood and they

:14:01.:14:06.

were the ones who were the most, least protected, most vulnerable and

:14:07.:14:09.

it turns out the most severely abused, sexually and physically. I

:14:10.:14:13.

know you have been working on this for many years and you have been

:14:14.:14:18.

speaking to others who have been abused. What kind of scale was it

:14:19.:14:24.

on? What can you tell us? Well, that is the frightening part. As a result

:14:25.:14:29.

of all of the interviews I have done with kids who went to Favourite with

:14:30.:14:33.

me and others and other research that I have made available eye, for

:14:34.:14:41.

this enquiry, has estimated that as high as 60% of the children were

:14:42.:14:46.

sexually abused in the institution. Which is just a devastating fact

:14:47.:14:51.

that you talk about. This happened from 1938 until 1974. Thousands of

:14:52.:14:55.

parents effectively signing over their children. I must say,

:14:56.:15:01.

incidentally, if you need to feel for the parents. My mother was a

:15:02.:15:06.

case in point. You know, they were told that if you really love your

:15:07.:15:09.

children you will make this great sacrifice for them and a lot of

:15:10.:15:14.

parents in innocence and in good faith signed their children over to

:15:15.:15:18.

these schemes which were widely flawed. There has been a landmark

:15:19.:15:25.

settlement, hasn't there, against Fairbridge. You again were part of

:15:26.:15:29.

that. What else do you think needs to be done? I think the case we won

:15:30.:15:38.

after years of struggle in Sydney last year, what came with it, which

:15:39.:15:45.

was so important and comforting for the kids, well, the former kids, was

:15:46.:15:49.

an acknowledgement of the terrible wrong that had been done to them.

:15:50.:15:54.

But frankly there is not... Yukonite unto the great wrong. You cannot

:15:55.:15:58.

give back a childhood that has been crushed. -- you can't undo the great

:15:59.:16:04.

wrong but you can have some recompense. I hope that will happen

:16:05.:16:08.

far the Child migrants as a result of this enquiry. You will give

:16:09.:16:12.

written evidence to this enquiry. What would you like to say? There

:16:13.:16:19.

were a series of things but the abuse was far more widespread than

:16:20.:16:23.

has been accepted today and the other thing of great significance is

:16:24.:16:28.

that the authorities, including the British government, knew that these

:16:29.:16:35.

schemes were flawed at the time and did nothing to correct it. In 2010

:16:36.:16:43.

the Prime Minister apologised to children who had been shipped

:16:44.:16:47.

overseas. Is that enough, in your view? Oh, no, there is much more.

:16:48.:16:55.

The British government condemned and blacklisted a number of institutions

:16:56.:17:02.

including Fairbridge and then, as a result of political pressure,

:17:03.:17:05.

quietly tore up the blacklist and allowed hundreds more children to be

:17:06.:17:09.

sent, including me, to institutions that they had condemned. It has been

:17:10.:17:15.

kept secret and covered up for over 40 years. I am sure that this

:17:16.:17:19.

enquiry is going to be very helpful in uncovering all of that. And that

:17:20.:17:23.

is what you would like to see? Evidence that that happened? I want

:17:24.:17:27.

to see the evidence out there and I have been research and, you point

:17:28.:17:31.

out, for many years and I have given all that material to the enquiry

:17:32.:17:43.

already. We appreciate your time. It is an incredible story. Let's find

:17:44.:17:46.

out what is happening with the weather. Carol has it this morning.

:17:47.:17:52.

It certainly has. This morning you will notice a cold start to the day

:17:53.:17:56.

and generally colder feel which will puts -- push south through the day.

:17:57.:18:02.

We are looking at heavy showers, a combination of rain, hail, sleet,

:18:03.:18:06.

thunder, lightning and snow. Watch out for ice on untreated surfaces

:18:07.:18:10.

and the callback their cuts in further south as we go through the

:18:11.:18:14.

afternoon and into the evening time. This morning across Scotland it is a

:18:15.:18:17.

mixture of bright spells, sunshine and showers, some of the showers

:18:18.:18:22.

wintry with sleet and snow at low levels. The same for Northern

:18:23.:18:25.

Ireland, a lot of dry weather but the showers are not far away and

:18:26.:18:30.

there is the risk of ice across northern England. For England and

:18:31.:18:33.

Wales we are looking at plentiful showers as we go through the course

:18:34.:18:37.

of the day. Not all of us catching them, that is the nature of showers,

:18:38.:18:41.

and this morning any wintry feel is going to be across high ground in

:18:42.:18:46.

the south-west of England. Windy across the Northern Isles, so winds

:18:47.:18:54.

are now peaking. This the remnants of storm Ewan, and gusty winds

:18:55.:18:57.

across the South and south-east. As we go through the day, the showers

:18:58.:19:01.

will be heavy, some with thunder and some with sleet and snow but a

:19:02.:19:05.

period of heavy snow across south-eastern Scotland and northern

:19:06.:19:09.

England. If you are travelling, they are all that in mind. As we head on

:19:10.:19:13.

through the evening and overnight, gusty winds, particularly in the

:19:14.:19:17.

south. Also north-west Scotland, in between a lot of dry weather. Where

:19:18.:19:20.

we have showers and overnight temperatures dipping there is the

:19:21.:19:24.

risk of ice, more widespread than the night just gone. Temperatures in

:19:25.:19:28.

Scotland falling easily to between -4 and minus six. Then as we move

:19:29.:19:38.

through tomorrow, this is what is left of storm Ewan. A weakening area

:19:39.:19:42.

of low pressure, and you can see it is quite windy around its southern

:19:43.:19:45.

flank and with the accompanying weather front we will see some rain

:19:46.:19:49.

coming out of it and some snow, particularly across higher ground

:19:50.:19:52.

across parts of England and Wales. A lot of dry weather to be had as

:19:53.:19:57.

well. Wall am moving across the South taking showery rain as it

:19:58.:20:01.

goes. For Tuesday into Wednesday, there goes that system moving away

:20:02.:20:05.

into the south. You can see the isobars close together for a while,

:20:06.:20:10.

meaning it will be windy for a while, and then they broaden out. We

:20:11.:20:14.

are looking at a more settled day on Wednesday, a quieter day except in

:20:15.:20:18.

the south, where we have a cluster of weather fronts rolling across us

:20:19.:20:23.

bringing wet and windy weather. Temperatures between about eight and

:20:24.:20:26.

10 Celsius. In summary, for the early part of the week is going to

:20:27.:20:30.

feel cold. There will be some wintry showers around but as we head

:20:31.:20:34.

towards the latter part of the week, the beginning of March, milder but

:20:35.:20:38.

we will also see some rain. Thank you very much, pretty chilly for

:20:39.:20:43.

some people. The weather has been the outstanding story of the last

:20:44.:20:45.

few days, but move over, whether! It is the storyline worthy

:20:46.:20:48.

of an Oscar itself. Chaos at the Academy Awards,

:20:49.:20:50.

after the wrong film was announced This is the dramatic moment

:20:51.:20:53.

at the end of the night where it There was a sort of activity behind

:20:54.:21:10.

the stage, you are thinking what is going on? Carnage. They have

:21:11.:21:16.

announced the wrong film. Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were on

:21:17.:21:18.

stage and this is what happened. And the Academy award... For Best

:21:19.:21:32.

Picture... Moonlight, you guys

:21:33.:21:44.

won best picture. This is not a joke, I'm afraid

:21:45.:21:57.

they read the wrong thing. That is Jordan Horovitz, one of the

:21:58.:22:24.

producers, taking control on the stage.

:22:25.:22:24.

There is only one place to go, the vanity Fair after-show party,

:22:25.:22:28.

where we can talk to our Los Angeles correspondent James Cook.

:22:29.:22:31.

Normally at this point in an Oscars ceremony we are talking about the

:22:32.:22:36.

winners of all the awards and which film did particularly well, what the

:22:37.:22:39.

British success was but at the moment there is only one story, and

:22:40.:22:43.

it is unfortunately the awkward one. That's right. It was awkward, it was

:22:44.:22:49.

a difficult moment. I think some people for a very brief moment were

:22:50.:22:52.

concerned about the security when they saw people coming on from the

:22:53.:22:56.

side of the stage and they wondered what was happening. In fact it is...

:22:57.:23:02.

In fact, it was a moment when it turned out that it was just the

:23:03.:23:06.

wrong announcement that had been made, that the wrong envelope had

:23:07.:23:10.

been handed over. We have been getting plenty of reaction, we will

:23:11.:23:14.

get more in a minute, but let's first of all hear from Jackie Chan.

:23:15.:23:20.

It was great drama, great night, I think tomorrow all of the world will

:23:21.:23:25.

talk about it. I think it is drama, good! It is a good thing? No one is

:23:26.:23:30.

perfect. The whole world, everybody... It was a great night.

:23:31.:23:43.

Thank you, chaps, thank you. Well, that was the reaction there from

:23:44.:23:47.

Jackie Chan, standing alongside Chris Tucker. A few seconds ago we

:23:48.:24:00.

heard from some -- Salma Hayek. I think it was fantastic. He got a

:24:01.:24:05.

moment to shine, he was so gracious towards the other winner because

:24:06.:24:10.

they are all winners, and it was a fantastic moment for him. I know you

:24:11.:24:14.

are trying to grab people as they go past, so feel free to grab people as

:24:15.:24:21.

they go by. What are the headlines from the evening? La La Land 16

:24:22.:24:26.

Oscars from its nominations, but where else are the headlines? You

:24:27.:24:31.

are right, I do need eyes in the back of my head -- La La Land won

:24:32.:24:46.

six. The best supporting categories both went to black actors, Viyella

:24:47.:25:08.

-- Viola Davies, and Mahershala Ali. Plenty more on that Oscars debacle

:25:09.:25:12.

throughout the programme. If you've missed it, don't worry, we will play

:25:13.:25:20.

at again. Trying to cover what has happened overnight while everyone is

:25:21.:25:25.

shouting at you. Once upon a time when the idea of taking pictures on

:25:26.:25:29.

your phone seemed laughable and social media wasn't a thing, the

:25:30.:25:34.

Nokia 3310 ruled the world. When smartphones took over it fell out of

:25:35.:25:38.

fashion but it is making a comeback and you can still play Snaked on it.

:25:39.:25:47.

Barcelona, and as the mobile phone industry

:25:48.:25:49.

arrives for its annual jamboree, there is nostalgia in the air.

:25:50.:25:52.

Nokia, a name that used to rule the mobile world,

:25:53.:26:04.

This was its first chance to make a big splash.

:26:05.:26:09.

And, with a range of new smartphones, it unveiled

:26:10.:26:16.

something very retro, last on sale in 2005.

:26:17.:26:18.

You cannot do much with this phone except make calls and play a game

:26:19.:26:23.

of Snake, but the battery lasts forever.

:26:24.:26:25.

We asked consumers what is the most iconic device that you have ever

:26:26.:26:40.

We thought, let us have some fun and be creative with this device.

:26:41.:26:44.

This may be fun, but let us face it, it is a gimmick.

:26:45.:26:48.

If Nokia wants to be a major force in the world again,

:26:49.:26:51.

it will not be because of the 3310, but a new range of Android

:26:52.:26:55.

This is already selling well in China.

:26:56.:26:57.

But competition in a market where smartphones all look the same

:26:58.:27:00.

So perhaps it was smart to look backwards as well as forward.

:27:01.:27:07.

By bringing out this truly iconic device with bags of nostalgia,

:27:08.:27:10.

for many people it was their first mobile phone.

:27:11.:27:16.

It captures their attention, and let them know that Nokia is back.

:27:17.:27:19.

Maybe with my parents' generation, but not something I'd

:27:20.:27:34.

Here is another phone making a comeback.

:27:35.:27:44.

This is the Blackberry 31, launched by a Chinese firm.

:27:45.:27:46.

Two big names making an unlikely bet they could be big again

:27:47.:27:50.

Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC News, Barcelona.

:27:51.:31:16.

Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:31:17.:31:30.

The Oscars ceremony has ended in confusion, after the wrong film

:31:31.:31:33.

In a dramatic and farcical ending, La La Land was announced

:31:34.:31:44.

as the winner, before the award eventually went to Moonlight.

:31:45.:31:46.

Let's cross to our Los Angeles correspondent James Cook,

:31:47.:31:49.

who's at the Vanity Fair after-show party.

:31:50.:32:08.

And the Academy award... For best picture...

:32:09.:32:20.

Moonlight, you guys won best picture.

:32:21.:32:33.

I am afraid they read the wrong thing.

:32:34.:32:38.

This is very unfortunate what happened.

:32:39.:33:08.

Personally I blame Steve Harvey for this.

:33:09.:33:16.

I would like to see you have an Oscar anyway.

:33:17.:33:19.

I will be proud to hand this to my friends from

:33:20.:33:22.

To explain what you are seeing there, Jimmy Kimmel was the hottest.

:33:23.:33:34.

Jordan was the guy holding up the piece of paper that he took took

:33:35.:33:41.

away from Warren Basey. It seems that they had been handed the wrong

:33:42.:33:45.

envelope. There are two identical suitcases on either side of the

:33:46.:33:50.

stage and the award before that was Emma Stone for La La Land for best

:33:51.:33:54.

actress in a leading role. It seems that Warren Basey and Faye Dunaway

:33:55.:34:01.

picked up an envelope, got the same envelope in duplicate. When he

:34:02.:34:05.

opened it it's said Emma Stone, La La Land and you saw him make a face,

:34:06.:34:11.

is this the right one? Presume your belly she just saw La La Land and

:34:12.:34:16.

that is what she said. We cut it short. Two speeches had already been

:34:17.:34:20.

made, thanking family members, what a great night it had been a leather

:34:21.:34:26.

and then eventually someone took control. Moonlight came up on stage,

:34:27.:34:34.

gave their speeches and it was spectacularly awkward. And

:34:35.:34:38.

congratulations to Moonlight. We spoke to the director last week. We

:34:39.:34:39.

will have more on that later. The independent inquiry into child

:34:40.:34:41.

sexual abuse will hold its first public hearings today,

:34:42.:34:44.

more than two and a half years after it was set up

:34:45.:34:47.

by the government. It'll begin by examining

:34:48.:34:49.

the mistreatment of British children in care or from poor families,

:34:50.:34:52.

who were sent to Australia in the years after

:34:53.:34:55.

the Second World War. The inquiry will be told

:34:56.:34:57.

that the scale of abuse they suffered was much wider

:34:58.:35:00.

than previously thought. Downing Street has dismissed

:35:01.:35:05.

suggestions that Theresa May will announce that the end of free

:35:06.:35:07.

movement for new EU migrants The Daily Telegraph is reporting

:35:08.:35:11.

that the cut-off date could be the 15th of March, once

:35:12.:35:15.

the Government's Article 50 Bill has Anyone arriving in the UK after that

:35:16.:35:18.

point would no longer have the automatic right to stay

:35:19.:35:24.

in the UK permanently. Downing Street has said that no

:35:25.:35:27.

decision has been taken. More than a third of small

:35:28.:35:35.

businesses expect their rates to rise this April, according

:35:36.:35:37.

to the Federation of Small The Federation says many face

:35:38.:35:41.

unsustainable and unaffordable increases, and are planning to cut

:35:42.:35:44.

the amount they invest The government has promised help

:35:45.:35:47.

for those worst hit. We have an Oscar winner now. James

:35:48.:36:05.

Cook is with Colleen Atwood. Good morning. Good morning and thank you

:36:06.:36:10.

very much. We have an Oscar winner, our first of the morning. Thank you

:36:11.:36:17.

so much for joining us. You won your award for costume design. Please

:36:18.:36:21.

show it to us. How does it feel to hold it? It feels great. There was a

:36:22.:36:28.

total surprise to me but I am thrilled to be here and holding this

:36:29.:36:35.

lovely statue. You won it for that the adaptation of the JK Rawling

:36:36.:36:38.

novel, fantastic beasts and we do find them. I think this is the only

:36:39.:36:42.

Oscar for anything adapted from JK Rawling. That is true. I was quite

:36:43.:36:49.

shocked but that is the case. I'm happy to be the first hopefully the

:36:50.:36:54.

first of many. What is it like, walking up the steps when your name

:36:55.:37:00.

is called. What is it like? Because I am a behind the camera person it

:37:01.:37:06.

is quite scary. You got up there, you got the award. Who presented it

:37:07.:37:13.

to you? Um, I can't remember either. Ryan... Ryan Bathie. -- Murphy.

:37:14.:37:26.

Anyway, you have it. It's fine. You are only live on BBC. Do not worry

:37:27.:37:31.

about it. What did you think of the end of the show was to mark I was as

:37:32.:37:35.

shocked as anybody else and I felt bad for everybody, the people up

:37:36.:37:39.

there, to find that you don't have it after that moment of terror with

:37:40.:37:45.

your heart in your throat. And I felt for the people who... You know,

:37:46.:37:49.

I mean, it is just awkward. I think they handled it beautifully in both

:37:50.:37:55.

cases. They were classy, won't they? Yes. Quite classy. It was a great

:37:56.:38:00.

opportunity for a movie where people were tied to say thank you to

:38:01.:38:04.

everyone and then for the next round it was awesome to see them up there,

:38:05.:38:09.

hugging each other and it was great. And, finally, if there are any young

:38:10.:38:13.

costume designers watching they will now look up to you for a long time.

:38:14.:38:17.

What would you say to them? I would say to keep working hard, you know?

:38:18.:38:23.

Do not be afraid to be yourself and don't be afraid of the magic. Thank

:38:24.:38:29.

you so much and congratulations. Colleen Atwood has won an Oscar, as

:38:30.:38:36.

you can see there in her hand, for fantastic beasts and where to find

:38:37.:38:42.

them. We will try to find some other Oscar winners to speak to live on

:38:43.:38:47.

the programme. In the end, La La Land won six. Do you think they will

:38:48.:38:53.

put that on the advert? Won six but thought they won seven? Let's get

:38:54.:38:59.

some cup winners on now. Good morning, everybody.

:39:00.:39:04.

Jose Mourinho has become the first Manchester United manager to win

:39:05.:39:07.

a trophy in his first season at the club after guiding his side

:39:08.:39:10.

to a 3-2 win over Southampton in the EFL Cup.

:39:11.:39:13.

Saints fans will consider their side to have been unlucky

:39:14.:39:16.

as Manolo Gabbiadini saw a goal contentiously ruled out.

:39:17.:39:18.

United then went two nil up through Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Jesse

:39:19.:39:21.

Gabbiadini struck either side of the interval to bring

:39:22.:39:24.

But Ibrahimovic snatched victory with just a few minutes left

:39:25.:39:27.

to secure the first domestic silverware of the season.

:39:28.:39:31.

So I want to have these words for them.

:39:32.:39:43.

I feel happy with our victory and very

:39:44.:39:47.

happy with the fact that I did it four times,

:39:48.:39:51.

the same as the biggest one, the same as Mr Clough.

:39:52.:40:00.

Harry Kane scored his third hat-trick in nine games as Tottenham

:40:01.:40:05.

thrashed Stoke 4-0 at White Hart Lane.

:40:06.:40:07.

All the goals came in the first half, with Delle Alli scoring

:40:08.:40:11.

It's Kane's third hat-trick in nine games.

:40:12.:40:14.

Spurs go second in the Premier League -

:40:15.:40:17.

but they're still ten points behind Chelsea.

:40:18.:40:22.

England made it seventeen wins in a row after beating Italy 36-

:40:23.:40:25.

15 in their Six Nations match at Twickenham.

:40:26.:40:27.

England weren't at their best and had to come from behind to claim

:40:28.:40:31.

the bonus point victory as Italy led by five points at half time,

:40:32.:40:35.

but five second-half tries, including this from Elliot Daly,

:40:36.:40:38.

ensured England top the Six Nations table but coach Eddie Jones

:40:39.:40:41.

was critical of Italy's unusual breakdown tactic.

:40:42.:40:48.

You must have an offside line to play the game.

:40:49.:40:54.

Italy was smart and congratulations to their coaching

:40:55.:40:56.

staff and their players, they executed their plan brilliantly

:40:57.:41:04.

If I were the BBC I would be asking for my

:41:05.:41:08.

money back because we have no rugby game.

:41:09.:41:10.

We need to go outside and train now so we get some proper

:41:11.:41:14.

He was decidedly unhappy. The referee was expecting the tactic.

:41:15.:41:30.

Italy had had a word with the referee prior to the game, a tactic

:41:31.:41:35.

of Rockliff rugby. England, in the first half, did not know what to do

:41:36.:41:39.

about it. Surely you do whatever you can to overcome your opponent. Yes,

:41:40.:41:43.

and that is what Italy was doing. Whether that was in the spirit of

:41:44.:41:45.

the game, I am uncertain. Switching energy suppliers

:41:46.:41:49.

is at a six-year high according You would think that more people

:41:50.:42:00.

would switch but the vast majority of people tend to stay with the same

:42:01.:42:02.

provider. Yes we all know we should be

:42:03.:42:03.

switching energy suppliers to get a better deal and according

:42:04.:42:06.

to the latest figures more of us The energy regulator Ofgem has just

:42:07.:42:09.

published its figures for consumer It says that customers

:42:10.:42:13.

swapped their energy providers nearly eight million times last year

:42:14.:42:16.

That's a rise of nearly three So customers are voting

:42:17.:42:20.

with their feet. Three of the big six energy firms

:42:21.:42:25.

have just announced price rises Rachel, good morning to you. The

:42:26.:42:43.

question that I post there, doesn't make any difference? On one hand

:42:44.:42:46.

these figures are great and it's just that more of us are voting with

:42:47.:42:50.

our feet, taking ourselves elsewhere but does not stock prices going up.

:42:51.:42:54.

I think, obviously, this is a very good news story and we are seeing

:42:55.:42:58.

things move in the right direction in terms of putting pressure on

:42:59.:43:07.

suppliers. But you are right. We see intense competition for people who

:43:08.:43:10.

switch regularly. With good prices in the market. We see much less that

:43:11.:43:15.

two thirds of loyal customers who stay with their supplier. What we're

:43:16.:43:19.

hoping is that the more switching that there is, the more that that

:43:20.:43:23.

pressure is felt including for the standard variable tariffs that are

:43:24.:43:31.

at 65% of people are paying. The vast majority of people are still on

:43:32.:43:35.

the standard variable tariffs. They tend to be the most expensive and

:43:36.:43:39.

therefore it penalises people for apathy. If you stick with the status

:43:40.:43:43.

quo, you pay the price for doing so. Even if you do not want to change

:43:44.:43:48.

supplier you can usually find a better deal with your current

:43:49.:43:53.

supplier is you are on a standard variable tariffs. I would encourage

:43:54.:43:57.

customers in that situation to look at their bills which will include

:43:58.:44:01.

information about how much they could save from switching to a

:44:02.:44:04.

better deal, even with their own supplier. But, you know, switching

:44:05.:44:09.

between suppliers is far easier and faster than it has ever been. Most

:44:10.:44:14.

switches between suppliers are taken around 21 days and that includes two

:44:15.:44:18.

weeks cooling off period if you want to change your mind. So the message

:44:19.:44:23.

it really is, you know, get online, have a look for good deals and vote

:44:24.:44:30.

with your feet. You say it has never been easier for customers to do this

:44:31.:44:34.

but if it was so easy I think we would see the figures for the number

:44:35.:44:37.

of switches rise even more because as you said, the vast majority are

:44:38.:44:41.

still on the most expensive tariff. We just don't think it is worth the

:44:42.:44:46.

hassle to move. And then if we do move there is nothing to stop the

:44:47.:44:49.

provider putting up the prices that was just move to. Most of the good

:44:50.:44:53.

deals on the market are fixed deals. So not only are you switching to a

:44:54.:45:00.

lower price but you are also switching to a price guarantee for

:45:01.:45:03.

12 months or in some cases even further. So there is a really strong

:45:04.:45:08.

incentive to shop around and, in oh, we will continue to do everything we

:45:09.:45:13.

can to make the switching process smooth and reliable and we will

:45:14.:45:17.

continue to do everything we can to give people the information they

:45:18.:45:20.

need to make a good choice about their energy provider. And making a

:45:21.:45:24.

good choices about making compensation work in the market.

:45:25.:45:27.

People will move in that means that the business should, in theory

:45:28.:45:32.

react. But is it not your job, as a regulator, to make competition were,

:45:33.:45:36.

not just rely on consumers do the hard work was to mark as I said, we

:45:37.:45:40.

are working hard to make it as easy as possible to shop around. We are

:45:41.:45:45.

making it as easy as possible as well for new suppliers to come in

:45:46.:45:48.

with good offers and innovative offers that are attracting

:45:49.:45:55.

consumers. We have, also, recently announced a price cap for the 4

:45:56.:46:02.

million households that are on prepaid meters and are not getting

:46:03.:46:06.

access to good deals in the market. There is protection available there

:46:07.:46:11.

for those who are thusly served and in the meantime many people should

:46:12.:46:15.

be shopping around and voting with their feet if they are unhappy with

:46:16.:46:19.

the price they are paying. It is good to talk to you. So you have

:46:20.:46:28.

heard the advice, shop around if you are unhappy. Have you guys switched

:46:29.:46:34.

it? My wife mentioned it, yesterday. Why haven't we switched yet? Glad

:46:35.:46:41.

she listens to what we talk about in the studios. I also listen to Carol,

:46:42.:46:44.

who has very interesting details about the weather. Thank you, good

:46:45.:46:51.

morning. We're looking at a cold start to the day for many of us and

:46:52.:46:55.

heavy not just this morning but through the course of the day. Some

:46:56.:46:58.

of those will be thundery, with hail, and some will have some heat

:46:59.:47:02.

pants no embedded in them. It is very windy across the Northern

:47:03.:47:06.

Isles, but this will move away. This is X storm Ewan. And if you look at

:47:07.:47:12.

the isobars, here through the course of the day it is going to be very

:47:13.:47:16.

lonely. Ahonen all dollar that we are pulling in cold air, so

:47:17.:47:20.

increasingly we have got wintry showers in Scotland and Northern

:47:21.:47:24.

Ireland, but as the cold air cut them across parts of England and

:47:25.:47:27.

Wales, we'll see some wintry showers but not everyone will see them as we

:47:28.:47:31.

have through the course of the afternoon. This morning we have the

:47:32.:47:35.

risk of ice first thing on untreated surfaces. There is quite a bit of

:47:36.:47:38.

dry weather in between the showers, we are looking at some sunshine, but

:47:39.:47:42.

wintry flavour across Scotland and Northern Ireland. It will dry and

:47:43.:47:46.

brighten up in Scotland. For England and Wales we are looking a lot of

:47:47.:47:50.

showers increasingly turning wintry. The North of Scotland will brighten

:47:51.:47:54.

up this afternoon, the south, south-east and northern England we

:47:55.:47:57.

are looking at a spell of heavy snow. For Northern Ireland,

:47:58.:48:01.

sunshine, bright spells and showers for you and for Wales and south-west

:48:02.:48:06.

England we are likely to see some wintry conditions this afternoon,

:48:07.:48:09.

even at lower levels, but it shouldn't be problematic. For the

:48:10.:48:13.

rest of England and Wales we are looking at rain showers, some of

:48:14.:48:16.

those heavy and thundery with some hail. Through the evening and

:48:17.:48:20.

overnight we hang on to some of those wintry showers. Still windy in

:48:21.:48:23.

the south and north-west but there will be a lot of dry weather and

:48:24.:48:27.

where we have damp surfaces and low temperatures there is the risk of

:48:28.:48:30.

ice. More widespread than this morning. We are looking at

:48:31.:48:34.

temperatures in rural areas in Scotland down as low as possibly -4

:48:35.:48:39.

minus six. Similar in Northern Ireland, England and Wales -2 to

:48:40.:48:44.

around about freezing. A cold start to the day on Wednesday morning.

:48:45.:48:47.

There goes our first front in the next lot coming in, this is storm

:48:48.:48:56.

Ewan. Still quite windy around its south-western flank and as it comes

:48:57.:48:59.

in the showers will be driven in by that wind. A lot of them will be

:49:00.:49:04.

rain showers but there will be some wintry conditions on higher ground.

:49:05.:49:07.

We also have another system scooting across the south of England,

:49:08.:49:10.

bringing some wet and windy conditions, but in between dry and

:49:11.:49:15.

bright, our temperature range between six and about nine. Thank

:49:16.:49:26.

you very much, see you later. If you are waking up this morning, the big

:49:27.:49:31.

story is the Oscars and you would expect us to be talking about

:49:32.:49:35.

diversity and the winners, but the big moment is right at the end. The

:49:36.:49:39.

final moment of the night, Best Picture, La La Land was expected to

:49:40.:49:53.

win, but Moonlight was also in contention. Warren Beatty looked

:49:54.:49:57.

deeply confused and in the middle of it thought it looked so confusing

:49:58.:50:04.

that he decided to put Faye Dunaway under the bus.

:50:05.:50:14.

Moonlight, you guys won best picture.

:50:15.:50:43.

This is not a joke, I'm afraid they read the wrong thing.

:50:44.:50:47.

I believe I should keep it anyway! They made three acceptance speeches,

:50:48.:51:17.

the producers of La La Land, and he very graciously tries to put it all

:51:18.:51:27.

straight, and he does. Moonlight was the winner. And we will have more

:51:28.:51:30.

after eight a.m.. Grey bins, green bins,

:51:31.:51:32.

blue boxes, and red boxes. If you are confused about where

:51:33.:51:35.

to put your recycling, Keep Britain Tidy claims that

:51:36.:51:37.

complicated bin collections are putting us off from

:51:38.:51:41.

sorting our rubbish. And, as a result recycling

:51:42.:51:43.

targets are being missed, Bin collections in England are so

:51:44.:51:57.

desperate and complicated they are being blamed for a drop in recycling

:51:58.:52:02.

rates. Keep Britain Tidy said there are more than 300 different systems

:52:03.:52:07.

for collecting household waste and people are confused about what they

:52:08.:52:10.

can and cannot recycle. The pressure group on the government to impose a

:52:11.:52:14.

blueprint for recycling to make the situation simpler for householders.

:52:15.:52:18.

It is very difficult to actually have a national conversation about

:52:19.:52:22.

what we should recycle and what should be recycled and everybody is

:52:23.:52:26.

doing something different. Every local authority in the UK has been

:52:27.:52:31.

given the target of recycling 50% of its waste by 2020 to meet EU

:52:32.:52:34.

guidelines, but the figures obtained by BBC Inside Out North-west found

:52:35.:52:40.

some councils are recycling as little as 15% of their waste. London

:52:41.:52:45.

boroughs are amongst the worst offenders, with none of the councils

:52:46.:52:48.

in the capital currently hitting the 50% mark they will have to reach

:52:49.:52:52.

within the next few years. Keep Britain Tidy believes we can learn

:52:53.:52:56.

from Wales, which has a 60% recycling rate. The devolved

:52:57.:53:01.

government has set ambitious targets, and every household has

:53:02.:53:06.

food waste collected. That is incredibly important as we waste 7

:53:07.:53:10.

million tons of food in the UK every year.

:53:11.:53:11.

Richard McIlwain from the campaign group Keep Britain Tidy

:53:12.:53:13.

Good morning to you. So so many different systems. Shall we talk

:53:14.:53:24.

about what is going right? We mentioned that Wales seemed to be

:53:25.:53:27.

really mailing list. How is that different? First of all, Wales have

:53:28.:53:36.

set a target of 7% by 2025, an ambitious target when England is

:53:37.:53:43.

currently recycling 40%. Each of the authorities will work to deliver

:53:44.:53:47.

greater consistency in the way they collect the waste, which ultimately

:53:48.:53:50.

could be having the same coloured bins, and also the Welsh government

:53:51.:53:53.

support local authorities with funding where they have hard to

:53:54.:53:58.

reach areas with low recycling rates. So it is a complete package,

:53:59.:54:02.

and that is what we are looking at now, saying are voluntary measures

:54:03.:54:08.

enough or do we need to look at places like Wales and learn from

:54:09.:54:11.

what they are doing? We are getting better, you go back to 2002 and we

:54:12.:54:15.

were recycling 10% of household waste, a lot better than what we

:54:16.:54:20.

were. Yes, local authorities have done a great job, we have increased

:54:21.:54:26.

from 10% to 44% over the last few years. Over the last four to five

:54:27.:54:32.

years it has flat lined, so we have struggled to get above that. We are

:54:33.:54:36.

looking at another step change and part of that is to say let's have a

:54:37.:54:40.

much more consistent service. We do an awful lot of work with people on

:54:41.:54:45.

the doorstep, to talk to people about the issues around recycling.

:54:46.:54:49.

We know that people find it confusing. If we could have a once

:54:50.:54:55.

only national message about what you recycle, the same waste types,

:54:56.:54:57.

consistent services, the same coloured bins, it would be very much

:54:58.:55:02.

easier and overall it would save money. Richard in Leicester makes

:55:03.:55:07.

the point that the house next door can't recycle what they can, why

:55:08.:55:10.

isn't there a single country-wide system? Vera says we can't recycle

:55:11.:55:18.

yoghurt pots or some things like that, so there are so many different

:55:19.:55:22.

things going on and changes being made. Exactly, and if you want

:55:23.:55:28.

people to do the right thing, make it easy for them, that is the

:55:29.:55:31.

classic mantra in policy-making. We are saying let's try to unpick what

:55:32.:55:37.

has been a very effective system up until now and take a step back and

:55:38.:55:41.

say what do we need to do next? We would welcome a conversation with

:55:42.:55:44.

government and local authorities and business. There is already work

:55:45.:55:48.

going on and a blueprint in England, we just need to see some pace behind

:55:49.:55:53.

it and some targeting. If we set ourselves timescales for 2025 to

:55:54.:55:58.

2030, it gives everybody confidence that we can move towards them. Loads

:55:59.:56:04.

of people getting in contact on that one.

:56:05.:56:04.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs insisted some

:56:05.:56:07.

councils had excellent recycling rates, but admitted more could be

:56:08.:56:10.

Viewers in the north-west of England can see more on this story

:56:11.:56:15.

on Inside Out tonight on BBC One at 7:30pm.

:56:16.:56:17.

If you are in another part of the country,

:56:18.:56:19.

it will be available on the BBC iPlayer.

:56:20.:56:26.

And bins in Liverpool are purple because they cannot be blue and red,

:56:27.:56:31.

so they combine them and make them purple.

:56:32.:56:32.

Smoking bans on hospital grounds and travel and weather where you are.

:56:33.:59:53.

Smoking bans on hospital grounds and the Oscars is all being discussed by

:59:54.:59:57.

Vanessa Feltz in the next half-hour. For

:59:58.:00:03.

This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:00:04.:00:06.

Confusion at the Oscars as the best picture award is handed

:00:07.:00:09.

La La Land was initially named the winner.

:00:10.:00:12.

The producers started their acceptance speeches.

:00:13.:00:14.

But they were interrupted with an announcement that Moonlight

:00:15.:00:16.

It was one of the most dramatic plot twists in the history of the Academy

:00:17.:00:40.

Awards and we will be getting lots of reaction throughout the

:00:41.:00:41.

programme. Also this morning: the independent

:00:42.:00:51.

inquiry into child sexual abuse finally holds its first public

:00:52.:01:03.

hearings as it looks at the treatment of British children

:01:04.:01:06.

who were sent to Australia. The number of us switching energy

:01:07.:01:10.

suppliers has hit a six year high I'm looking at why it's still worth

:01:11.:01:18.

shopping around for cheaper deals In sport Manchester United beat

:01:19.:01:22.

Southampton in the EFL Cup final. The 3-2 win saw Jose Mourinho become

:01:23.:01:26.

the first United manager to win a trophy in his first season

:01:27.:01:29.

with the club. Good morning. It is a cold day today

:01:30.:01:41.

but one of bright spells, sunshine and showers. Some of the showers

:01:42.:01:45.

will be heavy and boundary with pale, but some of them will also be

:01:46.:01:53.

wintery. -- heavy and thundery with hailstones.

:01:54.:01:58.

The Oscars ceremony has ended in farce after the wrong film

:01:59.:02:00.

It doesn't matter how many times you see this clip, it gets more awkward

:02:01.:02:06.

every time! The team behind La La Land had

:02:07.:02:11.

begun their acceptance speeches when they were interrupted

:02:12.:02:14.

by a producer who said the award Let's cross to our Los Angeles

:02:15.:02:16.

correspondent James Cook, who's I imagine that is top of everything

:02:17.:02:26.

they are disgusting. How did it happen and do we even know yet? Good

:02:27.:02:32.

morning. Good morning. The stars are pouring in here. We have just seen

:02:33.:02:37.

Elton John, Matt Damon and Scarlet Johannson. Loads of stars pouring in

:02:38.:02:41.

here and not many willing to talk about that moment. What we think

:02:42.:02:45.

happened is that the wrong envelope was handed to Faye Dunaway and

:02:46.:02:53.

Warren Beatty, and the envelope contained the winning name of Emma

:02:54.:02:57.

Stone, who had just won best actress for La La Land, and that was read

:02:58.:03:01.

out. And that is why the producers of La La Land came up onto the stage

:03:02.:03:06.

to accept the award. A brief moment of glory for this dazzling musical.

:03:07.:03:11.

Escapism personified here in Hollywood. But in fact it was a much

:03:12.:03:17.

more serious work, Moonlight, which actually won the Oscar. Dave Willis

:03:18.:03:18.

reports. Warren Beatty was about to announce

:03:19.:03:37.

the award for best picture but he seemed confused. Best picture... In

:03:38.:03:45.

the end Faye Dunaway made the announcement. La La Land! And the

:03:46.:03:53.

producers were midway through the acceptance speeches when in came the

:03:54.:03:56.

man in the headphones frantically trying to clear the stage. It turned

:03:57.:04:00.

out that La La Land had not won the Oscar after all and it belonged

:04:01.:04:06.

instead to the producers of Moonlight, the low budget underdog.

:04:07.:04:10.

This is not a joke. Moonlight has won best picture. Moonlight.

:04:11.:04:19.

Moonlight, best picture. La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz gallantly

:04:20.:04:23.

handed the Oscar over as the audience looked on aghast. It was

:04:24.:04:26.

left to an embarrassed Warren Beatty to try and explain the producers'

:04:27.:04:35.

mistake. I will tell you what happened. I opened the envelope and

:04:36.:04:39.

it said Emma Stone, La La Land. That is why I took such a long look at

:04:40.:04:45.

Faye and at you. I wasn't trying to be funny. Moonlight, the drama of a

:04:46.:04:51.

gay black man growing up in Miami was dwarfed by La La Land in terms

:04:52.:04:56.

of nominations but it ended triumphant in the most extraordinary

:04:57.:05:01.

of circumstances. Even in my dreams this could not be true but too well

:05:02.:05:04.

with dreams. I'm done with it because this is true. Oh, my

:05:05.:05:09.

goodness. Academy award organisers are still trying to work out exactly

:05:10.:05:13.

what went wrong on a night like no other at the Oscars. I blame myself

:05:14.:05:23.

for this. David Willetts, BBC News, Hollywood. A night like no other.

:05:24.:05:31.

You can say that again. I am joined now by Davis. Good morning. It is

:05:32.:05:34.

strange to say that because you are just starting to party. What on

:05:35.:05:37.

earth did you make of the end of that? I simply... I don't know what

:05:38.:05:46.

happened. What is so weird, Jimmy Kimmel had been roasting Matt Damon

:05:47.:05:52.

all night. So the guy who came on with the correct envelope looked a

:05:53.:05:55.

bit like Matt Damon and I thought it was part of the bit, until it

:05:56.:06:01.

clearly wasn't. What a tough way for La La Land to find out they lost and

:06:02.:06:05.

what a tough way for Moonlight to find out that they won. They

:06:06.:06:10.

couldn't enjoy the moment as well as they might. La La Land was so classy

:06:11.:06:15.

about it. What did you think of Moonlight as a winner. We should be

:06:16.:06:18.

talking about that as a deserving best picture. Nobody is going to

:06:19.:06:24.

forget who won best picture at the 2017 Academy Awards. For a film made

:06:25.:06:30.

for $1.5 million, a film about a marginalised group, and made by a

:06:31.:06:33.

film-maker who hadn't made a film for 12 years, it is a Cinderella

:06:34.:06:41.

story really. Naomi Harris just walking past. We are going to get

:06:42.:06:44.

her to join us... She said she will be back. Sorry. Moonlight, what is

:06:45.:06:52.

your view about representation of race and other diversity and whether

:06:53.:06:57.

it has broadened out over the past year? This is a very good showing,

:06:58.:07:01.

not only in front of the camera but behind the camera as well. We have

:07:02.:07:04.

cinematographers of colour, producers, editors, but they are

:07:05.:07:10.

still lacking any area of female directors, which is pretty

:07:11.:07:15.

egregious. In terms of Hispanic and Asian representation, that is still

:07:16.:07:19.

thin on the ground. It is a great year but there is still work to be

:07:20.:07:23.

done. It is just one year. We have seen towards the Viola Davis, but

:07:24.:07:30.

two years with no nominees of colour at all. The thing to be wary of is

:07:31.:07:35.

apathy, to think we can be complacent because we have had a

:07:36.:07:39.

good year. We have had good years in the past. Everybody is looking for

:07:40.:07:42.

the kind of consistency where we don't need to have this diversity

:07:43.:07:46.

and inclusion, sage and again and again because movies should reflect

:07:47.:07:51.

the world we actually live in. -- inclusion conversation. La La Land

:07:52.:07:56.

doesn't reflect the world we live in. What would you like to say about

:07:57.:08:01.

that movie? The less I say about that, the better! I thought it was a

:08:02.:08:06.

truly unique film this season. I loved it. I loved Ryan Gosling and

:08:07.:08:09.

Emma Stone and congratulations to her for winning the academy award. I

:08:10.:08:14.

think we just need variation. Even though it was tragic way it played

:08:15.:08:18.

out to have Moonlight and La La Land on the same stage tonight was great.

:08:19.:08:25.

Naomi! Sorry. They are saying that she is getting away. We will run and

:08:26.:08:30.

try to get her. So sorry to keep interrupting. That is terribly rude.

:08:31.:08:34.

One more question I was going to ask you which is about the politics. A

:08:35.:08:39.

lot of politics tonight, quite a lot from the hose, Jimmy Kimmel. He was

:08:40.:08:44.

funny but how do you think that goes down with all of United States?

:08:45.:08:50.

People in the UK may not feel quite how divided and politically charged

:08:51.:08:56.

the atmosphere is right now. I actually thought it was a mild

:08:57.:09:00.

ceremony considering what is going on in America right now. I think he

:09:01.:09:06.

did it in a humorous way that did not feel too heavy-handed. Thank you

:09:07.:09:09.

so much and lovely talking to you, David. We appreciate you coming back

:09:10.:09:15.

to speak to us. Let's hear a bit more reaction to what has been going

:09:16.:09:21.

on tonight. A little bit broken but it was one of those things that get

:09:22.:09:28.

thrown at you and you can choose to lean into Ed or push away from it.

:09:29.:09:34.

It was a real honour to be able to give it to them. Everybody is

:09:35.:09:43.

talking about the same thing here tonight. It has been a remarkable

:09:44.:09:47.

evening. We are just chasing Naomi Harris down the carpet. Let me see

:09:48.:09:51.

if I can figure out what she is doing because we would be keen to

:09:52.:09:55.

get to come and speak to us. Naomi, the BBC. Live on the BBC. Would you

:09:56.:10:02.

come and talk to us? Possibly not. She is queueing for her photograph.

:10:03.:10:08.

We can't quite get down there. We will see if we can get Naomi to come

:10:09.:10:14.

back. I'm sure she just didn't hear you. She's not ignoring you! She is

:10:15.:10:22.

having her hair ruffled by somebody. She has spoken to us repeatedly

:10:23.:10:25.

throughout the Oscar season and she has been very charming so I hope we

:10:26.:10:29.

will get her back. It would be wonderful to speak to her and she

:10:30.:10:34.

was in Moonlight. Three days work. Amazing. We will come back to James

:10:35.:10:39.

later. We will try to tidy it up for you later but that is the magic and

:10:40.:10:44.

the madness of the after show party. James trying to hold it all together

:10:45.:10:49.

and talk you through what happened overnight, while various a list

:10:50.:10:53.

celebrities are walking past. He has done a great job. It is aged 10am

:10:54.:11:05.

and now time for some other news. -- it is 8:10am.

:11:06.:11:10.

The independent inquiry into child sexual abuse will hold its first

:11:11.:11:13.

public hearings today, more than two and a half

:11:14.:11:15.

years after it was set up by the government.

:11:16.:11:17.

It'll begin by examining the mistreatment of British children

:11:18.:11:19.

who were in care or from poor families, who were sent

:11:20.:11:22.

to Australia in the years after the Second World War.

:11:23.:11:24.

The inquiry will be told that the scale of abuse

:11:25.:11:27.

they suffered was much wider than previously thought.

:11:28.:11:29.

Here's our home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds.

:11:30.:11:30.

NEWSREEL: They arrive at Fremantle from Great Britain with 931

:11:31.:11:33.

That is what children in care or from poor families were promised.

:11:34.:11:40.

But 70 years on some, like Clifford Walsh,

:11:41.:11:42.

are still affected by the beatings and sexual abuse

:11:43.:11:44.

His Catholic children's home, Bindoon, near Perth in Australia

:11:45.:11:50.

For the next two weeks the televised public enquiry will consider

:11:51.:12:00.

new evidence of the extent of the abuse, claims that children

:12:01.:12:03.

were picked by paedophiles to travel aboard and allegations

:12:04.:12:05.

We want to know what happened, we want to know who did it

:12:06.:12:12.

and we want to know who covered it up for so long.

:12:13.:12:14.

There are consequences for children today.

:12:15.:12:18.

We also need to look at why it has taken 30 years to bring about this

:12:19.:12:25.

enquiry into the horrific abuse of hundreds if not

:12:26.:12:27.

The enquiry rejects suggestions that it is reaching too

:12:28.:12:32.

Many of the migrants are still alive.

:12:33.:12:37.

Getting to the bottom of what happened to them and why,

:12:38.:12:40.

The Labour MP and former minister Sir Gerald Kaufman has

:12:41.:12:53.

He was an MP in Manchester for 47 years, and a shadow minister

:12:54.:12:58.

In 2015, as the longest continuously serving MP,

:12:59.:13:01.

The BBC has ordered an investigation into TV licence collectors

:13:02.:13:07.

following reports that they're deliberately targeting vulnerable

:13:08.:13:09.

The Daily Mail claims enforcement officers,

:13:10.:13:16.

who are employed by the private company Capita, are ordered to catch

:13:17.:13:24.

28 evaders every week and promised financial incentives

:13:25.:13:26.

More than a third of small businesses expect their rates

:13:27.:13:29.

to rise this April, according to the Federation

:13:30.:13:31.

The Federation says many face unsustainable and unaffordable

:13:32.:13:35.

increases, and are planning to cut the amount they invest

:13:36.:13:38.

The government has promised help for those worst hit.

:13:39.:13:46.

Let's go straight back to Vanity Fair where James is speaking to

:13:47.:13:54.

Naomi Harris. Good morning! She is a lovely, lovely lady and I told you

:13:55.:13:58.

she would come back and she has come back to speak to us. Naomi Harris of

:13:59.:14:02.

Moonlight. A wonderful performance, it really was. It was most

:14:03.:14:06.

enjoyable, if that is the right word. It was slightly grim as well.

:14:07.:14:11.

What about the end of those Oscars? It is a moment I am never going to

:14:12.:14:15.

happened in history of the Oscars. happened in history of the Oscars.

:14:16.:14:19.

It was quite extraordinary and I have

:14:20.:14:45.

to say a little awkward. More than a little awkward, actually. I went up

:14:46.:14:49.

on stage with a gormless expression because I didn't know what was

:14:50.:14:51.

happening when they finally said Moonlight. I was stunned and shocked

:14:52.:14:53.

and shaking even. A very strange moment. And poor La La Land. Yes. I

:14:54.:14:57.

hadn't even thought of that. I was only thinking of it from our

:14:58.:14:59.

perspective but poor La La Land. But they won best director. What was

:15:00.:15:01.

wonderful was that most of the movies got recognition in some form.

:15:02.:15:04.

There were some nice surprises and it wasn't like one movie swept the

:15:05.:15:07.

board. It was diverse in terms of number of films and representation.

:15:08.:15:09.

Yes, and I think that is really wonderful. That is what people like.

:15:10.:15:12.

It gets a little boring when it is just one movie.

:15:13.:15:18.

Tell me why your piece of work won Best Picture? Because it is an

:15:19.:15:33.

honest, authentic story. The writer wrote the piece because his mother

:15:34.:15:37.

died and he was trying to recount his past and make sense of it. In

:15:38.:15:42.

that personal journey he penned it is a universal story that appeals to

:15:43.:15:45.

so many people whasmt really connects with people is because it

:15:46.:15:48.

is about this yearning for connection and we are all yearning

:15:49.:15:53.

for connection. What's next for Naomi Harris, now with an Oscar

:15:54.:15:57.

winning film? Next to something different. I'm doing Rampage with

:15:58.:16:05.

Dwayne Johnson in Atlanta, but I'm taking a break first. Hopefully

:16:06.:16:09.

you'll have more than three day to say film this one? I've got two

:16:10.:16:13.

months. A real luxury. I won't know what to do with myself. What are you

:16:14.:16:16.

going to be doing tonight to celebrate? I'm here tonight with my

:16:17.:16:25.

mum and my friend Peter and my amazing manager and publicist so

:16:26.:16:28.

we're going to celebrate here. Thank you very much. I'll let you go and

:16:29.:16:35.

speak to 5 Live. Naomi, thank you. It is, it is a wonderful

:16:36.:16:40.

performance. She plays a mother who is really struggling and failing to

:16:41.:16:48.

hold it together as a result of drug addiction in the film Moonlight

:16:49.:16:53.

which is a coming of age drama. So it's Best Picture as well. Believe

:16:54.:16:59.

it or not, some people didn't. James you said she was lovely and you are

:17:00.:17:05.

100% right. I wanted to see what happened between us saying goodbye

:17:06.:17:09.

to James and speaking to David and running off and trying to get Naomi

:17:10.:17:15.

Harris to come back and speak to us. Wonderful. Shall we have a break

:17:16.:17:21.

from the Oscars? Yes. Let's have the weather.

:17:22.:17:28.

Good morning. I have a picture for you and it's of lying snowment there

:17:29.:17:35.

are heavy showers around today. Not all will be wint ary. Some will have

:17:36.:17:41.

hail and -- wintry. Some will have hail. It will be windy in the south

:17:42.:17:44.

of the country, but also in the north. At the moment we have very

:17:45.:17:48.

gusty winds, but they will come down through the day across the Northern

:17:49.:17:52.

Isles. This is what's left of ex-storm Ewan and through tomorrow

:17:53.:17:56.

it will come back across our shores. But today, it will increasingly turn

:17:57.:18:00.

colder. It's cold already across Scotland and Northern Ireland and

:18:01.:18:04.

Northern England. Through the day that cold front digs in behind the

:18:05.:18:08.

yellow warmer conditions that we have across Southern England and

:18:09.:18:13.

South Wales. So to put pictures on that, watch out for ice this

:18:14.:18:17.

morning. There will be a lot of dry weather, but a lot of showers.

:18:18.:18:20.

Across parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland, they're going to

:18:21.:18:25.

be wintry. At lower levels you could see sleet or snow. As the cold air

:18:26.:18:31.

cuts in later, we will see more of that across England and Wales, but

:18:32.:18:34.

not everywhere. By then the north of Scotland will be dying up, but

:18:35.:18:36.

south-eastern Scotland and Northern England will see a period of heavy

:18:37.:18:39.

snow. For Northern Ireland, you've got a mixture of bright spells,

:18:40.:18:43.

sunshine and showers. Some wint ariness and for Wales and south-west

:18:44.:18:47.

England, you could see a little bit of sleet and snow at lower levels,

:18:48.:18:51.

but we don't expect it to be problematic. For the rest of

:18:52.:18:54.

England, it is a mixture of bright spells and heavy showers as well.

:18:55.:18:59.

With showers, not all of, of course, will catch them. Still the risk of

:19:00.:19:04.

wintriness in the showers tonight. A lot of dry weather and where we've

:19:05.:19:07.

got the damp surfaces and the low temperatures there is a risk of ice

:19:08.:19:12.

this coming night. Themps tures are indicative of towns and cities. In

:19:13.:19:16.

Scotland we are looking at minus six Celsius. The same for Northern

:19:17.:19:20.

Ireland. England and Wales minus two to freezing, but that's in rural

:19:21.:19:26.

areas. Tuesday and into Wednesday, there goes our runner taking showers

:19:27.:19:30.

with it. Here comes what's left of ex-storm Ewan. As it pushes across

:19:31.:19:36.

us, you will notice the squeeze in the isobars. It will turn windy. The

:19:37.:19:42.

wind driving in showers. We have what's left of our runner across the

:19:43.:19:46.

south producing showers. But in between, there will be a lot of dry

:19:47.:19:50.

weather and some of us will see sunshine. A blustery feel to the

:19:51.:19:55.

today with temperatures between seven and nine Celsius. From Tuesday

:19:56.:19:59.

and into Wednesday, there goes one system, a ridge of high pressure

:20:00.:20:02.

builds in behind it, but then we've got a plethora of weather fronts

:20:03.:20:05.

coming in from the Atlantic. To put that on charts, a lot of dry

:20:06.:20:09.

weather, one or two showers and then we've got wet and windier conditions

:20:10.:20:13.

moving across the south of England and South Wales, but with it turns

:20:14.:20:18.

that little bit milder, Dan and Lou. Thank you very much, Carol.

:20:19.:20:24.

From Wednesday, the penalty for drivers caught using their

:20:25.:20:33.

mobile phone will double, to a fine of ?200

:20:34.:20:39.

But for some this doesn't go far enough.

:20:40.:20:42.

One of those is Meg Williamson, whose partner Gavin Roberts

:20:43.:20:45.

was killed last year by a driver who lost control of his car

:20:46.:20:48.

Just last week she met the man responsible, Lewis Stratford.

:20:49.:20:52.

We'll talk to her in a moment, but first take a look

:20:53.:20:54.

Has it affected your family? They've obviously had to go into work and

:20:55.:21:08.

know their son was a sort of a, some sort of murderer someone at my step

:21:09.:21:16.

mum's workplace said, "Your son killed someone. He should be put in

:21:17.:21:20.

prison for life." Are you angry at me? A-little bit, but then so many

:21:21.:21:29.

people do it. So many people. It was a stupid mistake.

:21:30.:21:35.

I don't want to hate you forever. I'm not that type of person.

:21:36.:21:41.

Eventually I'll probably be able to forgive you. Oh, Meg Williamson

:21:42.:21:51.

thank you for coming in. What a brave and extraordinary thing to do

:21:52.:21:58.

to go and meet the person responsible for Gavin's death. Tell

:21:59.:22:02.

us what happened? Gavin was heading to work. He was heading up to

:22:03.:22:06.

Oxfordshire to work that evening and I just got a phone call the next

:22:07.:22:10.

morning to say that he had not made it to work. So, I went straight to

:22:11.:22:16.

the hospital. Went to see how he was and then four or five days later, we

:22:17.:22:22.

had to say goodbye. Just watching that film of you

:22:23.:22:25.

meeting the man who caused that crash. What was that like preparing

:22:26.:22:29.

for that when you first knew that you were going to get that

:22:30.:22:33.

opportunity to sit down with this man, who had, you know, changed your

:22:34.:22:37.

life forever? When the accident originally happened I wanted to meet

:22:38.:22:42.

him straightaway. I had anger and I wanted to blame him and over time I

:22:43.:22:45.

still continued to want to meet him, but then it became more of a

:22:46.:22:50.

determination for me to have this as a deterrent so it prevents people

:22:51.:22:54.

from using their phones behind the wheel. Yes, I was anxious and I was

:22:55.:22:58.

very nervous, but I guess he was as well. He certainly appeared so.

:22:59.:23:04.

Lewis was driving at the time and was having some argument. Did he

:23:05.:23:07.

explain to you what was going on? He said he was having an argument on

:23:08.:23:11.

the phone. He doesn't remember very much. So again this was something

:23:12.:23:15.

that I wanted to highlight with people that if you are distracted,

:23:16.:23:19.

emotionally by the physical use of the mobile phone then it's going to

:23:20.:23:23.

have an impact. Not just on you, but on other drivers as well. So why do

:23:24.:23:27.

you feel the changes which we're going to see in a few days of a ?200

:23:28.:23:32.

fine and six penalty points, why isn't that enough? To me, I am

:23:33.:23:37.

emotionally charged by this, but I think ?200 to some people is not a

:23:38.:23:41.

lot of money and if they can afford to drive a car, and they can afford

:23:42.:23:46.

to have their mobile phone then ?200 isn't very much. So I think using it

:23:47.:23:50.

as a deterrent and using it as an impact for people just to make them

:23:51.:23:54.

aware, just like we do with drink-driving or drugs behind the

:23:55.:23:56.

wheel, then I think this is something that needs to be

:23:57.:23:59.

highlighted. Essentially, it is a phone conversation that had a

:24:00.:24:04.

devastating impact on many people. Yeah, not just an impact on my life

:24:05.:24:11.

and Gavin'sle family and friends. On Lewis' side, he suffered and his

:24:12.:24:16.

family suffered and society does it. Everybody picks up their phone

:24:17.:24:19.

behind the wheel and now is the time, I think, to raise that

:24:20.:24:24.

awareness. There is a lot of comments coming on this morning.

:24:25.:24:29.

Lots of support what you're saying. Lois, a penalty should be automatic

:24:30.:24:32.

imprisonment especially if someone is kill. Simon Burn says plan a no

:24:33.:24:38.

nonsense response with no offer of a driver awareness course. Another one

:24:39.:24:41.

says it will make no difference because the chance of getting caught

:24:42.:24:45.

is so low. They say they see it every day. Doreen says take the car

:24:46.:24:49.

and the fond and ban them driving forever. I travel from Kent through

:24:50.:24:55.

Dartford and Kent and Blackwall. One time I counted five of the first 12

:24:56.:24:59.

were using their phones. It is a widespread problem. It is very

:25:00.:25:03.

widespread and I agree in some respects that we can't find

:25:04.:25:08.

everybody who is on their phone. People know it's illegal and so

:25:09.:25:12.

thinking about it now, do we implement it within schools and we

:25:13.:25:18.

teach drugs, sex education and alcoholism, can we bring in the

:25:19.:25:22.

driving awareness of using the mobile phones and starting from the

:25:23.:25:25.

younger generations. It is illegal to touch a mobile phone with a

:25:26.:25:30.

hands-free set since 2003 that includes using a mobile phone to

:25:31.:25:36.

follow a map and check social media and the law applies even if you're

:25:37.:25:40.

stopped at traffic lights and your engine is running. What do you do?

:25:41.:25:43.

For example, with your mobile phone? Do you not have it in the car? It's

:25:44.:25:48.

in the bootment it is in my bag. It's locked away. People hear sounds

:25:49.:25:51.

and they have to pick up that phone to see who is it that's messaged? My

:25:52.:25:58.

message to people, a phone will still be there at the end of your

:25:59.:26:01.

journey. Allow the journey to continue and if you're going to make

:26:02.:26:05.

it to the end of the journey without touching the phone you've saved your

:26:06.:26:08.

life and other people's as well. What do you think Lewis thinks about

:26:09.:26:16.

this now? What was his thoughts at the end of the meeting? He said it

:26:17.:26:20.

helped him. He accepted the penalty and what will happen to him and he

:26:21.:26:23.

said he didn't want the cam passion, but as human beings you realise that

:26:24.:26:27.

he is a person and he made that stupid mistake just as o many other

:26:28.:26:30.

people have done and probably will do until this law is properly

:26:31.:26:35.

enforced. Thank you so much for coming to talk to us. I always think

:26:36.:26:40.

such an incredibly brave thing to do to go and talk to him as well. Thank

:26:41.:26:42.

you. Viewers in the south of England can

:26:43.:26:46.

see more on this story on Inside Out tonight

:26:47.:26:49.

on BBC One at 7.30pm. If you're in another

:26:50.:26:51.

part of the country, it will be available

:26:52.:26:53.

on the BBC iPlayer. Time now to get the news,

:26:54.:26:56.

travel and weather where you are. I will be back in half an hour,

:26:57.:30:20.

goodbye for now. Hello, this is Breakfast

:30:21.:30:28.

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. The Oscars ceremony has ended

:30:29.:30:34.

in confusion after the wrong film The team behind La La Land had been

:30:35.:30:49.

told they had won, they had all got on stage and become their acceptance

:30:50.:30:53.

speeches when they were interrupted by one of their producers who said

:30:54.:30:56.

the award should have gone to Moonlight.

:30:57.:31:00.

To explain it, watch this from our LA correspondent.

:31:01.:31:12.

What should have been the climax of the glitziest night in Tinseltown

:31:13.:31:15.

ended in a farce. Warren Beatty was about to announce the award for Best

:31:16.:31:23.

picture, but seemed confused. The award for Best picture... In the

:31:24.:31:28.

end, Faye Dunaway made the announcement... La La Land! And La

:31:29.:31:36.

La Land's producers were midway through their acceptance speeches

:31:37.:31:40.

went on came a man in headphones frantically trying to clear the

:31:41.:31:44.

stage. It turned out La La Land had not won the Oscar after all, it

:31:45.:31:48.

belonged instead to the producers of Moonlight, the low-budget underdog.

:31:49.:31:55.

This is not a joke, Moonlight has won best picture. Moonlight, best

:31:56.:32:02.

picture! La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz gallantly handed the Oscar

:32:03.:32:06.

over as the audience looked on aghast. It was left to an

:32:07.:32:10.

embarrassed Warren Beatty to try and explain the producer's mistake. I

:32:11.:32:15.

want to tell you what happened... I opened the envelope and it said...

:32:16.:32:22.

Emma Stone, La La Land. That is why I took such a long look at Faye and

:32:23.:32:32.

at you, I wasn't trying to be funny! Moonlight, the drama of a gay black

:32:33.:32:35.

man growing up in Miami, was dwarfed by La La Land in terms of

:32:36.:32:40.

nominations but ended triumphant in the most extraordinary of

:32:41.:32:44.

circumstances. Very clearly, even in my dreams this could not be true,

:32:45.:32:48.

but to hell with dreams, I am done with it because this is true! Oh, my

:32:49.:32:53.

goodness! Academy Award organisers are still trying to work out exactly

:32:54.:32:57.

what went wrong on a night like no other at the Oscars. I blame myself

:32:58.:33:04.

for this! More on that later as well.

:33:05.:33:08.

The independent inquiry into child sexual abuse will hold its first

:33:09.:33:15.

public hearings today, more than two-and-a-half

:33:16.:33:16.

years after it was set up by the Government.

:33:17.:33:19.

It'll begin by examining the mistreatment of British children

:33:20.:33:21.

in care or from poor families who were sent to Australia in the

:33:22.:33:26.

The inquiry will be told that the scale of abuse

:33:27.:33:30.

they suffered was much wider than previously thought.

:33:31.:33:32.

Downing Street has dismissed suggestions that Theresa May

:33:33.:33:34.

will announce that the end of free movement for new EU migrants

:33:35.:33:37.

The Daily Telegraph is reporting that the cut-off date

:33:38.:33:41.

could be 15th March, once the Government's Article 50

:33:42.:33:43.

Anyone arriving in the UK after that point would no longer

:33:44.:33:46.

have the automatic right to stay in the UK permanently.

:33:47.:33:49.

Downing Street has said that no decision has been taken.

:33:50.:33:53.

More than a third of small businesses expect their rates

:33:54.:33:55.

to rise this April, according to the Federation

:33:56.:33:57.

The Federation says many face unsustainable and unaffordable

:33:58.:34:03.

increases, and are planning to cut the amount they invest

:34:04.:34:05.

The Government has promised help for those worst hit.

:34:06.:34:20.

Hundreds of English bulldogs have been taken on a big walk

:34:21.:34:23.

through the streets of Mexico, to try and break

:34:24.:34:25.

951 bulldogs took part, but the walk didn't last very long

:34:26.:34:31.

The owners held umbrellas over their pets to protect

:34:32.:34:35.

The record attempt is being verified, so we don't know just yet

:34:36.:34:47.

if they managed to break it, or not.

:34:48.:34:49.

They have to discount the bulldog in the carriage!

:34:50.:34:54.

Do you think one will make all the difference, Dan?

:34:55.:34:56.

It could be, every little counts! Sally is here talking about handing

:34:57.:35:10.

out gongs, the first football gong of the season has gone to Manchester

:35:11.:35:13.

United. Some might argue it could have been

:35:14.:35:17.

Southampton, were a particular goal allowed. If you watch the clip of

:35:18.:35:21.

Jose Mourinho that we will run shortly, he doesn't look that happy,

:35:22.:35:25.

does he?! He looks a bit more animated at times but... I think

:35:26.:35:30.

what he is trying to convey is that this is just the beginning, not

:35:31.:35:32.

massive celebrations. He has become the first

:35:33.:35:36.

Manchester United manager to win a trophy in his first season

:35:37.:35:38.

at the club after guiding his side to a 3-2 win over

:35:39.:35:41.

Southampton in the EFL Cup. Saints' fans will consider

:35:42.:35:43.

their side to have been unlucky as Manolo Gabbiadini saw a goal

:35:44.:35:46.

contentiously ruled out. United then went 2-0 up

:35:47.:35:49.

through Zlatan Ibrahimovic Gabbiadini struck either

:35:50.:35:51.

side of the interval But Ibrahimovic snatched victory

:35:52.:35:55.

with just a few minutes left to secure the first domestic

:35:56.:35:59.

silverware of the season. So I want to have

:36:00.:36:04.

these words for them. I feel happy with the victory,

:36:05.:36:27.

very happy with the fact that I did it four times,

:36:28.:36:30.

the same as the biggest one, Harry Kane scored his third

:36:31.:36:33.

hat-trick in nine games as Tottenham thrashed Stoke 4-0 at White Hart

:36:34.:36:36.

Lane. All the goals came in the first

:36:37.:36:38.

half, with Delle Alli It's Kane's third

:36:39.:36:41.

hat-trick in nine games. Spurs go second in the Premier

:36:42.:36:43.

League, but they're still ten England made it 17 wins in a row

:36:44.:36:46.

after beating Italy 36-15 in their Six Nations

:36:47.:36:55.

match at Twickenham. England weren't at their best

:36:56.:36:57.

and had to come from behind to claim the victory as Italy led by five

:36:58.:37:02.

points at half time. But five second-half tries,

:37:03.:37:04.

including this from Elliot Daly, ensured England top

:37:05.:37:07.

the Six Nations table. But coach Eddie Jones was critical

:37:08.:37:11.

of Italy's unusual breakdown tactic. You've got to have an offside

:37:12.:37:19.

line to play the game. Italy were smart,

:37:20.:37:30.

and congratulations to their coaching staff

:37:31.:37:32.

and their players, they executed their plan brilliantly

:37:33.:37:36.

but it was not rugby. If I were the BBC I would be

:37:37.:37:38.

asking for my money back because you haven't

:37:39.:37:46.

had a rugby game. We need to go outside and train now

:37:47.:37:48.

so we get some proper rugby. We are printing off the latest Oscar

:37:49.:37:56.

news. The accounting firm have released a

:37:57.:38:00.

statement breaking -- taking the blame for the error which led to La

:38:01.:38:03.

La Land being incorrectly named as best picture before a producer

:38:04.:38:08.

corrected that it was in fact Moonlight. They say, we sincerely

:38:09.:38:13.

apologise to Moonlight, La La Land, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway and

:38:14.:38:17.

the Skippy was for the error made during the announcement for best

:38:18.:38:21.

picture. The presenters had mistakenly been given the wrong

:38:22.:38:25.

category envelope and, when discovered, was immediately

:38:26.:38:28.

corrected. We are investigating how this could have happened and deeply

:38:29.:38:34.

regret how this occurred. We are grateful for the gracious manner in

:38:35.:38:40.

which the nominees and the host, Jimmy Kimmel, handled the situation.

:38:41.:38:44.

The way we understand it, there are two people in charge from the

:38:45.:38:47.

accountancy firm and they are the only two who know the answers. We

:38:48.:38:55.

will not name them or anything! The last week that was sent before

:38:56.:39:03.

the ceremony was Emma Stone with her award, and the Twitter account went

:39:04.:39:05.

quiet before that. They memorise the winners, they

:39:06.:39:10.

cannot have it written down on paper or as nodes in their phone, they

:39:11.:39:13.

learn them all. Well, the hard copy let them down!

:39:14.:39:18.

A little bit more clarity about what happened.

:39:19.:39:25.

Talking about awards, this one win loads of them. Lots of us were

:39:26.:39:34.

gripped by the first two series of Broadchurch.

:39:35.:39:36.

Julie Hesmondhalgh has joined the cast this year,

:39:37.:39:44.

when she was offered a part in the third and final series

:39:45.:39:47.

It sees Olivia Colman and David Tennant return

:39:48.:39:50.

as Detectives Miller and Hardy, to investigate a serious

:39:51.:39:52.

Trish, hello, my name's Anna, I'm a crisis worker here at the SARC.

:39:53.:39:57.

This is a dedicated sexual assault referral centre.

:39:58.:39:59.

I'm going to be with you all the time you're here

:40:00.:40:02.

to make sure you understand everything that's happening.

:40:03.:40:05.

If you're feeling unsafe or uncomfortable in any

:40:06.:40:07.

We keep these rooms sealed so we know they're

:40:08.:40:16.

Julie Hesmondhalgh is here, lovely to see you, it has been a while! It

:40:17.:40:38.

has, hasn't it?! Last time we were talking about Corrie! Probably! Was

:40:39.:40:44.

it amazing to be offered a part in what has been a hugely successful

:40:45.:40:46.

series? And you loved it, didn't you? Can

:40:47.:40:51.

you imagine, I was just finishing a job and I got the call, I was

:40:52.:40:54.

thinking I would never work again, as you do every time you finish a

:40:55.:40:58.

job as a freelancer, and I got the call and I was over the moon,

:40:59.:41:02.

couldn't quite believe it. It is the first job that has taken me out of

:41:03.:41:08.

the North, so it was amazing, amazing feeling. What is it like to

:41:09.:41:12.

gone with a well-established on-screen and off-screen crew, and

:41:13.:41:18.

you are into date a story which so many people, millions, have

:41:19.:41:22.

followed... You are making me nervous! There must be a bit of

:41:23.:41:27.

pressure because people have been waiting for series three, the final

:41:28.:41:32.

series, for an awfully long time? Gas, no pressure! I was fine about

:41:33.:41:38.

it, really cool. It was very overwhelming, and the cast, apart

:41:39.:41:43.

from David and Olivia and Jodie, regulars from the past series, their

:41:44.:41:47.

raw also knew people like Lenny Henry, Sarah Parish, Charlie Higson

:41:48.:41:52.

in it, so it was quite a thing. We did a photo shoot, as you do, and it

:41:53.:41:59.

was like Madame Tussaud's, I was touching people! It was an amazing

:42:00.:42:04.

feeling. We have seen a little clip, we don't want to give too much away

:42:05.:42:07.

but tell the bit about your character my character is Trish

:42:08.:42:14.

winter months, the series starts with her being a victim of a serious

:42:15.:42:19.

sexual assault. It begins with her journey post-rape and her dealing

:42:20.:42:24.

with that and surviving it, and also trying to find out who did it. I

:42:25.:42:28.

don't think I'm getting too much away saying that she is taken to a

:42:29.:42:32.

sexual assault referral clinic and it is dealt with incredibly

:42:33.:42:36.

sensitively. The makers of the programme, Chris and all the writing

:42:37.:42:41.

team, were extremely careful in dealing with this as sensitively as

:42:42.:42:45.

they possibly could. There was a lot of discussion about sexual assault

:42:46.:42:50.

and sexual violence on TV and how it should be portrayed, we have all

:42:51.:42:53.

seen too many young women being chased through woods, the

:42:54.:42:58.

titillation of the chase and the attack, and I think this is very

:42:59.:43:02.

different in that it starts in the aftermath and you see the

:43:03.:43:05.

after-effects of it, you see her journey towards abiding it, and the

:43:06.:43:08.

terrible, devastating affects an attack like this has,

:43:09.:43:25.

making it really clear just by casting me as an ordinary

:43:26.:43:27.

middle-aged woman who has gone through this, because it can happen

:43:28.:43:30.

to anybody, that it is not an act of sex but acts of violence, very much

:43:31.:43:33.

so, and I think they did it very well and the research was the rug.

:43:34.:43:36.

Have you watched it all through, will you sit down with your family

:43:37.:43:39.

to watch it tonight? I have seen episode one because we had a cast

:43:40.:43:41.

screening on a massive screen, I wish I had not done that, actually!

:43:42.:43:44.

But I will watch with my husband and eldest daughter, my youngest went

:43:45.:43:47.

watch it, I think. I woke Reckitt, I know what happens! -- I won't spoil

:43:48.:43:54.

it! It is one of those things people talk about while they are watching

:43:55.:43:58.

it. I think it is one of the only ones on British TV where people like

:43:59.:44:03.

to watch it as it comes out, real water cooler TV where you want to

:44:04.:44:06.

talk about it, and I hope people will be pleased with it. I hope I

:44:07.:44:10.

have done my best to honour women who have been through this for real,

:44:11.:44:18.

and Rape Crisis and the other boards we have worked with, we are very

:44:19.:44:23.

close and I hope we striped it right in raising awareness as well as

:44:24.:44:28.

being good TV drama -- I hope we struck it right. Talking about TV

:44:29.:44:34.

water cooler is, you have been on the end of many awards yourself,

:44:35.:44:38.

have you ever been in a situation like at the Oscars, where just the

:44:39.:44:42.

awkwardness... Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty, not through their own

:44:43.:44:47.

fault, wrong envelope, they read out La La Land when in actual fact the

:44:48.:44:53.

Best Picture is Moonlight. I can't believe it happened, it is amazing.

:44:54.:44:57.

I'm just glad it happened that way round, if it had been the other way

:44:58.:45:02.

round and Moonlight had gone on stage and then it had been La La

:45:03.:45:05.

Land, that would be so terrible, in the times we live in, all the stuff

:45:06.:45:10.

that happens with the Oscars being so white last year, it would have

:45:11.:45:14.

been a disaster. This way round was a kind of happy ending that we all

:45:15.:45:19.

wanted. You make a good point, and La La Land was so expected to win it

:45:20.:45:26.

that even greater the surprise that Moonlight won. Everybody was happy

:45:27.:45:29.

for La La Land but really wanted Moonlight to win. La La Land were

:45:30.:45:35.

very gracious about it. They all handled it so well. And they did all

:45:36.:45:40.

right, they went with six, it wasn't like they went empty-handed! There

:45:41.:45:45.

is so much talk around a ceremony like that anyway, take that out and

:45:46.:45:50.

we still have plenty to talk about with all the politics and diversity

:45:51.:45:56.

issues. On a global stage with so many millions watching, you don't

:45:57.:45:59.

expect something like that to happen with something normally so well run.

:46:00.:46:07.

I loved it, I saw someone in to be given morning is that, I wish this

:46:08.:46:12.

had happened at the election! You deal with live audiences all the

:46:13.:46:15.

time, that is what you have to be able to do as an actor, put it back!

:46:16.:46:21.

And pretend to be all right about it! They are well practised, very

:46:22.:46:27.

well-deserved! Well, enjoy watching with your family tonight, I'm sure

:46:28.:46:31.

many millions will as well. Thank you very much. Broadchurch starts

:46:32.:46:35.

tonight on ITV at 9pm. Here's Carol with a look

:46:36.:46:41.

at this morning's weather. An full course to. This is a lovely

:46:42.:46:50.

picture from the Highlands, just up the road from Fort William. This is

:46:51.:47:00.

a picture from Norfolk, beautiful picture, lots of cloud in the sky,

:47:01.:47:03.

as there is a cross part of London. Thank you for sending in your

:47:04.:47:05.

pictures. -- across parts. The Northern Isles have been windy

:47:06.:47:16.

this morning. That will start to come down. Stormy Ewan will be

:47:17.:47:31.

affecting us with this cold air. It is cold across northern England,

:47:32.:47:34.

Scotland and Northern Ireland. Through the day it will cut south.

:47:35.:47:39.

Across England and Wales the blue colour will replace the yellows.

:47:40.:47:45.

Watch out for ice on untreated surfaces because it has been damp,

:47:46.:47:49.

there are showers around, wintry for Scotland and Northern Ireland.

:47:50.:47:55.

Particularly for England and Wales we will see a lot of showers through

:47:56.:48:00.

the day. By the afternoon it'll be drying up nicely across northern

:48:01.:48:02.

Scotland, Northern Ireland, as well, fewer showers. For Southee Scotland

:48:03.:48:07.

and northern England, a period of heavy snow. -- southern Scotland.

:48:08.:48:14.

For the south-west of England and the Moors, we will see sleet and

:48:15.:48:17.

snow at lower levels. We don't expect it to be problematic. Across

:48:18.:48:23.

the West of England and Wales, lots of showers, some heavy and thundery.

:48:24.:48:33.

Some showers overnight, still wintry in nature. A widespread risk of ice

:48:34.:48:39.

this coming night compared with the one just gone. These temperatures in

:48:40.:48:42.

towns and cities in rural areas. They will be freezing. As we end up

:48:43.:48:52.

on Tuesday, you can see the difference, behind it the remnants

:48:53.:48:59.

of Storm Ewan. It'll be another blustery day. That wind will be

:49:00.:49:03.

driving in showers across Liverpool Bay to the north of England, North

:49:04.:49:07.

Wales, some of those will be wintry. We see the back end of the other

:49:08.:49:11.

weather front of the South still producing showers. In between, dry

:49:12.:49:15.

weather with sunny spells, but still feeling cool. From Tuesday to

:49:16.:49:21.

Wednesday, the system comes through, high pressure comes in behind, then

:49:22.:49:26.

more fronts crossing the South. That translates into a largely dry day

:49:27.:49:30.

with their amounts of cloud, the odd shower, but wet and breezy down

:49:31.:49:35.

across the South. It'll be that bit milder in the south than it is

:49:36.:49:40.

further north. Thanks very much, we shall see you

:49:41.:49:43.

tomorrow. Nice numbers on the screen. Sorry, I

:49:44.:49:48.

was getting excited, we were talking about our Let It Shine guests,

:49:49.:49:52.

because we have the winners. Yes, and I was asking technical

:49:53.:49:56.

details, which one has hurt his leg? CHUCKLES

:49:57.:50:01.

The wrong film, you might have heard about it, was announced as best

:50:02.:50:05.

picture at the Oscars. You have to see it to believe it.

:50:06.:50:09.

This is the moment the Academy Awards ended in a farce.

:50:10.:50:20.

Moonlight, you guys won Best Picture.

:50:21.:50:49.

This is not a joke, I'm afraid they read the wrong thing.

:50:50.:50:55.

I think you guys should keep it anyway.

:50:56.:51:16.

Guys, this is very unfortunate, what happened.

:51:17.:51:23.

Personally I blame Steve Harvey for this.

:51:24.:51:28.

I would like to see you get an Oscar anyway, why can't we just give out

:51:29.:51:32.

I'm going to be really proud to hand this to my friends from Moonlight.

:51:33.:51:37.

Every time you see it you cannot believe it.

:51:38.:51:50.

And Warren Beatty especially, expecting somebody to say you have

:51:51.:51:53.

got the wrong one. And in the end he really does say,

:51:54.:52:00.

go on, you take the hit. There has been an apology for the

:52:01.:52:04.

blunder. The presenters had been given the

:52:05.:52:07.

wrong category envelope for an award which had been given to La La Land

:52:08.:52:15.

and Emma Stone. The award before was for best actress. It said Emma Stone

:52:16.:52:19.

from La La Land on the card. That is why there was confusion on his face.

:52:20.:52:25.

Of course you know, it was an amazing thing to hear La La Land, I

:52:26.:52:28.

think we would have loved to have won best picture. But we are so

:52:29.:52:35.

excited for Moonlight. It is one of the best movies of all time. So I

:52:36.:52:45.

was beside myself. I was also holding my best actress scarred the

:52:46.:52:47.

whole time. So whatever story that was, I had that card, so I'm not

:52:48.:52:52.

sure what happened, and I really wanted to talk to you guys first.

:52:53.:52:58.

There can only have been to Matt McCants. The PWC said that they had

:52:59.:53:01.

been given the wrong category envelope. -- there can only have

:53:02.:53:13.

been two cards. Naomi Harris talked about the moment

:53:14.:53:18.

she found out that the film she was in had actually won best picture. A

:53:19.:53:23.

moment I will never forget. I don't think it has ever happened in the

:53:24.:53:27.

history of the Oscars and it was more than a little awkward. --

:53:28.:53:32.

Naomie Harris. I went up on stage with the gormless expression because

:53:33.:53:36.

I didn't know what had happened when they finally said Moonlight. I was

:53:37.:53:39.

stunned, shocked, and even shaking, very strange moment. Paul La La

:53:40.:53:43.

Land. Yeah, I hadn't even thought of that.

:53:44.:53:53.

I was only thinking about it from our perspective but you're right. --

:53:54.:54:01.

poor La La Land. Most movies got recognition in some form. There were

:54:02.:54:05.

nice surprises. It was not as if one movie swept the board at all. Let's

:54:06.:54:10.

get more on this from James Cook who was at the after show party. In

:54:11.:54:14.

amongst the madness, you have been fully kilted for the Oscars, which

:54:15.:54:19.

we haven't mentioned. There is quite a good reason why,

:54:20.:54:24.

because nobody cares, that's probably the first thing. Nobody

:54:25.:54:34.

except Vin Diesel. Look at the kilt. Which clan is it? Stuart. What about

:54:35.:54:50.

the Oscars? We like the Scottish kilt. Are you Scottish?

:54:51.:54:58.

# Oh, flower of Scotland #. That is an English accent. No, it

:54:59.:55:03.

isn't, you don't even have an accent, he is an impostor! I'm very

:55:04.:55:09.

sure that's not what you sent me here, I'm sure it isn't. Do you want

:55:10.:55:13.

me to tell you who won the Oscars? Would that be useful?

:55:14.:55:19.

Yes, carry on. Let's run through the winners. Emma

:55:20.:55:26.

Stone, best actress for La La Land. Best picture, Moonlight, definitely

:55:27.:55:28.

Moonlight, even though it was La La Land for a few minutes, but it

:55:29.:55:34.

wasn't. Casey Affleck won best actor for Manchester by the sea. Best

:55:35.:55:36.

director went -- best director went to Damien

:55:37.:55:55.

Chazelle. That is the news from the Oscars.

:55:56.:56:32.

You've done well, considering everything that went wrong. Our film

:56:33.:56:38.

critic joins us. Moonlight won, eventually. A surprising win in some

:56:39.:56:44.

ways. Yes, forgetting the mistake. Had it just got normally it would

:56:45.:56:48.

still be a surprising win for Moonlight, because it is, I mean, it

:56:49.:56:58.

is funny that you had Vin Diesel, because Moonlight was the opposite

:56:59.:57:02.

of action movies. It was quiet, intimate, great movie. And made on a

:57:03.:57:07.

fraction of the Budget compared with the other movies. Exactly. To have

:57:08.:57:13.

that kind of impact with that kind of budget, not a lady with the

:57:14.:57:17.

stars, not a film people had many expectations for, that is amazing.

:57:18.:57:26.

-- laden with stars. It is great publicity for both movies, though.

:57:27.:57:33.

Earlier this month I spoke to the director of Moonlight, Barry

:57:34.:57:37.

Jenkins, such a charming man. He told us about the movie. He had also

:57:38.:57:40.

been talking about tonight's astonishing events. I'm going to

:57:41.:57:47.

drink champagne, wear a tuxedo by Christian Dior, and the rest of it,

:57:48.:57:51.

I'm going to try and enjoy it, you know? That's the thing. You are

:57:52.:57:55.

suddenly in this amazing moment. You've got to take a moment to look

:57:56.:57:59.

around and enjoy it. You know, it's a dream I've never had, yet it has

:58:00.:58:04.

come true. I am, sort of, backing myself into this dream I would not

:58:05.:58:11.

allow myself to have. How does it feel to be holding this? It feels

:58:12.:58:18.

amazing. Amazing, yeah. And in somewhat bizarre circumstances.

:58:19.:58:24.

Things happen. Human error. Whatever happened, I still don't know what

:58:25.:58:27.

happened, but it happened, but the result is the same. Do not have any

:58:28.:58:35.

idea of what went on? Or does it not matter? Definitely the latter, it

:58:36.:58:41.

doesn't matter. We are good. We won't go to sleep, but tomorrow we

:58:42.:58:49.

will find out what happened, yeah. Just fabulous. The wrong film will

:58:50.:58:55.

be the headline. But for La La Land to pick up all of those awards,

:58:56.:59:06.

amazing. Absolutely it won photography, it is a really good

:59:07.:59:12.

night. The end is a bit of a tarnish on the whole night, but it still did

:59:13.:59:17.

really well. In terms of those individual categories, Emma Stone

:59:18.:59:21.

won. I was so pleased to see that. Even in that bit which was

:59:22.:59:24.

explaining things, she was still brilliant. That is how good she is.

:59:25.:59:29.

There is a scene in La La Land where she goes to an audition and she

:59:30.:59:32.

sings a song called Audition. For that moment alone she should win

:59:33.:59:36.

every award. She is the heart and soul of that film. The only British

:59:37.:59:40.

winners came in the short documentary feature. James Cook

:59:41.:59:45.

spoke to them earlier to get their reaction.

:59:46.:59:51.

I am the director of White Helmets, and I believe this is an Oscar! I am

:59:52.:00:00.

the producer, also an Oscar! Hold them up, let's see them! Many, many

:00:01.:00:07.

congratulations, how does it feel? It feels humbling, if I'm honest.

:00:08.:00:12.

When we started this project, the entire thing was to spread the word

:00:13.:00:16.

and magnify the voices of the White Helmets comedy heroes at the heart

:00:17.:00:20.

of our film, and I feel that we have had the best platform to do that

:00:21.:00:25.

than we could have imagined -- the White Helmets, the heroes of our

:00:26.:00:29.

film. The fact that the Academy has honoured their work, we feel the

:00:30.:00:33.

world is recognising their work. It must feel strange, a moment of

:00:34.:00:38.

extraordinary joy born out of such terror and despair? Absolutely, the

:00:39.:00:42.

whole situation is bittersweet, we wish we had never had to make this

:00:43.:00:46.

run, we wish we did not have to be here with this award, but we do and

:00:47.:00:49.

so we are pleased they at least get the recognition they deserve.

:00:50.:00:54.

Really lovely that we got British winners as well as night.

:00:55.:00:58.

We were looking at the big names in the acting categories, Dev Patel,

:00:59.:01:02.

Andrew Garfield, Naomie Harris, they did not walk away with awards but it

:01:03.:01:06.

was good to see there were some home-grown winners.

:01:07.:01:13.

We were talking about political speeches, Jimmy Kimmel, the host,

:01:14.:01:16.

was quite political? He tweeted Donald Trump during the

:01:17.:01:20.

show, there were some big moments but it was quite mellow, he was

:01:21.:01:23.

quite a laid-back presenter, there was not the sort of anger in the

:01:24.:01:30.

room, it did not feel vitriolic. You will not forget this one, will

:01:31.:01:34.

you? I won't, no! I will talk about it

:01:35.:01:39.

more, this is not going away for a while!

:01:40.:01:41.

As Julie was saying, we talk about it now but it would be more awkward

:01:42.:01:46.

the other way round, had Moonlight been announced as winner and then

:01:47.:01:50.

they had to stop the speeches and La La Land had one.

:01:51.:01:53.

And ultimately Moonlight is a very worthy winner, people should go and

:01:54.:01:55.

see it. It is out now, isn't it?

:01:56.:02:01.

It is. In a minute, we will be talking to the winners from Let It

:02:02.:03:39.

I'm back with the lunchtime news at 1.30pm.

:03:40.:03:40.

Five To Five were crowned champions of Let It Shine on Saturday night.

:03:41.:03:55.

They'll now claim the prize of playing a fictional boyband

:03:56.:04:00.

in Gary Barlow's West End musical The Band, which is based

:04:01.:04:02.

Before we meet them, let's take a look at how

:04:03.:04:06.

# You can't stop an avalanche as it races down the hill.

:04:07.:04:19.

# You can try to stop the seasons, girl.

:04:20.:04:22.

# And you can try to stop my dancing feet.

:04:23.:04:28.

# 'Cause the world keeps spinning round and round.

:04:29.:04:34.

# And my heart's keeping time to the speed of sound.

:04:35.:04:39.

# I was lost till I heard the drums and I found my way.

:04:40.:04:43.

# A woman found out if she shook it she could shake up a man.

:04:44.:04:50.

# So I'm gonna shake and shimmy it the best that I can today.

:04:51.:04:53.

# 'Cause you can't stop the motion of the ocean.

:04:54.:04:55.

# You can wonder if you want to but I never ask why.

:04:56.:05:00.

# And if you try to hold me down I'm gonna spit in your eye and say.

:05:01.:05:04.

Fascinating to watch you all watching that back.

:05:05.:05:18.

Congratulations to AJ, Sario, Curtis, Nick and Yazdan.

:05:19.:05:21.

I know you have a busy few weeks ahead, you have not watched it all

:05:22.:05:28.

back in its entirety... We have seen clips, it is just bizarre watching

:05:29.:05:32.

it all back. We are in a bit of a bubble at the moment, it is going 1

:05:33.:05:36.

million miles but it is incredible. It is our dream come true, cannot

:05:37.:05:41.

believe it. Sario, congratulations on your jumper! I feel I have did

:05:42.:05:46.

mention it! You were thinking when you hit the stage is suddenly got

:05:47.:05:59.

nervous, did you? It just got really real, it is one thing rehearsing

:06:00.:06:02.

with no audience but when they are there they give you that energy and

:06:03.:06:05.

extra boost but it also makes me nervous, I'm not going to lie! You

:06:06.:06:07.

were here last week representing all the other bands as well and you said

:06:08.:06:10.

the experience of doing it live on the night is weird because yes,

:06:11.:06:13.

there are nerves, but you know you have one opportunity and have to get

:06:14.:06:16.

it right. I think the vast majority of people felt that on the night you

:06:17.:06:18.

guys managed to do it slightly better than the others? We were

:06:19.:06:28.

tasked with a couple of false part way through! But because we are good

:06:29.:06:32.

friends we hugged each other through the tough times and we went out

:06:33.:06:35.

there and gave the performance of our lives because that is all we can

:06:36.:06:40.

do -- we helped each other. You nearly came on with crutches this

:06:41.:06:46.

morning... It was really sore, just overworking the muscles, it

:06:47.:06:49.

tightened up and it was like a chain reaction of pain down the leg, into

:06:50.:06:54.

my knee, and it just got worse. I dearly I just needed to rest it so I

:06:55.:06:57.

did for the first half of the week but I couldn't, I had to start

:06:58.:07:02.

rehearsals for the dance on Wednesday morning, I was quite

:07:03.:07:06.

behind as it was so I just had to go out and do it for the boys, didn't

:07:07.:07:10.

want to let them down. That is what you are preparing yourselves to go

:07:11.:07:14.

onto the stage where whatever happened you just have to get on and

:07:15.:07:18.

do the show, so it is good preparation, really!

:07:19.:07:23.

You are a songwriter yourself, so it has been a different journey in some

:07:24.:07:28.

ways? Yes, it is a different route, and the things I've learned

:07:29.:07:31.

personally from the show and from these boys, all the dancing, I'm not

:07:32.:07:36.

going to forget the times when it got really tough and when you have

:07:37.:07:39.

do persevere through it, but watching that back and when we do

:07:40.:07:43.

eventually get to watch the show it makes it all worthwhile. Do you want

:07:44.:07:48.

to see the winning moment again? It has been a lovely dynamic, this is

:07:49.:07:52.

the moment you found out you had won.

:07:53.:08:06.

CHEERING. Well done, guys.

:08:07.:08:12.

Let's hear it for AJ, Curtis, Nick, Sario and Yazdan, the winning band

:08:13.:08:24.

is Five To Five! The big moment! Who was crying, was

:08:25.:08:31.

it you? We were all crying! He was crying all the way through, every

:08:32.:08:36.

performance! I was crying out of paying the first time, the second

:08:37.:08:43.

time out of relief. -- crying in pain. Louise spotted you all have

:08:44.:08:48.

keys on, what is the significance? When we came off stage, Danny gave

:08:49.:08:53.

us these keys, -- Gary gave us all these keys, five for us and he has

:08:54.:08:57.

the sixth one so we wear them for good luck. I want to know what they

:08:58.:09:02.

open because they are all different! That is the next show! They all have

:09:03.:09:08.

Shine engraved on them. He has thought this through! Robbie

:09:09.:09:13.

Williams was not able to be a judge, do you know why that was? We haven't

:09:14.:09:19.

been informed. And if you have you are certainly not saying! He was not

:09:20.:09:25.

well enough to be a good but was able to perform with Take That,

:09:26.:09:30.

which went down well. This is Take That on Let It Shine.

:09:31.:09:40.

# Yeah...

:09:41.:09:51.

# Although no one understood, we were holding back the flood.

:09:52.:10:01.

# Learning how to dance the rain. # There were all of them than us,

:10:02.:10:07.

now they'll never dance again. # Now they'll never dance again.

:10:08.:10:15.

# Hold on... They know what they are doing, don't

:10:16.:10:19.

they?! They are so good, I know I am

:10:20.:10:22.

biased! Who plays Robbie, or is it not like

:10:23.:10:28.

that? We are not trying to compare ourselves to Take That at all, we

:10:29.:10:32.

are part of eight Take That show but we are our own band and have our own

:10:33.:10:36.

identity and the band in the musical, I don't think we are ever

:10:37.:10:40.

referred to as Take That. I know, but still... ! The premise of the

:10:41.:10:45.

musical is that the story is told through Take That's music. Sario

:10:46.:10:52.

definitely has the best jumper! Thank you. Do you have a couple of

:10:53.:10:57.

weeks off before rehearsals? Two weeks off and then workshop and

:10:58.:11:00.

rehearsals in March for a couple of weeks to get to know the show, we

:11:01.:11:06.

met the writer yesterday, they were telling us all about the stories,

:11:07.:11:13.

getting as excited. It is amazing. The story is incredible and we are

:11:14.:11:18.

so excited, so excited. Having got onto the programme is one thing, but

:11:19.:11:23.

this could be your job now for life, couldn't it? Going into this

:11:24.:11:26.

industry, who knows where it will take you? Fingers crossed! I am

:11:27.:11:35.

buzzing! Don't cry! You might be buzzing but careful

:11:36.:11:40.

with the late! I will take it easy, it has been an incredible experience

:11:41.:11:44.

for all of us, we have had so much fun and so grateful to everyone that

:11:45.:11:48.

has supported us all this way. Good luck. Congratulations, guys.

:11:49.:11:50.

The musical The Band is due to open in September.

:11:51.:11:53.

We will leave you with one last look at the moment it all went so badly

:11:54.:11:58.

wrong at the Oscars! The end of the Academy Awards when

:11:59.:12:02.

La La Land, you might know this but if you have not woken up, what's

:12:03.:12:04.

wrong be announced as the best picture.

:12:05.:12:15.

Moonlight, you guys won Best Picture.

:12:16.:12:43.

This is not a joke, I'm afraid they read the wrong thing.

:12:44.:12:49.

What an extraordinary night for La La Land and, most of all, Moonlight,

:12:50.:13:13.

congratulations. We will never forget that Oscars,

:13:14.:13:17.

that will be the moment on the Oscars 2017.

:13:18.:13:21.

They got there in the end! That is it from us today, we are back

:13:22.:13:24.

tomorrow at 6am. Have a lovely day, see you soon,

:13:25.:13:26.

goodbye.

:13:27.:13:30.

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