12/01/2017

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:00:16. > :00:20.Hello and welcome to The One Show with Angela Scanlon

:00:21. > :00:29.Tonight we're joined by two stars of the BBC detective

:00:30. > :00:32.series Death In Paradise - one is smooth but stern.

:00:33. > :00:34.The other could occasionally give Inspector Clouseau

:00:35. > :01:10.The best team chewing on TV, no doubt about it. -- the best TV theme

:01:11. > :01:12.tune, no doubt about it. Apart from this one, obviously.

:01:13. > :01:14.Please welcome the stars of Death in Paradise -

:01:15. > :01:27.A world away from the Caribbean. We have got some great pictures from

:01:28. > :01:30.across the UK. Not great, if you are struggling to get home, but

:01:31. > :01:39.youngsters will be at the building snowmen. You have put this weather

:01:40. > :01:47.down to the fact that debt in Paradise is so successful on TV? --

:01:48. > :01:51.Death In Paradise. Yes, the BBC have made a rather astute choice in

:01:52. > :01:54.placing Death In Paradise in the schedules when everyone is a bit

:01:55. > :02:03.broke after Christmas, a little flat. -- fat. It is part of the

:02:04. > :02:09.reason it is so popular. Escapism. Escapism, people like to be at home.

:02:10. > :02:16.I love it. 8 million, nearly up there with Countryfile. LAUGHTER

:02:17. > :02:22.You'll agree you don't necessarily agree with that, about the weather

:02:23. > :02:28.being a big draw for the viewer? -- you don't necessarily agree. I think

:02:29. > :02:33.it is do with the chemistry, the characters, that is what people are

:02:34. > :02:37.really interested in. To see how we behave with each other. That is very

:02:38. > :02:44.important. It is on again tonight, everybody. Nine o'clock. We have got

:02:45. > :02:54.bigger fish to fry, it has been a dramatic day in the studio. We have

:02:55. > :02:56.had a murder. It is a good job that you are here, we need you to solve

:02:57. > :02:58.this murder. Lets take you to the

:02:59. > :03:00.scene of the crime. One drank fast and downed five

:03:01. > :03:10.drinks in the time it took The diner who drank one died -

:03:11. > :03:22.while the other survived. So - why did the diner

:03:23. > :03:32.who only drank one die? OK. Was it a peanut allergy?

:03:33. > :03:40.LAUGHTER you can get thinking. We are hopeful

:03:41. > :03:48.he will be able to solve this. If you at home have a suggestion

:03:49. > :03:51.then send them our way. By now most of us have a good idea

:03:52. > :03:55.of what fracking is - the controversial method

:03:56. > :03:57.of extracting gas from subterranean rock -

:03:58. > :03:58.which campaigners say Alex Riley has been to meet

:03:59. > :04:11.the protestors setting up camp Just over there is a group of

:04:12. > :04:15.protesters, opposed to a site across the road which is being prepared for

:04:16. > :04:20.fracking. I'm not here to discuss the ins and outs of that fracking

:04:21. > :04:27.project, no. I'm here to find out what it takes to be a protester.

:04:28. > :04:32.Tina is part of a protest group and they have been at the site all week.

:04:33. > :04:36.What are you when you are not protesting? I live down the road in

:04:37. > :04:43.Blackpool and I write copy for websites. I'm concerned grandmother.

:04:44. > :04:50.What kind of characters do you want to protest? I just love who we have

:04:51. > :04:55.hired everyday, 13 of us. -- who we have had. Eight of those 13 in their

:04:56. > :05:02.life had never done anything like this. We are likely to have some

:05:03. > :05:06.newcomers in the next half-hour. They get a shift change and we get

:05:07. > :05:12.ours. Why have you decided to come out here? I have been a protest all

:05:13. > :05:18.my life. I don't mind being out in the cold. It keeps me young,

:05:19. > :05:22.somehow. Walking in front of lorries all day is a little sense of some

:05:23. > :05:27.power in my hand, I've got some opportunity to make a statement and

:05:28. > :05:34.to be noticed for what I believe was I saw you dancing over there. I need

:05:35. > :05:38.to do that, I used to do a lot of jigging, but I don't do is much now,

:05:39. > :05:45.I'm stiffening up. I've been doing this five years now. I've been in

:05:46. > :05:51.camps. I'm able to come out. What does it take to be a protester?

:05:52. > :05:56.Knowledge, you need to know what you are talking about and you need

:05:57. > :06:02.determination. Warm gloves and coffee. You have got to keep your

:06:03. > :06:10.temperament because the moment you rise to aggression is the moment you

:06:11. > :06:13.lose your argument. OK, yeah. They have told me that no media is

:06:14. > :06:16.allowed to come in but the protesters have been let to the

:06:17. > :06:20.fence with the police liaison officers and they will stand in

:06:21. > :06:24.front of the lorry and make it difficult for it to get in. What you

:06:25. > :06:29.need to become an activist is believed that what you are doing is

:06:30. > :06:33.correct. We are a diverse movement and all activists come from

:06:34. > :06:38.different backgrounds. Why do you need to stand by the side of the

:06:39. > :06:45.road and possibly get run over? When investors see this, this is every

:06:46. > :06:51.truck, everyday, for three months on the road, and as an investor, would

:06:52. > :06:55.you invest? A separate group confront the police further down the

:06:56. > :07:00.road in front of another lorry. There has been a couple of ways that

:07:01. > :07:05.people want to go about, the way they to protest for the one wants to

:07:06. > :07:12.do one way and the other the other way. You can have a more radical

:07:13. > :07:19.group, but a protester who wants to make a change, that is what we are.

:07:20. > :07:25.There is a barrier of bodies and the protesters are shouting a feuding is

:07:26. > :07:29.at them, -- shouting a few things at them, but they have achieved their

:07:30. > :07:33.object, slowing down the lorries. They have achieved what they set out

:07:34. > :07:36.to do. It has been interesting meeting the protesters and the fact

:07:37. > :07:41.that there are two different groups who have different approaches, but

:07:42. > :07:47.what unites them, they have found a cause which is so important to them

:07:48. > :07:49.that it doesn't matter they have two sacrifice their home and work lives

:07:50. > :07:53.because they think what they are doing is making a difference.

:07:54. > :07:58.Whether or not it will make a difference in the long run is

:07:59. > :08:06.anybody's guess. How I judge those I stand by side, it is your intent, is

:08:07. > :08:10.that the same as mine? We are all aiming for the same goal.

:08:11. > :08:12.Pretty sure we'll be seeing more from that camp

:08:13. > :08:25.From Lancashire to the Caribbean. Don, you have been in Death In

:08:26. > :08:35.Paradise since the very beginning. Kris, this is your fourth series. It

:08:36. > :08:39.has gone very quickly, my son was eight months old when I started and

:08:40. > :08:44.now he's about to start school. This year is has been a bit different, it

:08:45. > :08:48.must have been quite difficult. I had a daughter in January last year,

:08:49. > :08:58.she will be one tomorrow, actually. Happy birthday. Thank you. Elsie?

:08:59. > :09:01.Yes. They came with me for three years but they could not come this

:09:02. > :09:06.year because she was three months old. And my son was three years old,

:09:07. > :09:13.he wanted to be on the beach, but he couldn't. Champagne problems.

:09:14. > :09:19.Champagne problems! How does that affect the experience for you? I

:09:20. > :09:26.have much more time at the bar. Not all bad! It is freezing at the

:09:27. > :09:32.moment, do you wish you were back out there? Much of your recent live

:09:33. > :09:39.has been spent in the Caribbean. Yes, I quite like the winter

:09:40. > :09:43.actually. I like it. I like snow. It is lovely to look at for top I don't

:09:44. > :09:50.want to be in it, but I like looking at it. With the fire lit. Yes, just

:09:51. > :09:57.through the window. Lovely. And you don't love the sunshine? No, I do

:09:58. > :10:03.love the sunshine. My skin is quite leathery. Although I don't look it,

:10:04. > :10:09.but I do brown quite easily. I thought you would have had a similar

:10:10. > :10:17.colour to me, I'm not exotic and the sunshine doesn't really agree... I

:10:18. > :10:26.would beg to differ. Now we can have a sense of what is going to happen

:10:27. > :10:31.tonight. Who is Baptiste? She wrote a novel that we all read at school.

:10:32. > :10:35.The flame tree. I had no idea it was set on the island. It is about an

:10:36. > :10:42.image man who marries iris against her will -- enrichment who marries.

:10:43. > :10:57.She kills herself. How? She jumps from the cliffs. APPLAUSE

:10:58. > :11:08.Wow. There was a bit of a kiss last week. Bit of a bumbling, he's not

:11:09. > :11:16.great. But he's not exactly smooth, easy question up I think he's a dark

:11:17. > :11:24.horse. -- he's not exactly smooth, easy? I think he will be a laugh

:11:25. > :11:30.Areola, maybe a clumsy love for you. --

:11:31. > :11:37.I have wondered if it was a slight affectation. If he slightly puts it

:11:38. > :11:43.on. I haven't worked it out. I hope it's not. That would make him

:11:44. > :11:53.calculated. I think it is slightly put on. OK. Talking of boss,

:11:54. > :11:56.Commissioner, let's hope your character can find some romance,

:11:57. > :12:04.because he has dabbled with various characters. He is a dabbler.

:12:05. > :12:09.LAUGHTER maybe he will get something more

:12:10. > :12:15.permanent. That would be very nice. It would be interesting to see him

:12:16. > :12:21.in that role as a romance and I think he would be very smooth. I

:12:22. > :12:25.couldn't agree more. The series is coming back to London for a couple

:12:26. > :12:30.of episodes? We have a double episode, this serious, which is a

:12:31. > :12:39.lot of fun and it gives us doubled the time to solve a murder -- this

:12:40. > :12:46.series. We think so. It is based in the Caribbean and you get that, how

:12:47. > :12:52.does the element of the UK fit? It is about a character who is a fish

:12:53. > :12:59.out of water, Englishman abroad, and it turns it on its head. I become

:13:00. > :13:01.the guy who is not the fish out of water and my colleagues are the fish

:13:02. > :13:06.out of water, so it turns the premise on its head. Level the

:13:07. > :13:13.playing field. Very much looking forward to tonight's episode. I'm

:13:14. > :13:17.off to Countryfile, so I will watch that on the iPlayer.

:13:18. > :13:20.Now, Don - keep an eye out for the title of the poem that

:13:21. > :13:24.Arthur Smith has dug out in the next film - we think it will be

:13:25. > :13:31.Here he is going underground to find a hidden river.

:13:32. > :13:36.If you walk the streets of London for long enough you begin to see

:13:37. > :13:43.small clues to a time when this was a more watery place. Hundreds of

:13:44. > :13:48.years ago, there were 20 smaller rivers that fed into the Thames and

:13:49. > :13:54.today they have all but disappeared and they are known as the lost

:13:55. > :13:59.rivers of London. I'm here to find out why these rivers disappeared and

:14:00. > :14:05.how they inspired a marvellous poem called Rising Damp.

:14:06. > :14:11.The little fervent underground Rivers of London

:14:12. > :14:15.Effra, Graveney, Falcon, Quaggy, Wandle, Walbrook, Tyburn, Fleet

:14:16. > :14:22.Whose names are disfigured, Frayed, effaced.

:14:23. > :14:27.My first stop is the coach and horses in Clerkenwell where I am

:14:28. > :14:34.meeting Paul, connoisseur of these lost waterways. Why have you brought

:14:35. > :14:37.me here, are we going for a pint? No, we are going to listen to this

:14:38. > :14:43.drain in the middle-of-the-road in Clerkenwell. What can you hear? I

:14:44. > :14:50.can hear the loud sound of flowing water. And it smells a bit, as well.

:14:51. > :14:55.That is the river fleet that flows from the heights of Hampstead Heath

:14:56. > :15:03.down to the Thames at Blackfriars Bridge. There were many rivers? All

:15:04. > :15:09.over London, yes. Different parts, Bermondsey, Camden Town, Bayswater.

:15:10. > :15:12.Everywhere had a river. They were used for drinking originally,

:15:13. > :15:22.supplying cattle with water. It's these subterranean rivers that

:15:23. > :15:23.inspired the modern poet UA Fanthorpe to write her moving poem

:15:24. > :15:33.Rising Damp. These are the currents

:15:34. > :15:34.that chiselled the city, That washed the clothes

:15:35. > :15:36.and turned the mills, Where children drank and salmon swam

:15:37. > :15:47.And wells were holy. Ursula Askham Fanthorpe only began

:15:48. > :15:53.writing poetry when she was in her 40s, in 1974. She had left her job

:15:54. > :15:56.as head of English at Cheltenham ladies college to become a

:15:57. > :16:01.receptionist at a hospital psychiatric unit. She felt a deep

:16:02. > :16:06.sympathy with the patients, a sympathy which released a well

:16:07. > :16:09.poetry within her. One of the things that interested her most was the way

:16:10. > :16:19.the past is written into the landscape of today. But why did

:16:20. > :16:23.these rivers of London disappear? It was around about 200 years ago,

:16:24. > :16:27.these were really covered over, as the population went up they were

:16:28. > :16:34.getting more and more clogged up with debris and so on. They became

:16:35. > :16:36.open sewers. The solution was building London's Victorian sewage

:16:37. > :16:43.tunnels and diverting the rivers into them. This is what I call a

:16:44. > :16:50.pair of waders! I have been given an opportunity to explore the remains

:16:51. > :16:54.of the River Fleet with engineering team leader chemical nick Fox. I'm

:16:55. > :17:07.on some suspenders. What do you do at weekends? So this water is the

:17:08. > :17:10.River Fleet. Yes, coming down from the Hampstead area, the original

:17:11. > :17:18.Fleet. Presumably it was once on the service? We think it's pretty much

:17:19. > :17:23.covers the same line that the Fleet did in 1800. It comes out just under

:17:24. > :17:32.Blackfriars bridge. We are standing in a river underneath London. UA

:17:33. > :17:36.Fanthorpe died in 2009, but her words still flow through the

:17:37. > :17:40.anthologies of English verse. Here is a little poem I wrote for her.

:17:41. > :17:47.Once we danced and sparkled like gems through the fields to Father

:17:48. > :17:52.Thames, but now we are dark and deep and brown and buried deep beneath

:17:53. > :18:03.the ground. We are the bowels of London town will stop.

:18:04. > :18:10.Thank you, Arthur, wherever you are! The poem Rising Damp, you see. Yes,

:18:11. > :18:16.I saw, excellent. I am glad it wasn't wasted on you. Miranda is

:18:17. > :18:22.here. These rivers are not unique to London. , No they are happening all

:18:23. > :18:26.over the country. We have a picture here Bradford Beck. I come from

:18:27. > :18:31.Bristol. Residents there are familiar with the fact that we have

:18:32. > :18:35.the river Avon dominating the landscape, but we also have the

:18:36. > :18:38.River Frome running through the city centre, and yet we don't see much of

:18:39. > :18:43.it. We walk over it and drive over it everyday. As a result, the

:18:44. > :18:51.Environment Agency pledged about five years ago to restore 9500 miles

:18:52. > :18:56.of rivers around the country, and there are 4600 projects going on or

:18:57. > :19:00.completed, so a lot is happening. Let's have a word on Rochdale,

:19:01. > :19:04.because the River Roch, we have a picture from a hundred years ago.

:19:05. > :19:08.This is what it used to look like. It was important as a transport

:19:09. > :19:12.system. They transported will from Yorkshire to the mills in Rochdale.

:19:13. > :19:17.And then the trams came along and they covered over the river to make

:19:18. > :19:21.way for this new form of transport. Now the river is being uncovered

:19:22. > :19:25.again, there is a restoration project that has just been finished.

:19:26. > :19:29.Here is some footage of it. It has been a success because, during the

:19:30. > :19:33.Boxing Day floods in 2015, the floodwaters didn't get up as far as

:19:34. > :19:40.the town hall, so that heralds the success of the project. There is

:19:41. > :19:44.also one in the pipeline in Sheffield, the River Shaef. This is

:19:45. > :19:48.mostly hidden tunnels under the city and it was covered over during the

:19:49. > :19:51.building of the railways. There is a section of the storm drain that is

:19:52. > :20:01.now called the mega trompe which is being used by daredevil weight

:20:02. > :20:08.borders, in the storm drains. These guys are called Josh and Brad. I

:20:09. > :20:14.don't think it is open to wake boarding. Yes, not for public

:20:15. > :20:20.access! To these tend to be more in urban spaces? Know, all around the

:20:21. > :20:24.country. There is one in the Lake District, a river called Swindale

:20:25. > :20:28.Beck. A couple of hundred years ago, they straightened the river to get

:20:29. > :20:32.room for more farmland but they realised that, in doing that, they

:20:33. > :20:36.increased the river flow and the fish could read in that river

:20:37. > :20:43.because the river was flowing too fast. -- the fish couldn't breed. So

:20:44. > :20:48.now they are putting the natural bends back into the river. It looks

:20:49. > :20:51.much better like that. We have just heard that someone had been spotted

:20:52. > :20:58.spawning in the river and those eggs should hatch in the spring. Back in

:20:59. > :21:01.the urban areas, it is going to increase an enormous amount of

:21:02. > :21:05.wildlife and bring that into the cities. Yes, and the rivers are

:21:06. > :21:10.getting cleaner, bringing more species back. If there are fish in

:21:11. > :21:14.the river, you have got the things that eat them, so birds, even otters

:21:15. > :21:21.have been spotted in Bristol. These projects are great for wildlife.

:21:22. > :21:26.That was Sheffield. Yes. Lovely. Thank you, lovely stuff. We have

:21:27. > :21:32.always been known as a nation of shopkeepers and today they come from

:21:33. > :21:38.all corners of the globe. We said our street barber to cut a world's

:21:39. > :21:44.worth of hair in one road in Leicester. This is Narborough Road,

:21:45. > :21:48.a mile long stretch of businesses and family homes just south of the

:21:49. > :21:52.city centre in Leicester. It looks like a typical high street but it's

:21:53. > :21:57.not. It's exceptional. That's because a recent survey has shown

:21:58. > :22:00.that this road has got to be just about the most multicultural street

:22:01. > :22:07.in the country. But don't take my word for it. The people here want to

:22:08. > :22:15.say hello. THEY SPEAK IN THEIR NATIVE

:22:16. > :22:19.LANGUAGES. The people living and working here

:22:20. > :22:23.were born in 22 different countries. It is what is known as a super

:22:24. > :22:34.diverse community. One thing that unites them... First, I am saying

:22:35. > :22:37.hello to the man who runs a body-building and food supplement

:22:38. > :22:42.shop. His story is typical of the people coming to this country and

:22:43. > :22:50.his parents arrived in 1973. My parents originate in India, Punjab,

:22:51. > :22:54.but I was born and bred the UK. Was it predominantly an Indian area?

:22:55. > :23:00.Yes, but it has changed in the last ten years. 30% of our customers are

:23:01. > :23:04.from Poland, Estonia, Slovakia, so it has increased a lot. Why do so

:23:05. > :23:13.many people from different countries come here? It is the Premier League

:23:14. > :23:20.champions! I forgot about that! And with that? Fantastic, I look ten

:23:21. > :23:24.years younger. Getting to Britain is one thing and fitting in and they

:23:25. > :23:28.need a home is another ball game. Cecilia, who recently opened this

:23:29. > :23:32.boutique store, arrived from Zimbabwe in 2003. Did you like it

:23:33. > :23:39.here or were you unsure? A little bit I wasn't very short, but I

:23:40. > :23:44.realised that mostly Africans, using Caribbean 's, Americans, Indians...

:23:45. > :23:49.It is like everybody has been in Leicester. It makes you kind of like

:23:50. > :23:56.fit in. OK. Just because you are from somewhere else as well? Yeah.

:23:57. > :23:59.But not everybody who chose to settle in Britain originates from

:24:00. > :24:03.the far corners of the globe. This man from Sicily opened his barber 's

:24:04. > :24:09.shop 40 years ago and his son now works here as well. Any trendy

:24:10. > :24:16.haircuts? Afro hair can be difficult. Europeans, Middle

:24:17. > :24:22.Eastern, they landed short on the sides. Do you tend to find that most

:24:23. > :24:26.people speak English? Yes, and if they don't they normally come in

:24:27. > :24:29.with somebody who politely says, my friend doesn't speak English, this

:24:30. > :24:34.is what they want, or they get their phone out with a picture. It makes

:24:35. > :24:38.me wonder how many of the 22 countries of birth represented here

:24:39. > :24:42.have had their hair cut here. This morning we have had Indian, Polish,

:24:43. > :24:50.Italian, Portuguese, Slovakia and Irish. That is already today.

:24:51. > :24:54.Everybody gets on. It's good. Something else that's good is the

:24:55. > :25:00.many different kinds of food available, mirroring perfectly the

:25:01. > :25:09.diversity of this community. This man runs a Kurdish cuisine

:25:10. > :25:14.restaurant. I am Kurdish. Is there a big Kurdish community? Yes, some

:25:15. > :25:22.from Iraqi Kurdistan. After the Iraq war is to mock yes. The reasons for

:25:23. > :25:25.being here are diverse, from war, displacement, economic migration to

:25:26. > :25:30.trying out a different European city. How do they all get along? I

:25:31. > :25:36.think there is mutual respect and the students come to make friends

:25:37. > :25:39.from different backgrounds. It feels like there is a generation of young

:25:40. > :25:46.people that don't have any prejudice. The younger generation

:25:47. > :25:52.are hopeful. We are, you are right. OK, you are looking good. Thank you

:25:53. > :25:56.very much. ... What strikes me about this place is it is massively

:25:57. > :26:00.diverse, yet it has the greatest sense of community anywhere I have

:26:01. > :26:06.ever been. Thank you, Michael. We were talking earlier, Don, you were

:26:07. > :26:10.born in Trinidad and venue moved to my neck of the woods, Newcastle.

:26:11. > :26:16.What were you expecting and what was the reality when you got there?

:26:17. > :26:20.Well, I was small and I wasn't expecting much, but I did expect to

:26:21. > :26:25.arrive in this sort of golden palace. Because that was our

:26:26. > :26:31.expectation of England. Unfortunately, it didn't quite live

:26:32. > :26:35.up to that. Newcastle, back in the day, wonderful, don't get me

:26:36. > :26:39.wrong... Don't knock Newcastle. It's a lovely town and I'm grateful to it

:26:40. > :26:46.in lots of ways. It was a shock. It is a shock to the system. But I

:26:47. > :26:52.think, when one is young, you adapt very quickly. So, within the space

:26:53. > :27:01.of weeks or so it feels, I became a Geordie. I can tell by your accent!

:27:02. > :27:08.I know! So, from there, you went on to be in Rising Damp, which we all

:27:09. > :27:13.remember. How was that? In a nutshell. It was what happened. I

:27:14. > :27:18.don't know what to say. I was at drama school. They were casting it.

:27:19. > :27:23.There you go. Did it feel ground-breaking at the time? No,

:27:24. > :27:27.just like a job. It was my first job and I was excited and we didn't know

:27:28. > :27:31.what it would do, and it turns into this thing that is still going on.

:27:32. > :27:40.Played with stereotypes and turned them on its head, we love it. We

:27:41. > :27:44.need to resolve the mystery before we go. Do you want to give out the

:27:45. > :27:48.figures? Two friends went for dinner and they both ordered iced tea. The

:27:49. > :27:52.boys have been racking their brains. One drank it really fast and got

:27:53. > :27:57.through five drinks. The other had one drink. The one who had one drink

:27:58. > :28:05.guide. All of the drinks were poisoned. Why? Luke thinks that I

:28:06. > :28:11.was told to pay the bill as he's faking it. Lisa thinks that the

:28:12. > :28:15.waiter is an alien and poisoned the rich guy so she could steal his

:28:16. > :28:19.money to buy weapons to take over the world. Diane thinks the real

:28:20. > :28:27.mystery is how Don looks no older than he did when he was in Rising

:28:28. > :28:32.Damp. All of that Caribbean sun. We worked as a team. We think that the

:28:33. > :28:40.lady who had five iced teas must be desperate for the loo. But we think

:28:41. > :28:46.it's something to do with the ice. It is! The poison was in the eyes

:28:47. > :28:51.and, because the person who drank the five drinks so quickly, the

:28:52. > :28:55.poison didn't get into the drink. Thanks to both of you for joining

:28:56. > :28:57.us. I am back tomorrow with Al Murray hair and Lee Mack there. Good

:28:58. > :29:01.night. Wood good night one and all! Body of a young woman's

:29:02. > :29:03.just been found, I know this is a difficult time,

:29:04. > :29:09.but I need to ask a few questions.