:00:28. > :00:32.Hello. Welcome to The One Show with Alex Jones. And Matt Baker. Tonight
:00:32. > :00:36.is dedicated to the great wet weekend that we had. Lots of you
:00:36. > :00:40.probably wore one of these, the fashionable poncho. Indeed, but
:00:40. > :00:45.that is not what we are talking about right now so we can take it
:00:45. > :00:51.off! Tonight's guests are an odd couple, but they have two things in
:00:51. > :00:59.common, the love of tennis and the country of Moldova. It is Pat Cash
:00:59. > :01:02.and Tony Hawks! Good to see you both. Pat Cash, straight in for the
:01:02. > :01:07.question that lots of people are asking you, is that as close as
:01:07. > :01:13.Murray is going to get to the Wimbledon trophy? I don't think so.
:01:13. > :01:21.I think he will win at some stage. You must have tipped him. I tipped
:01:21. > :01:27.Rafael Nadal and he went out! You know, the top four guys have been
:01:27. > :01:32.winning all of the titles. Murray played a very good match. He is
:01:32. > :01:37.getting closer all the time. It is hard to expect him to beat Roger
:01:37. > :01:43.Federer. A few things worked against him yesterday. The roof?
:01:43. > :01:47.really suits Roger Federer's style of play. He plays a risky type of
:01:47. > :01:52.game. When the winds of blowing the ball around, he cannot play that
:01:52. > :01:57.game quite so well. It was unlucky for Murray but he is getting closer
:01:57. > :02:05.all the time. It is focus. It is all up there, just because. Emotion
:02:05. > :02:11.and the release after the match, it was fantastic. Did you shed a tear?
:02:11. > :02:16.I did. It was lovely that he showed that side to him and we have warmed
:02:16. > :02:21.to him. I think the whole nation has. I was wiping tears away. We
:02:21. > :02:24.were asking if you have had a Murray moment. When could you not
:02:24. > :02:28.hold back those tears and if you have got a photo, all the better,
:02:28. > :02:33.there is the address to send them in. We will read them out at the
:02:33. > :02:38.end of the show. Empty beaches, muddy car parks, damp socks. 2012
:02:38. > :02:45.photo albums are going to look pretty much the same! So what do
:02:45. > :02:53.you do? Stake in or go out and make the best of it? Angela Bell met
:02:53. > :02:57.those whose motto is to wrap up and carry on. -- Angellica Bell.
:02:57. > :03:03.might think that organising outdoor summer event would be relatively
:03:03. > :03:13.easy, but June has been one of the wettest on record. And so far July
:03:13. > :03:14.
:03:14. > :03:17.has been absolutely... Bucketing down. Lashing it down. Horrible!
:03:17. > :03:23.The East of England Show held outside Peterborough has been
:03:23. > :03:28.running since the 1700's. Despite the forecast it has still attracted
:03:28. > :03:34.a keen crowd today. The farming public has to work in all weathers
:03:34. > :03:38.and keep going. I think in Britain we do it. It has not put a damper
:03:38. > :03:43.on the day? I have enjoyed it. I would like to do the judging in my
:03:43. > :03:48.kilt and worries but that might not be suitable! My parents have got
:03:48. > :03:58.sheep and they came yesterday and slept in a tent. What? In the mad?
:03:58. > :04:00.
:04:00. > :04:07.Yes! -- are they mad? It was very bad yesterday. The did not consider
:04:07. > :04:11.not coming tomorrow? Of course not. Has the rain affected business?
:04:11. > :04:18.Sort of. As soon as it rained, everybody disappeared. When the sun
:04:18. > :04:21.came back out, everybody came back out and that was nice. You have
:04:21. > :04:28.been in a country for 10 months. What do you think of the British
:04:28. > :04:32.weather? Horrible! I was expecting sunshine. It is just rainfall. We
:04:32. > :04:36.are going back to winter and they do not know what is happening.
:04:36. > :04:42.we talk too much about the weather in this country? Yes, we talk about
:04:42. > :04:46.it. I like it because you make us prepare. Maybe, as a wise man once
:04:46. > :04:52.said, it is true that there is no such thing as the wrong weather,
:04:52. > :04:58.just the wrong clothes. I always say that! You have told me
:04:58. > :05:02.that twice before! Yes, get the message! Thank you very much for
:05:02. > :05:06.that. Many people in the South West of England have had to deal with
:05:06. > :05:10.real flooding this weekend. Some remarkable pictures on the news.
:05:10. > :05:17.Anita Rani is in Lancashire with a community that has been helping
:05:17. > :05:21.each other out. Hello. Hello. Don't be fooled by the blue skies. The
:05:21. > :05:25.small town of Darwen was affected by the appalling weather that we
:05:25. > :05:30.have had. The reason being that the river Darwen runs underneath and
:05:30. > :05:37.behind this pub. It has happen not just once. And the last four weeks,
:05:37. > :05:42.this pub has flooded three times. The landlord of the pub is Anthony.
:05:42. > :05:48.How bad has it been? Horrendous, nearly catastrophic. The cellar is
:05:48. > :05:51.totally flooded, 9 ft of water. We lost all of our stock and equipment.
:05:51. > :05:56.That happened a couple of weeks ago and then this weekend you were down
:05:56. > :06:00.there again bailing it out. Yes. After the first episode we put in
:06:00. > :06:03.some emergency pumps so that we could deal with any problems and
:06:03. > :06:07.luckily that has kept the water level down this weekend. Touch wood
:06:07. > :06:11.it will carry on. Touch wood. In nine years of being the landlord,
:06:11. > :06:17.have you seen anything like this? Nothing like this. It has been
:06:17. > :06:21.catastrophic. We hope it stays dry. Businesses have also been affected.
:06:21. > :06:25.Jonathan is a solicitor. Normally you sort out the flooding claims.
:06:25. > :06:29.What happened to you? We had bad weather over the last week and then
:06:29. > :06:33.on Friday the police told us to evacuate the building. That was
:06:33. > :06:36.because the buildings could fall down? Yes, the flooding have caused
:06:36. > :06:41.problems in the alleys behind and the buildings were going to fall
:06:41. > :06:48.down. We hope it stays dry. Throughout all of this, the
:06:48. > :06:53.community has pulled together so cheers to you all. Cheers!
:06:53. > :06:58.weather that we have had has been so sporadic. From drought to this.
:06:58. > :07:03.It is just depressing. For you Dickens fans, you will have great
:07:03. > :07:06.expectations of this next film. author's favourite holiday home was
:07:06. > :07:12.in Broadstairs in Kent. Arthur Smith went for bed and breakfast at
:07:12. > :07:16.Bleak House. In 1851, novelist Charles Dickens
:07:16. > :07:24.wrote a fond portrait of an English seaside resort with its semi-circle
:07:24. > :07:29.sweep of houses and we're all food and beer. -- strange old wooden
:07:29. > :07:34.pier. He was describing Broadstairs in Kent. He was renting that house
:07:34. > :07:38.on the cliff at the time and that is where I am spending tonight.
:07:38. > :07:44.There are a lot of houses in Broadstairs that lay claim to
:07:44. > :07:48.hosting Charles Dickens. And some that do not! He came to Broadstairs
:07:48. > :07:53.for many years, the first time in 1837 when he was writing the
:07:53. > :07:57.Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist. Very soon he latched on to lodgings
:07:57. > :08:02.on top of the cliff. Fort House, as it was known there. The name was
:08:02. > :08:04.changed by an entrepreneurial owner after Dickens died in two Bleak
:08:04. > :08:09.House to make the connection complete, but that is why he spent
:08:09. > :08:14.his summers. He wrote there? wrote wherever he was, he couldn't
:08:14. > :08:17.not right. He rode David Copperfield here. The great scene
:08:17. > :08:23.at the end of the novel, the massive ship work and the body
:08:23. > :08:29.washed up on the beach, that was written at Bleak House. -- the
:08:29. > :08:35.massive shipwreck. It was a great inspiration. Watery walls came
:08:35. > :08:39.rolling in, threatening to engulf the town. It was fear from this
:08:39. > :08:49.view that he got the inspiration for the famous storm scene. -- it
:08:49. > :08:52.was here. David Copperfield was Dickens's most autobiographical
:08:52. > :09:01.novel, and much around Broadstairs inspired him. What is now the
:09:01. > :09:08.Dickens Museum was the fictional home of David Potters -- David
:09:08. > :09:12.Copperfield's aunt. Bleak House itself does not feature in the book.
:09:12. > :09:20.Amazingly, its current owners were not attracted by its literary past.
:09:20. > :09:25.When you came here, you did not really know much about the Murray -
:09:25. > :09:28.- Dickens connection? Not at all. We thought it was a lovely place
:09:28. > :09:33.but I now realise more. I have never been such a than that I have
:09:33. > :09:38.read the books. But now that I have read a couple and I think they are
:09:38. > :09:43.brilliant. Do you ever think as you are sitting in your rooms that this
:09:43. > :09:47.is where Charles Dickens was? I have done that a few times. If
:09:47. > :09:51.anybody wants to sit in the chair at Charles Dickens's death can take
:09:51. > :09:55.pictures, I do not mind. The children write notes and put them
:09:55. > :10:01.inside the desk. Has anybody ever suggested that you are Dickensian
:10:01. > :10:10.character yourself? I get that all the time. All the time! I wonder
:10:10. > :10:15.what he would have called you. Don't say A Bumble. He was much
:10:15. > :10:19.fatter than me! This is where I am spending the night tonight, said to
:10:19. > :10:21.be the very bedroom where Charles Dickens slept. I wonder how he
:10:22. > :10:26.would have spent the evening after the children had been put to bed
:10:26. > :10:33.and all of the words were gone from his bed. Maybe you would have had a
:10:33. > :10:37.drink in the Albion Hotel, or at the frigate, which he described as
:10:37. > :10:46.the cosiest sailors in. Maybe he would have stood on this terrace
:10:46. > :10:52.and watch the light training from the sky. Half-awake and half asleep,
:10:52. > :10:56.this idle morning in our sunny window on the edge of a chalk cliff.
:10:57. > :11:02.That is how Charles Dickens described Broadstairs and this
:11:02. > :11:07.House, 160 years ago. Skies, C, beach and village, lying still
:11:07. > :11:11.before us as if they were sitting for the picture. It is still quite
:11:11. > :11:19.a scintillating view. I can imagine sitting here and writing all summer
:11:19. > :11:25.myself. If I was not so lazy! Broadstairs heritage is celebrated
:11:25. > :11:31.every year with a week-long festival. Millions of people have
:11:31. > :11:35.been inspired to visit this town. It is sad to think that after the
:11:35. > :11:41.publication, the tourists arrived and Charles Dickens laughed. It was
:11:41. > :11:46.no longer the quietest little place in the world. -- Charles Dickens
:11:46. > :11:51.left. It was never quite the same for Charles Dickens.
:11:51. > :11:57.So beautiful. You would love that. We have to thank Arthur Smith for
:11:57. > :12:01.this whole world of playing the Moldavians at tennis. This is now a
:12:01. > :12:06.film and it was a book. Give us some idea of how it started. I was
:12:06. > :12:08.watching England play Moldova in the World Cup qualifiers with
:12:08. > :12:13.Arthur Smith. I had been playing tennis and he said he did not think
:12:13. > :12:17.I was very good. I said that I was number two in Sussex as a junior.
:12:17. > :12:25.He said that I was not good enough to beat those footballers. I said
:12:25. > :12:28.but I was because but callers are not so good at tennis. --
:12:28. > :12:32.footballers are not so good. I said the England team would never let me
:12:32. > :12:39.play them and so I had to play the Moldova team and the loser of the
:12:39. > :12:43.bat had to strip naked and sink the Moldova national anthem. -- the bet.
:12:43. > :12:48.Then I set off on that adventure, it made the book and then the film.
:12:48. > :12:52.What is your part in that? Tony is an old friend of mine. We have a
:12:52. > :12:57.passion for tennis and we have a charity which tries to get free
:12:57. > :13:04.coaching for children on public courts. We feel that is very
:13:04. > :13:10.necessary in the UK. Plus, starred in the movie! I did not, just three
:13:10. > :13:13.words of commentary! It is a fantastic movie. Travelling around
:13:13. > :13:16.the world to play tennis you have some amazing Adventures but it was
:13:16. > :13:20.nothing like this one that he had travelling around Moldova and
:13:20. > :13:26.everywhere else, trying to play these people. It was fantastic.
:13:26. > :13:36.Let's have a little look. You start talking them off one after another.
:13:36. > :13:54.
:13:54. > :13:59.Lovely! Absolutely brilliant. That bet worked out well, a book and a
:13:59. > :14:03.film. What you need is another challenge, really. Maybe but it is
:14:03. > :14:08.enough of a challenge getting a film out and about. We are a small,
:14:08. > :14:12.independent film, let's face it. think it is time to set up
:14:12. > :14:18.challenge number two. We have a certain Arthur Smith on the
:14:19. > :14:22.telephone right now. What is next? This is what I propose. You have
:14:22. > :14:25.done the Irish, you have done Moldova and it is time for the
:14:25. > :14:32.Welsh. Wales became the first country recently to have a public
:14:32. > :14:37.right of way around the coast. You have got to walk round it, starting
:14:37. > :14:41.with nothing. You cannot advertise it in advance. You have got to turn
:14:41. > :14:46.up wearing only what you are wearing, and find places to stay,
:14:46. > :14:51.some way of eating, for the whole thing. I bet you cannot do it
:14:51. > :14:56.because you are not man enough. If you lose the bet, you have to stand
:14:56. > :15:03.in a tars and costume in Caernarvon Castle and sing the Welsh national
:15:03. > :15:07.anthem. And what will he do if he does do it? This is the thing. He
:15:07. > :15:16.gets me doing things and he just sits on a sofa and watches
:15:16. > :15:20.television! OK, I might take you on. I will have a think about that.
:15:20. > :15:24.have cut him off! He is gone. The see you later. Wherever he is
:15:24. > :15:28.staying has not got very good reception. Playing The Moldovans At
:15:28. > :15:38.Tennis is out now in cinemas. we are giving all the money to this
:15:38. > :15:39.
:15:39. > :15:44.care centre for children with Now, it is just 18 days to go until
:15:44. > :15:50.the Olympic counting down finally stops. Over the last few weeks, Ade
:15:50. > :15:53.Adepitan has been introducing some of the 1948 London Olympians to
:15:53. > :15:59.their morpbt counterparts. Tonight he takes a look at hockey. A
:15:59. > :16:05.dangerous game, that. At the last London Olympics in 1948,
:16:05. > :16:13.the British male hockey team won a silver medal.
:16:13. > :16:19.John Peak, who is now 87, was Britain's youngest player at 23.
:16:19. > :16:24.64 years later, and Olympic hockey is back in London. 19-year-old
:16:24. > :16:28.Harry Martin is the youngest member of the team, trying to build on
:16:28. > :16:32.John's legacy. It is so much quicker. I'm glad I'm
:16:32. > :16:36.not playing now. The One Show has brought John and
:16:36. > :16:40.Harry together here. The sport has changed since John
:16:40. > :16:45.was playing? We did not have a training base at all. We did not
:16:45. > :16:50.get together until a few months before the Olympics, we did not
:16:50. > :16:55.know we had been chosen. How long have you been together? Overall we
:16:55. > :17:01.train about three years. I would not say we were not fit,
:17:01. > :17:08.but nothing like the athletic stage with all of the doctors, the food
:17:08. > :17:13.and the training schedule. I work in the gym on month Monday, Tuesday,
:17:13. > :17:16.Wednesday, two pit sessions, Thursday, and Friday, two pit
:17:16. > :17:19.sessions and then running and Saturday.
:17:19. > :17:23.Amazing. John, what was it like being the
:17:23. > :17:30.youngest member of the team? suppose that they looked after me.
:17:30. > :17:35.How old are you Harry? 19. You get a bit of stick, but it is usually
:17:35. > :17:41.deserve. But they look after me. What is it like being 19 years old
:17:41. > :17:45.and in a high-performance team? Sometimes I get a call from my
:17:45. > :17:51.friends as I just started university, but none of that, it is
:17:51. > :17:55.all worth it. Iefpl not jealous at all! In 1948 food was rationed in
:17:55. > :17:59.Britain, but athletes were permitted the occasional treat.
:17:59. > :18:08.We probably had a few sausages that we should not have done. When I was
:18:08. > :18:13.at the Naval College at Greenwich, I do remember there was a special
:18:13. > :18:17.breakfast, I got eggs for breakfast. Other did not.
:18:17. > :18:23.We are given individual programmes depending on what you need.
:18:23. > :18:31.Pies, burgers? Not that anyone is fat, but some are told to stay off
:18:31. > :18:36.the carbs! Not fat, but told to stay off the carbs?! That means you
:18:36. > :18:41.are fat! Sport science has made today's players stronger, fitter
:18:41. > :18:46.and faster. Hockey is now so fast that at London 2012, the pitches
:18:46. > :18:50.will be blue with a pink surround. That and the yellow balls, help the
:18:50. > :18:56.spectators and the cameras to keep track of the action. There are a
:18:56. > :19:00.few reasons why the game is so much quicker, the most obvious is the
:19:00. > :19:03.surface it is Astro turf, that is very different from the green,
:19:04. > :19:09.green grass of Wembley that John played on in the 1948 Games. The
:19:09. > :19:14.ball has even changed. The ball that John used looked like a
:19:14. > :19:19.cricket ball. Soft leather, even with a seam. It would absorb
:19:19. > :19:25.Moysure and get dirty and have to be replaced erten minutes or so,
:19:25. > :19:29.slowing the game down. Now the ball is a hard plastic and reaches
:19:29. > :19:33.speeds of up to 100 miles per hour. Another reason that the game is so
:19:33. > :19:36.quick is because of the stick that the players use. This is the 1948
:19:36. > :19:41.stick, but even then, some nations were ahead of the game.
:19:41. > :19:45.This is the British stick, that was the stick that the Indians were
:19:45. > :19:50.using. When we played in the final, they were able with their sticks to
:19:50. > :19:55.move it about much more quickly and carefully than we were. They were
:19:55. > :20:01.very good at it. They were more effective than we were on the grass,
:20:01. > :20:06.which we thought would be better for us. Today as sticks are made
:20:06. > :20:10.from advance materials, like carbon firebrand and Kevlar. The sticks
:20:10. > :20:15.that Harry use are very strong and the smaller heads means that they
:20:15. > :20:19.move the sticks quicker, results in faster dribbling, faster swings and
:20:19. > :20:24.seriously vicious hits. There is a good chance with the home support
:20:24. > :20:28.that both men and women teams can win the medals this year. I know
:20:28. > :20:33.that one person will be watching this extremely fast sport closely!
:20:33. > :20:38.I just said that Australia are going to win! On that hockey stick,
:20:39. > :20:43.another fact for you. It is connected to farming.
:20:43. > :20:49.Hockey gets its name from the French word for shep hard's crook.
:20:49. > :20:56.There you go. It has been a fascinating series. Ade Adepitan,
:20:56. > :21:00.what have been the main differences looking back to' 48? Obviously the
:21:00. > :21:05.equipment, but what struck me was rationing. The fresh food produce
:21:05. > :21:15.was a luxury back then. The athletes now we could not train
:21:15. > :21:16.
:21:16. > :21:20.the same way as we do now with their food. Bradley Wiggins is
:21:20. > :21:23.doing the tour do France, he southerns -- burns up 6,000
:21:23. > :21:30.calories a day, that would have been impossible then.
:21:30. > :21:35.Now, the training camps, they are not just in London? This is what I
:21:35. > :21:39.love. We bring it home, we are spreading it around the country. In
:21:39. > :21:44.Aberdeen, the Cameroon team are staying up there. I know you are
:21:44. > :21:50.laughing! But a little bit of rain and cold. In Antrim there are three
:21:50. > :21:55.teams staying there, Egypt is one of them. Stop laughing, dudes! In
:21:55. > :22:01.Cardiff there is also another three teams, Trinidad and Tobago, so Alex,
:22:01. > :22:04.you can welcome them. Orpls Ormskirk, this is a test of
:22:04. > :22:11.geography. The Federated States of Micronesia are one of the countries
:22:11. > :22:14.staying there. And in lovely East Anglia, Bury St
:22:14. > :22:20.Edmunds, we have Rwanda staying there.
:22:20. > :22:25.You are getting the torch very soon? I will be. On the 26th of
:22:25. > :22:30.July. I will be carrying the torch through London. I will be keeping
:22:30. > :22:34.my hair back so it does not go up in flames! Any way, coal mines were
:22:34. > :22:39.once the backbone of British industry. Now there is a major
:22:40. > :22:47.concern for two -- million homeowners, whose houses are built
:22:47. > :22:50.on top of them. Mortgage lenders are so reluctant to lend on these
:22:50. > :22:56.properties, many are finding it difficult to move.
:22:56. > :23:00.The housing of the 60s, transformed the British landscape, creating
:23:00. > :23:04.modern housing etaits like this one, but 50 years on, the area's past is
:23:04. > :23:08.badly affecting its future. You would not think it to look at it,
:23:08. > :23:13.but this house is unsellable, or unbuyable, the reason? It was built
:23:13. > :23:19.on top of a former coal mine. As a result, the only person who did put
:23:19. > :23:25.in an offer last year was refused a mortgage.
:23:25. > :23:31.And that's because until 1949 this whole area was a colliery, dotted
:23:31. > :23:36.with mine shafts. Vertical holes drilled up to 1 80m into the
:23:36. > :23:40.grounds. After the coal shaft closed, the shafts were corped, the
:23:40. > :23:47.estate built, and hundreds of families moved into the new homes.
:23:47. > :23:51.We moved in August of 1975, the problem came when we tried to sell
:23:51. > :23:53.the property in 2009. The person buying the house could not get a
:23:53. > :23:59.mortgage because of the coal mining report.
:23:59. > :24:04.The house is close to four former mine shafts, long since covered by
:24:04. > :24:08.homes and gardens, but this was not a problem when Lawrence bought the
:24:08. > :24:15.house. It say in the letter that there are no active workings to
:24:15. > :24:21.affect the property? That is correct. That is one of the reasons
:24:21. > :24:27.why the mortgage company gave us the mortgage in 1975.
:24:27. > :24:32.But now that has changed. The chance that damage could occur in
:24:32. > :24:35.the future has made the lenders cautious. He they are saying that
:24:35. > :24:40.the property is in the likely zone of influence.
:24:40. > :24:48.That is fine, unless you bought the place in 19 79.
:24:48. > :24:52.The coal mines are have offered to reassure buyers and mortgage
:24:52. > :24:58.companies that should something go wrong that they will not have to
:24:58. > :25:02.pay out, but this has not worked. Caroline Gripton is the estate
:25:02. > :25:06.agent whose job it was to sell Lawrence's house in 2009. Have you
:25:06. > :25:11.had problems selling houses in this area because of the mine shafts?
:25:12. > :25:16.the 11 years I have been an estate agent locally, we have had four
:25:16. > :25:21.properties deemed unmortgagable. A couple here, specifically, number
:25:21. > :25:24.30, across the road, there and another couple further up the
:25:25. > :25:29.street. Mine shafts only pose a problem for buildings within 20
:25:30. > :25:35.metres, but this was not the case when many residents bought their
:25:35. > :25:38.homes. In 1991, the goalposts moved. You could mortgage a property
:25:38. > :25:43.providing there were no mines within five metres. Then at the
:25:43. > :25:48.beginning of the 1990s, that became 20 metres. Because a lot of the
:25:48. > :25:54.people have lived here for many years it has never been an issue
:25:54. > :25:59.because they bought at a time when that restriction was not in place.
:25:59. > :26:03.There are more than 2 million homes at risk of damage by being built
:26:03. > :26:09.near former coal mines. In the current economic climate, mortgage
:26:09. > :26:13.companies are risk-averse. We asked an independent surveyor to check
:26:13. > :26:18.out how the mine affects the value of Lawrence's house.
:26:18. > :26:23.We can see on the map that in the vicinity we have four main shafts.
:26:23. > :26:28.We are here and there are two in the opposite property's garden and
:26:28. > :26:31.two behind the property. And two in front. So this is the house we are
:26:31. > :26:36.standing outside of now. What about a house for example up here that
:26:36. > :26:41.does not have any mine shafts around it at all? This house would
:26:41. > :26:46.probably be worth in the region of up to �150,000.
:26:46. > :26:51.And this one? Because of the close proximity of the four mine shafts,
:26:51. > :26:58.the current value base on that would be about �90,000.
:26:58. > :27:02.What a difference! Absolutely. this house has had no con
:27:02. > :27:06.structural problems, does that not come into it? Unfortunately not,
:27:06. > :27:11.even though there are no cracks or signs of movement caused by a mine
:27:11. > :27:16.shaft, the fact that there are four within this area is what the
:27:16. > :27:19.problem is and there is a risk. Off the back of that, solicitors and
:27:19. > :27:23.surveyors have to advise their clients on the risks.
:27:23. > :27:27.After a full assessment, Sophie told us that she would be reluctant
:27:27. > :27:32.to recommend a mortgage company lends on the house at all.
:27:32. > :27:36.Lawrence's only hope now is to find a cash buyer or to sell at a
:27:36. > :27:41.significant loss. Who is going to buy a property with
:27:41. > :27:45.mines in the vicinity? It would help me if the property fell down
:27:45. > :27:49.and nobody got hurt. Now, earlier on we asked for your
:27:49. > :27:54.stories and photos of the Andy Murray moments we have loads. We
:27:54. > :27:56.have this one from Ross, whether his beautiful wife walked down the
:27:56. > :28:03.aisle, he could not hold the tears back.
:28:03. > :28:10.Bless you. And this one, the mum and dad
:28:10. > :28:17.turned up to their daughter's 21st birthday in Uganda. Daughter Cora
:28:17. > :28:23.having a moment, when she put a bow in her hair. This is a nice one,
:28:23. > :28:30.the husband giving a speech about how much he loved his wife. Pat
:28:31. > :28:36.said, he was crying because he was gutted! Now, before we go, it is
:28:36. > :28:41.your last chance to make your nominations for the One Show 999
:28:41. > :28:45.award. If you have known someone who has acted quickly, e-mail the
:28:45. > :28:50.story to us at the One Show. We need your nominations by midnight
:28:51. > :28:54.tomorrow so get them in now. All of the details are on the website.