10/01/2012

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:20. > :00:24.Hello, welcome to The One Show with Anita Rani... And Matt Baker.

:00:24. > :00:29.Tonight's guest has played some pretty nasty baddies. He's been a

:00:29. > :00:34.heartless thief, threatening to kill Harrison Ford's family...

:00:34. > :00:38.murderous monk trying to kill Tom Hanks... And a nasty gangster.

:00:38. > :00:46.latest character is an investment banker. Just saying! It's Paul

:00:47. > :00:51.Bettany. Is that the general reaction you get when you tell

:00:51. > :00:55.people you're playing an investment banker? No, it hasn't been.

:00:55. > :00:59.wanted to stop the show with a happy birthday. This is a wonderful

:00:59. > :01:03.picture from Beryl Flynn's 85th birthday party in Cardiff with the

:01:03. > :01:10.family. A surrounded by her nearest and dearest. An astonishing 13

:01:10. > :01:13.children, 48 grandchildren and 73 great-grandchildren. Birthdays and

:01:13. > :01:20.remembering names must be a nightmare. Can you imagine that a

:01:20. > :01:26.family that be? It's ridiculous! It is a bit like my Christmas. We have

:01:26. > :01:31.this place up in Vermont, and I invite the whole of England, all of

:01:31. > :01:37.my friends over. Did you do that this Christmas? Yes, we had about

:01:37. > :01:41.25 people living there for about two weeks. We do all of the cooking

:01:41. > :01:45.and cleaning. It is like running a hotel, it's a nightmare. I'm not

:01:45. > :01:49.doing it any more. I wish you had brought a picture. We are asking

:01:49. > :01:53.the viewers to send in pictures of your big family get-togethers. We

:01:53. > :01:58.will show the best ones at the end of the programme. We had a picture

:01:58. > :02:04.of your lovely family, there. That is a little bit bigger with the

:02:04. > :02:09.addition of Agnes? Yes. A beautiful. And you're beautiful, Oscar-winning

:02:09. > :02:13.wife, Jennifer Connelly. We'll be talking more about Paul's new film,

:02:13. > :02:17.Margin Call, later forced of Birmingham has been included in a

:02:18. > :02:20.list of the top places to visit in 2012 by the New York Times, a local

:02:20. > :02:24.paper, because of its brilliant restaurants.

:02:24. > :02:27.In a moment we will be talking to the City's curry king, on a

:02:28. > :02:31.controversial subject raging through the industry. Simon Boazman

:02:31. > :02:40.has been to another: Re Capital to investigate the hottest of hot

:02:40. > :02:44.topics. -- culinary capital. This is Demi from Yorkshire. She is

:02:44. > :02:51.taking part in the challenge of a lifetime. I think I can cook a

:02:51. > :03:00.curry as good as anybody. But this man thinks he can do better. Are

:03:00. > :03:10.you confident? I certainly am. are getting ready for a curry off.

:03:10. > :03:13.

:03:13. > :03:17.Demi is trained, but he's got curry in his DNA. We've got a lot of

:03:17. > :03:21.cooks from Bangladesh, Pakistan and India in the UK. There are plans to

:03:21. > :03:24.replace them with people from non Asian backgrounds, but it's not to

:03:24. > :03:27.everybody's taste. A tough immigration laws mean that

:03:27. > :03:33.restaurants are finding it harder to source their chefs, so they are

:03:33. > :03:38.having to turn closer to home. But can local chefs be taught the

:03:38. > :03:42.flavours of Asia? Chris Grayling thinks so. To go with my colleague,

:03:42. > :03:47.Eric Pickles, I have been in discussions about getting a curry

:03:47. > :03:49.college up and running. We are keen to see home-grown chefs with the

:03:49. > :03:57.kind of chef's skills that we have had to import from other parts of

:03:57. > :04:00.the world. We want skills to be developed here. Ahmed has three

:04:00. > :04:05.restaurants and employs 100 staff. He thinks that chefs from overseas

:04:05. > :04:08.have that extra ingredient. Do you think somebody that grow up on a

:04:08. > :04:13.Western diet can make a good, authentic curry? I would like to

:04:13. > :04:16.think so, but I don't think it's possible. It's just the cultural

:04:16. > :04:20.background and experience. If you have grown up with a certain diet,

:04:20. > :04:29.that does not consist of spice and flavour that we using Asian cooking,

:04:29. > :04:32.that will always be missing. This country, I've not got it around my

:04:32. > :04:37.head how we cover that. Whether we send students overseas or something,

:04:37. > :04:41.I don't know. Now, he believes that those brought up on a Western diet

:04:41. > :04:45.will not have the sense of spice that is required to be a top Asian

:04:45. > :04:48.chef. But there is a college just 500 metres from his restaurant that

:04:48. > :04:52.believes they can produce the next generation of curry chefs, no

:04:52. > :04:55.matter where they are from. The International Food Academy at

:04:55. > :05:00.Bradford College of trains chefs of all races and nationalities how to

:05:00. > :05:06.cook dishes from all over the world. We are an international food

:05:06. > :05:12.Academy, we teach all sorts of things. We get experts to help us.

:05:12. > :05:16.Today, we have someone from a highly acclaimed restaurant. She is

:05:16. > :05:20.teaching students Asian cookery. wife was cooking from the age of

:05:20. > :05:23.six. It's one hell of a learning curve. She trained at Bradford

:05:23. > :05:29.College, she learned professional cooking and health and safety, so

:05:29. > :05:32.it is a complete circle. Bradford the other day, two guys

:05:32. > :05:37.were talking about the Spice combination that should be in a

:05:37. > :05:42.bhuna. Here is the punchline, one was English and one was Polish.

:05:42. > :05:46.That is Bradford for you! We are not talking about the colour of

:05:46. > :05:50.people's skin, everybody likes curry here. Demi is one of the star

:05:50. > :05:54.pupils. The single mother has never set foot in the Indian sub-

:05:54. > :05:58.continent, but she believes she has got what it takes to make a

:05:58. > :06:03.brilliant career. Do you think you could make a career as good as a

:06:03. > :06:08.Pakistani or Bangladeshi chef? the right training and help, yes.

:06:08. > :06:12.So, she thinks she is good enough to be a professional chef. They are

:06:12. > :06:17.short of a chef or two, so the answer seems to be obvious. But is

:06:17. > :06:27.she good enough? Well, as Gregg Wallace would say, curry cooking

:06:27. > :06:29.

:06:29. > :06:34.does not get any tougher than this. We have sent Demi and an apprentice

:06:34. > :06:38.a traditional dish to make, using the same recipe. But the experience

:06:38. > :06:42.gap is huge. This is the second day of me doing this, they have been

:06:42. > :06:47.doing it a lifetime. As long as they say it is on the right spot or

:06:47. > :06:53.whatever, yes. Were you having these spices in your food from an

:06:53. > :06:57.earlier age? Yes. So, two days practice, compared to a lifetime.

:06:57. > :07:03.This is going to be tough board Demi. The moment of truth. For

:07:03. > :07:13.fairness, we are blindfolded and we are fed the dishes. It tastes nice,

:07:13. > :07:19.This one is really nice. Which one would you want to serve at the

:07:19. > :07:29.restaurant? They are both good. I think it would be... The first one.

:07:29. > :07:33.They were both really good. At one had slightly more fake -- flavour,

:07:33. > :07:37.but they were both good. Maybe with a little bit of trading, Demi could

:07:38. > :07:45.get a job? A bit more practice and experience, of course. In the right

:07:45. > :07:50.hands. Well, in the right hands. Love that, curry and Bradford

:07:50. > :07:53.rolled into one. A perfect film. We mentioned that the New York Times

:07:53. > :08:00.is wreck -- recommending that people does it Birmingham to sample

:08:00. > :08:05.the food. In particular, Aktar Islam's restaurant. Congratulations.

:08:05. > :08:08.Did you know they had come round and sampled your food? No. We had

:08:08. > :08:14.an image request, they said they would send a photographer. We

:08:14. > :08:18.didn't know what it was far. A lot of times you hope it will be good,

:08:18. > :08:23.and it is. Do you need to have lived and breathed curry to make a

:08:23. > :08:29.decent one? It gives you a head start. With any cuisine, it is

:08:29. > :08:37.about passion and love for it. With effort, that, and time, anybody can

:08:37. > :08:43.master it. Of course, Gordon Ramsey has been here, so you don't want to

:08:43. > :08:47.say that anyone from here cannot master a curry? Come on, you lie a

:08:47. > :08:53.curry fan command you? You have had European and Asian chefs in your

:08:53. > :08:56.restaurant, have they been equally as good? Everybody has their

:08:56. > :09:00.different skill sets. European chefs, I have had friends that have

:09:00. > :09:04.spent time in my kitchen and taken certain elements away. They are

:09:04. > :09:10.doing that really well. To do it in the entirety, you need years and

:09:10. > :09:18.years of experience. Anyone can do it, it is just time. It is

:09:18. > :09:25.beautiful. It is venison? It is teatime. He is obviously hungry.

:09:25. > :09:32.my God! Everybody just shut up! I live in New York, there is no good

:09:32. > :09:38.curry. Just be quiet, everybody. Birmingham might miss me. But we

:09:38. > :09:48.have got venison, from her Royal Highness's Balmoral estate. We have

:09:48. > :09:48.

:09:48. > :09:53.pumpkin, gravy, caramelised shallots. Well, it has his seal of

:09:53. > :10:02.approval. Apparently it is going to New York. I will book my ticket.

:10:02. > :10:07.Wow! He is picking up the bill, anyway. Do you want to get married?

:10:07. > :10:13.Well, our official small Ireland Correspondent Ben Fogle has been on

:10:13. > :10:23.his travels again. Tonight, he is in Argyll and Bute, looking at a

:10:23. > :10:24.

:10:24. > :10:29.mysterious island that holds a Just a few miles off the west coast

:10:29. > :10:35.of Scotland lies the island of Daavar Island. At low tide, it is a

:10:35. > :10:41.short walk across this natural spit. There is little to distinguish it

:10:41. > :10:45.from any number of rocky outcrops along the coast. Apart from a

:10:45. > :10:51.caretaker, the Ireland's only other inhabitants are wild goats and a

:10:51. > :10:57.flock of sheep. But back in August 1887, hundreds of people flocked

:10:57. > :11:03.here to what had all the hallmarks of a miracle. It was an astonishing

:11:03. > :11:09.sight. The discovery was made by a yachtsman, sheltering in one of the

:11:09. > :11:12.caves. He had come in to light his pipe, out of the wind and rain.

:11:12. > :11:21.What he saw by the light of his flickering match made him feint on

:11:21. > :11:25.the spot. The very next day, as news spread to the mainland of this

:11:25. > :11:31.mysterious discovery, curious townsfolk from Campbeltown crossed

:11:31. > :11:37.the water along here to see for themselves what the yachtsman had

:11:37. > :11:42.discovered. As they crowded into the cave, they could not believe

:11:42. > :11:50.their eyes. On the wall, in front of them, was a life-sized image of

:11:50. > :11:56.Christ. Just imagine what the locals would have made of this 125

:11:56. > :12:01.years ago. Back then, they were God-fearing folk. The appearance of

:12:02. > :12:08.an 8 foot painting of the Son of God innate cave caused quite a stir.

:12:08. > :12:14.Like the weeping statues in Ireland, this was seen as a profound

:12:14. > :12:19.Christian message. In short, it was a miracle. The news spread like

:12:19. > :12:24.wildfire. People came from across the country on pilgrimages to see

:12:24. > :12:30.for themselves this mysterious painting. But one local man knew

:12:30. > :12:36.that this was no miracle. This was not the work of God. Archibald

:12:36. > :12:42.Heikkinen was the local art teacher. And he had a secret. This was his

:12:42. > :12:46.handiwork. Archibald maintains that he woke in the morning and he first

:12:46. > :12:52.started to paint from a dream in which he had seen our saviour in

:12:52. > :13:00.this setting, on that particular wall. Surreptitiously, over the

:13:00. > :13:06.summer months of 1887, he created this painting. Nobody knew that he

:13:06. > :13:12.had done it. The concept was she her genius, finding this site and

:13:12. > :13:15.putting that image on it. It is world class. Archibald had used

:13:15. > :13:20.school supplies to paint the picture. He was worried he might be

:13:20. > :13:25.done for theft. He left his home for a new life, South of the Border

:13:25. > :13:30.in England. Only there, far from the island, did he pluck up the

:13:30. > :13:35.courage to reveal that he was the mysterious painter. Ever since the

:13:35. > :13:38.original picture in 1887, local Campbeltown art teachers have been

:13:38. > :13:45.caring for the painting, retouching it and protecting it from the

:13:45. > :13:54.elements. John McCamley, in the 1950s, John McKinnon Crawford in

:13:54. > :14:01.the 1960s, and bomblets told Mary since the 1970s, each adding a

:14:01. > :14:06.remark. Archibald came back to retouch it in June 1994. He

:14:06. > :14:09.returned to a hero's welcome, a far cry from the simmering anger of

:14:10. > :14:15.1887. He died less than a year after the final visit. But he will

:14:15. > :14:25.never be forgotten. Archibald not only left an indelible mark on the

:14:25. > :14:26.

:14:26. > :14:31.walls of the cave, but in the pages A remarkable story. Isn't it

:14:31. > :14:35.absolutely incredible. Are you an outdoors man or more like a City

:14:35. > :14:42.slicker like your character in Margin Call? I am a city boy. But

:14:42. > :14:48.my wife loved the outdoors. Consequently, I do a lot of hiking.

:14:48. > :14:54.I mean, proper hiking up in the mountains. Her reason for that is

:14:54. > :15:00.that you never get paparazzi up there. If you do, you can kill them

:15:00. > :15:05.and bury them and nobody would ever know. That is Vermont? Well, we

:15:05. > :15:08.have a place that we go to in Vermont. But there is so much great

:15:08. > :15:13.hiking to be done in America. One of the great things about America

:15:13. > :15:16.is the outdoors. It's great for the kids, as well. You have come up

:15:16. > :15:26.with an interesting way of dividing up the babysitting duties, haven't

:15:26. > :15:30.

:15:30. > :15:35.We try and do it one on at one off, which is simple, but hardly ever

:15:35. > :15:40.works. There last film is a good example of it not working. Yes, it

:15:40. > :15:46.didn't work. The movie I am talking about tonight, he came up, it was a

:15:46. > :15:49.great script and she was working in Michigan and I met the director and

:15:49. > :15:54.I really wanted to do it, because it had Kevin Spacey in, and I

:15:54. > :16:00.really wanted to do it. Their work night time shoots, so consequently

:16:00. > :16:05.I had my kids on the set with main -- for their work night-time shoots.

:16:05. > :16:10.It was a tiny movie and I had this little office space in the trading

:16:10. > :16:16.floor we were shooting on. I had an inflatable mattress in there with

:16:16. > :16:23.my kids sleeping in their, and my dog... The life of a Hollywood

:16:23. > :16:28.actor, sleeping on a Lilo with a dog. I would go out for breakfast

:16:28. > :16:32.in the morning, go and run the dock ragged for a bit, and then go and

:16:32. > :16:39.get some sleep and then let the kids play too many computer games.

:16:39. > :16:49.The cast is incredible. Kevin Spacey, and just before you think

:16:49. > :16:50.

:16:50. > :16:57.it is all over, Jeremy Irons turns up. And Demi Moore. Tell us what it

:16:57. > :17:06.is about. It is about the crash, the financial crash of 2008. Don't

:17:06. > :17:13.let that put you off though. It takes the form of a thriller and it

:17:13. > :17:19.is a kid's who discovers that the formula they have been using his

:17:19. > :17:22.fundamentally flawed and is not working and that they are actually

:17:22. > :17:28.so lathered up that they have borrowed more than the company is

:17:28. > :17:31.worth. It is told from the bankers perspective, which makes you put it

:17:31. > :17:41.in a different light. He was a little clip of how you spend the

:17:41. > :17:45.

:17:45. > :17:52.money in your Lavis lifestyles. The mortgage takes 300 grand, and I

:17:52. > :18:01.send 150 home for my parents. So what is that? 800. I spend 150 on a

:18:01. > :18:06.car. 75 on restaurants, 50 on close, I put 400 away for a rainy day.

:18:06. > :18:10.Smart as it turns out, because it looks like the storm is coming.

:18:10. > :18:14.does sound like he has a ridiculous amount of money, but you do feel

:18:14. > :18:21.sorry for these guys when you watch. What has been the reaction from the

:18:21. > :18:27.bankers? I don't know. They feel it is a fairly fair portrayal and I

:18:27. > :18:31.think the film makes people who are not bankers justifiably angry. I

:18:32. > :18:35.went to meet a lot of these guys, and I shadowed a guy that did the

:18:35. > :18:40.job I am pretending to do, and you have a preconception of how they

:18:40. > :18:44.will be, but you get in there and go into the office and there are

:18:44. > :18:49.pictures of their kids, they are married, and they have mortgages.

:18:49. > :18:53.It is confounding, but there is a truth. They do talk about toxic

:18:53. > :18:59.assets and may have this jargon that distances them from the

:18:59. > :19:02.reality, and that reality is that eight toxic -- a toxic asset is

:19:02. > :19:07.someone defaulting on their mortgage and being thrown out of

:19:07. > :19:12.their house and they are distant from that. It is a brilliant script,

:19:12. > :19:16.brilliantly acted. We really enjoyed it. Margin Call is in

:19:16. > :19:19.cinemas this Friday. Now, for 75 years, the 999 service has been

:19:19. > :19:22.helping people faced with life or death situations. But a quarter of

:19:22. > :19:25.calls don't turn out to be real emergencies. This has prompted the

:19:25. > :19:35.police to launch a new phone line across England and Wales, and Lucy

:19:35. > :19:50.

:19:50. > :19:54.Siegle's been given exclusive Let's be clear, if you need a taxi,

:19:54. > :20:00.cooking advice or rescue a pigeon, you should not call 999. It sounds

:20:01. > :20:05.obvious, but those are real-life examples. In Brighton, 999 call

:20:05. > :20:08.handler Tim it is on a busy shift. What are some of the more

:20:08. > :20:15.ridiculous calls you have dealt with? My gerbil is giving birth.

:20:15. > :20:19.Mike Catt is ill. Burst water pipe. If only someone had not rung the

:20:19. > :20:25.number of a Peter being late, we could have answered the real court

:20:25. > :20:30.later -- their dinner being late. This business is happening now, so

:20:30. > :20:34.do they need a blue right -- blue light response? The government is

:20:34. > :20:38.launching a new non-emergency number, 101, across England and

:20:38. > :20:42.Wales. For the first time there will be an easily memorable number

:20:42. > :20:46.that people can ring if they want to get hold of the police but it is

:20:46. > :20:51.not an emergency. So it is not watering down the 999 system?

:20:51. > :21:01.will still be available. If they ring the non-emergency number and

:21:01. > :21:11.

:21:11. > :21:14.the police judge it is an emergency, I am about to see how the police

:21:14. > :21:18.respond to 101 calls on patrols. This telephone call came in about

:21:18. > :21:21.three hours ago, and now he has gone missing and his wife cannot

:21:21. > :21:27.find him, we can see that that is an emergency because she does not

:21:27. > :21:30.know where he is or he might get lost. 999 is just when you need the

:21:30. > :21:35.police immediately. Luckily the missing person was found before

:21:35. > :21:39.nightfall and the officers spoke to him and caught up with his wife.

:21:39. > :21:43.many people are dialling 999 and getting in a way of real

:21:43. > :21:48.emergencies. How did the police respond, do you think? They were

:21:48. > :21:52.marvellous. They alerted all the bus drivers and a bit later two

:21:52. > :21:58.police officers came up here and spoke to me. Did you feel more

:21:58. > :22:03.comfortable? Using that number? did, really. It has all worked out

:22:03. > :22:10.very well. I absolutely wonderfully. A happy ending in the end. Lucy, to

:22:10. > :22:14.clear it up, what is the difference between 101 and 9999? 999 is when

:22:14. > :22:17.you need the police there. That is a blue light emergency situation.

:22:17. > :22:23.Someone who was a criminal is still in the house, of violent struggle

:22:24. > :22:28.is going on, someone is in danger, something the police can do if they

:22:28. > :22:33.get there. One no one is when there is not an immediate danger to you

:22:33. > :22:36.or another member of the public -- won a one is when there is no.

:22:36. > :22:40.Suppose your house had been burgled a week before while you're on

:22:40. > :22:43.holiday, it might seem like an emergency to you, but the police

:22:44. > :22:47.cannot do anything of their war then. It is also for ongoing

:22:47. > :22:50.problems like anti-social behaviour and things you need to talk to the

:22:50. > :22:55.police about the there is no point coming there and then. It is about

:22:55. > :23:01.taking pressure off the system. I should say the one A1 at number

:23:01. > :23:06.costs 15 p, but it is a flat rate number -- will 101 and number.

:23:06. > :23:10.if you call and it is an emergency? Having been in both call centres, I

:23:10. > :23:15.can tell you these are experts and if they hear a call that they think

:23:15. > :23:18.is an emergency, they will upgrade it. All the time they are listening

:23:18. > :23:23.for signs it is an emergency, so do not worry that it will not be

:23:23. > :23:27.upgraded. While You were Here, you will last the viewers for some help.

:23:27. > :23:30.We have had various stories about councils switching of street

:23:30. > :23:34.lighting at certain times to save money, and we want to look further

:23:34. > :23:38.into the story. If this is happening in your area, we would

:23:38. > :23:42.love to know about it. Please get in touch with us with details, and

:23:42. > :23:46.the e-mail addresses on the screen now. Arthur Smith likes to sleep

:23:46. > :23:49.over at famous people's houses for The One Show. But on his latest

:23:49. > :23:51.visit he wasn't too pleased to be offered the couch for the night.

:23:51. > :24:01.That was until he realised the house belonged to legendary

:24:01. > :24:02.

:24:02. > :24:07.If in 1938, the London suburb of Hamstead became one of the RFU's --

:24:07. > :24:10.refuge of one of the great men of the 20th century, Sigmund Freud,

:24:10. > :24:15.the father of psychoanalysis. Tonight I am sleeping in his own

:24:15. > :24:19.house, and given that his master work is a book called the

:24:19. > :24:26.Interpretation of dreams, I hope that my own dreams will have added

:24:26. > :24:31.intensity and we shall interpret them in the morning. Now a museum,

:24:31. > :24:38.this was Freud's sanctuary. Aged 82, he had escaped from Nazi

:24:38. > :24:46.persecution in Vienna. He brought his family here to north London

:24:46. > :24:50.where he could live out his days in Freud had begun his career working

:24:50. > :24:56.with a scalpel and a microscope in the field of Neurology. But his

:24:56. > :24:59.fascination with the mind led him to a new kind of treatment, which

:24:59. > :25:06.she called Psycho analysis. Freud believed that if you have a problem,

:25:06. > :25:10.you should talk about it -- he called psychoanalysis. He uncovered

:25:10. > :25:16.the thoughts of the 20th century, the way that human beings were not

:25:16. > :25:21.people who performed calculatingly, they had an unconscious, they were

:25:21. > :25:25.prone to a rational forces. His great invention was that the

:25:25. > :25:30.patient would lie down and start talking, and in that process of

:25:30. > :25:35.what he called Free Association, talking randomly and allowing the

:25:35. > :25:42.unwitting to emerge, somehow, a deeper picture of what was

:25:42. > :25:47.troubling the individual would come out. This is where it happened,

:25:47. > :25:51.Freud's consulting couch, where his patients lay and revealed their

:25:51. > :25:59.deepest all. Freud, meanwhile, sat in the original psychiatrist's

:25:59. > :26:03.Chair, out of sight, making notes. Freud continued to see four

:26:03. > :26:07.patients a day in England, but his work was restricted by illness. A

:26:07. > :26:11.heavy cigar smoker all his life, he had a mouth cancer and was in a

:26:11. > :26:17.great deal of pain. Despite poor health, Freud was very sociable

:26:17. > :26:23.when he was here. He received many eminent guests. The writer H G

:26:23. > :26:27.Wells was a friend and came for tea, as did Virginia Woolf. And the

:26:27. > :26:31.artist Salvador Dali, who penned this sketch. Apparently Salvador

:26:31. > :26:36.Dali saw Freud's brain as being like a snail. His brain, he said,

:26:36. > :26:41.is in the form of a spiral. I guess from Salvador Dali that was a kind

:26:41. > :26:45.of compliment. Freud is often portrayed as stern and unsmiling,

:26:45. > :26:53.but he had a much softer and humorous side. He was a father of

:26:53. > :26:58.six, a great family man and loved his home life. His son inherited

:26:58. > :27:02.the house, and he said it was the most beautiful house they had ever

:27:02. > :27:07.lived in. Their future Myhrer of England, loved it, thought it was

:27:07. > :27:12.the language of -- the land of freedom -- he was a huge admirer of

:27:12. > :27:16.England. He loved reading fiction and read a few pages every night to

:27:16. > :27:22.get into a dream of mood. You have heard of Freudian slips. But these

:27:22. > :27:28.are Freudian slippers. I think they are going to keep me nice and comfy

:27:28. > :27:31.for the overnight stay. Freud said that the interpretation of dreams

:27:31. > :27:41.is the royal road to knowledge of the unconscious activities of the

:27:41. > :27:45.

:27:45. > :27:51.mind. So let's see what is in my Good morning. I'm not sure what

:27:51. > :27:56.expressions of the subconscious I had, but a child could tune I

:27:56. > :28:01.remembered coming into my head. I wish I was a spaceman, the fastest

:28:01. > :28:10.guy alive. I'm not sure what that means, but if anyone could explain

:28:10. > :28:14.it, it probably would have been Thanks, Arthur. Lovely Freudian

:28:14. > :28:18.slippers. Earlier we asked you for pictures of your big families and

:28:18. > :28:23.you have not disappointed. You have crashed at the BBC e-mail system.

:28:23. > :28:28.Unbelievable. We managed to get these before it went down. Paul,

:28:28. > :28:32.start us off. This is from Robert Ward, and their location is unknown.

:28:32. > :28:40.You could do that with your family. You can get into decent --

:28:40. > :28:44.different positions when you're in Vermont. Different shapes! Here is

:28:44. > :28:49.a family at a wedding in 2008. Absolutely beautiful. Very nice.

:28:49. > :28:56.This is from Stephanie Johnson celebrating her grandmothers 60th

:28:56. > :29:00.birthday in Malaga. Wicked! The Wilson family from Aberdeen in

:29:00. > :29:04.Boxing Day 2011. That is from Kathleen. This is Jack from

:29:04. > :29:13.Northern Ireland with his family, having a super time. Sent in by

:29:13. > :29:18.John, thank you very much. Paul, thank you ever so much indeed.