:00:19. > :00:25.Hello and welcome to The One Show with Alex Jones. And Matt Baker. To
:00:26. > :00:30.my's guest loves nothing more than to spring surprises on unsuspecting
:00:31. > :00:33.members of the public. But it was more a case of shock and surprise
:00:34. > :00:38.when the tables were turned on her recently. Annabel, will you marry
:00:39. > :00:48.me? CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
:00:49. > :00:55.No. This isn't Surprise Surprise. I'm at Ant, that Dec!
:00:56. > :01:07.It is, of course, Holly Willoughby. Hello. So that was... The worst day
:01:08. > :01:12.of my life. They're so amazing. I didn't suspect for a second that
:01:13. > :01:18.that was Ant. On the show, I'm thinking about the surprise at the
:01:19. > :01:22.end, the big proposal. I always say, what happens if she says no? But you
:01:23. > :01:27.never think that's going to happen and it happened and I felt sick! I
:01:28. > :01:33.was just so relieved that it was them. So it was actually better?
:01:34. > :01:40.Yes, and then you start thinking, you naughty boys! What were you
:01:41. > :01:43.going to tell the woman? I just remember thinking I wanted to get
:01:44. > :01:46.her off the set because all the audience stood up and they were
:01:47. > :01:51.leaning over and watching and getting closer to the action and I
:01:52. > :01:55.thought I had to separate them. I kept telling the gallery to get them
:01:56. > :02:02.off set and they said, "stay there!" . It was horrific. We've
:02:03. > :02:09.just seen your surprised face. You always do this! But tonight we want
:02:10. > :02:13.to see yours as well. If you've surprised a loved one and managed to
:02:14. > :02:18.capture the moment on camera, send us your pictures and tell us what
:02:19. > :02:22.the event was. Britain's housing shortage is so serious that it
:02:23. > :02:28.estimated around 240,000 homes need to be built every year for the next
:02:29. > :02:33.20 years to solve it. Just this month George Osborne announced plans
:02:34. > :02:36.for a new garden city in Kent which includes 15,000 new homes. But what
:02:37. > :02:43.do locals think about getting so many new neighbours?
:02:44. > :02:48.Welcome to Ebbsfleet in Kent. It has a state of railway station with
:02:49. > :02:55.high-speed links into into London taking just 17 minutes. And it's
:02:56. > :02:59.also got this slightly less state football ground. But what what else?
:03:00. > :03:05.I'm going to find out. Ebbsfleet is going to be Britain's first garden
:03:06. > :03:09.city in almost 100 years. Can we go and have a look at the Ebbsfleet
:03:10. > :03:13.town centre as it is now? There isn't a town centre. There is no
:03:14. > :03:17.town centre. Ebbsfleet is literally at the moment the international
:03:18. > :03:23.station. Garden cities were seen as the answer to inner-city squalor at
:03:24. > :03:26.the end of the 19th century. Self-contained cities with their own
:03:27. > :03:30.industries and loads of green space - the Purbeck mix. Letchworth and
:03:31. > :03:38.Welwyn Garden City were built on these principles. And it is here
:03:39. > :03:42.that the government plans to spend ?200 million turning this disused
:03:43. > :03:47.quarry and surrounding marshland into a garden city. There has
:03:48. > :03:52.already been a development project going on here to build this but this
:03:53. > :03:57.news makes it much bigger. The current developers bought the land
:03:58. > :04:04.in 2001 and have so far invested ?150 million. What changes? As a
:04:05. > :04:09.result of the announcement, we would get a much more flexible planning
:04:10. > :04:13.system. We've got planning permission that was granted a long
:04:14. > :04:18.time ago for a lot of mixed use and office development. For the
:04:19. > :04:22.remainder of the quarry, we've got the potential, with some investment
:04:23. > :04:27.from government, to accelerate the pace of development. The government
:04:28. > :04:33.is setting up a special corporation with the power to grant planning
:04:34. > :04:37.permission, borrow money and build. Whenever I talk to my passengers
:04:38. > :04:42.about this, in the first sentence, the word infrastructure comes up.
:04:43. > :04:47.The first garden city, Letchworth, was pioneered by this man whose
:04:48. > :04:51.vision was to combine the best bits of town and country. But to run a
:04:52. > :04:58.proper garden city, you have to stick to his social principles. What
:04:59. > :05:02.is the danger of Ebbsfleet, when you're building 15,000 houses? If it
:05:03. > :05:08.isn't planned properly, what could we be left with? If it isn't planned
:05:09. > :05:13.properly, we could just be left with housing without any of the other
:05:14. > :05:18.infrastructure benefits - homes, jobs, a real sense of community.
:05:19. > :05:23.It's hoped that Ebbsfleet will help to solve the current housing
:05:24. > :05:28.shortage. We're in a really desperate housing crisis. We need
:05:29. > :05:31.240,000 new homes each year but we are building less than half. What do
:05:32. > :05:35.the locals think? Strictly speaking, there aren't any.
:05:36. > :05:40.Ebbsfleet isn't a place, remember. But there are couple of towns
:05:41. > :05:44.nearby. I do believe that once the garden city is built they will swarm
:05:45. > :05:49.into the area because they struggle at the moment to be able to afford
:05:50. > :05:54.London prices. For us, it is very good news. 15,000 new homes, 15,000
:05:55. > :06:04.families, construction workers - very good news for us. The football
:06:05. > :06:09.team can't believe it's luck. It changed its name to Ebbsfleet United
:06:10. > :06:14.when the Eurostar came in 2007 and now there's this news. It's suddenly
:06:15. > :06:19.put Ebbsfleet on the map and if we can piggyback on that, so much the
:06:20. > :06:26.better. In truth, who would have heard of Ebbsfleet before this
:06:27. > :06:30.announcement? Well, we are now joined by Andrew
:06:31. > :06:35.Bulmer from the Royal Institue of Chartered Surveyors. We heard
:06:36. > :06:40.yesterday from the Treasury that we are on the verge of a housing
:06:41. > :06:44.bubble. What does this mean? That's interesting. Bobble is a great word
:06:45. > :06:48.but what does a bubble mean? It means different things to different
:06:49. > :06:54.people. It isn't really a very helpful term. Our members around the
:06:55. > :06:58.country are telling us quite mixed messages. Overall the market is
:06:59. > :07:02.strong and overall prices are going up but I do get into trouble when I
:07:03. > :07:06.go around the country and meet by members and they say, " we're always
:07:07. > :07:12.reporting house prices rocket up but I'm not seeing it". Even in my
:07:13. > :07:19.hometown of Nottingham you have an area like West Bradford which is
:07:20. > :07:22.very strong. -- Westbridge food. Prices are increasing quite rapidly
:07:23. > :07:27.in some areas but what is causing that and what are the dangers? It is
:07:28. > :07:32.the same old thing of supply and demand. If you have more buyers than
:07:33. > :07:38.supply, prices go up. The whole thing about this is supply. 15,000
:07:39. > :07:43.units in Ebbsfleet - great. There are some who have been slightly rude
:07:44. > :07:51.about it and called it more of a village than a city. But we need far
:07:52. > :07:55.more than that. 240,000 units a year is a target that we're miles away
:07:56. > :08:00.from at the moment. The builders are building more but they're
:08:01. > :08:05.struggling. If you were in your early 20s now and keen to get a
:08:06. > :08:11.place of your own, would you do it right now? I'm not going to tell a
:08:12. > :08:16.20-year-old what to do but if I was 20 and it was right to buy for me at
:08:17. > :08:20.that time in my life... When you buy a home, you're not buying an
:08:21. > :08:24.investment. It's a really important thing. Prices are generally going up
:08:25. > :08:28.and people do look at them as an investment but it is a home first
:08:29. > :08:32.and if it is right to you at that time, with the market the way it is
:08:33. > :08:37.at the moment, I would buy. If there were any alarm bells ringing, what
:08:38. > :08:42.would you be listening out for? You'd see it coming. It would be a
:08:43. > :08:46.catastrophic change to the economy or the liquidity of the banks and
:08:47. > :08:50.mortgage lending. At the moment, there's nothing like that on the
:08:51. > :08:54.horizon that would stop me from buying personally. Thank you,
:08:55. > :08:58.Andrew. Family businesses in the UK employ
:08:59. > :09:02.over 9 million people. Larry Lamb has been to meet one family firm who
:09:03. > :09:08.are proud to have been in the business of funeral directing for
:09:09. > :09:14.over 200 years. For eight generations, the Leverton
:09:15. > :09:19.family has been burying people. And old-fashioned funeral cortege. It's
:09:20. > :09:25.still a site that stops us all in our tracks. I think most people are
:09:26. > :09:30.very impressed and you see a lot of people. In. Maybe if they're wearing
:09:31. > :09:35.a hat, they will usually take it off, hold their collar, cross
:09:36. > :09:42.themselves. I think it is a moment where most people perhaps do reflect
:09:43. > :09:45.on their own mortality. Leverton's is one of the oldest and most
:09:46. > :09:49.prestigious undertaking firms in the country. The funerals they've
:09:50. > :09:54.directed range from one of doctor Crippen's murder victims to Baroness
:09:55. > :09:57.Thatcher. There's only one chance to do a funeral and it has to be right
:09:58. > :10:06.every time for every family and they must have what they want. In 1997,
:10:07. > :10:15.they directed the funeral of Diana, Princess of. I flew over to Paris to
:10:16. > :10:21.bring her back to the UK. It was very demanding and I was conscious
:10:22. > :10:29.of a lot of emotions that were being manifest as we went about our task.
:10:30. > :10:34.We were right in the eye of the storm. We had 27 other funerals
:10:35. > :10:38.already arranged that week and we looked after all the families
:10:39. > :10:46.equally well. Do you ever get nervous? Yes, very. This is our
:10:47. > :10:52.oldest ledger from October 1895. Total cost of the first funeral was
:10:53. > :10:56.five guineas. Moving on to April 1941, during the air raids. Four
:10:57. > :11:02.people killed in one block of flats that was demolished. Between them,
:11:03. > :11:06.Keith and Clive have notched up two years short of a century in
:11:07. > :11:11.undertaking. They are custodians of a family business that started in
:11:12. > :11:18.1789. It started with John Leverton, my great, great, great
:11:19. > :11:21.grandfather. He came up to London in the 18th-century to make his
:11:22. > :11:27.fortune. Part of his job for the community would have been to make
:11:28. > :11:33.the coffins and he would also have undertaken to do various aspects of
:11:34. > :11:39.work. Gradually, during the 19th-century, it became more of an
:11:40. > :11:45.industry, principally because Queen Victoria's morning for Prince Albert
:11:46. > :11:50.made funerals more fashionable and when graveyards became to fall,
:11:51. > :11:55.funerals had to travel to the place of burial. -- became too full. The
:11:56. > :12:05.carpentry became less and less important and the company could do
:12:06. > :12:07.more and more of the funerals. Clive's daughter Pippa is the
:12:08. > :12:13.youngest member of the family to have joined the firm. I think some
:12:14. > :12:17.people are very surprised to come across a female funeral director.
:12:18. > :12:24.Women have always been involved in the care and love of people, whether
:12:25. > :12:30.that's from newborn babies, delivering babies, looking after the
:12:31. > :12:39.sick, and that care continues right through to the end of life care that
:12:40. > :12:43.women have always provided. It is a profession that some might regard as
:12:44. > :12:49.ghoulish but it's a job that runs in this family's blood. I was 12 when I
:12:50. > :12:56.spoke to the careers master at school. Those who knew, at the age
:12:57. > :13:00.of 12, wanted to be engineers or footballers or something quite
:13:01. > :13:06.high-flown and I said I wanted to be a funeral director like my dad.
:13:07. > :13:09.Paper, her cousin Andrew and his sons, the ninth generation of
:13:10. > :13:20.Levertons, visit the family gravestone. A lot of people have
:13:21. > :13:24.asked me why I do my job. It's the worst time in a family's life. You
:13:25. > :13:28.look at them all through the process and on the day of the funeral, they
:13:29. > :13:33.come and find you on this terrible, terrible day, perhaps crying their
:13:34. > :13:37.eyes out and threw their arms around you and say thank you. What could be
:13:38. > :13:43.more humbling than that? The horse drawn hearse. Now that
:13:44. > :13:48.I've seen that, I think I'm settled. That's quite morbid. It is an
:13:49. > :13:52.important thing to think about. Yes, and I think we have a bit of a
:13:53. > :13:56.rubbish relationship with death and sometimes it's better to talk about
:13:57. > :14:00.it and know what you want. You've got enough stress in the family
:14:01. > :14:05.around that time anyway. Now, a little gentle reminder. It's
:14:06. > :14:12.Mother's Day this Sunday, so no excuses, everybody! What if you've
:14:13. > :14:15.treated your mum to a slap up lunch, chocolates, flowers and whatever
:14:16. > :14:18.else her heart desires? You can cuddle up with her for a special
:14:19. > :14:22.Mother's Day edition of Surprise Surprise. You are probably wondering
:14:23. > :14:27.what Boyzone are doing in this car park. We are here to surprise a mum
:14:28. > :14:31.in a million with a Mother's Day gift she won't forget. She thinks
:14:32. > :14:34.she's shooting a documentary but she doesn't realise four lads from
:14:35. > :14:42.Dublin are about to storm her radio show. Good morning. I'm with you for
:14:43. > :14:54.the next half an hour. We're going in. Any chance of playing a Boyzone
:14:55. > :15:00.record? How are you? What are you doing here? !
:15:01. > :15:05.Now, Mother's Day must be a dream for you and you must be inundated
:15:06. > :15:08.with people. It's one of those special shows anyway and then you
:15:09. > :15:11.throw into the mix that it's Mother's Day and then you got the
:15:12. > :15:15.beautiful stories that come with it. It couldn't be more perfect. Apart
:15:16. > :15:21.from Boyzone, what else will be happening? Lots of lovely stories.
:15:22. > :15:25.There's a surprise for a mum who, through her own experience of having
:15:26. > :15:31.a premature baby, you just realise that you give birth to your child
:15:32. > :15:36.and it's whisked away and the one thing she was able to do was to
:15:37. > :15:39.breast-feed the baby because it was in an incubator. You can't put a
:15:40. > :15:47.baby grow on. -- was dressed the baby. She made this incredible baby
:15:48. > :15:52.grow so that the tubes could go in it gave her some control back as a
:15:53. > :15:58.mum. Of course, Surprise Surprise wouldn't be the same without a
:15:59. > :16:00.reunion. We have a very good one. A grandmother is reunited with her
:16:01. > :16:10.twin boys. She hasn't seen them for 50 years. Do you hold it together?
:16:11. > :16:15.Not always! I always say that if I wasn't doing it I would be sat at
:16:16. > :16:18.times snivelling because it's real life and real stories are always the
:16:19. > :16:27.things that get me. I can't apologise for that! When I'm not
:16:28. > :16:33.watching Matt's programme... I watch it and I'm in pieces. You do a great
:16:34. > :16:48.job. What's the best surprise you can think of? In series one, there
:16:49. > :16:53.was a couple, and their wedding video went missing. Lo and behold,
:16:54. > :16:58.30 years later, the guy goes to a car-boot sale. His hobby was to buy
:16:59. > :17:02.old pseudonym R boxes, and he looked in there and he found his wedding
:17:03. > :17:05.video and he thought, one day I should reunite them with the owner.
:17:06. > :17:16.He said if surprise surprise ever came back, that is what he would do,
:17:17. > :17:34.and we reunited it with them. You can see that Mother's Day addition
:17:35. > :17:37.at 7pm on ITV. Jacqueline Wilson, JK Rowling and Holly and her sister
:17:38. > :17:43.have all written children's books that have topped the bestseller
:17:44. > :17:47.list. Here is Ruth Goodman with the tale of a 19th-century author who
:17:48. > :17:54.has been engaging children's imaginations for generations.
:17:55. > :17:59.In this house lived a remarkable girl whose imagination, literary
:18:00. > :18:02.flair and sense of adventure would lead her to become one of the most
:18:03. > :18:09.celebrated children's authors of her day. Edith, E Nesbit, as she was
:18:10. > :18:13.best known, is credited with writing the very first adventure books for
:18:14. > :18:18.children in the early 19 hundredths, books such as five children and it,
:18:19. > :18:23.the story of the treasure seekers and the Railway children. They have
:18:24. > :18:28.enthralled generations of readers. Despite selling millions of books,
:18:29. > :18:33.her path to literary success was not easy. After age choice childhood and
:18:34. > :18:36.a dysfunctional marriage and ever present money worries, she did not
:18:37. > :18:42.publish her first children's book until she was 41. Were it not for a
:18:43. > :18:52.few teenage years here at Houston Hall, she might never have found the
:18:53. > :18:58.inspiration to become a writer. Born in 1858, Edith was the youngest of
:18:59. > :19:02.six siblings. She was only four when her father tragically died, and
:19:03. > :19:08.shortly afterwards her elder sister Mary contracted TB. The family spent
:19:09. > :19:13.the next four years in France, trying unsuccessfully to find a cure
:19:14. > :19:22.for her. After Mary's death in 1871, the family returned to England
:19:23. > :19:28.and eventually settled in Kent. This came at a very sad point in her
:19:29. > :19:31.life. She had had these awful boarding schools where she had been
:19:32. > :19:34.lonely, never settled, always moving. Suddenly she had this
:19:35. > :19:51.wonderful house and a room of her own where she could look out.
:19:52. > :19:55.Edith's poem, recalls happy times. There's a garden away from the noise
:19:56. > :20:01.of smoke and cities where the hours pass, and lovely leisure blossoms
:20:02. > :20:05.every day. Brenda is the present bash Makro Brendan is the present
:20:06. > :20:10.owner. We believe this was her room as a child, her bedroom. At the
:20:11. > :20:15.back, this would have been where most of the shrubs she talks about
:20:16. > :20:18.in her writings were. So it is probable that her desk may have been
:20:19. > :20:21.here and she would have been looking out over this window. The death of
:20:22. > :20:26.her father and sister weighed heavily on her, and her grief was
:20:27. > :20:32.profoundly expressed in her later work. In her stories, there is
:20:33. > :20:41.always this idea that your true dream should be a complete family.
:20:42. > :20:50.We almost ending of the Railway children - my daddy, my daddy. After
:20:51. > :20:57.turbulent childhood years, her time Halstead Hall at may have inspired
:20:58. > :21:01.her to put pen to paper, but it would take more turmoil in later
:21:02. > :21:05.life to driver writing forwards. At 22, she moved to London and married
:21:06. > :21:10.Hubert Bland, a failed bank clerk with literary pretensions. He
:21:11. > :21:14.contributed little to the family finances in the early years of their
:21:15. > :21:21.marriage, and despite having three children together, he was also a
:21:22. > :21:24.notorious womaniser. EDF turned to her writing for comfort and began to
:21:25. > :21:31.sell short children's stories to London magazines. -- Edith. She
:21:32. > :21:36.turned what had been a useful pass time into a steady source of income.
:21:37. > :21:42.She eventually published her first children's book in 1899, based upon
:21:43. > :21:47.a family of adventurous children. Her vivid memories of being a child
:21:48. > :21:50.meant she could give her characters individual voices, expressing
:21:51. > :21:56.genuine emotion, something that had rarely been seen in children's
:21:57. > :22:00.literature before. Many of her characters were based on people she
:22:01. > :22:08.knew. There is an Oswald in her life, a friend, that she would have
:22:09. > :22:14.faced Oswald on, and the uncle next door might have been Hubert. The
:22:15. > :22:19.book was a success and E Nesbit's path to literary stardom was
:22:20. > :22:23.secured. Her adult life may have been fraught but for her and many of
:22:24. > :22:33.her readers, her greatest source of comfort was in her past, here
:22:34. > :22:37.Halstead Hall at. You and your sister have written the
:22:38. > :22:45.third instalment of school for stars, which I would love if I was a
:22:46. > :22:52.little girl. For those that have not read it! It is really about
:22:53. > :22:56.friendship. There are two Twin sisters and they go to the school
:22:57. > :22:59.for stars and meet their best friend, Pepper. It is really just
:23:00. > :23:06.their life adventures in what they get up to whilst they are there. So
:23:07. > :23:09.they are at stage school. Is it based on anyone in particular? When
:23:10. > :23:14.you are writing, you think of stories from your school life.
:23:15. > :23:20.Neither of us went to stage school, but we imagined what it might have
:23:21. > :23:25.been like. There is a Molly in it, which sounds a bit like you. Maria
:23:26. > :23:33.is journalistic and bright and Molly is a show off. My sister is the
:23:34. > :23:36.bright one! Obviously the aim is for them to be successful and famous.
:23:37. > :23:41.Thinking about your own children and with another one on the way, is it
:23:42. > :23:46.something you will be encouraging them to do? They can do whatever
:23:47. > :23:49.they want. The nice thing about the book is that the girls are genuinely
:23:50. > :23:53.talented at what they are doing and they are going through the process
:23:54. > :23:58.and working hard to get there. That is nice to set right from the start.
:23:59. > :24:04.The dedication and hard work but it takes. And the good girls always win
:24:05. > :24:07.out, so it is a good message. You have a fourth instalment on the way,
:24:08. > :24:16.but would you branch out into adult books. Not adult! 50 shades of
:24:17. > :24:20.grey? I am not planning that at the moment, but as long as the story
:24:21. > :24:25.keeps going we will see where we take it. I will let you know how I
:24:26. > :24:29.get on with the adult books. Well, we have heard about the girls hoping
:24:30. > :24:35.to be stars, but Ewan Thomas has been to a school where the boys are
:24:36. > :24:39.learning to be men. Dads and adds, it has a good ring to
:24:40. > :24:44.it but not all boys have the benefit of a live at home dad. In the UK
:24:45. > :24:48.there are 1.9 million single parent families, and 8% are single fathers,
:24:49. > :24:53.meaning the majority are single mums. According to the Princes
:24:54. > :24:57.trust, having a positive male role model in children's lives can make
:24:58. > :25:00.them happier and more confident, which is why this high school in
:25:01. > :25:04.Essex have set up this project with the aim to give the boys a chance to
:25:05. > :25:09.put down their pencils and interact with positive role models and ask
:25:10. > :25:13.them some man's staff. Dan Chaplin is the teacher behind it, and in
:25:14. > :25:16.this lesson they will discuss the important attributes that a man
:25:17. > :25:24.needs to succeed. They have strength. Bravery. How important do
:25:25. > :25:29.you think this is? Have you learnt a lot from this lesson? It is very
:25:30. > :25:34.important. Some do not have a male role model so they learn what it is
:25:35. > :25:40.to be a man from Mr Chaplin and the other teachers. What exactly is this
:25:41. > :25:44.man they? We help them to get rid of some of their fears about what it is
:25:45. > :25:48.like to be a man. I have lived by good principles and I want to feed
:25:49. > :25:54.some into them, maybe bring back some old-fashioned values, but still
:25:55. > :25:58.helping them live in a modern world. Next, wiring a plug, not only to
:25:59. > :26:04.help them practically but also a lesson in recycling. What is
:26:05. > :26:09.important about learning this? When you are older, instead of buying new
:26:10. > :26:15.things, you can learn how to sort out things yourself. Do you have the
:26:16. > :26:19.ingredients to become a good man? I certainly have the qualities of a
:26:20. > :26:25.hand someone as well. Being a man is not all about wiring a plug but the
:26:26. > :26:31.shared success of doing this in a male environment is what it is all
:26:32. > :26:36.about. It is not only the men's supporting the scheme. Female
:26:37. > :26:40.teachers think it is great, too. It is definitely important. At home, my
:26:41. > :26:46.son and my husband go off fishing and to football and they enjoy it.
:26:47. > :26:49.It is important that we are not just an exam factory but a place where
:26:50. > :26:53.they become well rounded young adults that go out into the world
:26:54. > :26:58.with a focus and knowing what they are doing. Not only do they get
:26:59. > :27:06.stuck in with DIY, but they get to cook, too. And to finish off, a
:27:07. > :27:11.round of golf. Why is golf important for these young men? It teaches them
:27:12. > :27:19.discipline, manners and how to behave on the course. And it teaches
:27:20. > :27:25.them a whole lot of patients. I think it works better with that.
:27:26. > :27:29.Let's face it, we could all use positive role models, male or
:27:30. > :27:34.female. The lads have loved today, and I would like to think I showed
:27:35. > :27:41.them a thing or two. That is what he thinks! Earlier, we
:27:42. > :27:47.asked for pictures if you had surprised a family member. We have
:27:48. > :28:00.had loads of brilliant ones. She is being surprised by her mother's
:28:01. > :28:04.singing. It could possibly be wind. This is Natalie's daughter,
:28:05. > :28:13.surprised by the presence on Christmas Day. That is always a
:28:14. > :28:19.wonderful moment. This is Mary being surprised on her 80th birthday.
:28:20. > :28:24.Because she has a posh new handbag. Just what she wanted. I have waited
:28:25. > :28:27.80 years for this! Emma was surprised when her boyfriend
:28:28. > :28:37.proposed to her on her 21st birthday. That was what was meant to
:28:38. > :28:41.happen when ant and deck turned up. Tina's mum was surprised when she
:28:42. > :28:47.had her 60th birthday party. I am scared of surprise birthday parties.
:28:48. > :28:56.That is all for this evening. Thank you to Holly. And the book is out
:28:57. > :28:59.now. Tomorrow, Chris and I are joined by Alan Davies. Good night.