Browse content similar to 22/04/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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President Obama warns Britain would be | :00:00. | :00:00. | |
"at the back of the queue" for a trade deal, | :00:07. | :00:09. | |
After talks with David Cameron at Number Ten, | :00:10. | :00:14. | |
he said the special relationship meant the US | :00:15. | :00:16. | |
had to be honest about the upcoming referendum. | :00:17. | :00:20. | |
Because our focus is in negotiating with a big bloc, the European Union, | :00:21. | :00:24. | |
And the UK is going to be in the back of the queue. | :00:25. | :00:32. | |
on his final visit to Britain as President. | :00:33. | :00:39. | |
Boris Johnson says Mr Obama is being "downright hypocritical" | :00:40. | :00:41. | |
for intervening in the EU referendum debate. | :00:42. | :00:44. | |
We'll assess what impact the President's comments | :00:45. | :00:46. | |
A teenager obsessed with the Yorkshire Ripper | :00:47. | :00:52. | |
has been convicted of the murders of two strangers. | :00:53. | :00:56. | |
The owners of Alton Towers admit they breached health | :00:57. | :00:58. | |
and safety regulations, after a collision last summer left | :00:59. | :01:01. | |
They've been celebrating his life around the world. | :01:02. | :01:08. | |
Fans continue to mourn the death of the pop star Prince. | :01:09. | :01:13. | |
Once dismissed as a mediocre manager, now Leicester | :01:14. | :01:15. | |
City's Claudio Rainieri stands to win the Premier League. | :01:16. | :01:20. | |
It's FA Cup semi-finals this weekend, | :01:21. | :01:33. | |
with Martinez and Van Gaal looking to save their seasons. | :01:34. | :02:00. | |
Good evening, and welcome to the BBC News at Six. | :02:01. | :02:03. | |
Barack Obama has urged Britain to stick with the European Union, | :02:04. | :02:06. | |
saying membership magnifies the UK's influence in the world. | :02:07. | :02:11. | |
On his final visit to Britain as President, he had lunch | :02:12. | :02:14. | |
with the Queen at Windsor Castle, and held talks at Number | :02:15. | :02:17. | |
The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, who's campaigning | :02:18. | :02:26. | |
for Britain to leave the EU, says Mr Obama's advice | :02:27. | :02:29. | |
in the referendum debate is "inconsistent and incoherent". | :02:30. | :02:34. | |
Here's John Pienaar, and his report contains | :02:35. | :02:36. | |
When the president comes calling, he starts at the top. Touched down at | :02:37. | :02:53. | |
Windsor Castle for a private visit with the Queen. Well, as private as | :02:54. | :02:58. | |
these visits get. The one person to whom Barack Obama defers. He is here | :02:59. | :03:03. | |
not just as a courtesy on his farewell tour, but I have his say on | :03:04. | :03:07. | |
Britain's place in the world before her subjects decided. Now, which | :03:08. | :03:11. | |
head of state is supposed to go in front? The Royal welcome was warm | :03:12. | :03:19. | |
enough. Warmer than those wanting out of the EU were about to feel | :03:20. | :03:23. | |
about Barack Obama, especially after the business end of his visit, his | :03:24. | :03:28. | |
next stop. And in Downing Street, his welcome looked even warmer. Not | :03:29. | :03:32. | |
just because President and Prime Minister are quite good friends, you | :03:33. | :03:36. | |
could see that, but because the biggest star in world politics was | :03:37. | :03:40. | |
here to help David Cameron in the fight of his life, keeping Britain | :03:41. | :03:44. | |
in the EU and in the process saving the Cameron premiership from a | :03:45. | :03:49. | |
messy, unhappy end. And then they were on. President Obama took his | :03:50. | :03:54. | |
chance and was not holding back. I figured you might want to hear from | :03:55. | :03:59. | |
the President of the United States. On that matter, for example, I think | :04:00. | :04:04. | |
it is fair to say that maybe at some point down the line there might be a | :04:05. | :04:12. | |
UK- US trade agreement, but not any time soon, because our focus is in | :04:13. | :04:16. | |
negotiating with a big block, the European Union, to get a trade | :04:17. | :04:20. | |
agreement done. And the UK is going to be in the back of the queue. | :04:21. | :04:25. | |
Toughest warning yet by far, and he was not sorry for saying it. | :04:26. | :04:31. | |
Ultimately, this is something the British voters have decided to | :04:32. | :04:34. | |
themselves. But, as part of our special relationship, part of being | :04:35. | :04:42. | |
friends, is to be honest, and to let you know what I think. And speaking | :04:43. | :04:48. | |
honestly, the outcome of that decision is a matter of deep | :04:49. | :04:51. | |
interest to the United States, because it affects our prospects as | :04:52. | :04:56. | |
well. David Cameron could not have asked for more. To him, the choice | :04:57. | :05:04. | |
was obvious. Our collective power and reach is amplified by Britain's | :05:05. | :05:08. | |
membership of the European Union. When it comes to the special | :05:09. | :05:12. | |
relationship between our countries, there is no greater enthusiasts than | :05:13. | :05:17. | |
me. I am very proud to have had the opportunity to be Prime Minister and | :05:18. | :05:20. | |
stand outside the White House listening to this man, my friend, | :05:21. | :05:24. | |
say that the special relationship between our countries has never been | :05:25. | :05:28. | |
stronger. But I've never felt constrained in any way in | :05:29. | :05:31. | |
strengthening this relationship by the fact that we are in the European | :05:32. | :05:35. | |
Union. Even before the president said a word, you somehow knew | :05:36. | :05:41. | |
something big was coming, bigger than the Beatles, the Stones all in | :05:42. | :05:45. | |
a row. Maybe some game changer. And what a show when Barack Obama comes | :05:46. | :05:52. | |
to town. In there, it is about international diplomacy, high-stakes | :05:53. | :05:56. | |
politics. Out here, it feels like a crowd at a rock concert, people have | :05:57. | :06:00. | |
come to get a glance at a president more popular than any politician | :06:01. | :06:04. | |
here in their dreams. But can Barack Obama win over minds as well as | :06:05. | :06:09. | |
hearts? If you did not know these two workers, you know now. Their | :06:10. | :06:14. | |
opponents are upset. One of them, Boris Johnson, even doubted whether | :06:15. | :06:18. | |
the president he called part Kenyan had British interests at heart. I | :06:19. | :06:24. | |
think it is perverse that we are being urged by the United States to | :06:25. | :06:28. | |
embroil ourselves ever more deeply in a system where our laws, 60% of | :06:29. | :06:34. | |
them now emanate from the EU, when the United States would not dream of | :06:35. | :06:38. | |
subjugating itself in anyway to any other international jurisdiction. | :06:39. | :06:44. | |
Side-by-side, shoulder to shoulder, Barack Obama has done his part and | :06:45. | :06:48. | |
more. The fight for Britain's future still lies in the balance and that | :06:49. | :06:52. | |
will decide whether the dramatic support David Cameron's closest | :06:53. | :06:55. | |
friend and ally has given is remembered as a prize trophy or just | :06:56. | :07:01. | |
a consolation. Laura Kuenssberg is at the Foreign | :07:02. | :07:05. | |
Office, where President Obama has been speaking in the last few | :07:06. | :07:08. | |
minutes. Tell us how big a moment this could be in the EU debate with | :07:09. | :07:13. | |
the intervention of the president. This feels like it could be a very | :07:14. | :07:18. | |
big moment indeed, because in the last few minutes basically the most | :07:19. | :07:22. | |
powerful politician in the world has said that David Cameron is right in | :07:23. | :07:25. | |
the European Union debate and his rivals are wrong. President Obama, | :07:26. | :07:31. | |
when asked why it was any of his business, insisted he was not | :07:32. | :07:35. | |
interested in fixing any votes. But frankly, if Downing Street had | :07:36. | :07:39. | |
written the script for him it could hardly have been any more | :07:40. | :07:43. | |
supportive, and particularly one of his messages I think we will hear | :07:44. | :07:46. | |
again and again through this campaign, with the economy | :07:47. | :07:49. | |
absolutely the disputed territory at the heart of the campaign, is | :07:50. | :07:54. | |
president Obama's suggestion that if we left the EU, Britain would go to | :07:55. | :07:58. | |
the back of the queue in terms of trying to do a trade deal with the | :07:59. | :08:03. | |
United States. Leaves campaigners say that is something we could do, | :08:04. | :08:07. | |
they tried to breeze over it, saying it could easily be achieved, but -- | :08:08. | :08:13. | |
but Barack Obama has suggested it would be very difficult. That | :08:14. | :08:16. | |
message will go up on the grandeur of the Foreign Office to villages, | :08:17. | :08:19. | |
towns and cities around the country as we get into the campaign in the | :08:20. | :08:21. | |
weeks ahead. Thank you. Jon Sopel has been travelling | :08:22. | :08:24. | |
with President Obama and is outside Kensington Palace | :08:25. | :08:26. | |
for us now. We were promised an intervention by | :08:27. | :08:37. | |
the president. Did anyone expect anything as forthright and Frank is | :08:38. | :08:41. | |
this? Well, we got a clue couple of nights ago when I was travelling | :08:42. | :08:46. | |
with him in Saudi Arabia and one of his closest advisers said to me, | :08:47. | :08:50. | |
there will been ambiguous to about where the president stands. I think | :08:51. | :08:55. | |
he has completely delivered on that. There is no ambiguity. What was | :08:56. | :09:00. | |
interesting was him making the case, not just to help David Cameron, | :09:01. | :09:04. | |
which I think is coincidental. I think the calculation is that it is | :09:05. | :09:08. | |
clearly in America's interests as well that Britain remains part of | :09:09. | :09:12. | |
the European Union because of the economic uncertainty that British | :09:13. | :09:16. | |
departure might bring, which could wash up on American shores. The | :09:17. | :09:20. | |
American political and economic establishment is more or less united | :09:21. | :09:23. | |
in support of Britain remaining in the EU. As for the American people, | :09:24. | :09:28. | |
they will be more interested in the dinner taking place with the | :09:29. | :09:31. | |
Cambridges tonight and the lunch at Windsor Castle, and in particular | :09:32. | :09:35. | |
the Duke of Edinburgh driving the Obamas. I don't know what his Secret | :09:36. | :09:39. | |
Service detail would have thought about that. Many thanks. | :09:40. | :09:43. | |
A teenager from Colchester, described as having a fascination | :09:44. | :09:45. | |
with the Yorkshire Ripper, has been found guilty of murdering | :09:46. | :09:47. | |
James Fairweather who's 17, admitted the manslaughter | :09:48. | :09:52. | |
of James Attfield and Nahid Almanea, but denied murder on grounds | :09:53. | :09:55. | |
of diminished responsibility.Duncan Kennedy is at Guildford Crown Court. | :09:56. | :10:06. | |
This case is shocking on many levels. Not just his age, just 15 at | :10:07. | :10:14. | |
the time, but the brutality with which James Fairweather killed his | :10:15. | :10:19. | |
victims, and also his desire, as you said, to become a serial killer. I | :10:20. | :10:23. | |
should warn viewers they may find some of the images in my report | :10:24. | :10:24. | |
disturbing. This is the 15-year-old schoolboy | :10:25. | :10:26. | |
who's become one of Britain's In this chilling police interview, | :10:27. | :10:28. | |
James Fairweather spoke of hearing voices, as he admitted | :10:29. | :10:32. | |
killing his first victim. While I was doing that, | :10:33. | :10:37. | |
voices were laughing and laughing He's seen here in a bar | :10:38. | :10:47. | |
in Colchester, just before he went outside, where he was stabbed 102 | :10:48. | :10:53. | |
times by Fairweather. Three months later, | :10:54. | :10:59. | |
this security camera caught his second victim, | :11:00. | :11:00. | |
Nahid Almanea, a student Fairweather murdered her on this | :11:01. | :11:03. | |
path in Colchester. 11 months later he was arrested | :11:04. | :11:10. | |
with this knife, as he went looking Today, James Atfield's | :11:11. | :11:13. | |
mother, Julie, spoke We had no idea the | :11:14. | :11:18. | |
killer was so young. James Fairweather is a monster | :11:19. | :11:24. | |
in our eyes and we will never be The jury was told Fairweather, | :11:25. | :11:27. | |
who has autism, fantasised about serial killers | :11:28. | :11:32. | |
like the Yorkshire Ripper, the Stockwell Strangler | :11:33. | :11:35. | |
and the American Ted Bundy, keeping images of them on his phone | :11:36. | :11:41. | |
and watching violent DVDs. Some want to be footballers, | :11:42. | :11:47. | |
some want to be ballet dancers, some want to be pop stars, | :11:48. | :11:50. | |
some just want to be ordinary people with ordinary lives they can go | :11:51. | :11:53. | |
about and enjoy. This particular offender, | :11:54. | :11:55. | |
through a fascination with serial killers, wanted to | :11:56. | :11:57. | |
become a serial killer. The families of both victims say | :11:58. | :12:00. | |
they've been devastated by the actions of James Fairweather, | :12:01. | :12:02. | |
still only 17, and who will be Duncan Kennedy, BBC | :12:03. | :12:07. | |
News, in Guildford. Representatives from | :12:08. | :12:14. | |
more than 170 countries have been signing the first global | :12:15. | :12:16. | |
agreement on climate change, The deal was reached last December, | :12:17. | :12:19. | |
and aims to keep the rise in global temperatures below | :12:20. | :12:24. | |
two degrees Celsius. The owner of Alton Towers theme park | :12:25. | :12:34. | |
has admitted breaching health and safety regulations, | :12:35. | :12:37. | |
after a carriage collided with an empty car on the Smiler Ride | :12:38. | :12:39. | |
in June last year, leaving five Merlin Attractions Operations, | :12:40. | :12:42. | |
has been warned it faces One of the victims most | :12:43. | :12:45. | |
seriously injured has spoken exclusively to the BBC, | :12:46. | :12:48. | |
saying collision was like It was at Alton Towers' star | :12:49. | :12:50. | |
attraction that lives changed Chanda Chauhan and her daughters | :12:51. | :12:58. | |
Venetia and Meera were among Chanda suffered a ruptured liver | :12:59. | :13:03. | |
and internal bleeding. This is the first time she's spoken | :13:04. | :13:08. | |
about what happened. We were in a horror movie | :13:09. | :13:13. | |
with things, flesh, So although we were not | :13:14. | :13:19. | |
cut and our scars were They came to court to hear the theme | :13:20. | :13:25. | |
park's owners admit failing to These pictures taken | :13:26. | :13:36. | |
during their Health and Safety Executive investigation show how | :13:37. | :13:43. | |
the carriage was crushed. Two young women suffered leg | :13:44. | :13:45. | |
amputations. Victoria Balch and Leah Washington | :13:46. | :13:49. | |
had been sitting in the front row. They were the most | :13:50. | :13:55. | |
seriously injured. Today was certainly | :13:56. | :13:58. | |
not about victory. Today was certainly not | :13:59. | :14:00. | |
about retribution but it was a very important step, | :14:01. | :14:03. | |
a psychological milestone along the The Smiler ride has now | :14:04. | :14:10. | |
reopened after the company's own investigation revealed | :14:11. | :14:16. | |
human error was to blame. Today Merlin Attractions said | :14:17. | :14:21. | |
they had accepted responsibility from the outset | :14:22. | :14:23. | |
and sought to support the injured. The company will be sentenced | :14:24. | :14:29. | |
in the Crown Court and could face | :14:30. | :14:30. | |
a multi-million pound fine. Sian Lloyd, BBC News, | :14:31. | :14:34. | |
Staffordshire. President Obama ones that Britain | :14:35. | :14:58. | |
would be at the back of the queue for a trade deal with America if it | :14:59. | :15:05. | |
left the European Union. To be, or not to be. Why Shakespeare is still | :15:06. | :15:08. | |
a superstar- videos his death. Coming up in Sportsday in the next | :15:09. | :15:11. | |
15 minutes on BBC News we will look ahead to Sunday's London Marathon, | :15:12. | :15:14. | |
with the Weir Wolf aiming for a record seventh win in | :15:15. | :15:17. | |
the wheelchair race. He's the Premier League manager once | :15:18. | :15:26. | |
dismissed as a "tinkerman", changing teams from game to game, | :15:27. | :15:31. | |
with little strategic nous. Now, as boss of | :15:32. | :15:34. | |
Leicester City and five with just four games to go, | :15:35. | :15:37. | |
Claudio Ranieri is being touted Our Sports Editor Dan Roan has been | :15:38. | :15:41. | |
speaking exclusively He is on the verge of masterminding | :15:42. | :15:56. | |
a true sporting fairy tale. So far Claudio Ranieri has taken it in his | :15:57. | :16:02. | |
stride. The Leicester City manager refusing to get carried away but | :16:03. | :16:05. | |
today he told me the Premier League leaders were intent on completing a | :16:06. | :16:11. | |
remarkable journey. Four matches to go, we are straightaway trying to | :16:12. | :16:15. | |
win the title. Trying to win the title with all our strength, heart, | :16:16. | :16:20. | |
soul. We have to try. Try because now is the right moment. This year, | :16:21. | :16:29. | |
Warner for more. It is now or never? Now or never. Having been 5000-1 to | :16:30. | :16:34. | |
win the title at the start of the season list of city have defied all | :16:35. | :16:39. | |
expectations and now need only eight points to guarantee one of the | :16:40. | :16:42. | |
greatest shocks in sporting history. Does it feel like a dream at times? | :16:43. | :16:48. | |
Yes, it feels like a dream because once I came here, I say, I hope to | :16:49. | :16:53. | |
make a very good season but of course, never, never can I think | :16:54. | :17:03. | |
what happened. Their squad cost a fraction of some of their wealthier | :17:04. | :17:07. | |
Premier League rivals, Ranieri has forged a special bond with his | :17:08. | :17:16. | |
players. They have a lot of energy. They understand the moment. It's | :17:17. | :17:23. | |
fantastic. It's good. How proud of them are you? I'm very proud to | :17:24. | :17:29. | |
manage these men, not players, men. The charismatic Italian puts the | :17:30. | :17:35. | |
success of the underdog is down to a host of factors, among them the | :17:36. | :17:39. | |
support of the club's owners, from Thailand, and the loyal fans. Yet he | :17:40. | :17:42. | |
believes that whatever happens this season, the elite need not worry. | :17:43. | :17:49. | |
Leicester, a little team, can fight against them, the biggest in the | :17:50. | :17:53. | |
world. It could happen, it could happen. It is a good story. It is a | :17:54. | :18:02. | |
good story, but not the normality. Tinkerman's long managerial career | :18:03. | :18:06. | |
has taken him on a tour of some of the biggest clubs in Europe and his | :18:07. | :18:10. | |
defining moment could be about to come. You have won much in your | :18:11. | :18:14. | |
career but you have never won a major domestic league title. You | :18:15. | :18:19. | |
have been the nearly man. Is it now time you to be the main man? I hope. | :18:20. | :18:27. | |
I hope so. Ranieri has already guided Leicester City to the | :18:28. | :18:30. | |
Champions League. Now all that remains is for them to become | :18:31. | :18:35. | |
champions and seal place in sporting folklore. Dan Rowan, BBC News, | :18:36. | :18:37. | |
Leicester. A post-mortem examination | :18:38. | :18:42. | |
is being carried out on the body of the pop star Prince, | :18:43. | :18:45. | |
whose sudden death at the age of 57 He was found at his home | :18:46. | :18:48. | |
in Minneapolis yesterday. Around the globe fans have been | :18:49. | :18:52. | |
celebrating his life, with purple coloured | :18:53. | :18:54. | |
tributes and dance parties, and hundreds of people have gathered | :18:55. | :18:55. | |
outside his home, to Our Correspondent James Cook | :18:56. | :18:58. | |
is there for us now. James? Yes, the postmortem | :18:59. | :19:07. | |
examination began at nine o'clock this morning local time, that is | :19:08. | :19:11. | |
just over three hours ago. I have just spoken to the coroner 's office | :19:12. | :19:14. | |
and they say it should be nearing its conclusion. The results might be | :19:15. | :19:21. | |
some time in coming. Meanwhile at Paisley Park, fans continue to | :19:22. | :19:22. | |
gather and to pay their tributes. In Minneapolis, where a star | :19:23. | :19:26. | |
was born, and where he died, Remembering a local hero | :19:27. | :19:29. | |
who became a global superstar. Across the United States and beyond, | :19:30. | :19:37. | |
one colour said it all. Famous landmarks glowing in tribute | :19:38. | :19:45. | |
and everywhere singing and dancing in memory of an artist | :19:46. | :19:47. | |
who redefined music. On Broadway, Jennifer Hudson led | :19:48. | :19:50. | |
the cast of The Color For his friends, Prince's sudden | :19:51. | :19:59. | |
and still unexplained I'm just glad I was able to say | :20:00. | :20:08. | |
to him "I love you", the last time At Prince's Paisley | :20:09. | :20:28. | |
Park home and studio It appears the artist was already | :20:29. | :20:31. | |
dead when he was found slumped Exactly how Prince died | :20:32. | :20:37. | |
here is still unclear. The county coroner's office has | :20:38. | :20:52. | |
warned it could be several weeks before the results of | :20:53. | :20:58. | |
toxicology tests are known. There are questions, | :20:59. | :21:01. | |
too, about Prince's legacy. His output was prodigious, | :21:02. | :21:04. | |
but there were also undiscovered treasures, will they | :21:05. | :21:06. | |
now be released? There was a song called Moonbeam | :21:07. | :21:09. | |
Levels. I think, at last, I am so happy, | :21:10. | :21:13. | |
this beautiful song The man himself called it | :21:14. | :21:15. | |
simply "Inspirational". James Cook, BBC News, | :21:16. | :21:26. | |
at Paisley Park, Minnesota. "A man can die but once," wrote | :21:27. | :21:32. | |
William Shakespeare. Yet 400 years after | :21:33. | :21:38. | |
his death, the poetry and plays, the products | :21:39. | :21:39. | |
of a brilliant mind, He's widely regarded | :21:40. | :21:41. | |
as the greatest writer and the world's pre-eminent | :21:42. | :21:44. | |
dramatist. But what is it that makes | :21:45. | :21:46. | |
his legacy so enduring? The distinguished actor, | :21:47. | :21:49. | |
Simon Russell Beale, has been speaking to our | :21:50. | :21:51. | |
Arts Editor Will Gompertz at the Royal Shakespeare | :21:52. | :21:53. | |
Company in Stratford. Tomorrow, and tomorrow, | :21:54. | :21:57. | |
and tomorrow, creeps day to day, to the last | :21:58. | :22:01. | |
syllable of recorded time. He is arguably more popular now | :22:02. | :22:10. | |
than he has ever been in Well, of course, there | :22:11. | :22:13. | |
is a school of thought that thinks it is entirely | :22:14. | :22:26. | |
constructed fame, isn't it? That it is to do with | :22:27. | :22:31. | |
cultural pressures. The British Empire, English | :22:32. | :22:34. | |
being spoken through the world. There are people who | :22:35. | :22:38. | |
believe that but I do not think he could have survived that | :22:39. | :22:40. | |
type of pressure unless he was very, This blessed plot, this | :22:41. | :22:43. | |
earth, this realm, this He writes characters that | :22:44. | :22:48. | |
you can make your own. Yes, doing Hamlet, for instance, | :22:49. | :22:54. | |
the worst thing you can possibly do is worry | :22:55. | :22:57. | |
about what previous Hamlets did. And you've got to | :22:58. | :23:00. | |
convince yourself, and it's certainly true, | :23:01. | :23:05. | |
that your Hamlet will be unlike any other Hamlet there has | :23:06. | :23:07. | |
ever been because you are you. And that is sort of true | :23:08. | :23:13. | |
of all those parts. And with the very great parts | :23:14. | :23:15. | |
like Hamlet, they are limitless, and therefore | :23:16. | :23:19. | |
cannot be done properly. To be or not to be - | :23:20. | :23:22. | |
that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler in the mind | :23:23. | :23:26. | |
to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous | :23:27. | :23:30. | |
fortune, Or to take arms against a | :23:31. | :23:33. | |
sea of troubles and by I suppose the most | :23:34. | :23:35. | |
obvious thing about Shakespeare's plays is they are | :23:36. | :23:45. | |
imbued with the universal themes. And that is, I am sure, | :23:46. | :23:56. | |
why he has survived so well, so, love, war, jealousy, | :23:57. | :24:01. | |
evil, you have to go to the big boys and girls for that, | :24:02. | :24:03. | |
really. No, you unnatural hags, | :24:04. | :24:06. | |
I will have such revenges on you both that | :24:07. | :24:18. | |
all the world shall... I will do such things, | :24:19. | :24:20. | |
what they are yet I know not, but they shall be the | :24:21. | :24:23. | |
terrors of the earth. getting bad! For the third day in a | :24:24. | :24:50. | |
row North Wales had the best weather. Northern Britain has seen | :24:51. | :24:55. | |
the best of the weather despite a few showers into Scotland, some | :24:56. | :24:59. | |
lovely sunny spells today, that south a different story in central | :25:00. | :25:04. | |
and southern England and Wales, it was cold and pretty miserable. Bad | :25:05. | :25:08. | |
weather front continues to sink slowly south through this evening | :25:09. | :25:13. | |
and overnight, so a legacy of cloud preventing temperatures from falling | :25:14. | :25:17. | |
too low. Further north, clearer skies, a touch of frost in sheltered | :25:18. | :25:21. | |
glens in Scotland and the risk of snow showers on higher ground. A | :25:22. | :25:25. | |
cold start to Saturday, dry and sunny for | :25:26. | :25:54. | |
most places. Thousands of this, we will see showers turning | :25:55. | :25:56. | |
increasingly wintry in the form of Scotland and running down through | :25:57. | :25:58. | |
the exposed North Sea coasts and adding wind will make it field is | :25:59. | :26:01. | |
appointing. Further south and west will we have seen the disappointing | :26:02. | :26:03. | |
weather today it shouldn't feel too bad, 11 or 12 degrees in the | :26:04. | :26:05. | |
sunshine, shelter from the wind, along the North Sea coast the risk | :26:06. | :26:08. | |
of showers into the a and it will free cold, 89 and it will free cold, | :26:09. | :26:11. | |
eight or Ireland, and into western Scotland, we will keep the risk of | :26:12. | :26:14. | |
some showers going into the fire and into western Scotland, we will keep | :26:15. | :26:17. | |
the risk of some showers going into the far north-east. Through Saturday | :26:18. | :26:19. | |
night into Sunday it turns pretty frost likely those of you taking | :26:20. | :26:21. | |
part bad through north-west England, Northern Ireland, and into western | :26:22. | :26:23. | |
Scotland, we will keep the risk of some showers going into the far | :26:24. | :26:25. | |
north-east. Through Saturday night into Sunday it turns pretty cold for | :26:26. | :26:28. | |
this time of year, a widespread frost likely first thing, a chilly | :26:29. | :26:31. | |
start for those of you taking part in the London Marathon. Some | :26:32. | :26:33. | |
sunshine for England and Wales to start with, but will gather and | :26:34. | :26:35. | |
share was developed in the north-west in the afternoon and | :26:36. | :26:37. | |
again pretty cold for this time of year. Thank you. | :26:38. | :26:38. | |
President Obama has said Britain would be in the back of the queue | :26:39. | :26:42. | |
for | :26:43. | :26:43. |