:00:00. > :00:00.Good morning, Ayshah here with loads of stuff you need
:00:00. > :00:11.Paralympic GB have another golden day at the games and it's a hundred
:00:12. > :00:28.It's one of the BBC's most successful and popular shows,
:00:29. > :00:33.We don't know yet whether the two judges,
:00:34. > :00:36.Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood, will move with the show.
:00:37. > :00:39.Channel 4 is understood to have offered more money than the BBC
:00:40. > :00:46.The first show from channel 4 is expected to be on tv next year.
:00:47. > :00:48.Next, to the Paralympic Games in Rio, where three golds
:00:49. > :00:52.in the pool helped push the British team's medal tally to 63 in Brazil,
:00:53. > :00:54.putting them second in the medal table behind China.
:00:55. > :01:06.Welcome to British house, the official home of Paralympics GB.
:01:07. > :01:09.There has been plenty to celebrate here on day five because the British
:01:10. > :01:15.athletes have back even more medals in record-breaking fashion. All eyes
:01:16. > :01:22.were on British swimming's: Beryl Ellie Simmonds is you want to defend
:01:23. > :01:27.her 200 metre medley title. She won it in London four years ago. The
:01:28. > :01:32.21-year-old did not disappoint, winning the gold medal in a
:01:33. > :01:39.world-record time. I was so nervous going into that race. I thought all
:01:40. > :01:44.my gosh I am going to be sick! But I had a great warm up and I have just
:01:45. > :01:49.really chuffed. It hasn't sunk in yet. Ellie wasn't the only one
:01:50. > :01:52.winning gold in the pool, 32 Sasha Kendrick pushed his body to the
:01:53. > :01:59.limit to win the 200 metre individual medley, winning goals in
:02:00. > :02:03.a new world record time. As if to cause wasn't enough, Suzy Rogers
:02:04. > :02:07.completed a hat-trick of winning goals for Adam Voges GB, coming
:02:08. > :02:14.through a tough final to win the S 750 mile -- 50 metre butterfly
:02:15. > :02:17.title. And when's Will Bailey celebrated his first Paralympic
:02:18. > :02:24.medal in style by jumping on the table after his victory in the men's
:02:25. > :02:29.seven class table tennis final. Finally most adept Davies set a new
:02:30. > :02:32.record of 59.7 metres in the men's shop at final. Improving on the
:02:33. > :02:38.bronze medal he won at London 2012. The summer holidays might be over -
:02:39. > :02:41.but it looks like nobody In fact today could be the hottest
:02:42. > :02:46.September day in more than 40 years. Here's BBC weatherman
:02:47. > :02:51.Simon King with more. Just as we were going back to school
:02:52. > :02:55.we will see some really hot weather missing in across the United Kingdom
:02:56. > :02:58.coming from the new continent. But that is coming in from the map. The
:02:59. > :03:01.heat will only affect England and Wales and it would be cooler with
:03:02. > :03:06.showers and some strong winds at times further north and west you
:03:07. > :03:10.are. By Tuesday afternoon 31 degrees the south-east, you will notice that
:03:11. > :03:15.those temperatures are going down again by Friday. These temperatures
:03:16. > :03:18.on Tuesday afternoon, widely into the mid-20s but look at the yellow,
:03:19. > :03:22.colour in Scotland and Northern Ireland. These are the overnight
:03:23. > :03:29.temperatures, still very warm overnight into Wednesday morning.
:03:30. > :03:34.Not quite record-breaking. That was in 1986 -- 1906, but it is the
:03:35. > :03:36.warmest weather in 43 years with warm nights as well.
:03:37. > :03:39.Next this morning, to an 11 year old girl who beat
:03:40. > :03:41.thousands of kids to get her short story written in Jacqueline
:03:42. > :03:47.Well I'm delighted to have Emily on the sofa, and also
:03:48. > :04:00.And it's the first time you've met- author meet winner.
:04:01. > :04:07.I am amazed I'm sitting next to Jacqueline Wilson right now. I went
:04:08. > :04:10.to see Hetty the musical and I wanted to involve that with the
:04:11. > :04:15.storyline, so I decided that it would be about somebody who used to
:04:16. > :04:20.be a trapeze artist and the would be a unique twist at the end. I have
:04:21. > :04:24.read the twist and it is brilliant. I think she has done it so well, I
:04:25. > :04:30.mean I would have been proud to have written that study myself and I read
:04:31. > :04:38.the entries and they were also good, but yours, Emily, was right up here.
:04:39. > :04:43.Is the twist why she won? It was a combination of everything, how
:04:44. > :04:47.imaginative way of getting in the head of the main character, I'm not
:04:48. > :04:50.giving anything away, and it was just so beautifully written, so
:04:51. > :04:58.clever, so tender. It was magnificent. And because it is going
:04:59. > :05:02.in my new book I am so proud that I feel I should tell everybody, never
:05:03. > :05:08.mind my story, read Emily 's! It is brilliant. Emily how did you come up
:05:09. > :05:15.with the story and those characters? I wanted it to be about something
:05:16. > :05:20.that people don't usually talk about so I wanted to have the unique twist
:05:21. > :05:25.at the end to make it work unique. Brilliant. Jacqueline, you entered
:05:26. > :05:32.Short story competitions, didn't you? I got nowhere, never at even
:05:33. > :05:37.commended. My friends did, I didn't. Anyone desperate to be a writer and
:05:38. > :05:38.goes in for competitions and gets nowhere, don't give up! A very good
:05:39. > :05:40.lesson to learn. And sticking with brilliant books
:05:41. > :05:42.it's the 100th anniversary So we want to know -
:05:43. > :05:53.what's your favourite book by him? Matilda. The BST. Maine is fantastic
:05:54. > :05:55.Mr Fox. We want to know at all what is yours. What is now online.
:05:56. > :06:00.Goodbye.