18/10/2013

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:00. > :00:19.from the BBC News at Six. So it s goodbye from me, and on

:00:20. > :00:24.Good evening and welcome to BBC Points West. Our headlines tonight:

:00:25. > :00:27.900 stolen handbags. This woman is jailed after making a fortune

:00:28. > :00:30.shoplifting designer bags and selling them online.

:00:31. > :00:32.A bridge closure too far ` the locals who claim roadworks are

:00:33. > :00:37.costing them millions in lost trade. Graffiti wars ` a setback for Banksy

:00:38. > :00:41.as the Mayor of New York says his work is not art.

:00:42. > :00:42.And a snapshot of Bristol ` an appeal tonight for thousands of us

:00:43. > :00:53.to take a local photo. A woman from Wiltshire has been

:00:54. > :00:55.jailed today for stealing more than 900 handbags during a three`year

:00:56. > :01:02.shoplifting crime spree across Britain. A court's heard Jayne Rand

:01:03. > :01:05.would walk into stores, cut off the security tag of a designer handbag

:01:06. > :01:10.and leave with the bag on her shoulder. Police who searched her

:01:11. > :01:14.country home in Wiltshire found she'd been selling hundreds of them

:01:15. > :01:26.online. Scott Ellis joins us now from Purton.

:01:27. > :01:30.Yes, a one`woman crimewave living here in Purton. The village is about

:01:31. > :01:33.four miles from Swindon and the judge said today that Jayne Rand

:01:34. > :01:38.made more money from shoplifting than most professional gangs. Yet

:01:39. > :01:43.she lives here with her two grown`up children and a husband, in a large

:01:44. > :01:46.detached house on the outskirts of Purton, surrounded by farmers

:01:47. > :01:51.fields. It has come as a great surprise, not just for her

:01:52. > :01:54.neighbours but also her family. Jayne Rand admits stealing 905

:01:55. > :01:59.designer handbags and purses over a three`year period. She was jailed

:02:00. > :02:02.today for 18 months. These are some of the bags police seized, taken

:02:03. > :02:07.from shops in Bath, Bristol, Manchester and Liverpool. Police

:02:08. > :02:12.found another 50 at her home in Purton and found she'd made ?88 000

:02:13. > :02:19.` selling the handbags on line. Neither her husband nor two children

:02:20. > :02:25.were aware of the crime spree. Her neighbours were equally shocked No

:02:26. > :02:30.reason at all to imagine that she would need to do anything like that.

:02:31. > :02:37.How shock to you that she stole as many as 900? `` how shocked are you?

:02:38. > :02:42.I can't even imagine you would get that far. Do you scoop them up, take

:02:43. > :02:49.them one at the time, how long did it take? How long has she been doing

:02:50. > :02:52.it, I have no idea at all. I just can't get my head around it. I think

:02:53. > :02:55.it is very sad. Rand was eventually caught by store detectives in South

:02:56. > :02:57.Wales. The judge at Newport Crown Court said Rand had "made a business

:02:58. > :03:15.of stealing." The court heard Rand would on

:03:16. > :03:20.occasions cut the security tag off the handbags, but usually didn't

:03:21. > :03:29.have to. Tonight in Purton, neighbours say have deep sympathy

:03:30. > :03:32.feel most sorry for Rand's family. From my point of view, anything we

:03:33. > :03:38.can do to help them, we would do. Rand led a double life. Telling

:03:39. > :03:40.police she needed the money to fund her lifestyle. The court heard she

:03:41. > :03:44.bitterly regrets everything that she's done and that she'd become

:03:45. > :03:49.almost immune to the feeling of wrongdoing.

:03:50. > :03:52.Shops have got CCTV, security guards, how on earth did she get

:03:53. > :03:58.away with doing this on an industrial scale? The bags were only

:03:59. > :04:03.worth about ?200 each, they are going to be on display, they are not

:04:04. > :04:06.behind glass, they can be picked up by customers. She may have cut of

:04:07. > :04:10.the security tags but I have been told there are other ways of

:04:11. > :04:14.compromising those tags and she knew what she was doing. I have spoken to

:04:15. > :04:18.a security expert who says that shops are using fewer and fewer

:04:19. > :04:23.store detectives, they can't afford them. They are using more CCTV,

:04:24. > :04:28.which he says is not as effective as catching people. Jayne Rand was

:04:29. > :04:32.travelling around the country, Manchester, Liverpool, Bath,

:04:33. > :04:36.Bristol, South Wales. She will go to jail for 18 months and there will be

:04:37. > :04:40.a proceeds of crime hearing so the police will look at how much money

:04:41. > :04:46.she made, and balance it against assets and try to seize back some of

:04:47. > :04:49.her assets. Two men have been arrested in

:04:50. > :04:52.connection with a serious sexual assault on a 19`year`old woman in

:04:53. > :04:55.Bristol. The attack happened on Belgrave Road in Clifton in the

:04:56. > :04:58.early hours of last Thursday morning. Police say the two men

:04:59. > :05:01.both aged 24, remain in police custody.

:05:02. > :05:03.The closure of a road bridge in Somerset is costing the local

:05:04. > :05:08.economy millions of pounds, according to the area's MP. Network

:05:09. > :05:14.Rail is closing the road bridge over the railway at Ansford for 19 weeks.

:05:15. > :05:18.The MP David Heath is so incensed, he's raised the issue in the House

:05:19. > :05:23.of Commons. Our Somerset correspondent, Clinton Rogers, has

:05:24. > :05:27.the story. From the air you can see the bridge

:05:28. > :05:32.is just 100 metres from Castle Cary railway station on the busy London

:05:33. > :05:38.line. But if you're approaching from South Somerset, this is as far as

:05:39. > :05:44.you get. Now you face a 17`mile diversion to catch your train. It is

:05:45. > :05:48.infuriating for commuters, but spare a thought for lorry drivers whose

:05:49. > :05:52.diversion is 32 miles long to avoid low bridges. And for haulage

:05:53. > :06:01.companies like this, that's expensive. It is costing us in the

:06:02. > :06:08.region of 55,000 pounds in extra fuel, time and drivers hours. It is

:06:09. > :06:11.quite a significant impact. The Road Haulage Association carried out a

:06:12. > :06:23.survey among seven of its members who estimate their collective losses

:06:24. > :06:26.will be more than ?860,000. Network Rail closed the bridge in July for

:06:27. > :06:29.essential strengthening work and it won't reopen until the end of

:06:30. > :06:32.November. That is 19 weeks. We couldn't see anyone working on the

:06:33. > :06:40.bridge today and that's part of what's annoying local traders, who

:06:41. > :06:44.say the drop in trade is alarming. July and August were pretty bad We

:06:45. > :06:48.rely on visitors at that time of the year. I would say my business was

:06:49. > :06:52.down by about 50%. The local MP raised the issue in the House of

:06:53. > :06:59.Commons this week. He says Network Rail should be working seven days a

:07:00. > :07:04.week, day and night. Can you imagine a major road in London being closed

:07:05. > :07:10.for 19 weeks, and if people then had to have a deep tour of 17 miles in a

:07:11. > :07:15.car, 32 miles in a lorry, can you imagine that being acceptable? Of

:07:16. > :07:19.course it would not. Network Rail had no one available for interview

:07:20. > :07:23.but in a statement, they told us they recognised local concerns and

:07:24. > :07:27.had now decided to replan this work so that one lane of this bridge will

:07:28. > :07:45.be open for the last two weeks of the budget. Too little, too late say

:07:46. > :07:48.the critics. It is 6:35pm. A very warm welcome to BBC Points West on

:07:49. > :07:51.this Friday evening. Ian will be here later and there's still plenty

:07:52. > :07:58.more to come, including ` life through a lens, a 24`hour snapshot

:07:59. > :08:01.of city life. A Government minister has admitted

:08:02. > :08:10.that the badger cull in Somerset and Gloucestershire could temporarily

:08:11. > :08:14.increase bovine TB in places. This is the recording of the Sunday

:08:15. > :08:17.politics West this afternoon. The minister agreed that diseased

:08:18. > :08:24.badgers may have been frightened away, spreading TB. This is what

:08:25. > :08:29.they call the perturbation effect, and this came out from the last

:08:30. > :08:32.trials. That badgers initially, in the short`term, moved to other areas

:08:33. > :08:38.and it can lead to short`term increase in the infection in the

:08:39. > :08:56.ring around a colour area. But it is a short lived experience `` cull

:08:57. > :09:01.area. But in the long`term bovine TB does go down.

:09:02. > :09:05.As we've been hearing, the Home Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has spoken

:09:06. > :09:09.out today about the hundreds of thousands of elderly people in this

:09:10. > :09:12.country who say they feel isolated and alone. He said we should learn

:09:13. > :09:16.lessons from how other cultures care for older people. His wife is

:09:17. > :09:22.Chinese ` and he said he's struck by the reverence and respect for older

:09:23. > :09:25.people there. In China and Japan it is quite normal for elderly parents

:09:26. > :09:30.to live with their children and family. The Indian government has

:09:31. > :09:34.even announced it plans to name and shame people who abandon their

:09:35. > :09:39.parents. In those countries, when living alone is no longer possible,

:09:40. > :09:43.residential care is a last, rather than first option. Recently in China

:09:44. > :09:47.a law was passed to force children to look after their elderly parents

:09:48. > :09:51.and grandparents. But would such an approach work here? Alice Bouverie

:09:52. > :09:58.has been investigating the challenges of caring for an ageing

:09:59. > :10:03.population. I think there are a lot of lonely old people out there, and

:10:04. > :10:05.I was one of them. And it is heartbreaking.

:10:06. > :10:10.For many people, getting old in Britain is no fun. Frieda lives on

:10:11. > :10:19.her own in Bristol. She's 84, and has no children. I was so isolated,

:10:20. > :10:22.I got really timid to go out. I could not make conversation or

:10:23. > :10:26.anything. At least Frieda has her basic state pension. In China,

:10:27. > :10:35.there's little or no state pension at all. By 2050, one in four of the

:10:36. > :10:38.entire population of this country is expected to be of retirement age.

:10:39. > :10:42.That figure is exactly the same in China as well, but in China they are

:10:43. > :10:52.taking an interesting approach to the problem. In the summer, a new

:10:53. > :10:56.law was passed called the elderly rights law. Adult children were

:10:57. > :11:01.ordered to visit their ageing parents. Xiaojing Sun studies

:11:02. > :11:04.International Relations in Bristol. She speaks to her parents via the

:11:05. > :11:11.internet every few days. She thinks the law is actually quite a good

:11:12. > :11:15.thing. It is a little bit difficult for some old people in a village,

:11:16. > :11:22.and there children move to cities to work. The government did something

:11:23. > :11:25.for them. How many of us were there in the house...

:11:26. > :11:30.The Soo family were the first Chinese family in Cheltenham in

:11:31. > :11:33.1948. Karen's now taking over her father's business ` she sees it as

:11:34. > :11:37.her duty as a daughter. But even within the Chinese community here in

:11:38. > :11:45.Britain, attitudes are changing All the older Chinese are still

:11:46. > :11:49.following the old customs. It is only the new younger ones who are

:11:50. > :11:54.coming over now, who have their independent spirit and way they want

:11:55. > :11:59.to live. Isolation among the elderly is a huge problem. The charity

:12:00. > :12:09.Contact the Elderly helps by holding monthly tea parties in people's

:12:10. > :12:14.homes. It estimates over 1 million older people are lonely. Everybody

:12:15. > :12:18.is so busy and that is always the excuse. When I speak to my own

:12:19. > :12:24.grandma, she said were used our family lunches on a Sunday. It is

:12:25. > :12:27.ironic that even with all the technology, people are so isolated.

:12:28. > :12:30.It's something Government is find it hard to legislate against, but it's

:12:31. > :12:35.something many elderly people can't protect themselves against either.

:12:36. > :12:40.New York Police have denied that they are out to arrest the Bristol

:12:41. > :12:43.street artist Banksy. It had been reported in the American press that

:12:44. > :12:48.detectives want to charge him with vandalism. But today the Mayor of

:12:49. > :12:53.New York has criticised Banksy's work, saying it's not art and it

:12:54. > :13:00.defaces public property. Here's Andrew Plant.

:13:01. > :13:07.What have Bristol and the Big Apple got in common? America's a bit

:13:08. > :13:15.bigger, of course, but Bristol had Banksy first. His last piece sold

:13:16. > :13:19.for 400,000. Now the anonymous artist has made New York his new

:13:20. > :13:28.canvas and the city's citizens have been snapping up his famous

:13:29. > :13:31.spray`painted stencil style. A new one is appearing almost daily on the

:13:32. > :13:34.streets, which prompted The city's Mayor Michael Bloomberg to say in an

:13:35. > :13:37.interview that defacing public property wasn't his definition of

:13:38. > :13:42.art. A feeling clearly not lost on the artist. Several have already

:13:43. > :13:51.been defaced ` or even erased completely. Banksy's artworks have

:13:52. > :13:54.become huge part of Bristol's international reputation. When his

:13:55. > :13:59.stencils first started appearing around the city in the 1990s, a lot

:14:00. > :14:03.of them were considered graffiti then and quite often they were

:14:04. > :14:09.painted over. Do you think graffiti is art? It can be, some of it. What

:14:10. > :14:14.do you think of this? Does it brighten the city? I thought it was

:14:15. > :14:20.just a bit of building work, to be honest. The graffiti or art debate

:14:21. > :14:23.still divides people here. But with original Banksy's now worth tens of

:14:24. > :14:29.thousands of pounds, perhaps New Yorkers will find it rather easier

:14:30. > :14:33.to learn to love their new artwork. From midnight tonight a unique

:14:34. > :14:43.record will be created of life in Bristol. From the SS Great Britain

:14:44. > :14:46.to the Suspension Bridge, to the view from your bedroom window,

:14:47. > :14:49.images of the city are being collected over a twenty`four hour

:14:50. > :14:52.period. The pictures will form part of an exhibition in the city next

:14:53. > :14:56.month, and is already attracting photographers from across Europe.

:14:57. > :14:57.Lizzie Way has been checking out the sights.

:14:58. > :15:01.Capturing a moment. A look. A landmark. The aim of the competition

:15:02. > :15:08.is to photograph the essence of life in Bristol. It will show a side of

:15:09. > :15:12.Bristol that most people may have never seen before. A lot of

:15:13. > :15:17.photographers are out doing recce is, a guy has been jogging every

:15:18. > :15:22.morning, just to find out what is going on at that time, as background

:15:23. > :15:26.research. Each entrant is allocated a one hour slot to take a photo to

:15:27. > :15:29.submit. Sightseeing buses will let the entrants travel free around the

:15:30. > :15:33.city, taking them to inspiring places. But some have, of course,

:15:34. > :15:39.been allocated an hour in the middle of the night ` not that it seems to

:15:40. > :15:43.faze them. I have decided I am going to try to do 24 hours continuous

:15:44. > :15:46.photography was not to get the best of Bristol you have to be there for

:15:47. > :15:51.the whole day and I would be afraid to miss something jarring that time.

:15:52. > :15:55.I come from Paris originally, I have been living in Bristol for three

:15:56. > :15:59.years. The things that struck me are the food, the people, their spirit

:16:00. > :16:05.of independence. It is definitely something I would try to emulate. I

:16:06. > :16:11.come from Hamburg in Germany, I have been to Bristol before. I really

:16:12. > :16:19.like Bristol a lot. I am hoping to take a photo that captures street

:16:20. > :16:23.life. Around a hundred of the images will be on display in the Guildhall.

:16:24. > :16:28.You don't need one of these two enter, you can just use your phone

:16:29. > :16:32.because it is all about the image, not the equipment. You can still

:16:33. > :16:38.enter until midnight tonight. It is going to be a full moon tonight so

:16:39. > :16:44.you can expect to see 24 hours of images a little differently.

:16:45. > :16:49.From today listeners to local radio in many parts of Gloucestershire can

:16:50. > :16:51.tune in on digital radio. New DAB transmitters were officially

:16:52. > :16:59.switched on at a special ceremony in Cheltenham this morning. Around

:17:00. > :17:01.400,000 people will be able to receive the new service, although

:17:02. > :17:10.listeners will have to rescan their digital radios first. And a reminder

:17:11. > :17:11.of the website to check your postcode for DAB coverage in

:17:12. > :17:21.Gloucestershire. It's getdigitalradio.com. 11 games into

:17:22. > :17:25.the football league season. Traditionally a time when managers

:17:26. > :17:29.take stock of their progress and we are doing the same in our regular

:17:30. > :17:42.team talk feature. This week, Bristol City played host to Geoff

:17:43. > :17:49.Twentyman, Scott Murray, Mark Cooper and Siobhan Chamberlain. The top

:17:50. > :17:54.performing team so far, what is the secret to making football management

:17:55. > :17:58.look easy? I wish it was easy, a new group in the summer, a lot of young

:17:59. > :18:02.players. They have taken a bit of time to gel. We have some decent

:18:03. > :18:06.players who are technically very good and they are starting to come

:18:07. > :18:12.together and play well. What kind of manager are you? Pretty calm. As you

:18:13. > :18:16.get older and experienced, you have to calm down and realise you can't

:18:17. > :18:24.be jumping up and down all the time. With the age of the squad we have

:18:25. > :18:28.got, we have to try and pick up You know Gary Johnson well, Scott. When

:18:29. > :18:31.he was here he famously threw the hand grenade in the dressing room

:18:32. > :18:38.after a bad result, will he have a few hand grenades in the pocket At

:18:39. > :18:41.Yeovil the dressing room is not as big. He did chuck a few down here

:18:42. > :18:48.and there are a few lads who were on the end of a few. It is a tight

:18:49. > :18:53.group at Yeovil and a lot of good mates, I think they will be all

:18:54. > :18:58.right but it will be a tough season. Linda has a question for you,

:18:59. > :19:07.Siobhan. What are the expectations of restore Academy for next season?

:19:08. > :19:10.`` for Bristol Academy? A priority is to keep the players we had

:19:11. > :19:14.together with the squad this year. Everyone wrote us off and said we

:19:15. > :19:18.would finish seventh or eighth. To come second is a great achievement.

:19:19. > :19:22.If we can keep the squad together and keep the three Spanish girls,

:19:23. > :19:27.and add a couple more, I don't see why we can't be in the same position

:19:28. > :19:31.challenging again. Does it frustrate you, the money in men's football

:19:32. > :19:36.compare to what is in the women s game? It is or is hard to compare

:19:37. > :19:40.and say, I wish we could get the same kind of funding and money that

:19:41. > :19:43.there is in the men's game. If you don't draw in the crowds and you

:19:44. > :19:48.haven't got the media and the publicity, you're not going to get

:19:49. > :19:53.that money and that coverage. What we have shown with Bristol Academy

:19:54. > :19:56.is you don't need a massive budget to be successful. We have the FA Cup

:19:57. > :20:05.final and Champions League have finished second in the WSL. Not a

:20:06. > :20:13.bad season, is it? Let's talk about Bristol City. 23rd in league one, no

:20:14. > :20:20.one yet in the league. It is marched since they won a game. Scott, what

:20:21. > :20:23.is your take on the season so far? The main thing is to be patient

:20:24. > :20:28.Performances in the last four or five games are improving. It will be

:20:29. > :20:34.a long season but the main thing is everyone sticks together. The other

:20:35. > :20:42.week they led twice but you one 3`2, what is you `` you won 3`2. What is

:20:43. > :20:46.your take? It was a good game, very open, they have a real attacking

:20:47. > :20:51.threat in Thomas. If they get a result they could easily go on a

:20:52. > :20:55.run. We have all played in teams that have had bad spells, what is

:20:56. > :21:00.the secret to bring in a team out of a sequence of no wins and poor

:21:01. > :21:05.results? You have to keep believing. If you are strong in your belief in

:21:06. > :21:10.how you play, you have to keep believing and get that across. We

:21:11. > :21:13.went wrong with Gary Johnson and I think we lost nine on the spin, it

:21:14. > :21:17.is one of the worst feelings in the world. You go on the pitch and

:21:18. > :21:25.you're not expecting to lose but as soon as something happens, your head

:21:26. > :21:30.goes down, no one once the ball `` wants the ball. We are desperate to

:21:31. > :21:41.get the first win and get the monkey off our back. Careful with that one!

:21:42. > :21:49.Cheltenham, 17th in league one, is it hard for Mark Yates to keep

:21:50. > :21:53.reinventing the wheel? They have done brilliantly for two years. They

:21:54. > :22:00.have been really unlucky. I thought last year they would do it. Like you

:22:01. > :22:06.say, it is rude difficult for them, some big clubs and big budgets. ``

:22:07. > :22:12.really difficult. They are constantly punching above their

:22:13. > :22:16.weight. Steve Mildenhall, the goalkeeper 's union is probably one

:22:17. > :22:19.of the strong list in football. He looks me in the eye on our first

:22:20. > :22:24.team talk and he told me that Bristol Rovers would be promoted.

:22:25. > :22:30.They are 20th at the moment. Would you give him some advice? There is

:22:31. > :22:34.still time. If you go into the season thinking you're not going to

:22:35. > :22:39.be promoted or challenging, what is the point in playing? You want to

:22:40. > :22:43.win and be at the top. It only takes that one is old to turn around the

:22:44. > :22:47.season and get a few more wins under your belt. A big thank you for

:22:48. > :22:48.Siobhan Chamberlain, Scott Murray and Mark Cooper.

:22:49. > :23:04.APPLAUSE From football to Rugby. Gloucester

:23:05. > :23:07.face a tough trip to Ireland tomorrow as they take on two time

:23:08. > :23:25.Champions Munster in the Heineken Cup.

:23:26. > :23:34.From rugby to the arts, it was the red carpet premiere of One Chance

:23:35. > :23:40.last night ` the movie about the life of Bristol born opera singer

:23:41. > :23:42.Paul Potts. The former supermarket worker became an international

:23:43. > :23:46.superstar after winning Britain s Got Talent. And now his story,

:23:47. > :23:49.including life growing up in Bristol, has been told in a star

:23:50. > :23:55.studded movie, with James Corden playing Paul. You were there ` what

:23:56. > :24:01.was it like? It was an amazing night. It must have been an

:24:02. > :24:05.incredible night for Paul Potts We were there earlier seeing the team

:24:06. > :24:11.setting up, making sure everything was perfect before the celebrities

:24:12. > :24:16.arrived. Fans queued to meet stars including James cordon, who played

:24:17. > :24:22.Paul Potts. We see the young Paul Potts, Christopher Bull from

:24:23. > :24:28.Bristol. And Paul Potts himself arrived to greet fans as he walks

:24:29. > :24:34.down the red carpet with his wife to watch the movie. Gary Barlow was

:24:35. > :24:41.there. All your heroes! And you spoke to James cordon? Yes, he was

:24:42. > :24:47.keen to clear up misunderstanding about his accent. A lot of people

:24:48. > :24:51.think he is Welsh but he is not he just lives in Wales and he is from

:24:52. > :24:55.Bristol. I had to make that clear to a lot of people who are telling me I

:24:56. > :25:01.should do a Welsh accent. I said I think you will find it's more like

:25:02. > :25:05.that. He was very good at that Bristolian accent. The film is not

:25:06. > :25:10.out just yet, you will have to wait until next Friday to see that. Let's

:25:11. > :25:16.catch up with the weather. Thank you. This photo will characterise

:25:17. > :25:22.much of the weather through the course of the weekend.

:25:23. > :25:30.There will be brighter phases, it will be a breezy weekend. There will

:25:31. > :25:34.equally be some parts of the weather which will be wetter in the shape of

:25:35. > :25:39.showers, they could be heavy, possibly thunder mixed in. The

:25:40. > :25:44.rainfall radar has been showing the encroaching threat of showery

:25:45. > :25:52.outbreaks of rain across our districts. Some of it is becoming

:25:53. > :25:55.more prevalent. There will be moderately heavy outbreaks of rain

:25:56. > :25:59.for a while. If we spin forward towards midnight, the first cluster

:26:00. > :26:05.of Sharon Ringo have moved northwards. A second one follows in

:26:06. > :26:08.its wake. Then there will be a window of reasonable weather until

:26:09. > :26:15.the afternoon, when we get heavy showers coming through. And we do it

:26:16. > :26:18.again on Sunday. If anything on Sunday per square mile and per hour

:26:19. > :26:23.of the West Country, there will be more showers more widely

:26:24. > :26:28.distributed. It is certainly not a right of despite the threat of

:26:29. > :26:32.periodic wet weather. The threat of what weather others as we run

:26:33. > :26:41.through towards mid`evening. He heavy fist `` the

:26:42. > :26:46.the second phase will be with some of you by daybreak tomorrow and

:26:47. > :26:51.temperatures will be mild again tonight. 12 or 13 Celsius will be

:26:52. > :26:56.typical. A lot of low cloud associated with the lighter outbreak

:26:57. > :27:00.of rain as it moves northwards. We get this window of drier and

:27:01. > :27:04.brighter weather. It will be breezy and feel warm but as the trough

:27:05. > :27:09.moves in through the early or mid afternoon period, we run the threat

:27:10. > :27:12.of about an hour of thundery showers. Not everywhere seeing those

:27:13. > :27:18.but the possibility that a fair number of you will. Temperatures

:27:19. > :27:25.tomorrow will be quite warm, 17 or 18, a similar story for Sunday. Not

:27:26. > :27:33.a similar story for Monday. A very wet start for next week. Thank you,

:27:34. > :27:38.umbrellas at the ready. That is all from the Friday team. There will be

:27:39. > :27:42.a quick update at eight o'clock and then 10:00pm. Have a lovely weekend,

:27:43. > :27:45.see you Monday. Good wife.