26/04/2017 The One Show


26/04/2017

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We have had dancers and musicians performing out here before. . We

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have. You know what, we've never had them performing up there!

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Hello and welcome to The One Show with Matt Baker

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Tonight is full of daredevils. We will find out what is going on

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outside and up there, in a second. Let's meet the star of Pirates

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of the Caribbean, The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings who isn't

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afraid of performing his own stunts. And, a comedian who dreams of

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becoming the next action movie hero. APPLAUS Evening to you both. What a

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lovely couple! I love you. Actors these day, they seem to have to be

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real superheroes. Have you seen in the news, Tom Hardy

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- Allegedly. Chased after a dude who nicked a scooter. Chaise chased him

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down, caught him and checked his ID. We were thinking that is a heroic

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moment. I rescued a dog in China. Really? That was pretty amazing.

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We were on a set. He was, like, all destroyed at the back end, cut open

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and bleeding. So I picked him up, put in my trailer. Finished work

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took him to the vet. It was a Chinese vet.

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I couldn't understand what they were saying. They were starting to work

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on him. I was like, can I do it. They had the water running. I was

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like, not too hot. I did a story about it. A poor little thing. He's

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all right and lives in Denmark. Sl that heroic. From China to Denmark.

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Kind of. Can you compare? A reason why we will be married. We chatted

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about it, it's for the best. I saved a bee. Spent two hours saving a bee.

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It isn't as dramatic at as yours. We wouldn't be here without bees. Bees

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keep us alive on the planet. I think you are both heroes. Put that in the

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news! We will hear more from this fantastic partnership later on and

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your film, other Lang do, Unlocked. We'll be hearing about Orlando's

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new film, Unlocked, later. We've taken the title 'unlocked'

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literally because we want you to get in touch if you think

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you have the biggest bunch of keys or in fact just one key that opens

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something that's very The key thing is,

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we're talking keys! Send in your pictures,

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we'll have a look later. We'll also find out the real reason

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Orlando's film is called Unlocked. Back to those Flying Frenchies,

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who are about to perform on highwires, high above our studios

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here at the BBC. We asked Tommy to find out

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some more about them. We gave him an important tip - don't

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look down. Down. This is a part of the BBC that very few people are

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even allowed to step foot into, and that is for a very good reason.

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Because this is an incredibly dangerous and hazardous environment.

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You are on a rooftop. But, for Sommer people, this is their stage.

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You see the iconic Shard building, there is the London Eye. Oh, look,

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there is a man hanging 80 feet in the air with a double bass.

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Reaching the top, pushing the boundaries of extreme endurance.

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That's one thing, these guys, the Flying Frenchies, have a whole

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different kind of summit fever. This outlandish group of friends have

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performed heart-stopping stunts the world over. Tonight, they are

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performing here at the BBC, suspended more than 80 feet in the

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air and, not only that, they'll be air dancing and playing a guitar and

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double bass live. Keeping a close eye on proceedings is the team's

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highwire choreographer. How are you? Hi. This is your stage. There is no

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stage, it's air. Tell us, what are we going to be seeing? Who will

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perform where? He will dance on the wall. Hi. We will have a bass.

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Guitarist. Easy to play... Upside down. We have a dancer in this part

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of the wall. We are going to have people walking on the line here.

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Whose idea is all of this? I love to imagine some crazy things with

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artist. Flying Frenchies is a big team of friends. We mix artistic

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things and sport things. Finally, maybe it opens something in the

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brain, we imagine something more big. I'm Adrian. I'm going to be

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playing this little keyboard. I will be singing a song right on the edge

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of the building. What has it been dealing with the BBC health and

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safety and all of that that you've had to go through? All the

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agreements, it was not easy. Finally, we found we adapt with all

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of that because we are less free than in high mountains. Finally we

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found a good balance. Don't they get nervous before each performance? For

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sure. First is safety. If you use your mind, step after step, you can

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learn. After all, you are more strong be in your mind.

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You know your body and you can brain, so you can manage the

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adrenaline rush. It's just 30 meters high. It's nothing. Nothing! We are

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looking forward to the Flying Frenchies performing for us live

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later on. Some of the shots, when they are up there on the highwire.

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Do you pay extra to see those guys play up in the air? That seems up

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your street you like high energy sport I got into a lot of that on

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Lord of the Rings, bungee jumping. It was great thing. You have done

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similar things to that. More things in common. I have hairy toe, The

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Hobbit thing is taken care of. Some men don't like, it I feel you will

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be fine with it. Yeah. I did a zipwire from a large crane across a

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river. I did a sitcom where I was suspended from the ceiling by my

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ankles. I was punched repeatedly in the face. A great character to play.

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I have huge respect for people who do that, it's difficult to do well

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stunts like that. You can tell if it's not done well. It's a great

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skill to have. Where do you draw the line with what stunts you do? I

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don't have a gatekeeper. I'm like, I will do everything. On Unlocked, we

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are here to promote it in London. One of the scariest things I had to

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do was stand in front of a 130lb rottweiler and have him charge at

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me. We shot it in Prague. The animaler wrangler was his English

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was so, so, he was like keep the cupboard inside your jacket. I love

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dogs. What do they say about working with kids and animals. He could take

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my hand off. Unlocked, tell us about it? It stars Noomi Rapace, who is a

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remarkable, wonderful actress. It's the story - it's a terrorist attack,

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potentially a biological terrorist attack in London. It's quite timely

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with what is going on in the world. We shot it two years ago. Did you?

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Yes. It has John Malkovich, Michael Douglas and Toni Collette. We either

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pro pel her forward or throw obstacles in her way as characters.

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It was a really good film. Michael Apted directed it. He's an old hand.

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He has done bond movies and other films. It's an action thriller. Two

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years ago then, why did you want to do this? Why did it feel important

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to you? We have seen an enormous amount of stuff like that over the

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next few years So timely to be coming out now. At that time, you

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know, I was really in the midst of being present for my son. This part

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was like a handful of scenes, within this handful of scenes I got to be a

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bit of a rogue, a bit of a romantic, a bit of a sort of hero and a bit of

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a sociopath and a bit of a killer. So it turned into something - it was

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literally a handful of scenes. It was written as a buttoned up MI5

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guy. I felt we had seen a lot of that. I was like - can I do

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something different. I went with a roguish, ex-military, possibly ex-,

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you know, prison time guy. He's got a job to do. This is you offering up

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your services to Noomi Rapace in an unconvention al job interview on a

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roof. Goodbye, Jack. Bad idea shedding me, I heard too much.

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Tactically, it's a no brainer. You really want me around, I'm useful. I

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like trouble. Goodbye. APPLAUSE

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We see you playing that gritty, hard man role. He's a bit of an

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aggressor. Yeah. Different to the CGI and the fantasy and make-believe

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world that is put in around you afterwards. There you are with all

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of this reality right in front of you. That must have felt different

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even two years ago? Yeah. It's a great film in that respect. I love

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making films, any films, you know what I mean. It was wonderful to

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shoot in London. To see the skies of London and to be right there on the

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ground. It was a lot of fun. Michael is a great director. What type of

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roles do you per per. You have the real hard man, action hero. In Lord

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of the Rings The Hobbit is more fantasy, CGI they must be different

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meed yums? I've never wanted to be peeingon holed into anything. I like

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to keep people guessing. I think that I just turned 40, I'm excited

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about the next little - Congratulations. Thank you very

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much. Wasn't sure I would get there, got there in the end. I'm excited

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about what the next chapter holds. A lot of actors do their best stuff in

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that period. I want to keep people guessing. It's - there is not one

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sort of thing that I love. I did have a lot of fun being an action,

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like, contemporary action man. AGreggs of. You are into producing.

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This is your footage of a film called SMART Chase. This is you

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training. . Me training. Is this where the China anecdote came from

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with the dog? Yeah. I was - that guy is a warrior. He is like a real

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lethal weapon. That is like wearing dance routines. I can't believe they

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have me shirtless on this show. I can! You know, arguably, China is

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that market that's going to surpass the domestic box office in America

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in the next few years is what I'm saying. I've had a few different

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scripts come my way from there. This one felt kind of very do-able and

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real. It's about an expat who is in love with a Chinese girl and works

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in security and transport of valuable objects of art from

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mainland China to the rest of the world. He gets heisted. He gets a

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vase, it's a caper movie it's aimed for a youth culture odd glens China.

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It was great. I had a great time doing it. That movere will probably

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be out in October. Look out for that then. Busy. We will talk about

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Pirates of the Caribbean later on. As we know, from the experiences

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of Alex and the One Show Sport Relief team last year,

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sailing in one of these can be gruelling and

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rewarding in equal measure. Yesterday, one famous sailing team

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was reunited with the boat that carried them into the history books,

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and we were there to witness what proved to be

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a very special moment. This is the first all-female crew to

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take part in the race in 1980. The skipper was Tracy Edwards. It was

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Tracy's drive and determination against all the odds that sailed the

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women into the history books, inspiring a generation of women and

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winning the admiration of millions. Their yacht, which came second, was

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called Maiden and I've been invited to witness the moment Tracy will

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take the boat to water for the first time in almost three decades. Can

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you take us back to when you first announced you would be sailing with

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an all-female crew modulo this was only 30 years ago, people seriously,

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genuinely thought we couldn't do it. They thought we were going to die.

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Do you think because they were so against it drove you an modulo yes,

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as soon as I said, you can't do that I said, I think you'll find I can.

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After completing the race, Tracy couldn't afford to keep Maiden and

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had to let her go. We grown so attached to that boat, we knew every

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inch of her. She'd carried us safely round the world, we were alive

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because of her, she was a 13th crewmember. But four years ago, out

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of the blue, Tracy received a message saying Maiden had been

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abandoned in the say -- Seychelles and was damaged. She rescued the

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boat and launched a campaign to save her. Today's the day she is finally

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coming home, and joining Tracy for this momentous occasion are four of

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the original crew. Morning ladies! Morning. Morning. I will go along

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with right now the yacht is awaiting aboard a cargo ship at Southampton

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port and we are on our way to meet her. When was the last time you were

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all on the water together? 27 years ago! At the finish. Right here.

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Right here. Jo, when you first step on the Maiden, what will your

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feelings be? I don't know. I think it will be a really emotional moment

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to get on her again after all this time. It's so... I'm sorry... I

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can't leave you there like that sorry, sorry. It's amazing, isn't

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it? It's weird, actually. It was so overwhelming, but I think building

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up to today has been a realisation of what an amazing experience it

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was. As we arrive at the cargo ship, I

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catch my first glimpse of the iconic boat. Maiden has travelled 10,000

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nautical miles over 30 days to get here, now it's time for her to be

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released back into British waters. CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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Thank you so much! Do you know, this is the first time,

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right now, that I've just felt completely happy with no other

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feelings. Just completely and utterly happy.

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Maiden has been reunited with their record-breaking crew, but suddenly,

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Tracy spots a problem. Guys, guys, we're sinking! Water is seeping into

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the hull. They roll back the years and this leads to stem the flow. The

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boat is in a worse condition than Tracy feared. What a mess! But with

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the hole plugs, the crew help Maiden gets back to the safety of the

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harbour. This is a bit special really, isn't it? For Tracy, after

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all the trials and tribulations it's finally mission accomplished!

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It's been a very long, very hard four years, but our goal is back

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home. So, after she's had her refit, which will take a year, shall be

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doing a world tour to raise funds and awareness for girls education in

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developing countries. Thank you very much. APPLAUSE

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Back in 1990, made and rewrote history and now the boat is back,

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thanks to Tracy. The extraordinary journey of Maiden

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continues. APPLAUSE Great to see Jo and Jeni join us

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tonight. You can see the film, US sinking at point, ladies. Have you

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fixed the hole? We have. What happened? We got off the ship and we

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were being towed down and I thought, I'm sure that water was as high when

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we put the boat in the water. I said, we're sinking! No, we really

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are. Everyone went straight into their roles. Tania put her finger in

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the hole, which was brilliant! Then we took turns until we got to

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Southampton. Very technical! Jo, how was it for you being backed 27 years

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later? Oh my gosh, it was amazing. We got on the boat and it felt so

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comfortable. It was our home for so long. We just felt right back at

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home again. We thought we'd be emotional. Jeni, you one day

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yesterday? How did it feel seeing the film? Great. It's great to catch

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up with the girls. I'm quite pleased I didn't go on the boat, to go and

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experience what it looks like now, I'd rather wait, wait for it to be

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refitted, go on board and I don't have to feel that. When it's

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already. What I find interesting is all of you have very specific roles

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when you are on board. Tracy, you were the captain. Jo, you were the

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chef. You are cooking for the ladies. What kind of things did you

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cope to make people feel comfortable, feel at home on board?

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Well, one of the favourites was bred. The smell of bread can lift

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morale for everyone. But I didn't have enough, so I had to use a

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pressure cooker as an oven, without any water or anything. It burns at

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the bottom of it, but everyone liked it. It's all right! Otherwise it was

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freeze-dried food, so the bread was the highlight. It was. Jeni, you

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took the role of dealing with the electronics. You said if it was a

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mixed crew you don't think you would have been given that role? Number

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one, there wouldn't have been a mixed crew because I think without

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Tracy's determination to find a sponsor and get an all-female crew,

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we wouldn't have been there at all. We all had a job, as well as being a

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sailor. I looked after all the electrics and electronics, we had

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rigours and engineers and mechanics, a doctor, luckily! We'll had two

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rolls. You are a bunch of incredibly inspirational women. Thank you so

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much for coming in. I think they deserve a round of applause.

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APPLAUSE Inspirational stuff! Susan, does

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that inspire you, make you want to jump on board? I think they are

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wonderful... When I was about six my brother showed me Jaws when he was

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baby-sitting me and as a result I have a pathological fear of water.

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Do you? Yes. It's unlikely a great white shark will be off the coast of

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Scotland, but he convinced me there were great white sharks. So I think

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being in the ocean is one of the most terrifying things I can think

:22:38.:22:42.

of. It's the vast expanse of it. Is almost ruined me for a while as

:22:43.:22:48.

well. That brings us on brilliantly to the new Pirates of the Caribbean.

:22:49.:22:55.

We have a picture of you here, you don't look very well. Somewhere to

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stuff going on. What can you tell us about this movie without giving too

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much away Martin Gould I think the consensus would be the first movie

:23:05.:23:08.

was probably the most beloved of that franchise so far. They've sort

:23:09.:23:11.

of taken that narrative back for this movie. They've kind of gone

:23:12.:23:18.

back to that old style. It's great. I saw the film, I have a little bit

:23:19.:23:23.

at the beginning and end and send my son off on a journey. It's fantastic

:23:24.:23:34.

entertainment. Johnny is doing what he does best, pirate movies that

:23:35.:23:39.

it's best. We've seen a foreign version of the film, the trailer and

:23:40.:23:45.

Kiera Knightley involved, is that true? Is that news hot off the

:23:46.:23:49.

press? She might make an appearance for a quick smooch. I think you'd be

:23:50.:23:59.

perfect as a pirate. I would be. You have a past in acting. I'm glad

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you've finished that sentence! You have a past... I would love to do...

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My theory is, I would make a great assassin, because, no offence to

:24:13.:24:18.

Angelina Jolie, she is excellent, but she's a very noticeable woman. I

:24:19.:24:22.

think assassins should be someone like me. I looked like someone from

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your local Weatherspoons. Wouldn't see you coming. Exactly. I think a

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brilliant assassin, because you wouldn't necessarily notice I was

:24:36.:24:39.

there. You're a producer now, Orlando. Yeah, it's in there, it's

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going round. A world-renowned assassin, I think it would be very

:24:49.:24:52.

popular. I couldn't agree more. So, Orlando, in your next film!

:24:53.:24:57.

It's not just about the big screen these days. So much is happening as

:24:58.:25:01.

far as television is concerned, all these boxed sets and all this stuff

:25:02.:25:04.

you can download. That's something you are starting to concentrate on a

:25:05.:25:09.

little bit as well. A little bit. Exploring that long form in

:25:10.:25:12.

character is great through the medium of TV like that. There's a

:25:13.:25:14.

couple of things I've been looking at, like a limited series. I loved

:25:15.:25:21.

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance. Yeah. I have a book a producer

:25:22.:25:28.

friend of mine has called the last outlaws. It's assorted historic

:25:29.:25:32.

documents of those lads on their love triangle with the girl. The

:25:33.:25:35.

whole thing from beginning to end. I thought that could be a kind of

:25:36.:25:39.

interesting eight part or ten part series. How do you think TV and film

:25:40.:25:45.

differ? Are they very different? I think TV is having a golden period

:25:46.:25:49.

right now. The writing is phenomenal and the writers are doing some of

:25:50.:25:54.

the best work out there. And it's an opportunity for actors to really,

:25:55.:25:58.

like I said, explore that character over a long period of time and

:25:59.:26:02.

audiences to binge watch. I know I love to do that. Even something like

:26:03.:26:10.

Line Of Duty, that's captured everyone. I started watching it from

:26:11.:26:14.

series one again. That's captured everyone. Broad church. We are

:26:15.:26:19.

producing some great television. Is definitely a thing. We have to say

:26:20.:26:28.

thank you for all the boxes and his people are sending in. This one has

:26:29.:26:33.

come in from Becca. This is her dad's bunch of keys, for all of his

:26:34.:26:37.

fire alarms. Apparently he uses every single one of them every

:26:38.:26:42.

single day. Can you beat it? That's the question. You have got long.

:26:43.:26:44.

Shall I put it that way? 60 years ago, the UK exploded

:26:45.:26:48.

its first megaton hydrogen bomb, The story of how Britain

:26:49.:26:51.

raced to get the bomb after the Second World War is now

:26:52.:26:58.

being told in a new documentary, And it reveals, without help from

:26:59.:27:08.

the USA, the race to become a nuclear superpowers anything but

:27:09.:27:09.

straightforward. In November 1957, Britain exploded

:27:10.:27:20.

its first megaton hydrogen bomb. Over 100 times more powerful than

:27:21.:27:28.

the one dropped over Hiroshima. It was going to be a very close run

:27:29.:27:34.

thing, even if everything worked perfectly, and, of course, not

:27:35.:27:40.

everything did. A bomb came loose over Dorking, and the pilot took the

:27:41.:27:49.

aircraft over the Thames estuary, opened the bomb and doors, the bomb

:27:50.:27:54.

fell out and the splash and nearly drowned a couple of sailors who

:27:55.:27:59.

happened to be nearby. And so there had to be some pretty

:28:00.:28:04.

extraordinary actions taken, maybe in ways one would find a bit odd

:28:05.:28:07.

today. They had to take the plutonium core

:28:08.:28:14.

to Woolwich to be tested for flaws. Unfortunately, the car broke down.

:28:15.:28:18.

Now that meant for some hours the core of the British bomb was sat in

:28:19.:28:24.

a broken down Vauxhall, outside a pub somewhere in the south of

:28:25.:28:27.

London. And this is what it was all about.

:28:28.:28:33.

This is our first nuclear weapons that went into service. Here is the

:28:34.:28:38.

physics package, which detonates the central core of plutonium. Here it

:28:39.:28:43.

is in a scale model, you insert it into the core and click it into

:28:44.:28:46.

place. And now it had to be tested.

:28:47.:28:55.

Three, two, one, now! But the feeling of triumph was short

:28:56.:29:02.

lived. Just three weeks later, the Americans exploded Ivy Mike, 400

:29:03.:29:10.

times more powerful than the atomic bomb the British had just tested. It

:29:11.:29:19.

was the first hydrogen bomb. A year later, the Soviet Union exploded

:29:20.:29:25.

their own hydrogen bomb. The Prime Minister, Winston Churchill,

:29:26.:29:27.

responded by making the controversial decision that Britain

:29:28.:29:33.

should build its own hydrogen bomb. But there was another problem

:29:34.:29:39.

looming on the horizon. Under huge pressure from around the world, the

:29:40.:29:43.

two nuclear powers America and the Soviet Union, planned to declare a

:29:44.:29:48.

more Tori and an atmospheric nuclear testing.

:29:49.:29:51.

There was a race against time to conduct those tests and achieve ace

:29:52.:29:55.

scientific success we needed. So the government announced

:29:56.:30:02.

Operation Grapple For the first time, Britain's bomb maker in chief

:30:03.:30:06.

shows us the hydrogen bomb that was to become the British nuclear

:30:07.:30:10.

deterrent. Here we have the first hydrogen bomb

:30:11.:30:15.

that went into the service with the RAF for the United Kingdom was the

:30:16.:30:21.

red snow, and contained in this aerodynamic dropping Case. Finally

:30:22.:30:26.

on the 8th of November, 1957, the go-ahead for the test was given. At

:30:27.:30:33.

17.47 Greenwich meantime, the crew dropped the bomb and made a sharp

:30:34.:30:35.

turn to escape its blast. I think, having independently

:30:36.:30:48.

developed a hydrogen bomb and pretty soon put one into service, it

:30:49.:30:54.

achieved exactly what the Foreign Office wanted, which was a place at

:30:55.:30:56.

the top table. You can see the whole

:30:57.:31:02.

story on BBC Four. Britain's Nuclear Bomb:

:31:03.:31:04.

The Inside Story, next On Monday The Boss started. You said

:31:05.:31:18.

in the fist episode, nice guys come last. Yes. That was the first thing

:31:19.:31:23.

I heard. I thought, what is going on here? How would you describe this

:31:24.:31:30.

game show? A quiz show crossed with Agatha Christie's Then There Was

:31:31.:31:35.

None dchl appeals to me desperately. It's a standard quiz show. You can

:31:36.:31:39.

take out players, in a nice way, by challenging them. You can launch a

:31:40.:31:43.

leadership challenge - which would never happen in real-life in

:31:44.:31:49.

politics, it's quite prescient. You can launch a leadership challenge

:31:50.:31:54.

and take the role of The Boss. It's va strategy and intrigue as well as

:31:55.:31:57.

general knowledge. It's great fun because it's not a standard quiz

:31:58.:32:01.

show you have to think about how you would play the game. It's been great

:32:02.:32:10.

fun to do. I love it. Let's look at it. You are discussing plans with

:32:11.:32:15.

one of the contestants. You have to manage them. How will you stay the

:32:16.:32:21.

Boss? They will lose and they are going to go home early. OK. That's

:32:22.:32:27.

really just advice to them, if they want to challenge. You can be gone

:32:28.:32:34.

in no time. This is wonderful. Two of us regional accents going - come

:32:35.:32:36.

ahead, come on! It's general knowledge, your brain

:32:37.:32:45.

puzzles. Is it rare, or hard to find someone who is good at both of those

:32:46.:32:51.

things? Some people are incredible quizzers, general knowledge, the

:32:52.:32:54.

puzzles come up and they have no idea. It a different type of brain

:32:55.:33:00.

power that is working. It's a lovely combination of quizzes and pusles

:33:01.:33:06.

and also, asst a stand-up I get to chat to the contestants. How are you

:33:07.:33:12.

enjoying hosting? I love it. I love quiz shows anyway. I had the fortune

:33:13.:33:18.

of winning Pointless Celebrities with Gyles Brandreth.

:33:19.:33:21.

He did a lot of the heavy lifting, I will be honest with you. I love quiz

:33:22.:33:24.

shows, watching them. To host one is fantastic. We might as well show the

:33:25.:33:30.

moment. Here you are on Pointless Celebrities. The question was,

:33:31.:33:38.

stations on the London Undergound Bakerloo Line. Gyels answered Queens

:33:39.:33:45.

Park. I'm so stressed at this point. You won it! How did it feel to win?

:33:46.:33:52.

I love Pointless. The fear is, that you will go out in the first round.

:33:53.:33:57.

For example, I was fluent in French at one point. One of the rounds was

:33:58.:34:03.

Mr Men books in French. I could not remember anything in French.

:34:04.:34:08.

Everything went out of my friend. Gyles was there, who never forgets

:34:09.:34:12.

anything. An incredible thing. I know how contestants feel when they

:34:13.:34:16.

are on The Boss. I have been in that situation. It can be a stressful

:34:17.:34:21.

thing. It's a lovely show to do. You had a good partner in Gyles. I did.

:34:22.:34:26.

We asked him about his memories of that day as well. Really? I'm

:34:27.:34:33.

gladded to say that, yes, I did once win Celebrity Pointless. It was an

:34:34.:34:38.

exciting day. I won it. I did have help. I can't remember who it was

:34:39.:34:45.

Susan somebody, was it Susie Dent, Swede sweet, lovely, little Irish

:34:46.:34:49.

girl, was she Welsh. She did well. I think mine was the winning answer!

:34:50.:35:00.

Gyles. He did that for us yesterday. He knew you were coming on. He said

:35:01.:35:03.

I was special. How quickly he forgets these things. Gyles is

:35:04.:35:09.

immense. If you are going to be a in a quiz show, Gyles Brandreth is your

:35:10.:35:14.

man. Are you a quizzer. ? I can't say I've done a lot of pub quizzes.

:35:15.:35:21.

Are there places to do a good pub quiz in LA? No. You have to start

:35:22.:35:27.

one up. Maybe I should. We do have to say goodbye to you in a moment.

:35:28.:35:30.

Thank you for your company tonight. We have been asking for these

:35:31.:35:34.

pictures of keys and whether a big bunch of keys or special to you.

:35:35.:35:41.

Let's read a few out. I will show you this one. These are Michelle's

:35:42.:35:50.

work keys. Where does she work, Hogworts! Susan was given this key

:35:51.:35:55.

when she was successfully completed her cancer treatment. It was

:35:56.:35:59.

labelled - the key to happiness. Really nice. Brian has been

:36:00.:36:05.

celebinging keys for his job in security systems. Not the biggest,

:36:06.:36:10.

but they are very important to me! Has he not been given them back at

:36:11.:36:15.

the end? These are the keys to Molly's narrow boat Alice. It's a

:36:16.:36:20.

special part of her and her family's life. Nobody sent the key to their

:36:21.:36:28.

heart. Such a romantic. We have to say goodbye.

:36:29.:36:37.

Coming up, the first highwire performance above the One Show

:36:38.:36:40.

studios from a group that call themselves, The Flying Frenchies.

:36:41.:36:42.

First, here to investigate the secrets behind animal training,

:36:43.:36:44.

Mike has surrounded himself with a lot of clucking and clicking.

:36:45.:36:47.

Great time to leave! How do you inspect the teeth of a sealion or

:36:48.:37:03.

convince this to turn over and show you its flippers. I have been

:37:04.:37:07.

invited to a special workshop to witness a training technique that

:37:08.:37:13.

can be used on any animal. I'm not training anything exotic. I will be

:37:14.:37:18.

working with - a chicken. Because, believe it or not, chickens are the

:37:19.:37:25.

ultimate training tool. Internationally renowned animal

:37:26.:37:28.

behaviourist Mr Patel will teach me today. Chickens are great. They

:37:29.:37:32.

learn so fast. They can flap their wings. They can peck things and

:37:33.:37:37.

scratch. The animal can't offer too many different behaviours it makes

:37:38.:37:39.

it is easier for the student to learn. So how do you train one of

:37:40.:37:45.

these farmyard fowl? We are using a clicker as a marker signal. It's

:37:46.:37:50.

paired with food. When the animal hears a click sound they get a

:37:51.:37:54.

treat. That can be anything they are motivated to work for. We can use

:37:55.:37:58.

the click to teach them different behaviours. I have a target here, a

:37:59.:38:02.

disk with a dot on it. She goes near it, I will click. I will give her a

:38:03.:38:07.

treat. The click says to her, well done for moving close to it, and you

:38:08.:38:12.

have a treat. It's an example of positive reinforcement. A click

:38:13.:38:17.

signals instant reward before the trainer has a chance to give a

:38:18.:38:21.

treat. Get it wrong and the chicken will think you are rewarding fervour

:38:22.:38:28.

bad behaviour. If you get it right she will associate the good

:38:29.:38:32.

behaviour with a broib. When you master training a chicken, these

:38:33.:38:35.

techniques could be used to train any animal. Many of my fellow

:38:36.:38:39.

students work with dogs and have come from far and wide just to work

:38:40.:38:44.

with the chickens. I'm working at the animal training centre in

:38:45.:38:49.

Austria training particular dogs. I want to improve my training skill

:38:50.:38:52.

that I'm training the dogs even better. Bob Bailey used this

:38:53.:38:57.

technique for 60 years and is something of a legend in this field.

:38:58.:39:02.

. You have worked with an array of different animals? 140 different

:39:03.:39:09.

species. Like? Goats, sheep, killer he whales. In the 70s he trained

:39:10.:39:15.

ravens for the military. We used them for intelligence gathering. The

:39:16.:39:22.

ravens would be taught to carry a tiny camera and guided by a laser it

:39:23.:39:27.

would go to a particular window and take photographs. Then it would come

:39:28.:39:30.

back and we would develop the film and have a picture of whatever the

:39:31.:39:37.

REACH took a picture of. You are manipulating complex behaviour. How

:39:38.:39:40.

account students learn from chickens today? And use that elsewhere? The

:39:41.:39:45.

task is to teach the principles to the trainers and teach them how to

:39:46.:39:51.

apply it. These principles are proving invaluable to the students.

:39:52.:39:57.

I'm a mobility instructors, I train the dogs and the people in how to

:39:58.:40:02.

use the dogs. The principles we are learning here, timing, accuracy, the

:40:03.:40:06.

mechanic of it can be asupplied for anything. I have been struck by how

:40:07.:40:11.

quickly the chickens are responding. I have a challenge. The task I was

:40:12.:40:17.

given to combif give the chicken I have worked with for one hour to

:40:18.:40:25.

walk across the tightrope with the One Show logo as encouragement. I

:40:26.:40:28.

think I'm ready. Good luck. Thank you. She could easily hop off the

:40:29.:40:38.

narrow walkway at any point, failing the task. My training means she now

:40:39.:40:41.

associates the Worthington Cup be show logo with a food reward. It may

:40:42.:40:50.

have taken Bob years to get to the point of training spy ravens, but

:40:51.:40:54.

I'm pleased with what I've achieved in just a short space of time. Are

:40:55.:41:02.

we ready for this? We are. We have click trained Mike. Let's see what

:41:03.:41:12.

happens. In he comes. In he comes. Give him the doughnut! That's a much

:41:13.:41:20.

nicer treat. Well done, Mike. It is interesting, isn't it. For anyone

:41:21.:41:24.

who has pets at home, be it hamsters, cats, can you train your

:41:25.:41:33.

pets to do anything? The One Show Chirag saided that anything, birds,

:41:34.:41:37.

animals, insects, bugs, spiders all those things. Only recently George

:41:38.:41:44.

was watching bumblebees play football last week on the www. He

:41:45.:41:51.

One Show. We trained a goldfish in a goldfish bowl toll play football

:41:52.:41:54.

under water and dribble it into the goal, back of the net! There you go,

:41:55.:42:00.

amazing. It doesn't justs have to be a clicker. The sound. You could use

:42:01.:42:06.

a flash light. That works well with fish. Flash and give them a treat.

:42:07.:42:12.

Reinforcing positive behaviour. With deaf dogs you can do a thumbs up

:42:13.:42:16.

when they do something you want to. You can wean them off food. People

:42:17.:42:20.

think cats are really difficult to train. I would agree. You have quite

:42:21.:42:28.

a few cats? Five. Five. They are running riot. Over my laptop. I was

:42:29.:42:41.

trying to work. They surround me. The vet enjoys me immensely. She

:42:42.:42:44.

shouts out the name of the cats, obviously. The one thing we do do is

:42:45.:42:54.

trained them as we want to feed them at the same time. We make a noise.

:42:55.:43:02.

Maybe I have trained them slightly they are wilful. A problem with the

:43:03.:43:06.

laptop? They just take over the house, I will be honest with you. On

:43:07.:43:10.

their laptop all the They sit on time. It, the wardrobe people had to

:43:11.:43:19.

break open a lint roller because my anies were white when I arrived. Are

:43:20.:43:26.

you sure it's just the cats drooling. Try and reinforce their

:43:27.:43:31.

behaviour behaviour. They will be on there and it's warm. They see that

:43:32.:43:36.

is where your fingers are and might want a stroke. Put the basket near a

:43:37.:43:43.

ragged ator and encourage them into the basket. Don't feed them on the

:43:44.:43:55.

laptop. These are the Acrocats. You will see hoop jumping. Inspiration.

:43:56.:44:02.

My dream was to have a troop called the catrobats and again on Britain's

:44:03.:44:07.

Got Talent. They always have dogs, myself and the five cats, the

:44:08.:44:11.

catrobats, so far very little has been achieved. But I have high

:44:12.:44:16.

hopes. I've gone as far, I know I shouldn't tell you that... Come on.

:44:17.:44:20.

You can't leave us hanging. I rubbed a little bit of tuna on my legs to

:44:21.:44:24.

try and attract them because I wanted them to go through my legs.

:44:25.:44:28.

Even that they went - no, I'm not doing it. This is my life, I rubbed

:44:29.:44:33.

a little bit of tuna on my legs. Really. When we go into this next

:44:34.:44:37.

film we let you and Mike have a chat about how the training could be

:44:38.:44:41.

improved. I think it's better than rubbing tuna on myself.

:44:42.:44:46.

Every year groundbreaking new surgery achieves more

:44:47.:44:48.

In our next film, a young motorcyclist becomes the first

:44:49.:44:51.

person in the country to undergo a complete knee transplant,

:44:52.:44:54.

an operation that has changed his life.

:44:55.:44:58.

Martial arts with Stewart's big passion. I remember fighting this

:44:59.:45:07.

guy. He doesn't look like much but he kicks like a donkey. Steuart won

:45:08.:45:14.

fights with his powerful kick. Just before the accident I was training

:45:15.:45:18.

four or five times a week. My idea was to move into professional levels

:45:19.:45:24.

over the next couple of years, but unfortunately never got to happen.

:45:25.:45:29.

Never got to happen because in April 2011 Steuart was hit by a car while

:45:30.:45:34.

riding his motorbike. Even now I can still hear the bank, can still feel

:45:35.:45:39.

the pain. I got thrown off the bike and then went down the road on my

:45:40.:45:45.

knee. I really remember just feeling the road surface grinding my leg

:45:46.:45:51.

away. The way my leg looked was like a shark had bitten half of it off.

:45:52.:45:56.

There was a strong chance he would lose his whim but doctors saved it

:45:57.:45:59.

using muscle from other parts of his body. They took some muscles from my

:46:00.:46:06.

backhand down the side of the ribs and planted it onto the lake to save

:46:07.:46:11.

the leg and then I had given grafts as well. My life now compared to

:46:12.:46:17.

before has flipped upside down. Simple things like running,

:46:18.:46:21.

squatting, going from a fit and active bloke to not being able to do

:46:22.:46:25.

anything has been really tough. But Stuart was offered a landmark

:46:26.:46:28.

operation, the chance to become the first person in the UK to have a

:46:29.:46:34.

large section of someone else's work transplanted onto his. The thing

:46:35.:46:37.

that is different here is the combination of the spare parts that

:46:38.:46:40.

were used. It seemed a novel solution to have a replacement knee,

:46:41.:46:48.

including the thigh bone, the leg bone and the fibula. This is the

:46:49.:46:53.

first time that those bits have all been put together in a patient. Had

:46:54.:46:59.

you go about finding aids donor bone that would match Stuart's Lake

:47:00.:47:07.

dimensions? We measured Stuart's Lake. So we had the dimensions. Then

:47:08.:47:13.

it was all about waiting for the donor and they were very grateful to

:47:14.:47:18.

that family. During the six-hour operation, team of surgeons prepared

:47:19.:47:23.

Stuart's Lake to receive the bone. It was such a great moment, such a

:47:24.:47:31.

great specimen. I felt an enormous sense of responsibility, if it went

:47:32.:47:34.

on the floor clearly it was game over. When we put into Stuart's

:47:35.:47:40.

knee, that Eureka moment was the jigsaw fit as it went in, it really

:47:41.:47:45.

did fit well. It was a very, very significant moment. We caught up

:47:46.:47:50.

with Stuart a year to the day after his operation. What you think has

:47:51.:47:54.

improved since I last saw you monkey and I could straighten my leg out

:47:55.:47:57.

and hold it longer than I did before. I can bend it more. It's

:47:58.:48:04.

getting a bit stronger. Walking on it with more confidence. All in all

:48:05.:48:11.

you're doing fantastically well. We need to wait for that bone to grow

:48:12.:48:15.

in an fully integrate into your body. To what extent can we say the

:48:16.:48:22.

operation was a success? There's no sign of infection, it's beautifully

:48:23.:48:27.

healed. The boundary with Stuart's bone is blurred now. There are still

:48:28.:48:33.

problems, and that's something we would need to address at a future

:48:34.:48:38.

date. Those problems include daily pain and discomfort. Definitely the

:48:39.:48:42.

low points over the last year have been the pain. Sometimes you do have

:48:43.:48:46.

some dark days but you have to pick yourself back up and remember

:48:47.:48:49.

everyone around you is trying to help. Where'd you get your

:48:50.:48:52.

inspiration? What inspires me to keep going I can't stand being lazy.

:48:53.:48:57.

I really want to keep being active. This operation has meant a lot to

:48:58.:49:01.

me. If things keep going the way they're going, I'll be able to get

:49:02.:49:06.

back to a semi-normal life. Knowing I have someone else's donor bones

:49:07.:49:09.

inside of me is a strange thought, but it's the best chance I've got

:49:10.:49:14.

becoming the Stuart used to be. Stewart Stuart might not be able to

:49:15.:49:19.

manage martial arts again he has put it to good new use. I propose to my

:49:20.:49:24.

girlfriend at the Northern lights, got down on one knee. That was a

:49:25.:49:29.

goal for me. She said yes, it was perfect. We will hold the applause

:49:30.:49:34.

for one second because last October Stuart and his fiancee got married.

:49:35.:49:41.

They went on a month-long honeymoon to America.

:49:42.:49:50.

Stuart has continued to respond well to the donor bone and he has had a

:49:51.:49:53.

second operation tub with his mobility. He's doing very well and

:49:54.:49:57.

planning some cycling trips with his wife. Interestingly, Susan, your

:49:58.:50:02.

father was Chief Medical Officer for England and Wales. Did you ever

:50:03.:50:08.

fancy him along the science route? Absolutely not. I had no talent at

:50:09.:50:12.

all for the sciences, in the slightest. He was incredible, he was

:50:13.:50:15.

an oncologist and a transplant surgeon and ice showed no aptitude

:50:16.:50:20.

at all for the sciences. I thought I would go the other day and become a

:50:21.:50:25.

stand-up comedian, then he'll be proud! But no, that is an incredible

:50:26.:50:29.

story, what they can do these days is incredible. It really is. In a

:50:30.:50:36.

moment we will be heading outside... Look at that view, our fearless

:50:37.:50:40.

flying friend performing on high wires. A nice little sunset.

:50:41.:50:44.

Before that, Mobeen Azhar has met a group of Bradford women determined

:50:45.:50:47.

Bradford has over 100 mosques and right now all of them are run by

:50:48.:50:58.

men. Women have always been encouraged to pray at home that.

:50:59.:51:03.

Female provisions are often limited. The majority of mosques are not

:51:04.:51:06.

providing adequate services for women. Which can leave some women

:51:07.:51:11.

feeling marginalised. In a city like Bradford, where a quarter of the

:51:12.:51:15.

population from a Muslim background, there was an absence of women's

:51:16.:51:19.

voices. When I heard about a group of inspirational women that want to

:51:20.:51:23.

change all of that here in Bradford, I just had to come and meet them.

:51:24.:51:31.

These women work for the Muslim women's Council and are planning to

:51:32.:51:35.

build Britain's first female lead mosques. I grew up going to the

:51:36.:51:38.

mosque with my dad, while my mum and sister 's parade at home, so I'm

:51:39.:51:41.

keen to hear what it's currently like the women here at Bradford who

:51:42.:51:46.

wish to pray together at their local mosque. Is this the women's area?

:51:47.:51:53.

It's truly good compared to a lot of mosques, but even this is getting

:51:54.:51:58.

tight. This mosque good example, people women want to come, they even

:51:59.:52:02.

bring their own prayer mats and pray outside because they want to feel

:52:03.:52:05.

that spirituality and praying congregation, which is really

:52:06.:52:09.

important. Compared to many mosques, this place is doing pretty well, but

:52:10.:52:13.

next we take a look at the mend's prayer room. This is a lot bigger.

:52:14.:52:19.

It is. Much, much bigger, it's huge and lighter. And it smells nicer! It

:52:20.:52:24.

actually smells a lot nicer and all the natural light.

:52:25.:52:29.

To me, there's clearly a divide between the services offered to men

:52:30.:52:32.

on those two women, so I'm keen to hear more about the plans for the

:52:33.:52:37.

new female lead mosques. Everything from start to finish will have a

:52:38.:52:40.

female touch to it. The governments will be entirely made up of women,

:52:41.:52:44.

the services will prioritise the needs of women. What we're trying to

:52:45.:52:49.

create is a where families can pray together. We want the mosque to be

:52:50.:52:53.

all-inclusive. There's lots of men in the Muslim community who will

:52:54.:52:57.

think, why are they doing this? Have you faced any kind of opposition?

:52:58.:53:01.

There was at the beginning quite a fair bit of opposition, and I think

:53:02.:53:04.

that's because of the way that the media have communicated, using words

:53:05.:53:11.

like women only mosque, which is not what we'd communicated. Once we

:53:12.:53:14.

reassured them as to what our intention was, we have their full

:53:15.:53:20.

support. So Bradford could revolutionise the whole mosque seen

:53:21.:53:24.

in Britain. Not good, Bradford will revolutionise the whole mosque seen

:53:25.:53:27.

in Britain. The women hope the mosque will be built by 2020 and are

:53:28.:53:33.

taking inspiration from futuristic designs, but hitting it off the

:53:34.:53:36.

ground won't be easy. It's likely to cost between 3,000,000- ?5 million

:53:37.:53:40.

and they have yet to secure a site on which to build it. So today they

:53:41.:53:45.

have a meeting at City Hall in Bradford, and going with them is

:53:46.:53:49.

Peter Branson, from a local hospice. He is supporting the fundraising.

:53:50.:53:52.

With this meeting today, what's the best thing that can happen? That we

:53:53.:53:56.

will get closer to signing on the dotted line for the purchase of the

:53:57.:54:00.

land. As the meeting gets under way, I

:54:01.:54:04.

take the opportunity to find out for myself how supportive men in this

:54:05.:54:07.

Muslim community are of the women's plans. When I first actually heard

:54:08.:54:12.

about the idea I wasn't too keen on it. I thought we have 100 plus

:54:13.:54:16.

mosques in Bradford, so why do we need another mosque? I think

:54:17.:54:20.

something like this is needed, especially for the younger working

:54:21.:54:25.

professional females. What are they going to get out of it? One try

:54:26.:54:29.

spoke to the people trying to get it going I understood the idea behind

:54:30.:54:32.

it. Our women want to go to the mosque and I want to be at home. The

:54:33.:54:37.

president of the male lead counsel of mosques in Bradford joined me. I

:54:38.:54:41.

know lots of Muslim men who said women don't need to go to the

:54:42.:54:45.

mosque, they can just pray at home. Aren't you going to come up against

:54:46.:54:49.

that quite a bit? I think we will come up against it, but the thing is

:54:50.:54:53.

we cannot in any free, democratic society. If we want to live in a

:54:54.:54:58.

fair society, like the Times of our holy Prophet, we have to support

:54:59.:55:05.

everyone. The meeting over, it's time to find out how it went. It was

:55:06.:55:09.

a very positive meeting and I think the council receptive to what we

:55:10.:55:13.

want to happen. When is it going to happen? We

:55:14.:55:17.

wanted it happened yesterday, as you can imagine. There is still a lot of

:55:18.:55:21.

work to do but it's amazing to think that three Muslim women in Bradford

:55:22.:55:24.

could not only change how mosques are run in this city but across the

:55:25.:55:28.

world. That's not just exciting, it's

:55:29.:55:29.

revolutionary. Good luck to those three women

:55:30.:55:33.

and everyone else involved. Crowdfunding has just

:55:34.:55:36.

started for the mosque, so we'll keep an eye

:55:37.:55:37.

on how things go. Over the past few days,

:55:38.:55:39.

a group of aerial performers have been taking over the sky

:55:40.:55:44.

above our studios, rigging highwires and setting up bungee cords down

:55:45.:55:46.

the side of the building. All day people have been stopping to

:55:47.:55:56.

take photos on to wonder what on earth they are up to. We are about

:55:57.:56:00.

to find out. These are the Flying Frenchies. Good luck!

:56:01.:56:14.

# When the cuckoo takes it off his neighbour, we frown, we frown

:56:15.:56:37.

# But I don't know one animal # That pays to live in England, or

:56:38.:56:45.

the blackbirds as high as he likes # I don't know one animal who pays

:56:46.:56:49.

to live in England # Tell me how we would implement

:56:50.:57:10.

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE And that was my kind of thing, I

:57:11.:58:36.

loved that so much! On the high wire! So cool. Thanks guys! Wow! I'm

:58:37.:58:44.

going to go for some lessons. You can see The Flying Frenchies

:58:45.:58:46.

on highwires strung between mountains in their new film,

:58:47.:58:49.

called The Free Man, Absolutely amazing. Susan, thank you

:58:50.:58:51.

so much. Thank you Susan for joining us

:58:52.:58:56.

tonight, The Boss is on weekdays Tomorrow, Barry Manilow won't be

:58:57.:58:59.

bungee jumping from the roof, Hello, I'm Tina Daheley

:59:00.:59:14.

with your 90-second update.

:59:15.:59:17.

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