:00:15. > :00:17.Hello and welcome to The One Show with Matt Baker.
:00:18. > :00:23.After last night some are looking for good reasons to be cheerful.
:00:24. > :00:41.How about a hilarious new movie in which a supermodel gets
:00:42. > :00:53.I am here on the red carpet at London's biggest fashion event of
:00:54. > :01:03.the year. Stella! You are not wearing my clothes, are you? No,
:01:04. > :01:07.darling. Have you seen Kate? I am going to roll away... Hi, darling,
:01:08. > :01:12.don't you remember me? I can't believe you are still... Alive! .
:01:13. > :01:18.Kate, Kate! it's Jennifer Saunders
:01:19. > :01:30.and Julia Sawahla. Good evening. Amazing. There is a
:01:31. > :01:36.lot of excitement about the new Ab Fab movie. Could you just clear
:01:37. > :01:42.something up for me straightaway. Is Alex in the movie? I have not heard
:01:43. > :01:50.nothing but the end of this. Come on, Jennifer, tell him. Oh, I don't
:01:51. > :01:57.know... I haven't seen it. She's not in the poster. I thought you would
:01:58. > :02:02.be in that clip. Well, it goes on. The jeopardy goes on. We were by
:02:03. > :02:07.Tower Bridge, it was freezing, I was there. I have heard all the stories.
:02:08. > :02:09.What a diva! Seriously, we are going to find out if you are in the final
:02:10. > :02:14.cut. Andrew Neil is also with us
:02:15. > :02:17.for a bit of heavyweight comment after we hear how four days
:02:18. > :02:19.of political turmoil have left That was the city whose emphatic
:02:20. > :02:23.vote to leave on Thursday was the first clue that a surprise
:02:24. > :02:37.referendum result was on the cards. I have just arrived in Sunderland,
:02:38. > :02:45.the first of many places to vote Leave at 61%. Lads, are you Remain
:02:46. > :02:49.or Leave? I voted Leave. Leave, as well. You think there is positivity
:02:50. > :02:54.around what is going to happen? I think at the moment, no. No, still a
:02:55. > :02:59.lot of fear around there. There would have been fear if the Remain
:03:00. > :03:03.vote won because of the same issues still there. There is a suggestion a
:03:04. > :03:11.lot of the Leave campaign has been driven by racism and bigotry. Are
:03:12. > :03:17.you angry at the negative around it? That was never part of my vote.
:03:18. > :03:20.Without immigration and freedom of movement our job would be, well,
:03:21. > :03:25.wouldn't be here right now. Which side were you on? I voted in. What's
:03:26. > :03:33.your reaction now it's the other way? I am just interested in knowing
:03:34. > :03:38.who's going to take over as Prime Minister. Let's see what comes next.
:03:39. > :03:47.I am happy. Really, you voted to Leave? I did. Any regrets? No, I was
:03:48. > :03:52.delighted we got the result. You feel positive with about the future?
:03:53. > :03:56.Who knows what the future holds. Were you Leave or Remain? Remain.
:03:57. > :04:00.Completely, I was really disappointed when I realised what
:04:01. > :04:04.had happened. How do you feel now? I feel like the next generation's
:04:05. > :04:08.going to be ruined for my son. I feel people haven't choose right.
:04:09. > :04:12.They haven't looked into it properly and I don't think it's been the
:04:13. > :04:16.right decision at all. It's going back in time rather than progressing
:04:17. > :04:20.forward. I am totally ashamed to be British at this moment. Were you
:04:21. > :04:25.Leave or Remain? I was Leave. What's the positives? I am hoping now that
:04:26. > :04:29.the Government is going to listen to the people, the people have spoken.
:04:30. > :04:34.And said we are not happy about the way things have been run before, now
:04:35. > :04:40.we have more power back, please listen. You look forward to a Great
:04:41. > :04:46.Britain? I feel optimistic about it, I do. I don't feel doom and gloom
:04:47. > :04:50.that there seems to be a sense of, whether people voted Remain, I hope
:04:51. > :04:55.I made the right decision. But I know that I did what I felt was
:04:56. > :05:01.right for me and my family. I would like to see someone press the button
:05:02. > :05:04.and start the process. You think pull off the plaster and get going?
:05:05. > :05:09.Let's try and make sense of some of it with Andrew Neil.
:05:10. > :05:11.We're also joined by brothers Nigel and Ian Baxter who appeared
:05:12. > :05:13.on the show in the run-up to the referendum.
:05:14. > :05:16.They run haulage businesses on the opposite sides of the same road.
:05:17. > :05:18.They were very divided when it came to Brexit.
:05:19. > :05:21.Ian voted Remain and Nigel voted to Leave.
:05:22. > :05:27.Both of you not happy with the choice of us reshowing those
:05:28. > :05:31.t-shirts again! Lads, how is family life since? I am disappointed with
:05:32. > :05:36.the result but we have got on well. We have got to accept it now as
:05:37. > :05:39.families and also as the nation and come together and try and find a way
:05:40. > :05:44.forward that works for everyone. What was that first phone call like?
:05:45. > :05:47.We were texting all night. It was the most exciting night of politics
:05:48. > :05:54.I think anyone can imagine to be honest. There is democracy at work
:05:55. > :05:56.for you. LAUGHTER
:05:57. > :06:01.Well, it was, everybody was asked to vote. The question was answered.
:06:02. > :06:05.Andrew, people who wanted to Leave want us to get on with it but those
:06:06. > :06:08.who want us to Remain are hopeful it won't actually happen. How are you
:06:09. > :06:12.seeing it? I think it's going to happen. It's unstoppable now because
:06:13. > :06:15.whoever's the next Prime Minister will trigger the mechanism and once
:06:16. > :06:20.that's done you have two years in which to negotiate the terms of
:06:21. > :06:23.exit. That's pretty unstoppable. The European Union's in that mood, as
:06:24. > :06:27.well, they didn't want us to go but we voted and so the negotiations
:06:28. > :06:32.begin. The key thing is this Article 50 which is in the Lisbon Treaty,
:06:33. > :06:36.that's basically the European Union constitution. When you trigger that
:06:37. > :06:40.you set the clock going and you can't really stop it. It's a
:06:41. > :06:44.two-year process. We are in the driving seat as a country as to when
:06:45. > :06:49.we trigger it. The European Union can't tell us when to trigger it. We
:06:50. > :06:53.won't do that before the autumn. But the key obviously is who is going to
:06:54. > :06:57.be triggering it, who will become Prime Minister? That's very
:06:58. > :07:02.interesting in itself because if you get somebody like Jeremy Hunt who
:07:03. > :07:06.has said he is going to have another referendum potentially on the deal,
:07:07. > :07:09.then you have Theresa May in the Remain camp and she's going to
:07:10. > :07:15.stretch it for as long as possible. Who do you see the person that would
:07:16. > :07:18.press that trigger the quickest? The favourite is Boris Johnson. At the
:07:19. > :07:23.moment. We don't know but he is running with Michael Gove, it's a
:07:24. > :07:27.joint ticket. There will be a stop Boris candidate, Boris is not that
:07:28. > :07:31.popular in the Tory Party parliamentary party. But he is
:07:32. > :07:35.popular in the country. They've to whittle it down to two. The stop
:07:36. > :07:38.Boris candidate will be Theresa May, I think. The MPs will narrow it
:07:39. > :07:43.down. There are other candidates in the field, too. We live in an age
:07:44. > :07:48.now where people like me predict things and it turns out the exact
:07:49. > :07:52.opposite happens, whether it's Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the
:07:53. > :07:57.Labour Party or Donald Trump making the republican nomination. It looks
:07:58. > :08:01.like MPs will get the numbers down to two, Boris Johnson, Theresa May,
:08:02. > :08:07.they go to the Tory Party in the country. We will get the decision on
:08:08. > :08:11.September 9th. Whoever wins is the next Prime Minister. From the people
:08:12. > :08:15.that are there as the options do you feel confident in these politicians
:08:16. > :08:19.to take us forward to this new era? I think the two candidates Andrew
:08:20. > :08:23.outlined are definitely going to be the frontrunners for that. I would
:08:24. > :08:26.hope so. What we definitely need is a Conservative Party that's back
:08:27. > :08:29.together and we definitely need a country that's back together. That's
:08:30. > :08:34.an absolute imperative. You can't speak for everybody who voted out
:08:35. > :08:38.but when would you like to see the trigger pressed? I think that we
:08:39. > :08:43.have to wait until we have a new leader, a new Prime Minister. That's
:08:44. > :08:47.got to be the starting point of this negotiation or at least it would
:08:48. > :08:51.seem that way with terms coming out of the EU. I think we are stuck
:08:52. > :08:55.until the autumn, frankly. Andrew, a word on everything that's been
:08:56. > :09:00.happening recently. Have you managed to get any sleep? You can get - you
:09:01. > :09:02.can't go to sleep and you wake up and the exact opposite of what I
:09:03. > :09:06.have told everybody has happened! Normally in my business if the
:09:07. > :09:09.Tories are down, Labour's up. If Labour's down the Tories are up.
:09:10. > :09:13.They're both in chaos at the moment. It's unprecedented. What about
:09:14. > :09:18.Jeremy Corbyn, is he going to survive? I have come from the
:09:19. > :09:22.Commons, we don't know what now happens, the parliamentary party
:09:23. > :09:26.voted 80% no confidence in him. He is saying, so what? What do you want
:09:27. > :09:32.me to do? I am not going to stand down. We will now see this week,
:09:33. > :09:35.there will be a leadership challenge to Jeremy Corbyn. But that
:09:36. > :09:40.leadership challenge goes back to the Labour Party in the country,
:09:41. > :09:45.made up of the very people who elected Jeremy Corbyn. You could go
:09:46. > :09:49.around full circle and still be back with Jeremy Corbyn again. This
:09:50. > :09:53.summer we will have two leadership campaigns going. In your busy
:09:54. > :09:58.schedule thank you for stopping by. Thanks, lads. It's a big night for
:09:59. > :10:04.you. You are both fans of Absolutely Fabulous!
:10:05. > :10:07.When a statue of Mary Seacole is unveiled on Thursday many
:10:08. > :10:09.will see it as righting a serious wrong and celebrating
:10:10. > :10:12.a black woman whose place in history was forgotten.
:10:13. > :10:14.A few won't be celebrating, though, and say her role
:10:15. > :10:24.David Olusoga goes in search of the truth.
:10:25. > :10:29.In 2004 a national campaign was launched to identify the most
:10:30. > :10:34.important black people in British history. At the top of the list was
:10:35. > :10:39.a woman who many people had never heard of. Who is the greatest black
:10:40. > :10:45.Briton of them all? The winner announced today is Mary Seacole.
:10:46. > :10:52.Mary Seacole was a Jamaican woman who nursed injured and wounded
:10:53. > :10:57.soldiers during the Crimean war. She's buried here in London and
:10:58. > :11:01.until she won that poll in 2004 this was one of the only memorials to
:11:02. > :11:06.her. Since the poll brought her back into
:11:07. > :11:12.British consciousness, Mary Seacole has been added to the national
:11:13. > :11:21.curriculum, celebrated with a blue plaque and now a statue in her
:11:22. > :11:26.honour. But the story of Mary Seacole has also unleashed conflict
:11:27. > :11:29.and controversy because she made her name in the Crimean War she has
:11:30. > :11:34.perhaps inevitably been compared to Florence Nightingale.
:11:35. > :11:38.And there are those today who claim that her contribution wasn't
:11:39. > :11:44.significant enough to merit a place in our history books. What is the
:11:45. > :11:51.truth about Mary Seacole. This historian has been researching her
:11:52. > :11:56.work in the Crimea in London. She set up this general store but, more
:11:57. > :12:03.importantly, she also ran a kind of informal clinic. So, anyone who felt
:12:04. > :12:06.unwell could go and get medicine for their stomach upsets or have a wound
:12:07. > :12:10.stitched or even a bullet removed. She could certainly do those things.
:12:11. > :12:14.Was she a qualified nurse? Of course not. Because it was Florence
:12:15. > :12:20.Nightingale who instituted training for nurses after the Crimean War.
:12:21. > :12:27.She was a nurse in the broad sense of a care-giver, someone who mocked
:12:28. > :12:31.the fevered brow. We know about her impact in the Crimea because British
:12:32. > :12:36.soldiers wrote about her in letters home and journals. This is from a
:12:37. > :12:45.journal of a British medical officer. He says, her fame as a
:12:46. > :12:52.doctor are spread all over the camp. The extraordinary thing you find is
:12:53. > :12:58.if there is one person everyone knew it was Mary Seacole. The medicines
:12:59. > :13:03.she used on the British soldiers she treated were traditional herbal
:13:04. > :13:08.recommend tees from the Caribbean, learned at her mother's knee. Great.
:13:09. > :13:12.Thank you. This was actually a key ingredients Mary used, cinnamon
:13:13. > :13:21.bark. She would grind it, pound it, boil it up with water and sweeten it
:13:22. > :13:30.then. The other thing she used were fruits like guava and pommegranate.
:13:31. > :13:36.Liquids were her fundamental treatment. Her remedies were famed
:13:37. > :13:41.for effectiveness but over the years she was gradually forgotten. When
:13:42. > :13:44.most people think of the war they think of Florence Nightingale, a
:13:45. > :13:48.figure more famous. No one can take away from the extraordinary
:13:49. > :13:51.reputation of Florence Nightingale, she was a true pioneer. They were
:13:52. > :13:59.two very different women. Mary was her own woman with her own unique
:14:00. > :14:03.Jamaican methods. Mary was forgotten almost a century. There is many
:14:04. > :14:07.black figures in British history who were written out of our national
:14:08. > :14:11.story. Do you think race played a part in Mary's disappearance? It
:14:12. > :14:16.must have played some part but I don't see it as a really active
:14:17. > :14:23.forgetting. The huge problem with Mary is we have no paper trail. Once
:14:24. > :14:29.Mary died it was more of forgetting than I think an active racist
:14:30. > :14:35.deliberate desire to eradicate her from history. Mary Seacole is the
:14:36. > :14:39.first named black woman to be honoured with a statue in Britain.
:14:40. > :14:41.She may still be compared to Florence Nightingale, but her place
:14:42. > :14:48.in British history now seems assured.
:14:49. > :14:53.I think we should remember Mary Seacole in her own right and for her
:14:54. > :14:56.own achievements, both she and Florence Nightingale made unique
:14:57. > :15:00.contributions but there is plenty of room in our historic memory of the
:15:01. > :15:02.Crimean War for both of them. And the statue of Mary will be
:15:03. > :15:14.unveiled this Thursday. We run our on from politics and talk
:15:15. > :15:21.about Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie. We have seen these pictures
:15:22. > :15:26.of you from Pride, it sets the tone nicely. If you zoom out, you can see
:15:27. > :15:33.the jury... Look at insignificant Dominic! Glorious pictures, such
:15:34. > :15:40.colour. Let's talk about how Eddie and Patsy have moved on, and Saffy,
:15:41. > :15:51.since we saw them last. They are older! Whistles in 2012, the last
:15:52. > :16:00.thing... But Edina is slowing down and life is overtaking her such a
:16:01. > :16:03.she doesn't understand Twitter, ats, Snap chat, it panics are a bit
:16:04. > :16:08.because he doesn't want to stop, she has to be at the forefront.
:16:09. > :16:16.Emotionally, none of them have changed. They are still stuck. They
:16:17. > :16:21.have a huge house. I don't think the neighbours even realise that she has
:16:22. > :16:27.taken their swimming pool! She is literally doubled around other
:16:28. > :16:38.people's property. -- Bill Wills. It has taken 46 will years to write
:16:39. > :16:44.this -- 26. How do you! I have had a career, Julia! Everybody has been
:16:45. > :16:49.asking for a long time to have a movie of this. We were enjoying
:16:50. > :16:52.television. We were very busy. Wasn't it actually done to your
:16:53. > :17:01.great friend Dawn French and in the end you will bleed into it? --
:17:02. > :17:08.bullied into it. The lead is a good word. We stupidly agreed. She said,
:17:09. > :17:14.what are you doing next year? Is that I am writing the Ab Fab movie.
:17:15. > :17:20.She said, I bet he went thousand pounds when he don't write it. I
:17:21. > :17:28.said, I can't take a bite. I thought, this will take a minute. I
:17:29. > :17:37.started on December 23. Just on Christmas Day. A hot sweat came over
:17:38. > :17:43.me. Do you remember the first sentence you wrote? Not at all. Most
:17:44. > :17:49.of the script I handed to her just said blah blah blah. It was just
:17:50. > :17:52.paper. Although it has taken a while to do, because you were talking
:17:53. > :17:55.about Twitter and the dawn of technology and all of that, it's a
:17:56. > :17:59.really good time to have done it, because there is a lot happening to
:18:00. > :18:03.that generation that feel like they are out of touch with technology.
:18:04. > :18:07.And of course the Saffy now has a 13-year-old daughter, my
:18:08. > :18:12.granddaughter, so she has to keep up with it as well. So there is another
:18:13. > :18:19.dysfunctional relationship going on, that continues to stop like in all
:18:20. > :18:26.families. Shall we see in action, this is in the aftermath of the Kate
:18:27. > :18:33.Moss incident. Can you just shut up, I am trying to do my mindlessness. I
:18:34. > :18:40.am being treated on twitter. Everybody ate me. -- hates me.
:18:41. > :18:51.Earlier, woman shouted at me. She told me I was a pariah. Do you know
:18:52. > :19:01.with the is? -- what a pariah is? It's a fish. Tremendous, tremendous.
:19:02. > :19:08.Absolutely wonderful. But was one of the first jokes I wrote. I do
:19:09. > :19:19.remember that. It stayed in the film, Alex! Jennifer, come on now!
:19:20. > :19:23.Your character, Julia, it is so levelling, with all this happening,
:19:24. > :19:29.there is so much happening, and it's so funny, was it hard for you to not
:19:30. > :19:35.be able to visually enjoy it and laugh and be part of that energy,
:19:36. > :19:39.because you are so levelling? Yeah, when we'd used to do the series,
:19:40. > :19:45.used to get all my laughing out in rehearsals as much as I could. It is
:19:46. > :19:49.difficult, of course you want to laugh but you don't want to ruin
:19:50. > :19:53.somebody's performance. But actually, she breaks my heart more
:19:54. > :19:57.than she makes me laugh, because she is such a fantastic actress and as
:19:58. > :20:06.my mother, when she looks like this last little child, it actually makes
:20:07. > :20:12.me really love her. Why is everyone laughing? It adds to the comedy.
:20:13. > :20:17.Eddie noticed makes more and more addicted and when we first
:20:18. > :20:22.auditioned for the part of Saffy, she came along and I realised that
:20:23. > :20:25.as I was doing a dinner and she was sitting there, couldn't even look at
:20:26. > :20:31.her, I thought, she thinks I'm an idiot. I thought you hated me. I
:20:32. > :20:37.thought you were terrifying. And it works, completely. It is just been
:20:38. > :20:45.brilliant. Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie it out on Friday. In the film,
:20:46. > :20:47.they head to the south of France to escape justice.
:20:48. > :20:50.We're not sure what Christine Walkden and the dancer Wayne Sleep
:20:51. > :20:52.are running away from now but they are having an uproarious
:20:53. > :21:00.time recreating Wayne's childhood holidays.
:21:01. > :21:10.Five foot two, eyes of blue, has anybody seen my girl? That's the
:21:11. > :21:15.one! I am on Dartmoor with Britain's most famous wine Ballet star, Wayne
:21:16. > :21:20.Sleep. I remember singing that in my first ever competition. I tap danced
:21:21. > :21:25.with my feet turned down like Charlie Chaplin, which is perfect
:21:26. > :21:29.for classical ballet. So when she gave me the cut for the under 12, I
:21:30. > :21:36.was only eight, said where is his mother, he must learn ballet. My
:21:37. > :21:39.mother said, Ballet, never! She was totally against that. So were the
:21:40. > :21:44.rest of my family, they always thought it had a connotation about
:21:45. > :21:53.men doing it, which is totally wrong, but we were naive and
:21:54. > :21:56.ignorant. We'll go back to the 1950s, when Wayne and his family
:21:57. > :22:02.used to go back to Dartmoor for camping holidays. I used to love
:22:03. > :22:08.watching the ground below. Natural ventilation! We're at the actual
:22:09. > :22:18.field where Wayne and his family used to camp. I can remember this,
:22:19. > :22:23.it was all on a slot. -- slope. What would you doing camping on a slope?!
:22:24. > :22:27.I remember this ram which was running wild and I remember being
:22:28. > :22:30.pulled up a tree at the age of three, screaming and crying, because
:22:31. > :22:39.I thought, they had horns and everything! Time to roll up our
:22:40. > :22:48.sleeves and save Wayne... See if he remembers how to pull up a tent. Up,
:22:49. > :22:56.up! Are you all right for one minute?
:22:57. > :23:05.That was easy! Just in time for his guest. How are you? Joe is his
:23:06. > :23:12.younger sister from his mum's later marriage. There is my great
:23:13. > :23:15.grandfather, there is me as a baby and my mother in the middle. My
:23:16. > :23:20.mother brought me up by herself, she had a wonderful soprano voice, she
:23:21. > :23:25.got a contract with the BBC. And she didn't take it. I think because she
:23:26. > :23:31.had me, she felt guilty about being a one parent family. Wayne won a
:23:32. > :23:38.scholarship to the Royal Ballet will he was 12 but was one big problem.
:23:39. > :23:44.You have always been small. How did that affect your career? It ruined
:23:45. > :23:48.it. You have to be at least five foot seven, anything like that, the
:23:49. > :23:53.partner a small girl. The founder of the Royal Ballet said on the spin
:23:54. > :23:58.twice as fast as everybody else and jump twice as high, and I could
:23:59. > :24:04.never play the Prince in Swan Lake, because I would come on and I would
:24:05. > :24:08.be smaller than the chorus girls. It turned to my advantage because I had
:24:09. > :24:13.roles in a specially created for me. I would have been really depressed
:24:14. > :24:17.about it but suddenly realised I was an individual and I could do things
:24:18. > :24:22.the other dancers couldn't. When's incredible agility made him a star
:24:23. > :24:28.and in 1985 the things he danced with his biggest fan, Princess
:24:29. > :24:35.Diana. Did you have to practice and not? We did. I had to grab moments
:24:36. > :24:39.with her, sometimes down the telephone, kick, step, kick comes
:24:40. > :24:46.next. Things like that. I remember when she ran offstage, with me,
:24:47. > :24:53.after the eighth curtain call, she whispered, beats the wedding! But
:24:54. > :24:58.she didn't mean that, of course! It was a joke, it was a joke! I might
:24:59. > :24:59.not be Princess Diana but I can't leave Wayne without a quick dance
:25:00. > :25:07.lesson. I think I will stick to gardening!
:25:08. > :25:18.Your very sweet. Probably a good idea! Although her
:25:19. > :25:25.and Wayne are a brilliant combination. A partnership in the
:25:26. > :25:32.making. It is time to reveal if Alex is actually in the new Ab Fab movie.
:25:33. > :25:42.I might have evidence! Let's have a look.
:25:43. > :25:50.Can you tell us what that was? I can't say too much, can I? Lulu
:25:51. > :25:58.comes down the red carpet and I'm asking personal questions. I ask why
:25:59. > :26:07.she is so small? And this is a underling Christie, where is she so
:26:08. > :26:15.tall? My usual line of questioning. A great segue. Thank you so much,
:26:16. > :26:21.Jennifer. Thank you for doing it. It is more than a pleasure. 59 other
:26:22. > :26:25.famous faces make an appearance, including the likes of John Hamm and
:26:26. > :26:33.John Collins, but nobody from Countryfile! Just saying. You were
:26:34. > :26:37.saying thank you there, how does the whole thing happen? People were
:26:38. > :26:47.bringing you up to begin the movie. Just people whistle casually. --
:26:48. > :26:52.Riso casually. We asked them. She wasn't ringing up, begging. Although
:26:53. > :26:59.had I known your number I would have been! We are going to play a little
:27:00. > :27:01.game now, called who I, sweetie. We have a super fan to play the game,
:27:02. > :27:09.please welcome Cathy. Say hello before I am blindfolded.
:27:10. > :27:24.Is this surreal for you? It is. This is how it works. Some faces of
:27:25. > :27:30.celebrities who are making a cameos in the film are going to appear in
:27:31. > :27:36.this monitor, the Ab Fab monitor. You will describe the celebrity and
:27:37. > :27:43.she will guess who the celebrity is, if that's OK. A bit like beer
:27:44. > :27:52.goggles, champagne goggles! You look like you can see. Why are you being
:27:53. > :28:01.so competitive? I don't want her to win! Very glamorous, had a sister
:28:02. > :28:09.who wrote loads of books. Joan Collins! Has a chat show. Irish. I
:28:10. > :28:19.was in it the other night. Graham Norton! She's sitting just run away
:28:20. > :28:26.from you now. Alex Jones! Australian, Queen of chat shows.
:28:27. > :28:35.Dame Edna. My other comedy partner apart from Joanna Lumley. The
:28:36. > :28:43.French. Storming it now. Supermodel. Kate Moss. Australian, the funniest
:28:44. > :28:58.thing on legs and now. I know who you mean. Rebel... Rebel Wilson.
:28:59. > :29:12.Last one. I have mentioned in the intro. It's not port... John Hamm!
:29:13. > :29:19.We have got a treat for you. We have got a special surprise for you. Ten
:29:20. > :29:27.seconds! Tickets to the next England match! You are going to be premiered
:29:28. > :29:29.on Friday! That if it! See you tomorrow.