20/08/2014 The One Show


20/08/2014

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with Matt Baker And Alex Jones. On tonight's showlet dexterous Phil

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Tufnell will be showing off some amazing paper art. Next to him.

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Look, it's paper Don Draper. The star of hit American TV show, Mad

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Men, Jon Hamm is our guest tonight. Welcome. Yes. That is a remarkable

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likeness. Quite impressive. Strangely enough, an audience full

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of females more or less! We should have put a beard on. Could have done

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that. The beard looks good. This is how people are used to seeing you in

:00:57.:01:02.

Mad Men. Very clean cut. What do you think, with or without? We wrapped

:01:03.:01:08.

the show July 3rd. We are finished. I haven't shaved since then. I

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prefer not shaving to shaving, during the show I have to shave a

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couple of times a day. Very hairy. This is you in relax? In relaxed

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mode. There is more grey in it than there used to be. It's a shame Can't

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fight age. These things You have happen. Flown in from Saint Louis.

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So much civil unrest going on at the moment. What has it been like there

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It's my hometown. I was born and raised in Saint Louis I grew up a

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mile away from Ferguson. The intersection I used to ride my back

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through that intersection to buy comic books when I was 10-11 years

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old. It is close to me. It's unfortunate. It's a situation that

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hasn't gotten better. It's a situation that I think needs

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everybody's co-operation to get better because it hasn't been

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handled well. It has been fumbled at every step of the way. It needs to

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really - everybody really needs to kind of start paying attention and

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coming together as a community. I still have a lot of family that

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lives really near it there. Scary then. Heartbreaking. Heartbreaking

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for everybody involved, honestly. Strange for you to see home while

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you are over here on the news It has been weird. I have seen it in New

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York and I have seen it in LA. These things happen every now and again.

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It's the response that you really want... You want to be handled

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better. Unfortunately, it hasn't been handled well. Let's hope it

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comes to an end soon. We will talk to Jon about his brand new film

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later on. The plot of which unfolds after Jon's character watches a

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cricket match. We will get Phil Tufnell to set him a challenge.

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Phil, what do you have in store? I have wanted to know if Don Draper

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could bowl a googly A what! Yeah. Look, Jon has no idea. That sounds

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borderline filthy. This is the mix of the One Show. Colleagues of yours

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from America always go - what is this! I'm up for the challenge. He

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is happy to have a crack. Now to a subject close to my heart. During

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the depths of the dire winter we had. Not many farmers would have

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predicted a bumper harvest this summer. Lucy's been to the fields of

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Kent to sample the fruits of one farm's labour. Harvest, one of the

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most important events in the countryside farmer. But it's a

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year-long battle against the elements from droughts to gale force

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winds, downpours to snowstorms. This growing season has been nothing

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short of a rollercoaster. December turned out to be the stormiest month

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for over 40 years. A huge 50,000 hectares of argue cultural land was

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flooded during the winter with over 18 centimetres of rainfall in one

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month. The British weather did what it does best, it took another

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unexpected turn. It brought us a continental summer. With prolonged

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sunshine and temperatures soring to 32 degrees Celsius, the British

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fruit and crop harvest bounced back. The conditions were so perfect in

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fact that farmers, once up to their knees in floodwater, are now

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harvesting earlier than usual. I'm here in beautiful Kent, talking to

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fruit farmer, Clive Baxter. Tell me about the harvest this year. How

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ahead is it? A long way away. Four weeks ahead of last year. What does

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it mean to you? I'm thinking, great. If we have an early year. We get

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more sales and the season of course is going to be usually dryer because

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we are not going into the late autumn picking. It wasn't looking so

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good earlier in the year, was it? Back in the winter, the ground was

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so wet we had quite a lot of trees that were literally under this much

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water for three months. I thought they had to die. I could not

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understand how that could live. I couldn't believe they'd ever recover

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from that. But they have. We have now got a fantastic crop. It just

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shows you what happens with the weather in Britain. It's not just

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the apples that are early, is it? Early on Cherie, raspberry. Picking

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plums and pears. For those who would like to walk down the hedgerows

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there is blackberries also four weeks earlier than last year. Do

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they taste better, that is the question? Guarantee it. Let us have

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a go. I have been looking forward to this. Here we go. I don't even like

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apples that much. That is very, very nice. I'm glad you like it. It's not

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just fruit that has weathered the adverse conditions. The wet winter

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and warm summer has given us bumper crops of other British staples wheat

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and oil-seed reap. . You had a particularly bad time of it, didn't

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you? Yes. It would have been Christmas Eve, there was a lot of

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water came down through the river. Sheep grazing the cover crop, they

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ended up in a froot of water. We rescued them on Christmas Eve. Did

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you think you would lose everything? You could see it wasn't an easy

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year, yes. Nature has a way of turning itself about. It has. The

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yields are better than in a normal year, I would have said, because of

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the beautiful summer we had. How much pressure are you under to get

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the harvest in now? Quite a bit. It has been stood in the field for a

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fortnight. It is ready to go. Afternoon like this, with the wind

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blowing through it, it's drying it nicely. No doubt many combine

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harvesters will have their lights on, working now. Lucy was gutted she

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couldn't be here tonight. Devastated! She picked you a little

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something. They are from her. Thank you, Lucy. Lucy harvest for Jon.

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Have you ever seen apples that big! Never have I had trouble finishing

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an apple, I did this afternoon. You suffered through the rain. The

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benefit. We had as Matt calls it a popcorn breakfast this morning. We

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saw a brand new film, Million Dollar Arm, lovely, heart warming, a true

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story based on a sport agent that goes to India looking for people to

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pitch for a baseball team. That is it in a nut shell, isn't it Yes.

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Let's see the trailer. . India is the last great untapped market. What

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is with all the honking? We find new fans there. The financial

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opportunities are endless. Set it up like a talent contest. Exactly. When

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we find the guys, we bring them back here, train them in LA get them

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signed with a professional franchise. Can you do it within one

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year? Sure! APPLAUSE Now,

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this is the ultimate feel good film. I mean, it really is. I think you

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couldn't believe it when you heard this story? I had not heard it. I

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was a massive baseball fan. I hadn't heard the story. It slipped under my

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radar. When I read up on it and got into a Wikipedia hole about it. I

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thought, this is impossible. They took these two kids who had never

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picked up a baseball before and trained them to the elite level they

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needed to be to break into the Major Leagues, an impossible concept, it

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actually happened. I got a chance to meet both of the boys, Rinku and

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Dinesh. Dinesh now works with Million Dollar Arm. Rinku the left

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hander is still playing in the minor leagues. What was their reaction

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They had a movie made about their life. Pretty great. The best way it

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could work out. The way you filmed it was really interesting. You

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didn't meet the guys playing Dinesh and Rinku until you got to India, is

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that right? Yeah. We shot the first part of the shooting we did was over

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in India because we were bumping up against monsoon season. The if we

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missed that window we would have had to go after monsoon season, mosquito

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season. We got the lesser of two elves. All the things in the film

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are real including the sweat that I ex-sueding in every frame. Your

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character responds to the responsibility of giving somebody

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that life-changing opportunity when their life is just turned around

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like that? That is, in speaking with the person, the real-life person I

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play, that was his experience. He had that effect. It was, he was a

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surrogate father to these two boys and was not what he set out to do.

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He set out to make money. All of a sudden he had a little family that

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came up around him. It changed his life. It's a lesson, like the Simon

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Cowell's out there, with the talent shows, go, bang, look at the way it

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can... No. That is the, sort of, larger point of the movie. Not just

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a sports movie or baseball movie or anything like that, a family movie.

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That was the draw to me, not only was it true, it's 180 degrees away

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from Don Draper. An opportunity to play something a little bit

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different. We had Daniel Radcliffe on on Monday. He was like, Jon

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doesn't know anything about cricket. I taught him everything he knows.

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Wow, right under the bus! Thank you. When we shot the second series of

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Young Doctors Notebook the Ashes were going on. I was attempting to

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wrap my head around long form Test cricket matches and all this stuff.

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Dan was patient with me trying to explain things to me. I was not a

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very good student, I'm afraid. Phil Tufnell will fill in the gaps for

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you. Million Dollar Arm is released on the 29th August. We can meet the

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Whittington's from Kent. Dad Geoff has type 2 diabetes so his sons

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decided to do something about his deteriorating health and they made a

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film about it. They told you from the start, eat properly. That's all

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you have to do. Eat properly. Cut out the drink. The drink is killing

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you. The Dad you are 62 years old, doing 12-and-a-half hour night

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shifts. That is purely my own choice. I don't have to do that. We

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know that. That is the point! I could be doing three-and-a-half hour

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shifts. You make excuses for not doing it. That is why I say I start

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looking at, I probably don't have much longer. Let us get everything

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sorted out. Make sure everything is straight. We know he is stubborn. I

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don't enjoy cooking. You do. I don't enjoy cooking. I will not eat... How

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do... Frog legs, no. How do you fix something that is perfect. It's

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about giving him something else in his life and enriching it. Stop your

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moaning. Fixing a stubborn overweight diabetic is about more

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than just diet it's about changing the life that made him that way.

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It's not a question if he is going to do it any more. If he is going to

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beat it. He is so stubborn he is going to do this. He's changing. We

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are seeing the old Geoff. Listen, what a transformation.

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Geoff, you have so much energy now. A picture of health. Now. You should

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have seen me nine months ago. The I was literally dying with diabetes,

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no question about it, with cocktail drugs and everything that was going

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on. My foot collapsed. I couldn't walk. I couldn't move around. I

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couldn't do hardly anything at all. The boys decided to grab a hold of

:14:34.:14:38.

me and see what they could do. It's difficult to put into words what you

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want to say to them? So proud of these guys. They have done so much

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for me. Changed my life. They stuck themselves with their dad for

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several more years now. Positive outcome for you, Geoff.

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Unfortunately, it was not as great for your dad. Something very close

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to your heart. My dad suffered from diabetes as well and it is tough. If

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you do not take the bull by the horns, I am glad your sons did, it

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can not end so well. I did not get an extra few years that of my dad, I

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am glad you will. It is one of those things. New know now it is treatable

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to some degree. But it needs a lot of personal effort -- you know now.

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You cannot expect the NHS to treat you. They will do, they will

:15:42.:15:45.

medicate you. But that will kill you as well. What else is in store? We

:15:46.:15:54.

said with fixing dad, we made a pact and said, it is not just about

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weight loss, not just about fitness, it is also about nutrition and the

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mind side. The mind is what we are hoping will make the film

:16:05.:16:10.

accessible. It has been hilarious. Brilliant comedy. There is lots more

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to come. Lots more challenges. Some of what you see on the intro is just

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typical of the kind of stuff we have been doing. More big challenges to

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come which we cannot disclose. There is one specific challenge we would

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like to talk about because with the help of our research team at The One

:16:32.:16:36.

Show, they have worked hard with Ian, would you like to claim to your

:16:37.:16:42.

dad what the next big challenges? We are going to be going to Croatia and

:16:43.:16:48.

talking to 300 doctors about diabetes from a patient's

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perspective, from your perspective. Good grief! The hard thing is, you

:16:53.:17:04.

are going to be walking to Croatia! Is this part of the project? Yes. We

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have been looking for a goal and it is brilliant... Unbelievable!

:17:11.:17:16.

APPLAUSE Good luck. We look forward to saying

:17:17.:17:24.

the full version of the film when it is ready. If this family story has

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inspired you and you want to help fix your mum, dad, children,

:17:29.:17:32.

grandparents, e-mail us with your story. You are still gobsmacked. Do

:17:33.:17:40.

you fancy doing a bit of cricket? Last time was when I was ten. All

:17:41.:17:47.

good fun. Last night Miranda brought us the story of the San Salvador

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rock iguanas but were smuggled into the UK from the Bahamas at the

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beginning of this year. Part one ended as Brenda was boarding a plane

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to the Bahamas. Tonight she is following the species as they are

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released back into the wild -- ended as Miranda was boarding a plane.

:18:05.:18:11.

In February, customs officials at Heathrow seized 13 San Salvador rock

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iguanas, one of the world's most endangered animals. Today for the

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second time in history the UK border forces returning these animals to

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their home in the Bahamas. I would like to give a special welcome to

:18:27.:18:31.

The One Show. Whilst every precaution has been taken to ensure

:18:32.:18:35.

their safety, we have no way of telling how the iguanas are doing.

:18:36.:18:40.

It is a tense wait. We are finally on the descent into the island

:18:41.:18:47.

capital of the Bahamas. The iguanas have touched down and while they

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change planes for the next part of their journey, there is enough time

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to attend a special meeting marking their return to home soil. So

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important is the return of these individuals to the government that

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the Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of the environment have

:19:04.:19:06.

called a press conference and here we are. You must use events such as

:19:07.:19:16.

today to commit to redouble our efforts in protecting these

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wonderful animals for our future generations.

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APPLAUSE To take the iguanas on their final

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flight to San Salvador, the royal palm as defence force has provided a

:19:30.:19:35.

single-engine 208. It is on our's journey across the islands before we

:19:36.:19:39.

see it on the horizon, San Salvador, the first land cited by

:19:40.:19:43.

Christopher Columbus on his epic journey to the Americas. The whiners

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are greeted by an enthusiastic welcome party before embarking on

:19:51.:19:55.

the last leg of their journey -- the iguanas. They are on their way to

:19:56.:19:59.

the iguana research centre where they will be monitored before

:20:00.:20:03.

finally being released back into the wild. On arrival, this doctor and

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his team give the iguanas and a full health examination. They are weighed

:20:10.:20:16.

and measured and allocated pens. By the evening, each iguana is in

:20:17.:20:19.

place, but it will be a long night as we will have to wait till morning

:20:20.:20:25.

to see if they have made it. We put them to bed last night, how do you

:20:26.:20:28.

think they are doing? They look happy. They have been out in the

:20:29.:20:35.

sun. Why are 12 iguanas so significant? A lot of the

:20:36.:20:42.

populations number from ten to 25. We eliminate 12 and it could

:20:43.:20:47.

decimate a population. What about the future for the population as a

:20:48.:20:54.

whole? The news stories have come out about these smuggled iguanas, a

:20:55.:20:57.

lot more attention came to the plight of this animal. I think the

:20:58.:21:01.

people of the Bahamas suddenly realised the rest of the world is

:21:02.:21:05.

very interested in these guys. They will be held at the research centre

:21:06.:21:09.

for two months before being returned to the wild. To see the kind of

:21:10.:21:13.

habitat into which they will eventually be released, I am

:21:14.:21:17.

travelling to a small neighbouring island. It is one of the last places

:21:18.:21:21.

on earth where the San Salvador rock iguanas can be seen in the wild and

:21:22.:21:25.

immediately I am struck by the lack of fear shown by the animals. In the

:21:26.:21:31.

UK one when I get close to a wild animal, it wants to run away. But

:21:32.:21:39.

this chap is interested. That is one of the problems and why they are so

:21:40.:21:43.

susceptible to being smuggled. They have probably been fed by people

:21:44.:21:48.

stopping by on boats. They have learnt not to be too concerned. You

:21:49.:21:52.

can easily imagine being able to capture this guy. It is great to see

:21:53.:21:56.

them in the open in the wild habitat. Our iguanas have had an

:21:57.:22:05.

adventurous last six months but now they are back on home soil and seem

:22:06.:22:10.

to be released into the wild to join fellows like this one here. To

:22:11.:22:14.

smuggle any animal out of his native country is criminal. Thankfully this

:22:15.:22:19.

wildlife crime story has had a happy ending.

:22:20.:22:25.

It has. Miranda is still there! The question is, Jon, how is Mad Men

:22:26.:22:32.

going to end? The final series as over here shortly. The ending is

:22:33.:22:38.

odd. Don Draper gets arrested for smuggling iguanas. " jail. That is

:22:39.:22:49.

how it ends. -- ends up in jail. That is the official line! Phil has

:22:50.:22:56.

been a busy boy. He is going to teach Jon how to bowl. He has also

:22:57.:23:03.

been getting arty in Cambridge. For many people, the art of a good book

:23:04.:23:07.

lies in the right's ability to bring the characters and events to life. I

:23:08.:23:13.

am no exception. For me, the key to any great book is a story that jumps

:23:14.:23:15.

off the page. Which is why I am here in Cambridge,

:23:16.:23:26.

the city has been a centre for literature and learning since the

:23:27.:23:31.

13th century. I am here to meet someone who is more interested in

:23:32.:23:34.

cutting up books and reading or writing them. These paper carvings

:23:35.:23:41.

are the work of Justin who has been breathing new life into books no one

:23:42.:23:48.

wants. Appropriately enough, he works in a book shop. I am assuming

:23:49.:23:52.

you like books. What gave you the idea to start cutting them up? I

:23:53.:23:57.

love books. I first started cutting them up because I was given the task

:23:58.:24:03.

of creating a window display at Christmas for the shop. My wife

:24:04.:24:07.

suggested, why not do papers copter? I thought, papers got to,

:24:08.:24:12.

books, that is how it began -- paper sculpture? It is quite a long winded

:24:13.:24:20.

process. But I think it is worth it. I made three books in the first

:24:21.:24:24.

display. I did not expect very much. The response was amazing. The

:24:25.:24:30.

displays were the star of a new chapter in Justin's life. He spends

:24:31.:24:38.

less time behind the till now. How do you choose the books to make your

:24:39.:24:43.

artwork from? Sometimes there is an illustration in a book on the other

:24:44.:24:51.

times a particular story. I did one from The Lion The Witch And The

:24:52.:24:57.

Wardrobe. Children's books work well. They have a magical quality.

:24:58.:25:04.

That is what I tried to bring across in my sculptures. What do you say to

:25:05.:25:14.

people who said, cutting up books is wrong? I get them from junk shops

:25:15.:25:19.

and charity shops. They would end up in landfill. In the full century,

:25:20.:25:27.

Chinese royalty carved paper. In the 1500s, German artists worked with

:25:28.:25:32.

scissors to create intricate silhouettes. 17th-century Dutch

:25:33.:25:38.

artist Joanna's intricately carved portraits were so popular they

:25:39.:25:41.

outsold Rembrandt. Justin has a long way to go before he is that famous.

:25:42.:25:46.

For now, he creates at his kitchen table. You can put in as much detail

:25:47.:25:54.

as you like. I like to put in lots of little bits of branches and that

:25:55.:26:00.

kind of thing. I have just chopped a bit of branch of! That was meant to

:26:01.:26:09.

be. That is not a bad thing. Go with it. Do you think anyone could have a

:26:10.:26:15.

go? Absolutely. All you need is a scalpel and old books. A bit of

:26:16.:26:21.

glue. Then we just need to put them in place. Like that. Hold them down

:26:22.:26:29.

and in fairy they will stay -- in theory. He has been working on a

:26:30.:26:33.

more modern book to create a 21st-century scene. Fantastic. I

:26:34.:26:40.

don't know if you recognise it. Look at that! It it is my interpretation

:26:41.:26:50.

of The One Show studio. I like the bare! The cameraman. Finishing

:26:51.:26:55.

touch, this chap here needs to go in. Oh, I said! Just on the sofa.

:26:56.:27:07.

What a handsome chap. Remarkably accurate! Amazing. We are

:27:08.:27:15.

going to see if baseball fan Jon here has got what it takes to be a

:27:16.:27:24.

spin bowler. My strengths may lie more in pace. In the movie, you

:27:25.:27:31.

order rocketry. It can be played by toddlers! -- you are a bit to

:27:32.:27:40.

rocketry about cricket. Have a go. It is OK if it bounces? As long as I

:27:41.:27:45.

keep it below that I am in good shape. All right. Oh! Smashed it.

:27:46.:28:01.

Did not bounce! That is the baseball version. No pressure, Phil. You have

:28:02.:28:13.

wrecked the item. Phil was going to show you how to do it. That was

:28:14.:28:19.

place. Spin bowling is all about the pitch. It goes that way or another

:28:20.:28:26.

way to outfox the batsmen. It is a bit like opening a door. Ten

:28:27.:28:43.

seconds. Have a go. David Baddiel! Right, Jon. This is it.

:28:44.:28:51.

Thank you for being great sports. We will be back tomorrow with Peter

:28:52.:28:54.

Capaldi. See you later. The Doctor needs us -

:28:55.:29:13.

you more than anyone. The Doctor needs us -

:29:14.:29:14.

you more than anyone.

:29:15.:29:21.

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