Browse content similar to 23/01/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :00:00. | :00:07. | |
The Prime Minister announces a new plan for industry | :00:08. | :00:10. | |
Theresa May says the government is stepping up to a new, | :00:11. | :00:14. | |
She says she wants all part of the country to feel the benefits of | :00:15. | :00:30. | |
economic growth but what does it mean in reality and what can it mean | :00:31. | :00:33. | |
for places like this? Good morning, it's Monday | :00:34. | :00:46. | |
the 23rd of January. Calls for the government to give | :00:47. | :00:48. | |
a full explanation to parliament about a reported misfire | :00:49. | :00:55. | |
of a Trident missile. A warning from the Food Standards | :00:56. | :00:58. | |
Agency that overcooked foods like toast and potatoes | :00:59. | :01:01. | |
could increase the risk In sport, messages of support have | :01:02. | :01:03. | |
been sent to Ryan Mason after the Hull midfielder suffered | :01:04. | :01:11. | |
a fractured skull in a clash of heads with Gary Cahill | :01:12. | :01:14. | |
during their 2-0 Premier League Choose reality TV. Choose the same | :01:15. | :01:16. | |
for your kids, only worse. It's the film that helped | :01:17. | :01:29. | |
define the 1990s - now train-spotting returns | :01:30. | :01:32. | |
for a new generation. Good morning. Yes, we have dense | :01:33. | :01:47. | |
fog, particularly across southern England. It is freezing fog Thomas | :01:48. | :01:55. | |
some will be slow to clear. For many, it will be dry with sunshine | :01:56. | :02:00. | |
but I will have more details and 15 minutes. | :02:01. | :02:00. | |
Prime Minister, Theresa May will today introduce | :02:01. | :02:03. | |
the government's vision for a more interventionist, | :02:04. | :02:05. | |
The proposals will be unveiled at her first regional cabinet | :02:06. | :02:09. | |
meeting, taking place in north-west England. | :02:10. | :02:11. | |
Our Industry correspondent John Moylan has more. | :02:12. | :02:23. | |
How can the government ensured that the economy is fit for the future. | :02:24. | :02:31. | |
But the business Secretary Greg Clark, places like this are part of | :02:32. | :02:36. | |
the answer. It is a new automotive centre, backed by government and | :02:37. | :02:41. | |
industry money, designed to keep our carmakers are firing on all | :02:42. | :02:45. | |
cylinders. The strategy will be committed to driving very hard, to | :02:46. | :02:49. | |
spread the opportunities right across the country and to drive, not | :02:50. | :02:55. | |
just jobs but really good, well paying jobs in all parts of the | :02:56. | :02:59. | |
country. It will be a good part of our strategy. Today, the strategy | :03:00. | :03:03. | |
will be outlined in a new green paper, aimed at kickstarting a new | :03:04. | :03:08. | |
wide-ranging consultation on the government's new vision. That will | :03:09. | :03:11. | |
include plants for sector deals where businesses and stakeholders in | :03:12. | :03:16. | |
specific sectors can make the case for government support. That is just | :03:17. | :03:19. | |
one of ten so-called strategic pillars which are all designed to | :03:20. | :03:23. | |
increase productivity and drive growth. In the past, governments | :03:24. | :03:28. | |
used industrial strategies as an excuse to back key firms or | :03:29. | :03:33. | |
industries. It didn't always work. As we prepare for the challenge of | :03:34. | :03:38. | |
leaving the EU, the big test of this plan will be that it doesn't just | :03:39. | :03:42. | |
deliver for successful firms like this but that it reaches out to a | :03:43. | :03:47. | |
part of the UK to deliver the government's aim of an economy that | :03:48. | :03:50. | |
works for everybody. John Moylan, BBC News. | :03:51. | :03:51. | |
Ben is in Warrington for us this morning. | :03:52. | :03:53. | |
How are businesses responding to the announcement? | :03:54. | :04:01. | |
You are right. You heard in Tom's report the idea that we will hear | :04:02. | :04:08. | |
from the minister Theresa May little later about all elements of the | :04:09. | :04:11. | |
country feeling the benefits of economic growth. That will be the | :04:12. | :04:15. | |
key issue because we have heard a lot about things like the Northern | :04:16. | :04:19. | |
Powerhouse, getting cities in the north of England working again. That | :04:20. | :04:24. | |
includes places like Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds. It is about | :04:25. | :04:29. | |
bringing the whole country could together. She will lay out the ten | :04:30. | :04:32. | |
point she thinks is crucial for this. That includes hard | :04:33. | :04:39. | |
infrastructure, roads, railways and Internet infrastructure, rolling out | :04:40. | :04:44. | |
broad brant to more and more consumers and businesses -- | :04:45. | :04:48. | |
broadband. The great training and skills that many businesses say they | :04:49. | :04:51. | |
need the right stuff in the right place for the right jobs available. | :04:52. | :04:56. | |
Here, we are looking at the story of manufacturing. Does the UK produce | :04:57. | :05:00. | |
enough any more and if not why not? What extra help could it have from | :05:01. | :05:04. | |
the government to get the country working again? We will hear more | :05:05. | :05:08. | |
from Theresa May later at a warning, I will be here taking the pulse of | :05:09. | :05:13. | |
business in this part of the world and find out what they want to hear | :05:14. | :05:16. | |
in that announcement from the Prime Minister a little later. Join me in | :05:17. | :05:18. | |
about half an hour. The Labour Party is calling | :05:19. | :05:19. | |
on Theresa May to make a statement to Parliament clarifying | :05:20. | :05:23. | |
whether she she knew about a reported Trident missile | :05:24. | :05:24. | |
misfire before a vote The Prime Minister told the BBC | :05:25. | :05:27. | |
she has "full faith" Our political correspondent | :05:28. | :05:31. | |
Tom Bateman is in Westminster. Bearing in mind, many people asked | :05:32. | :05:48. | |
the question four times and not got a straight ante yesterday? This is | :05:49. | :05:54. | |
potentially embarrassing for the government -- straight answer. This | :05:55. | :05:59. | |
one happened last June. We heard nothing about it. The reported | :06:00. | :06:05. | |
misfiring happened just weeks before Theresa May stood up in front of MPs | :06:06. | :06:10. | |
and urged them to back the spending of ?40 billion to renew the Trident | :06:11. | :06:16. | |
system. As you say, crucially, she was asked about this several times | :06:17. | :06:19. | |
yesterday and just how much she knew about it. Did you know the misfire | :06:20. | :06:25. | |
had occurred? I have absolute faith in our Trident missiles. I think we | :06:26. | :06:29. | |
should defend our country. I think we should play a role in Nato with | :06:30. | :06:33. | |
an independent nuclear deterrent. Did you know about it when you told | :06:34. | :06:38. | |
the House of Commons? Jono the issue would talk about in the House of | :06:39. | :06:42. | |
Commons was a serious issue. It was about whether or not we should renew | :06:43. | :06:45. | |
Trident, looking to the future, have a replacement Trident. That's what | :06:46. | :06:49. | |
we were talking about in the House of Commons. That's what House of | :06:50. | :06:55. | |
Commons voted for. I believe in defending a country. Jeremy Corbyn | :06:56. | :06:59. | |
voted against it. He doesn't want to defend our country with an | :07:00. | :07:01. | |
independent nuclear deterrent. She was asked about it again and | :07:02. | :07:03. | |
declined to answer the question. One Labour MP accused the government | :07:04. | :07:13. | |
of a cover-up over this misfire. As for the Minister of defence, it says | :07:14. | :07:17. | |
that the capability of Trident remained, in its view, | :07:18. | :07:24. | |
unquestionable. You can see the fog behind Tom. It was foggy where I | :07:25. | :07:29. | |
was. We will get all the details. Tell us about the fog! | :07:30. | :07:32. | |
Government scientists are advising that starchy foods like toast | :07:33. | :07:34. | |
and potatoes are not cooked beyond a golden colour to reduce | :07:35. | :07:37. | |
The Food Standards Agency's "Go For Gold" campaign says | :07:38. | :07:41. | |
over-browning food for more flavour and crunch increases a carcinogenic | :07:42. | :07:44. | |
Our Health correspondent Robert Pigott reports. | :07:45. | :07:52. | |
The warning includes some of the most popular foods | :07:53. | :07:54. | |
in the British diet, such as crisps, chips, | :07:55. | :07:57. | |
The longer they're cooked above 120 Celsius, the more | :07:58. | :08:00. | |
Those foods go through a browning process, which many of us | :08:01. | :08:04. | |
like in terms of flavour and taste, but it also | :08:05. | :08:06. | |
The sugars in starchy foods such as your breakfast toast combine | :08:07. | :08:23. | |
with the molecules that make up protein to produce acrylamide that | :08:24. | :08:26. | |
We know that in animal studies it can create cancer | :08:27. | :08:30. | |
and so we are concerned if there is the same mechanism | :08:31. | :08:33. | |
in people that high exposure could increase people's risk. | :08:34. | :08:36. | |
The FSA says people should go for gold, aiming for gold and yellow | :08:37. | :08:39. | |
in baking, roasting, frying or toasting rather | :08:40. | :08:41. | |
It says eating a balanced diet rich in vegetables | :08:42. | :08:44. | |
Cancer Research UK says acrylamide might be harmful to people | :08:45. | :08:48. | |
but insists there are other far bigger proven dangers - | :08:49. | :08:51. | |
being obese, drinking too much and especially smoking. | :08:52. | :09:02. | |
In around ten minutes we'll be finding out more about that FSA | :09:03. | :09:05. | |
campaign and talking to the Masterchef winner Simon Wood | :09:06. | :09:08. | |
about how to prepare tasty meals without over-browning. | :09:09. | :09:14. | |
-- at ten past eight. The old burnt toast debate. People will be upset | :09:15. | :09:24. | |
about it. Have people upstairs tried to give us examples of burnt toast. | :09:25. | :09:28. | |
Imagine what is going on in the canteen. | :09:29. | :09:29. | |
The White House says it's in the initial stages of discussions | :09:30. | :09:32. | |
about moving the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. | :09:33. | :09:37. | |
A group of Syrian rebels are preparing for talks | :09:38. | :09:39. | |
with President Bashar al-Assad's government to reinforce a truce | :09:40. | :09:42. | |
brokered by Russia and Turkey last month. | :09:43. | :09:44. | |
It's the first time a group made up entirely of rebel forces | :09:45. | :09:47. | |
will negotiate with the Syrian government but it's still not been | :09:48. | :09:50. | |
decided whether the talks will be face-to-face. | :09:51. | :09:52. | |
Our chief international correspondent, Lyse Doucet, | :09:53. | :09:53. | |
We have told you so often about what is going on in Syria. Can it make a | :09:54. | :10:01. | |
difference, do you think? Any of your viewers will know from the kind | :10:02. | :10:05. | |
of images they have seen from Syria, the destruction, the refugees, | :10:06. | :10:10. | |
displaced, the dreadful conditions in which many people are now living. | :10:11. | :10:15. | |
They also know that every effort to try and end this war so far has | :10:16. | :10:21. | |
failed. Today, here in Astana, a new effort is starting. The venue is | :10:22. | :10:24. | |
different, we are here in Kazakhstan. As you say, they are | :10:25. | :10:29. | |
sponsored by Russia, Turkey and Iran for the first time. And for the | :10:30. | :10:33. | |
first time, it is the man who control the guns of the opposition | :10:34. | :10:36. | |
groups who are going to be at the tables inside this venue. Not the | :10:37. | :10:40. | |
political representatives of the Syrian opposition. This is a new way | :10:41. | :10:46. | |
to try to deal with the old problems will stop we are roadie healing that | :10:47. | :10:50. | |
the old animosities, the old obstacles -- we are already hearing. | :10:51. | :10:54. | |
The old obstacles are rearing their heads. Because the government, | :10:55. | :11:04. | |
backed by Russia and Iran, are now dominating the field, it is going to | :11:05. | :11:06. | |
have an impact on the talks as well. Police say one man has been arrested | :11:07. | :11:08. | |
after an officer was shot The officer is in a stable condition | :11:09. | :11:11. | |
after being hit twice in the arm when a number of shots | :11:12. | :11:16. | |
were fired from a car on the Crumlin Road | :11:17. | :11:19. | |
in the north of the city. The Northern Ireland Secretary | :11:20. | :11:22. | |
James Brokenshire said A police crackdown on motorists | :11:23. | :11:24. | |
who illegally use mobile phones at the wheel resulted in nearly 8000 | :11:25. | :11:29. | |
drivers being caught in the space 36 forces took part | :11:30. | :11:32. | |
in the operation in November. The National Police Chiefs' Council | :11:33. | :11:35. | |
has released the figures Dubai boasts the highest | :11:36. | :11:38. | |
skyline in the Middle East, and the city's firefighters | :11:39. | :11:48. | |
could soon be issued with jet packs to help them tackle blazes | :11:49. | :11:51. | |
in high-rise buildings. Footage released by | :11:52. | :11:53. | |
the Dubai Civil Defence shows firefighters using the kit to rise | :11:54. | :11:55. | |
above a bridge by using water The innovative system, | :11:56. | :11:58. | |
which is called Dolphin, is also aimed at reducing response | :11:59. | :12:01. | |
times by avoiding heavy traffic Have you seen people using these? I | :12:02. | :12:27. | |
have seen so many of these. It was comical. | :12:28. | :12:36. | |
Those are the main stories this morning. | :12:37. | :12:38. | |
Coming up, Carol will be here with the weather. | :12:39. | :12:42. | |
And Sally is he with a week in sport and hopefully some good news about | :12:43. | :12:49. | |
Ryan Mason. It is horrible what happened to him yesterday. A stable | :12:50. | :12:55. | |
condition is what we're hearing? For people who don't know, Ryan Mason | :12:56. | :12:59. | |
who plays for Hull City, was injured during a clash of heads with Gary | :13:00. | :13:02. | |
Caygill yesterday and was almighty. The news everybody is that we have | :13:03. | :13:07. | |
heard the hospital saying he is in a stable condition. He has undergone | :13:08. | :13:10. | |
surgery and does have fractured skull. | :13:11. | :13:18. | |
Hull midfielder, Ryan Mason, has undergone surgery | :13:19. | :13:20. | |
after fracturing his skull during a clash of heads | :13:21. | :13:22. | |
during a Premier League match at Chelsea yesterday. | :13:23. | :13:24. | |
Hull said in a statement that the 25-year-old | :13:25. | :13:26. | |
He was taken to the neurosurgery unit at a hospital close | :13:27. | :13:31. | |
to Chelsea's Stamford Bridge after the collision with Chelsea | :13:32. | :13:33. | |
defender Gary Cahill as they went to head the ball. | :13:34. | :13:39. | |
Britain's Johanna Konta is through to the quarter finals | :13:40. | :13:42. | |
She beat Russia's Ekaterina Makarova in straight sets and will play | :13:43. | :13:46. | |
England's cricketers won their first match of the winter in India - | :13:47. | :13:51. | |
taking the final one day international in Kolkata | :13:52. | :13:53. | |
The series was already lost though - India taking it 2-1. | :13:54. | :14:14. | |
Ronnie O'Sullivan has won a record seventh Masters title, | :14:15. | :14:16. | |
after coming back from 4-1 down to beat Joe Perry 10-7 at | :14:17. | :14:19. | |
He had shared the record of six Masters wins with Stephen Hendry, | :14:20. | :14:23. | |
but victory number seven puts him out in front on his own. | :14:24. | :14:26. | |
I do love him. He is such a character, isn't he? Unlikely we | :14:27. | :14:32. | |
will get an update until later in the day on Ryan Mason? E has had a | :14:33. | :14:39. | |
horrendous 24 hours but stable is a good thing at this point. -- he has | :14:40. | :14:41. | |
had. Let's have a look at | :14:42. | :14:42. | |
this morning's papers. Many of the papers taking the new | :14:43. | :15:04. | |
train-spotting cast. There's a nice interview there have done with Colin | :15:05. | :15:08. | |
Patterson that we will show you later, where they talk about | :15:09. | :15:13. | |
potentially doing a third film when they are in their 60s. The main | :15:14. | :15:17. | |
story here is how business rates are threatening the rural way of life. | :15:18. | :15:24. | |
This story on the front of the Mirror, that Sally was talking | :15:25. | :15:29. | |
about. And a story about Theresa May, the fact that she was asked on | :15:30. | :15:32. | |
Andrew Marr programme about whether she knew about the missile | :15:33. | :15:36. | |
misfiring. She is due to talk to Donald Trump, of course the new | :15:37. | :15:45. | |
President. They took about a new trade deals could open doors to the | :15:46. | :15:49. | |
US. And this row over crispy roast potatoes. Advise that you shouldn't | :15:50. | :15:53. | |
have your roast potatoes too overdone. Do you like your toast | :15:54. | :16:01. | |
burnt? No. I can't bear burnt toast, but I love crispy roast potatoes. | :16:02. | :16:07. | |
You can't have them soggy! We will have a chef coming in later, to tell | :16:08. | :16:11. | |
you how to do crispy potatoes without overcooking them. The | :16:12. | :16:16. | |
Guardian, a picture of Kelly MacDonald and Ewan McGregor from | :16:17. | :16:29. | |
train-spotting. And this picture from Apple Tree Yard. The new Sunday | :16:30. | :16:34. | |
night romp, they say. All of the papers talking about it | :16:35. | :16:39. | |
this morning, saying it is quite steamy! | :16:40. | :16:47. | |
Let's have a look at the Times. New techniques for the England squad. I | :16:48. | :16:54. | |
don't know if people have heard of Colin McGregor, a mixed champion -- | :16:55. | :17:03. | |
martial arts champion. The way he trains is phenomenal. They've | :17:04. | :17:07. | |
brought in the techniques he uses, in terms of tackling, fitness, | :17:08. | :17:13. | |
mental attitude as well, to help get that extra edge. It is something | :17:14. | :17:17. | |
Eddie Jones is keen on doing. He has been the Arsenal, Chelsea, | :17:18. | :17:21. | |
Southampton football clubs to talk to them. He has been out with a | :17:22. | :17:26. | |
cycling team to try to take the best bits of different sports and bring | :17:27. | :17:30. | |
them back to rugby. He has also controversially brought in a coach | :17:31. | :17:35. | |
from the Melbourne Storm, who had a close relationship with the New | :17:36. | :17:39. | |
Zealand side. Let's hope they are chatting to each other too much. | :17:40. | :17:49. | |
Inside the Telegraph, a story about why Hollywood here's English accents | :17:50. | :17:54. | |
as the perfect voice for bulimia. It done some research. -- villainy. In | :17:55. | :18:00. | |
New York linguist said the perfect villain has to be an actor who | :18:01. | :18:06. | |
speaks with perfect enunciation, as regional accents are too friendly | :18:07. | :18:08. | |
and sincere. Jeremy Irons in the lion king. | :18:09. | :18:15. | |
It does work. Scary! Most American dramas have English or | :18:16. | :18:19. | |
British actors doing American accents. | :18:20. | :18:24. | |
That's true. Do you want me to move on? Frozen fog vortex, says the | :18:25. | :18:31. | |
papers. The weather is causing issues. Let's find out what's | :18:32. | :18:35. | |
happening. This morning there certainly is fog | :18:36. | :18:40. | |
around. The Weather Watchers have been sending us pictures. This is | :18:41. | :18:44. | |
Greater London. We haven't seen such dense fog. Time. That was up | :18:45. | :18:50. | |
minster. We have a lot of fog in southern counties of England in | :18:51. | :18:54. | |
particular. Visibility down to 50 metres in places. Not just the | :18:55. | :18:59. | |
south, we have some in the north of England and some fringing into | :19:00. | :19:03. | |
Scotland. If you are travelling to take extra care. When I was driving | :19:04. | :19:07. | |
in this morning I couldn't even see the lines on the road, the fog was | :19:08. | :19:12. | |
so dense for freezing fog as well, it could lead to travel disruption. | :19:13. | :19:16. | |
Some flights have been cancelled from airports in the south. You can | :19:17. | :19:20. | |
find out what's happening on your BBC local radio station or the | :19:21. | :19:25. | |
website. We start off with freezing fog, with temperatures below | :19:26. | :19:28. | |
freezing across many parts of east Anglia and southern counties | :19:29. | :19:32. | |
generally. Some of this is dense and patchy in places. You dry into it, | :19:33. | :19:37. | |
it is because, you come out and are lulled into a false sense of | :19:38. | :19:43. | |
security. -- drive. Then we have more cloud coming into northern | :19:44. | :19:47. | |
England and patchy fog, which is also dense. A cold start in Northern | :19:48. | :19:51. | |
Ireland, especially in the west, where temperatures are currently | :19:52. | :19:55. | |
minus five. In Scotland we have a lot of cloud overnight, which is now | :19:56. | :19:59. | |
clearing, allowing temperatures to drop. A lot of frost this morning | :20:00. | :20:03. | |
and patchy fog. Patchy fog across northern England and also a frosty | :20:04. | :20:08. | |
start, so with that combination we have freezing fog. Some of the fog | :20:09. | :20:12. | |
in the south will be slow to clear. Some of it will linger for much of | :20:13. | :20:16. | |
the day. Elsewhere, it should slowly lift through the morning. For most | :20:17. | :20:21. | |
of us today it will be dry, with some sunshine, but you can see areas | :20:22. | :20:25. | |
where we hang on to some cloud. If we hang on to the fog that will have | :20:26. | :20:29. | |
an adverse impact on the temperatures. It will remain cold. | :20:30. | :20:33. | |
Wind strengthening as we go through the latter part of the day across | :20:34. | :20:37. | |
Northern Ireland and Scotland. Heralding the arrival of an Atlantic | :20:38. | :20:40. | |
weather front. As we head on through the course of the night, you can see | :20:41. | :20:46. | |
how the fog reforms across central and also eastern parts of the UK. | :20:47. | :20:51. | |
Again, some of these will be dense, some will be freezing and we are | :20:52. | :20:55. | |
looking at a widespread frost. Tomorrow, where we've got fog, it | :20:56. | :20:59. | |
will mean it will be stubborn to lift. Again, a little bit hanging | :21:00. | :21:03. | |
around for a large chunk of the day. A weather front bringing the rain | :21:04. | :21:06. | |
overnight into Scotland and Northern Ireland. It sinks further south. | :21:07. | :21:10. | |
Patchy weather front. Patchy in nature. It will produce spits and | :21:11. | :21:15. | |
spots of rain and drizzle, nothing too heavy. Behind it, more cloud. | :21:16. | :21:20. | |
Look at the temperatures and storm away, 10 Celsius! Under the fog, | :21:21. | :21:24. | |
temperatures lower than they have been. 11 as we head towards | :21:25. | :21:31. | |
Plymouth. Towards the end of the week we see an improvement. Thanks | :21:32. | :21:39. | |
for a much. -- thanks so much. I think about 100 flights from | :21:40. | :21:41. | |
Heathrow have been cancelled. We've got toast in a studio. You say | :21:42. | :21:49. | |
you don't like burnt toast. This is not the kind of post I like. | :21:50. | :21:55. | |
ARM between these two. I would be number two. -- I am between. | :21:56. | :22:05. | |
The point is... No, I have just bought the toasting, | :22:06. | :22:09. | |
there's no point. If you prefer it well-browned, | :22:10. | :22:11. | |
government scientists are advising aiming for a lighter shade to reduce | :22:12. | :22:13. | |
the risk of developing cancer. The Food Standards Agency says | :22:14. | :22:17. | |
over-cooking starchy foods like bread and potatoes causes | :22:18. | :22:19. | |
an increased level of a potentially It's launching a campaign to raise | :22:20. | :22:22. | |
awareness of the risks, as our health correspondent | :22:23. | :22:26. | |
Robert Pigott reports. Many of the foods under scrutiny for | :22:27. | :22:38. | |
acrylamide content are staples of the British diet, things like | :22:39. | :22:41. | |
crisps, chips, cakes, biscuits and bread. I've got with me Steve, | :22:42. | :22:48. | |
you've given us some stern advice about how dark outpost should be and | :22:49. | :22:52. | |
you are calling for golden yellow? That's quite a big ask. It is. We | :22:53. | :22:57. | |
are asking people to go for gold starchy foods when you cook at high | :22:58. | :23:01. | |
temperatures. They can collate acrylamide. The longer and hotter, | :23:02. | :23:06. | |
the more acrylamide. I think this is more or less what you are | :23:07. | :23:09. | |
recommending? Something like that. That's a bit lighter than I would | :23:10. | :23:14. | |
prefer, which is more like that. I think a lot of people would be | :23:15. | :23:18. | |
toasting their toast like I've done. It is still a matter of choice, but | :23:19. | :23:23. | |
we are saying if you want to take some small steps to reduce your | :23:24. | :23:26. | |
acrylamide intake, try lightening it by a couple of shades. | :23:27. | :23:29. | |
So if you are toasting this morning, that the advice. Simon is a former | :23:30. | :23:37. | |
MaterChef winner and now full-time chef. When you are cooking, do you | :23:38. | :23:42. | |
consider whether you are overdoing it, is it overground? I think | :23:43. | :23:47. | |
there's a fine line. -- over browned. For me, the second one is | :23:48. | :23:52. | |
about right. Anything greater than that and you are running the risk of | :23:53. | :23:57. | |
its tasting bitter and acrid. In terms of other than toast, like | :23:58. | :24:01. | |
vegetables, people roast goes, it can be difficult... Because of the | :24:02. | :24:07. | |
sugar content, it can make it hard when you roast things. With | :24:08. | :24:10. | |
potatoes, if you don't want to take it too far you can dress them in a | :24:11. | :24:15. | |
mix of polenta and flour. You can use cornflour if you want to keep it | :24:16. | :24:19. | |
gluten-free. That will give it a crunch without over roasting. With | :24:20. | :24:23. | |
vegetables that are high in sugar, I tend to parboil them and cook them | :24:24. | :24:27. | |
in stock. When I was on MaterChef I cooked things in carry -- carrot | :24:28. | :24:34. | |
juice. You don't need to keep them for hours on end to get a good | :24:35. | :24:39. | |
crunch. No one has ever had a crispy carrot. It is difficult to do, so | :24:40. | :24:44. | |
why try? Yellow beanies, they are talking about bringing temperatures | :24:45. | :24:48. | |
down. Can you cook and roast at a low temperature, for example? It is | :24:49. | :24:52. | |
possible to achieve cooking things well at a low temperature, from a | :24:53. | :24:57. | |
chef's point of view. I would be tended to use a water bath and then | :24:58. | :25:01. | |
finishing it. They are accessible, you can buy them on and is on. To | :25:02. | :25:06. | |
use it in a water bath first. To stick to the guidelines people are | :25:07. | :25:09. | |
talking about you could quite easily do that and cookie long and slow. -- | :25:10. | :25:14. | |
cook it. This is just starchy foods,... The water bath technique | :25:15. | :25:24. | |
you could use for meat, but for a roast potato to mix would do that | :25:25. | :25:28. | |
perfectly, flour and polenta. How many people do you think have the | :25:29. | :25:32. | |
time to worry about what colour their toast is? Guess it is very | :25:33. | :25:36. | |
difficult, but if you think about it, if you've got the same setting | :25:37. | :25:40. | |
and you get it right, you only have to worry about it once. One of the | :25:41. | :25:44. | |
other mornings I was reading about is keeping vegetables in a fridge. | :25:45. | :25:49. | |
What's the issue there? I wouldn't. I keep my vegetables out of the | :25:50. | :25:54. | |
fridge at home. For example, tomatoes, you spend all of that time | :25:55. | :25:58. | |
in a greenhouse keeping them warm, and then they get thrown in the | :25:59. | :26:01. | |
fridge. It doesn't make sense. Nature tells you how to store and | :26:02. | :26:07. | |
look after things. Eggs, potatoes, onions, carrots, they can all live | :26:08. | :26:10. | |
outside of the fridge quite happily. You will be back later. And three | :26:11. | :26:15. | |
much. We are getting lots of toast comments and I imagine pictures as | :26:16. | :26:20. | |
well. We talk about obesity quite a lot | :26:21. | :26:26. | |
and diabetes. It seems people, I would imagine, you might be getting | :26:27. | :26:29. | |
annoyed that you are getting told how to cook toast and we are talking | :26:30. | :26:34. | |
about this rather than other issues. Anyway, we will talk about them or | :26:35. | :26:38. | |
later. We will indeed. Thank you for your | :26:39. | :26:42. | |
messages. Some of you like York toast cremated. That's all it is. We | :26:43. | :26:48. | |
are also talking about Trainspotting. What have you been up | :26:49. | :26:55. | |
to? For 20 years... Good question. We will catch up with the stars of | :26:56. | :27:01. | |
the premiere of Danny Boyle's sequel to Trainspotting and find out how | :27:02. | :27:05. | |
the cult characters will be written. Time now to get the news, | :27:06. | :27:07. | |
travel and weather where you are. I'm back with the latest | :27:08. | :30:26. | |
from the BBC London newsroom Hello, this is Breakfast | :30:27. | :30:32. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. We'll bring you all the latest news | :30:33. | :30:40. | |
and sport in a moment, As Theresa May reveals ways to get | :30:41. | :30:43. | |
"the whole economy firing" with a new industrial plan for | :30:44. | :30:48. | |
post-Brexit Britain - we're live at factory in Warrington to find out | :30:49. | :30:51. | |
what businesses want to hear Often associated with | :30:52. | :30:54. | |
roads and roundabouts, Milton Keynes was in fact designed | :30:55. | :30:58. | |
to provide a greener, As it celebrates its 50th | :30:59. | :31:02. | |
anniversary, we find out why it's become a model for new | :31:03. | :31:09. | |
towns around the world. After 8:30, the MP | :31:10. | :31:11. | |
turned travel presenter Michael Portillo will be on the sofa | :31:12. | :31:15. | |
to talk about his latest adventure by train that takes him on a journey | :31:16. | :31:19. | |
through American history. But now a summary of this | :31:20. | :31:22. | |
morning's main news. The Prime Minister, Theresa May, | :31:23. | :31:33. | |
will today unveil the government's vision of a more interventionist, | :31:34. | :31:36. | |
industrial strategy for Britain. The key proposal is the creation | :31:37. | :31:42. | |
of deals to assist certain industry sectors, including nuclear power | :31:43. | :31:45. | |
and life sciences. Mrs May will launch the plans | :31:46. | :31:47. | |
at her first regional cabinet meeting which is taking place | :31:48. | :31:50. | |
in the north-west of England. Business secretary job -- Greg Clark | :31:51. | :32:05. | |
said it will be at the heart. Killam the industrial strategy will be | :32:06. | :32:08. | |
driving very hard to spread the opportunities right across the | :32:09. | :32:12. | |
country and to drive not just jobs but really good well paying jobs in | :32:13. | :32:16. | |
all parts of the country. It's going to be a big part of our strategy. | :32:17. | :32:18. | |
We'll be getting more details on those plans | :32:19. | :32:21. | |
from the Business Secretary Greg Clark just after 7:00. | :32:22. | :32:24. | |
The Labour Party is calling on Theresa May to make a statement | :32:25. | :32:29. | |
to Parliament clarifying when she knew about a reported | :32:30. | :32:31. | |
According to a report in The Sunday Times, | :32:32. | :32:34. | |
an unarmed missile veered off course during a test in June last year, | :32:35. | :32:38. | |
just weeks before a vote to renew the system. | :32:39. | :32:41. | |
In a BBC interview, the Prime Minister said she has | :32:42. | :32:43. | |
"full faith" in the Trident programme. | :32:44. | :32:48. | |
The White House says it's in the initial stages of discussions | :32:49. | :32:51. | |
about moving the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. | :32:52. | :32:54. | |
The United Nations does not recognise Jerusalem | :32:55. | :32:56. | |
Israelis and Palestinians both claim Jerusalem as their capital city | :32:57. | :33:00. | |
and Palestinian leaders have warned that moving the US embassy | :33:01. | :33:02. | |
It's barely the time it takes to fill the kettle - | :33:03. | :33:21. | |
but ten seconds is all it took for 19 buildings to be reduced | :33:22. | :33:24. | |
to rubble in a controlled explosion in China yesterday. | :33:25. | :33:27. | |
Demolition experts waited until dark had fallen before detonating five | :33:28. | :33:30. | |
tons of explosives which brought down 150,000 square metres | :33:31. | :33:32. | |
of concrete, glass and steel to make way for a skyscraper. | :33:33. | :33:45. | |
Extraordinary pictures. Incredible to watch that. Stand well back, I | :33:46. | :33:49. | |
think. Absolutely. Talks aimed at resolving | :33:50. | :33:50. | |
the Syrian conflict are due The negotiations have the backing | :33:51. | :33:52. | |
of Russia and Iran, which support the Syrian | :33:53. | :33:56. | |
government, and Turkey, It's the first time a group made up | :33:57. | :33:58. | |
entirely of rebel forces will negotiate with | :33:59. | :34:02. | |
the Syrian government. Hull midfielder, Ryan Mason, | :34:03. | :34:03. | |
has undergone surgery after fracturing his skull | :34:04. | :34:05. | |
during a clash of heads during a Premier League match | :34:06. | :34:08. | |
at Chelsea yesterday. Hull said in a statement | :34:09. | :34:10. | |
that the twenty five year-old He was taken to the neurosurgery | :34:11. | :34:13. | |
unit at a hospital close to Chelsea's Stamford Bridge ground | :34:14. | :34:17. | |
after the collision with defender Gary Cahill, as they both | :34:18. | :34:20. | |
went to head the ball. Police say one man has been arrested | :34:21. | :34:33. | |
after an officer was shot The officer is in a stable condition | :34:34. | :34:39. | |
after being hit twice in the arm when a number of shots | :34:40. | :34:43. | |
were fired from a car on the Crumlin Road | :34:44. | :34:46. | |
in the north of the city. The Northern Ireland Secretary | :34:47. | :34:49. | |
James Brokenshire said This incident underlines the risks | :34:50. | :34:55. | |
that they take an equally, the nature of some of the challenges we | :34:56. | :34:59. | |
continue to see in Northern Ireland. People will use violence to achieve | :35:00. | :35:06. | |
their twisted, or advance their rents. This has no place in Northern | :35:07. | :35:13. | |
Ireland. The political engagement, the peace process, we stand | :35:14. | :35:14. | |
absolutely behind. The world's biggest smartphone | :35:15. | :35:15. | |
maker, Samsung, has blamed faulty batteries for the fires that led | :35:16. | :35:18. | |
to the recall of its flagship The company was forced | :35:19. | :35:21. | |
to discontinue the device after a chaotic recall that | :35:22. | :35:24. | |
saw replacement phones The Korean electronics giant said it | :35:25. | :35:26. | |
apologised for the defect, and had learned lessons | :35:27. | :35:30. | |
from what had happened. Dubai boasts the highest | :35:31. | :35:40. | |
skyline in the Middle East, and the city's firefighters | :35:41. | :35:42. | |
could soon be issued with jet packs to help them tackle blazes | :35:43. | :35:45. | |
in high-rise buildings. Footage released by | :35:46. | :35:48. | |
the Dubai Civil Defence shows firefighters using the kit to rise | :35:49. | :35:50. | |
above a bridge by using water The innovative system, | :35:51. | :35:53. | |
which is called Dolphin, is also aimed at reducing response | :35:54. | :35:56. | |
times by avoiding heavy traffic Showed that on a high-rise building. | :35:57. | :36:20. | |
It depends how high you can get. It looks very impressive. If it works, | :36:21. | :36:21. | |
why not? Sally, you have more with Ryan | :36:22. | :36:29. | |
Mason. Killam I have the actual pictures of the incident yesterday | :36:30. | :36:32. | |
which I can assure you, everybody at home, is this distressing sounding | :36:33. | :36:37. | |
but he is OK. That is the first thing we should say. Ryan Mason is | :36:38. | :36:42. | |
in a stable condition in hospital after suffering a fractured skull in | :36:43. | :36:47. | |
a sickening clash with Gary Cahill yesterday. He was actually treated | :36:48. | :36:50. | |
on the pitch the eight minute before going to St Mary 's Hospital. Diego | :36:51. | :36:52. | |
Costa and. Scored the goals. They Diego Costa and Cahill scored | :36:53. | :37:11. | |
the goals which extended Chelsea's lead at the top of the | :37:12. | :37:14. | |
table to eight points. wish him the best. We hope to see | :37:15. | :37:19. | |
him very soon on the pitch, yes. There was late drama at the Emirates | :37:20. | :37:30. | |
with two penalties in extra time. With ten-man Arsenal leading, | :37:31. | :37:33. | |
Burnley thought they'd got a draw when Andre Gray scored | :37:34. | :37:36. | |
from the penalty spot in the 93rd minute but Arsenal got | :37:37. | :37:39. | |
their own penalty in the 97th Alexis Sanchez securing a 2-1 | :37:40. | :37:42. | |
victory that moves Arsenal up Southampton beat Premier League | :37:43. | :37:45. | |
champions Leicester THREE NIL. Leicester haven't won a game away | :37:46. | :37:55. | |
from home all season. Celtic will play Inverness in | :37:56. | :38:07. | |
the fifth round of the Scottish Cup after a 3-0 win over | :38:08. | :38:10. | |
League One Albion Rovers. Scott Sinclair scored | :38:11. | :38:13. | |
the pick of the goals. Britain's Johanna Konta | :38:14. | :38:15. | |
is through to the quarter-finals The world number nine beat | :38:16. | :38:17. | |
Russia's Ekaterina Makarova 6-1, 6-4 to reach the last eight | :38:18. | :38:21. | |
without dropping a set. Konta is the last remaining Brit | :38:22. | :38:24. | |
in the singles draw and will now play 22-time Grand Slam | :38:25. | :38:27. | |
champion Serena Williams. Andy Murray, of course, as we know, | :38:28. | :38:35. | |
is out. Wasps are into the quarter-final | :38:36. | :38:38. | |
of the European Champions Cup after a convincing 41-27 win | :38:39. | :38:41. | |
over Italian side Zebre. They scored seven tries, | :38:42. | :38:43. | |
including one for man of the match Elliot Daley, who was making his | :38:44. | :38:46. | |
150th appearance for the club. They'll face Leinster in the last | :38:47. | :38:49. | |
eight while Saracens will play We have been talking about what | :38:50. | :39:09. | |
things not to eat. Can I add something like that? Burnt toast or | :39:10. | :39:10. | |
the end of a snooker cue. Ronnie O'Sullivan has won a record | :39:11. | :39:13. | |
seventh Masters title. He beat Joe Perry 10-7 | :39:14. | :39:15. | |
at Alexandra Palace, despite having had problems | :39:16. | :39:19. | |
with the tip of his cue, which he bit off at | :39:20. | :39:21. | |
the end of the match. O'Sullivan had been 4-1 down before | :39:22. | :39:24. | |
winning seven frames in a row He had shared the record of six | :39:25. | :39:27. | |
Masters wins with Stephen Hendry, but victory number seven puts him | :39:28. | :39:31. | |
out in front on his own. It's great to get, you know, some | :39:32. | :39:47. | |
records. Still some world champions to get so I will try and nick that | :39:48. | :39:52. | |
one of him as well. Listen, when I was young I was just happy to have | :39:53. | :40:02. | |
won one. To win seven, someone must be looking after me. | :40:03. | :40:03. | |
England finished their disappointing one day series against India | :40:04. | :40:05. | |
with victory in the third and final match - the first on the entire | :40:06. | :40:09. | |
Ben Stokes was named man of the match, hitting a half century | :40:10. | :40:13. | |
Chasing 322 - India needed six to win from the final four balls - | :40:14. | :40:18. | |
but failed to score any more, losing five five runs. | :40:19. | :40:21. | |
Dave Ryding has become the first British skier to claim a World Cup | :40:22. | :40:26. | |
He finished second in the men's slalom at Kitzbuhel. | :40:27. | :40:30. | |
He was quickest after the first run but was eventually beaten | :40:31. | :40:33. | |
into second place by home favourite Marcel Hirscher. | :40:34. | :40:35. | |
No Brit has won an Alpine World Cup Ski Race in the 50 years | :40:36. | :40:39. | |
The last British skier to get onto the podium | :40:40. | :40:42. | |
No Brit has won in 50 years! 1981. There was a real moment. A time | :40:43. | :40:58. | |
yesterday where he looked like he could have done it but to even get | :40:59. | :41:02. | |
on the podium is fantastic. I know he is delighted with that result as | :41:03. | :41:12. | |
well. And Tommy won in Abu Dhabi. With a very unusual grip. The claw. | :41:13. | :41:20. | |
I've never tried the claw. Did not know you were a bit of a golf. Jono | :41:21. | :41:25. | |
she has got skills. There wasn't much else to do at university. | :41:26. | :41:29. | |
Except study! The Prime Minister says | :41:30. | :41:31. | |
the government is stepping up to a new, active role in industry - | :41:32. | :41:34. | |
and later she'll outline how she plans to boost the economy | :41:35. | :41:37. | |
in a post-Brexit Britain. Ben's out and about for us this | :41:38. | :41:39. | |
morning finding out what it He's a fuel processing | :41:40. | :41:43. | |
plant in Cheshire. Good morning. Good morning. Welcome | :41:44. | :41:57. | |
to Warrington. Let me show you where we are. This place is special. They | :41:58. | :42:04. | |
take all the oil from places like the North Sea, they refine it and | :42:05. | :42:10. | |
process it and the end up in this barrel. The crucial thing is this, | :42:11. | :42:14. | |
made in England. We will hear from the Prime Minister about how we can | :42:15. | :42:20. | |
do more of that. This is a refining centre but also the packaging and | :42:21. | :42:24. | |
labelling. The big question when we hear from the Prime Minister and at | :42:25. | :42:28. | |
a later, what are we expected to hear about the plans for the economy | :42:29. | :42:33. | |
and how the rest of the country will share in the benefit. Crucially, | :42:34. | :42:36. | |
what difference it will make for business. Greg is a deep bass here. | :42:37. | :42:45. | |
Good morning to you -- boss. What difference will it make? Government | :42:46. | :42:50. | |
laying out a ten point strategy. We are looking for stability. We don't | :42:51. | :42:56. | |
want any flux in the market. We are also looking to get on with our | :42:57. | :43:01. | |
jobs. We are quite a mature business so we are looking for the stable | :43:02. | :43:05. | |
platform and do what we are roadie doing very well. One of the big | :43:06. | :43:09. | |
issues is skills as well. Getting the right people through the door. | :43:10. | :43:17. | |
-- that we are already doing well. Absolutely. Somebody coming up on | :43:18. | :43:21. | |
the production floor takes six months to train. If we could have | :43:22. | :43:25. | |
somebody ready on day one, that would be a huge benefit. Time and | :43:26. | :43:29. | |
money. Interesting, when you hear from the government, hearing about | :43:30. | :43:33. | |
getting involved in business. Don't really want to be involved but they | :43:34. | :43:38. | |
want to be getting on with it. There are questions about whether | :43:39. | :43:41. | |
Westminster should be deciding what is best for the country? It's a | :43:42. | :43:44. | |
fantastic the government has decided to have an industrial strategy but | :43:45. | :43:49. | |
it is about it being tailored to a business like this one. It might be | :43:50. | :43:52. | |
fine getting on with things but others need support. They need | :43:53. | :43:56. | |
technical support. The government can provide some of that support. | :43:57. | :44:00. | |
What we are worried about is that these decisions need to be devolved | :44:01. | :44:05. | |
down to local areas. It should not be Whitehall dollop in little bits | :44:06. | :44:11. | |
of cash here and there where they see fit. We needed at local, | :44:12. | :44:16. | |
regional level, to make sure they invest in the best businesses there | :44:17. | :44:21. | |
are in that locality. And also, it's all well and good to hear these | :44:22. | :44:25. | |
announcements, ten point plan. The truth is, what it means Day today. | :44:26. | :44:35. | |
It can't just be a sound bite. Places like Warrington. We have seen | :44:36. | :44:40. | |
before, very good ideas coming out that when we come to use them, there | :44:41. | :44:44. | |
is no support or structure to make it work in the real world. Jono just | :44:45. | :44:48. | |
a word from you in the Northern Powerhouse, -- just a word from you. | :44:49. | :44:53. | |
It is not just about money which in market not at all. It's about | :44:54. | :44:59. | |
passing decisions down to regional agencies to make sure they can be | :45:00. | :45:03. | |
closer to where the best businesses are. They know what to invest in, | :45:04. | :45:08. | |
the right strategy, right sectors. Very often, if its London picking | :45:09. | :45:12. | |
which sectors, that's not going to be any good for those local areas. | :45:13. | :45:19. | |
Jono good stuff. The now. -- good stuff, for now, we will finish. We | :45:20. | :45:24. | |
will be hearing about how important it is for business here and what the | :45:25. | :45:28. | |
government can do to help us do more. | :45:29. | :45:34. | |
If you are waking up this morning, you might be seen that it is very | :45:35. | :45:40. | |
foggy in parts. Carol can bring us up to date. Good morning. Yes, | :45:41. | :45:49. | |
indeed, a lot of fog around this morning and unusually we have dense | :45:50. | :45:53. | |
fog across parts of London. We haven't had a distance in London for | :45:54. | :45:57. | |
some time. Lovely Weather Watchers pictures illustrating that point. | :45:58. | :46:01. | |
It's not just in the London area where we have fog, it is across many | :46:02. | :46:07. | |
southern counties. This is where we have particularly dense fog. | :46:08. | :46:10. | |
Visibility down to 50 metres in some parts of the south, we also have | :46:11. | :46:16. | |
parts of Wales, northern England and southern Scotland very foggy. So if | :46:17. | :46:19. | |
you are travelling it is freezing fog we are looking at. Travel | :46:20. | :46:24. | |
disruption possible. Already some flights have been cancelled. You can | :46:25. | :46:27. | |
find out what's happening weatherwise where you are on your | :46:28. | :46:32. | |
BBC local radio station and the BBC travel pages. Temperatures start | :46:33. | :46:36. | |
about freezing or below across many parts of the south-east, southern | :46:37. | :46:40. | |
counties, through the Midlands, heading towards the south-west. Here | :46:41. | :46:47. | |
we do have dense fog. In the far south-west it is cold and frosty, | :46:48. | :46:50. | |
but we don't have fog. Across Wales are some patchy fog and quite a bit | :46:51. | :46:56. | |
of cloud around. In Northern Ireland you for free, but it is foggy in the | :46:57. | :47:05. | |
west. -5, -6 at the moment. Frosty in Scotland after a cloudy start to | :47:06. | :47:09. | |
the night. The cloud starts to disperse, then temperatures drop and | :47:10. | :47:15. | |
we have patchy fog in southern Scotland, as we have across northern | :47:16. | :47:20. | |
England. You can see from the blue hue that it is freezing fog. Some of | :47:21. | :47:26. | |
that will be slow to clear. We expect it to take longer to clear in | :47:27. | :47:30. | |
the far south of England. Some places might hang onto it and if | :47:31. | :47:33. | |
that happens temperatures will struggle break freezing. For most of | :47:34. | :47:38. | |
us away from that it will be a fine and dry day, with quite a bit of | :47:39. | :47:42. | |
sunshine. No heat wave in prospect, highs of about 4-7. Later in the day | :47:43. | :47:48. | |
the wind will pick up in Northern Ireland and western Scotland. That | :47:49. | :47:51. | |
heralds the arrival of a weather front bringing in rain. It will be | :47:52. | :47:55. | |
too breezy fourfold in the west tonight. But you can see as we push | :47:56. | :47:59. | |
in through central and eastern parts of England in particular we are back | :48:00. | :48:03. | |
into a foggy situation. And also some widespread frost. So once again | :48:04. | :48:09. | |
we have freezing fog. Tomorrow that will take its time to clear. It will | :48:10. | :48:14. | |
linger again for much of the day for some parts. Some of it lifting in | :48:15. | :48:18. | |
the local out. Temperatures will be held down. Rain coming across | :48:19. | :48:23. | |
Scotland and Northern Ireland, it moves into northern England and | :48:24. | :48:28. | |
north Wales, but it's a weak affair, so it will be patchy light rain and | :48:29. | :48:32. | |
drizzle. Some sunshine either side. Highest temperatures towards the | :48:33. | :48:37. | |
west. Thanks we much. -- thanks very much. | :48:38. | :48:54. | |
It is said a missile fired by the Royal Navy last year went in the | :48:55. | :48:59. | |
wrong direction. The Labour Party has said the Prime Minister has | :49:00. | :49:03. | |
avoided questions about the event and is calling for a full | :49:04. | :49:05. | |
explanation today. Shadow Defence Secretary | :49:06. | :49:07. | |
Nia Griffith joins us Let's just talk about the questions | :49:08. | :49:16. | |
the Prime Minister was asked yesterday. She was asked | :49:17. | :49:19. | |
specifically about whether she knew that this test had gone wrong. | :49:20. | :49:21. | |
Should she have answered that question? She certainly should. It | :49:22. | :49:27. | |
is such a serious incident. She is bound to have known and what she | :49:28. | :49:31. | |
needs to tell us is did she know before she gave a major speech on | :49:32. | :49:35. | |
Trident just days before she became the Prime Minister? It isn't | :49:36. | :49:38. | |
something you would forget if you had been briefed about it. Do you | :49:39. | :49:42. | |
know it's a serious incident? We don't know yet, we only have | :49:43. | :49:46. | |
reports, and that's part of the problem. We should have had a full | :49:47. | :49:50. | |
report to Parliament and we should know exactly what happened from the | :49:51. | :49:53. | |
MoD and also what investigations they've carried out since. It is | :49:54. | :49:57. | |
extremely embarrassing that the British public and British MPs don't | :49:58. | :50:01. | |
know, and of course the international powers would have been | :50:02. | :50:04. | |
notified in the usual channels of any tests being carried out and | :50:05. | :50:08. | |
presumably if something had veered off course they would have had to be | :50:09. | :50:12. | |
notified about that. With regard... This was a test, that's what is | :50:13. | :50:17. | |
meant to happen. They are trying to see what happens at whether or not | :50:18. | :50:21. | |
things go wrong, and you think routinely that the Prime Minister | :50:22. | :50:24. | |
should know every single time something happens? There is normally | :50:25. | :50:28. | |
a report to Parliament about such incidents as. The MoD does normally | :50:29. | :50:33. | |
issue a report, and so of course we should know what is going on, and | :50:34. | :50:37. | |
particularly when you read something like this in the newspapers it | :50:38. | :50:41. | |
doesn't make you think, well, where's the transparency in | :50:42. | :50:44. | |
government and why couldn't the Prime Minister yesterday have been | :50:45. | :50:47. | |
upfront and honest about what she knew? You were discussing in | :50:48. | :50:53. | |
Parliament about time, or just after it happened, the future of Trident. | :50:54. | :51:00. | |
Could it have influenced decisions? We don't know because we don't | :51:01. | :51:04. | |
exactly what happened, so we can't speculate on that until we have a | :51:05. | :51:08. | |
full report. That's what we are for today. I know you may disagree with | :51:09. | :51:13. | |
him on this, at Jeremy Corbyn says the incident is a catastrophic | :51:14. | :51:17. | |
error. What does he mean by that? I think the incident speaks for | :51:18. | :51:22. | |
itself, if the reports are true, that a missile veering offcourse is | :51:23. | :51:25. | |
something to be extremely concerned about, but we need to have the full | :51:26. | :51:30. | |
detail of exactly what did happen and why this occurred. And the | :51:31. | :51:34. | |
government offcourse has spoken about this, and said the capability | :51:35. | :51:38. | |
and effectiveness of the Trident missile, should we ever need to | :51:39. | :51:42. | |
employ it, is unquestionable. Is that something you would agree with? | :51:43. | :51:46. | |
Any to explain what happened in this particular incident. We can't | :51:47. | :51:50. | |
speculate on what they are saying when they aren't being open and | :51:51. | :51:53. | |
honest and explaining exactly what happened. OK. Thanks for your time | :51:54. | :51:57. | |
on Breakfast. It was the film that defined | :51:58. | :52:03. | |
the Cool Britannia era, and made household | :52:04. | :52:05. | |
names of its cast. More than 20 years later, | :52:06. | :52:09. | |
the sequel to Trainspotting Some people waiting with bated | :52:10. | :52:11. | |
breath! T2 Trainspotting had its world | :52:12. | :52:22. | |
premiere in Edinburgh last night. Our Entertainment Correspondent | :52:23. | :52:24. | |
Colin Paterson was there. After more than 20 years, | :52:25. | :52:26. | |
the Trainspotting gang back together, on the orange carpet | :52:27. | :52:29. | |
of the long-awaited sequel. Hello, Mark. What have you been up | :52:30. | :52:38. | |
to 420 years? We didn't want to disappoint people because the film | :52:39. | :52:44. | |
had a section in people's hearts, Sweden want to ruin it and tarnish | :52:45. | :52:47. | |
that image, so I hope we haven't done that. Apart from all of in the | :52:48. | :52:52. | |
first movie I think people found it relatable, even though it was about | :52:53. | :52:55. | |
subjects they may have not been involved with, it was was still | :52:56. | :52:59. | |
relatable in some way. There is such a cultural weight associated with | :53:00. | :53:04. | |
it, that it feels like no we don't that I've been to before. Choose | :53:05. | :53:13. | |
life, choose a job, choose a career... Trainspotting was the | :53:14. | :53:19. | |
defining film of cool Britannia. The posters on student's walls, the | :53:20. | :53:23. | |
soundtrack in CD players. It dealt with addiction, feminism and | :53:24. | :53:28. | |
friendship. For the sequel, Ewan McGregor's famous speech has had and | :53:29. | :53:35. | |
update. Choose life, choose Facebook, Twitter, and hope that | :53:36. | :53:39. | |
somewhere someone cares. There's something very deep and moving about | :53:40. | :53:48. | |
finding out where they are all -- they all are now under the northern | :53:49. | :53:53. | |
India be that I've done and there aren't very many that we've seen, | :53:54. | :53:56. | |
where the characters become almost like people we know. It is fair to | :53:57. | :54:01. | |
say the four guys have lived the bet. How do you think they have | :54:02. | :54:05. | |
aged? There was always a moment in every shooting day where there was | :54:06. | :54:08. | |
that 20 years later moment where you felt 20 years had gone by since he | :54:09. | :54:13. | |
was last playing this guide. Detox the system. What does that even | :54:14. | :54:18. | |
mean? It doesn't mean anything. It isn't getting out of your body | :54:19. | :54:22. | |
that's the problem, it's getting out of your mind. You are an attic. You | :54:23. | :54:26. | |
think I haven't heard that 100,000 times? So, the addicted. The | :54:27. | :54:31. | |
addicted to something else. After Trainspotting came out we were like | :54:32. | :54:36. | |
the waiters of the movie in Britain. -- the waiters. We represented writ | :54:37. | :54:44. | |
pop movies. So there was a part of me that yearns for that again, I | :54:45. | :54:51. | |
suppose. And he might not be finished with a roll. The cast are | :54:52. | :54:55. | |
already talking about Trainspotting three, using urban Welsh's latest | :54:56. | :55:01. | |
novel as a starting point. We think the chances are good. It was | :55:02. | :55:07. | |
published in the and I'm up for it, he is up for it, so I don't think | :55:08. | :55:10. | |
you've seen the last of me yet! You've got the answer to why Ewan | :55:11. | :55:21. | |
McGregor was wearing that hat. Yes, lots of people were asking. He | :55:22. | :55:27. | |
is currently filming the third series of the TV series Fargo, so he | :55:28. | :55:31. | |
has a complete balls head at the moment. In the TV series he plays | :55:32. | :55:34. | |
twins and the twins where two different weeks. | :55:35. | :55:41. | |
So glad I asked! -- different wigs. There is advice out today that if | :55:42. | :55:45. | |
you burn your toast it could be carcinogenic. | :55:46. | :55:50. | |
We are asking how you like your toast. Lots of people contacting us | :55:51. | :55:54. | |
to say they only post their toast under the grill. Jay says the only | :55:55. | :55:59. | |
way to have your toast is to cremate it. MR says you have to have it | :56:00. | :56:03. | |
cremated, it makes your hair curly! The cremated toast people are very | :56:04. | :56:09. | |
vociferous this morning. I am sure many people out there don't like it | :56:10. | :56:15. | |
like that. Currently, 54% on our unofficial | :56:16. | :56:17. | |
poll is a golden brown. for Tuesday, under the cloud | :56:18. | :59:39. | |
and fog, just three Celsius. Hello, this is Breakfast, | :59:40. | :00:27. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. The Prime Minister announces | :00:28. | :00:30. | |
a new plan for industry Theresa May says the government | :00:31. | :00:32. | |
is stepping up to a new, Hello, this is Breakfast, | :00:33. | :00:36. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. The Prime Minister announces | :00:37. | :00:40. | |
a new plan for industry Theresa May says the government | :00:41. | :00:43. | |
is stepping up to a new, The Prime Minister wants people from | :00:44. | :00:51. | |
all corners of the country to feel the benefits of economic growth. | :00:52. | :00:55. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :00:56. | :00:57. | |
The Prime Minister announces a new plan for industry | :00:58. | :01:00. | |
Theresa May says the government is stepping up to a new, | :01:01. | :01:03. | |
The Prime Minister wants people from all corners of the country | :01:04. | :01:08. | |
to feel the benefits of economic growth. | :01:09. | :01:09. | |
Calls for the government to give a full explanation to parliament | :01:10. | :01:24. | |
about a reported misfire of a Trident missile. | :01:25. | :01:26. | |
A warning from the Food Standards Agency that overcooked foods | :01:27. | :01:29. | |
like toast and potatoes could increase the risk | :01:30. | :01:31. | |
It started as a small group of villages but now contributes | :01:32. | :01:35. | |
billions to the economy - the post-war new town Milton Keynes | :01:36. | :01:38. | |
In sport, Ryan Mason is in a stable condition in hospital after surgery | :01:39. | :01:46. | |
overnight the Hull City midfielder suffered a fractured skull | :01:47. | :01:49. | |
in a clash of heads with Gary Cahill during their 2-0 defeat at Chelsea. | :01:50. | :01:52. | |
in a clash of heads with Gary Cahill during their 2-0 defeat at Chelsea. | :01:53. | :01:59. | |
good morning. It certainly is. We have got sick, dense fog across | :02:00. | :02:07. | |
parts of southern England. It is freezing as well. It will take quite | :02:08. | :02:11. | |
a long time before it lifts. We also have patchy fog affecting other | :02:12. | :02:14. | |
parts of the UK, that will slowly lift. And the others, a slight -- | :02:15. | :02:20. | |
dry day. I will have more details in 15 minutes. | :02:21. | :02:21. | |
Prime Minister, Theresa May will today | :02:22. | :02:24. | |
announce her plans for boosting industry in Britain. | :02:25. | :02:26. | |
She'll be outlining a strategy, which she says will give | :02:27. | :02:29. | |
the government a new, more active role. | :02:30. | :02:31. | |
It will be unveiled at a cabinet meeting in the north-west | :02:32. | :02:34. | |
Our Industry correspondent John Moylan has more. | :02:35. | :02:38. | |
How can the government ensure the economy is fit for the future? | :02:39. | :02:41. | |
For the Business Secretary Greg Clark, places like this are part | :02:42. | :02:44. | |
It is a new automotive innovation centre in Warwick, | :02:45. | :02:47. | |
backed by government and industry money, designed | :02:48. | :02:49. | |
to keep our carmakers firing on all cylinders. | :02:50. | :02:57. | |
The industrial strategy will be committed to driving very hard, | :02:58. | :02:59. | |
to spread the opportunities right across the country and to drive, | :03:00. | :03:02. | |
not just jobs but really good, well paying jobs in all parts | :03:03. | :03:06. | |
It will be a big part of our strategy. | :03:07. | :03:11. | |
Today, the strategy will be outlined in a new green | :03:12. | :03:14. | |
paper, aimed at kickstarting a wide-ranging consultation | :03:15. | :03:16. | |
That will include plans for sector deals | :03:17. | :03:19. | |
where businesses and stakeholders in specific sectors can make | :03:20. | :03:21. | |
That is just one of ten so-called strategic pillars | :03:22. | :03:38. | |
which are all designed to increase productivity and | :03:39. | :03:40. | |
In the past, governments used industrial strategies as an excuse | :03:41. | :03:43. | |
As we prepare for the challenge of leaving the EU, the big test | :03:44. | :03:50. | |
of this plan will be that it doesn't just | :03:51. | :03:52. | |
deliver for successful firms like this but that it reaches out | :03:53. | :03:55. | |
to a part of the UK to deliver the government's aim of an economy | :03:56. | :03:59. | |
The Labour Party is calling on Theresa May to make a statement | :04:00. | :04:10. | |
to Parliament clarifying whether she she knew | :04:11. | :04:12. | |
about a reported Trident missile misfire before a vote | :04:13. | :04:14. | |
The Prime Minister told the BBC she has "full faith" | :04:15. | :04:18. | |
Our political correspondent Tom Bateman is in Westminster. | :04:19. | :04:21. | |
Some real questions to answer. These Trident tests take place only a few | :04:22. | :04:42. | |
-- every few years. Previous tests have had a blaze of publicity videos | :04:43. | :04:48. | |
released online but this one took place, and unarmed missile that was | :04:49. | :04:51. | |
launched from a submarine off the coast of the United States last | :04:52. | :04:55. | |
summer. We heard nothing about it. The apparent misfire that took | :04:56. | :05:01. | |
place, the reports that the missile veered off course. A few weeks | :05:02. | :05:07. | |
later, Theresa May stood up in front of the MPs and asked them to back | :05:08. | :05:12. | |
the spend of ?43 billion. She was asked whether she knew about the | :05:13. | :05:17. | |
misfire stood here is what she had to say. Do you know the miss by had | :05:18. | :05:23. | |
occurred? I have absolute faith in our Trident missiles. I think we | :05:24. | :05:28. | |
should defend our country, play our role in Nato with an independent | :05:29. | :05:34. | |
nuclear dip -- deterrent. Rola did you know? The issue we were talking | :05:35. | :05:39. | |
about in the House of Commons was important. Whether or not we should | :05:40. | :05:43. | |
renew Trident and have a replacement Trident. That's what we were talking | :05:44. | :05:46. | |
about in the House of Commons will stop the pop House of Commons voted | :05:47. | :05:50. | |
for. I believe in defending our country. Jeremy Corbyn does not want | :05:51. | :05:54. | |
to defend our country with an independent nuclear deterrent. We | :05:55. | :06:00. | |
heard from the Shadow Defence Secretary Leigh Griffiths a few | :06:01. | :06:03. | |
moments ago saying the Prime Minister Mr B upfront and honest -- | :06:04. | :06:13. | |
needs to be. They think there are no questions about Trident's capability | :06:14. | :06:16. | |
and effectiveness. Government scientists are advising | :06:17. | :06:18. | |
that starchy foods like toast and potatoes are not cooked | :06:19. | :06:20. | |
beyond a golden colour to reduce The Food Standards Agency's | :06:21. | :06:23. | |
"Go For Gold" campaign says over-browning food for more flavour | :06:24. | :06:27. | |
and crunch increases a carcinogenic Our Health correspondent | :06:28. | :06:30. | |
Robert Pigott reports. The warning includes some | :06:31. | :06:37. | |
of the most popular foods in the British diet, | :06:38. | :06:40. | |
such as crisps, chips, The longer they're cooked | :06:41. | :06:42. | |
above 120 Celsius, the more Those foods go through a browning | :06:43. | :06:45. | |
process, which many of us like in terms of flavour | :06:46. | :06:57. | |
and taste, but it also The sugars in starchy foods such | :06:58. | :07:00. | |
as your breakfast toast combine with the molecules that make up | :07:01. | :07:13. | |
protein to produce acrylamide that We know that in animal studies | :07:14. | :07:16. | |
it can create cancer and so we are concerned | :07:17. | :07:20. | |
if there is the same mechanism in people that high exposure | :07:21. | :07:23. | |
could increase people's risk. The FSA says people should go | :07:24. | :07:26. | |
for gold, aiming for gold and yellow in baking, roasting, | :07:27. | :07:29. | |
frying or toasting rather It says eating a balanced | :07:30. | :07:31. | |
diet rich in vegetables Cancer Research UK says acrylamide | :07:32. | :07:35. | |
might be harmful to people but insists there are other far | :07:36. | :07:38. | |
bigger proven dangers - being obese, drinking too much | :07:39. | :07:41. | |
and especially smoking. The White House says it's | :07:42. | :07:48. | |
in the initial stages of discussions about moving the US embassy in | :07:49. | :07:51. | |
Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. President Donald Trump | :07:52. | :07:54. | |
and the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, discussed | :07:55. | :07:56. | |
by phone on Sunday the Palestinian Mr Netanyahu has also accepted | :07:57. | :07:59. | |
an invitation to visit Washington next month, talking of a "common | :08:00. | :08:02. | |
vision" for the region. Talks aimed at resolving | :08:03. | :08:15. | |
the Syrian conflict are due For the first time | :08:16. | :08:17. | |
the negotiations will include representatives of | :08:18. | :08:20. | |
armed Syrian rebels. Our chief international | :08:21. | :08:22. | |
correspondent, Lyse Doucet, joins us from Astana in Kazakhstan | :08:23. | :08:23. | |
where the talks are taking place. Lyse how significant | :08:24. | :08:27. | |
are these talks? Rate to speak to you to gain. Talk | :08:28. | :08:37. | |
us through who is there and how significant this could be. Great to | :08:38. | :08:45. | |
speak to you. I'm sure it's not usual that BBC breakfast comes to | :08:46. | :08:49. | |
you live from Astana. New venue, new sponsors. This time it is Russia who | :08:50. | :08:54. | |
backs the Syrian government, Turkey which backs the rebels and around, | :08:55. | :08:58. | |
of course, also a key government back. The people inside this venue | :08:59. | :09:03. | |
out of this freezing cold weather, I have to say, at the opposition side, | :09:04. | :09:09. | |
are the men with the guns. The armed opposition groups. It is the first | :09:10. | :09:13. | |
time they are leading the delegation to talk. If they do in fact talk | :09:14. | :09:17. | |
face-to-face, with the Syrian government. This is a totally new | :09:18. | :09:21. | |
effort to resolve the very old problems about how do you bring an | :09:22. | :09:26. | |
end to the war? There is a ceasefire in place but it each is shaky. How | :09:27. | :09:30. | |
to get food to the millions of people who need it crossing the | :09:31. | :09:34. | |
front lines and howl, if ever, do you bring about a political solution | :09:35. | :09:40. | |
to a six-year-old devastating war? -- how old do you. -- howl. | :09:41. | :09:45. | |
Police say one man has been arrested after an officer was shot | :09:46. | :09:48. | |
The officer is in a stable condition after being hit twice in the arm | :09:49. | :09:53. | |
when a number of shots were fired from a car | :09:54. | :09:56. | |
on the Crumlin Road in the north of the city. | :09:57. | :09:58. | |
The Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire said | :09:59. | :10:00. | |
This incident underlines the risks that they take an equally, | :10:01. | :10:04. | |
the nature of some of the challenges we | :10:05. | :10:06. | |
People will use violence to achieve their twisted, | :10:07. | :10:10. | |
This has no place in Northern Ireland. | :10:11. | :10:13. | |
The political engagement, the peace process, we stand | :10:14. | :10:15. | |
Dense fog and widespread frost are beginning to cause travel | :10:16. | :10:31. | |
disruption in the south-east of England as temperatures plunge | :10:32. | :10:33. | |
This is the scene in London this morning. | :10:34. | :10:37. | |
Around 100 flights out of Heathrow Airport have been | :10:38. | :10:39. | |
cancelled and drivers have been urged to prepare for poor conditions | :10:40. | :10:42. | |
You can see, as Carol was saying, really dense fog, particularly in | :10:43. | :11:02. | |
the south of England. We will have more whether the UN a few minutes' | :11:03. | :11:09. | |
time. -- weather for you. You might be familiar with that shot because | :11:10. | :11:13. | |
sometimes we have Carol they are doing the weather and you are | :11:14. | :11:15. | |
looking down towards Oxford Street that you really cannot see anything | :11:16. | :11:20. | |
at all. That is the top of the new broadcasting house in London. That | :11:21. | :11:24. | |
is London, we can assure you. Yes, we know that. | :11:25. | :11:28. | |
A police crackdown on motorists who illegally use mobile phones | :11:29. | :11:31. | |
at the wheel resulted in nearly 8000 drivers being caught in the space | :11:32. | :11:34. | |
36 forces took part in the operation in November. | :11:35. | :11:37. | |
The National Police Chiefs' Council has released the figures | :11:38. | :11:40. | |
Dubai boasts the highest skyline in the Middle East, | :11:41. | :12:06. | |
and the city's firefighters could soon be issued with jet packs | :12:07. | :12:09. | |
to help them tackle blazes in high-rise buildings. | :12:10. | :12:11. | |
Footage released by the Dubai Civil Defence shows | :12:12. | :12:14. | |
firefighters using the kit to rise above a bridge by using water | :12:15. | :12:17. | |
The innovative system, which is called Dolphin, | :12:18. | :12:20. | |
is also aimed at reducing response times by avoiding heavy traffic | :12:21. | :12:23. | |
You up-to-date with news. And keep all of your comments coming about | :12:24. | :12:35. | |
toast. The government is set to unveil | :12:36. | :12:42. | |
a more interventionist, industrial strategy which it says | :12:43. | :12:44. | |
will boost the economy For more on what this could mean | :12:45. | :12:47. | |
for business and industry we can speak to Greg Clark, | :12:48. | :12:51. | |
the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, | :12:52. | :12:54. | |
who is here in the studio, 84 coming in. Good to see you. These | :12:55. | :13:01. | |
announcements, we should see, how much change is likely to happen? | :13:02. | :13:10. | |
What we need to do at the moment, especially with Brexit in mind, is | :13:11. | :13:14. | |
to think of the long. How we will make a living in the future. I think | :13:15. | :13:20. | |
the way to do that is to businesses, workers, people with an interest in | :13:21. | :13:28. | |
this, to work with us. It has everybody in view. We want to | :13:29. | :13:37. | |
consult. We need to make this set of policies that people can count on | :13:38. | :13:42. | |
for many years to come. There was talk of ?556 million being made | :13:43. | :13:46. | |
available this Northern Powerhouse. If their new money. -- is their new | :13:47. | :14:00. | |
money? What one thing we are putting forward is technical skills, for | :14:01. | :14:06. | |
example. We have good universities, "And in schools but in the middle, | :14:07. | :14:10. | |
people who perhaps don't go to university and don't get the same | :14:11. | :14:15. | |
level of technical education, in terms of the practical skills that | :14:16. | :14:21. | |
our competitors do. What we are proposing is that we invest in new | :14:22. | :14:27. | |
technology. What we have said is if you look at our competitors, they | :14:28. | :14:32. | |
get more hours of training in further education than we do. We are | :14:33. | :14:35. | |
identifying this as something we think we should improve on our | :14:36. | :14:40. | |
performance. Have you created the problem? There has been know the | :14:41. | :14:50. | |
emphasis of university courses. That is what industry we have spoken to | :14:51. | :14:54. | |
on the programme have been telling us. We haven't been as good recently | :14:55. | :15:01. | |
in technical. Why has that been put to the back of the queue? I think | :15:02. | :15:05. | |
our universities are some of the best in the world. Oettl who never | :15:06. | :15:10. | |
had a chance to go to university now can but I think you are right. -- | :15:11. | :15:16. | |
people. We haven't had the alternative of being able to learn | :15:17. | :15:22. | |
practical skills, technical skills, in industries where there is a big | :15:23. | :15:26. | |
demand. I think it is time to address that for a long time. You've | :15:27. | :15:31. | |
mentioned Brexit in the first answer you made. Talking about coming out | :15:32. | :15:36. | |
of the single market, is that going to affect trade? What you are | :15:37. | :15:39. | |
talking about today will be hugely affected by Brexit. Will that not be | :15:40. | :15:45. | |
a major factor? These changes we would want to make anyway. You | :15:46. | :15:49. | |
should have view as how you are going to be able to earn your | :15:50. | :15:54. | |
future. Every person and every company does that. We would need to. | :15:55. | :15:58. | |
In the context of Brexit it is right. Because we know we have to | :15:59. | :16:04. | |
compete and have the chance to compete with countries are round the | :16:05. | :16:08. | |
world. It's an increasingly competitive world. -- around the | :16:09. | :16:14. | |
world. We are less than even our neighbours, France and Germany, for | :16:15. | :16:19. | |
example. That is something we need to address. There is another aspect | :16:20. | :16:23. | |
as well. We are a very centralised country. Many decisions get made in | :16:24. | :16:31. | |
London but we don't have a uniform prosperity, if I can put it that | :16:32. | :16:35. | |
way. One of your reports from Warrington earlier in the programme, | :16:36. | :16:40. | |
I think we need to have a better influence for local decision-makers | :16:41. | :16:45. | |
who know what is needed to be done locally and what is needed in | :16:46. | :16:48. | |
Warrington is likely to be different to London and Plymouth. Can't have | :16:49. | :16:54. | |
you here this morning without asking you about Trident and what Theresa | :16:55. | :17:01. | |
May did not say yesterday. Speaking to the Shadow Defence Secretary this | :17:02. | :17:04. | |
morning. She said she must have known about the misfiring when she | :17:05. | :17:07. | |
made those comments. Surely that is the case, isn't it? If that is the | :17:08. | :17:12. | |
case, should we have known about that? For obvious reason, there is a | :17:13. | :17:18. | |
policy that we do not comment on the operations, including the tests, of | :17:19. | :17:24. | |
our nuclear all it is why did she give the answer yesterday? -- why | :17:25. | :17:33. | |
did she not? You would expect that they go under test the whole time. I | :17:34. | :17:38. | |
do not think it is right to give a commentary every time as an ... Is | :17:39. | :17:46. | |
something that has gone wrong and something that will cost this | :17:47. | :17:49. | |
country ?40 billion. Surely that will be made known to MPs before | :17:50. | :17:53. | |
they voted and the wider general public about something that lots of | :17:54. | :17:57. | |
people are concerned about. If you have a policy, you have a good | :17:58. | :18:04. | |
reason. You have tests all the time. Obviously, that is sensitive | :18:05. | :18:09. | |
information to enemies, the very people that we have this protection | :18:10. | :18:14. | |
against. I think you have to abide by that policy. That you don't, | :18:15. | :18:19. | |
everytime there is a test, metacommentary on it. If you do | :18:20. | :18:23. | |
that, you have to stick by it. Again, I see where you are coming | :18:24. | :18:27. | |
from but for the amount of money that is spent and will be spent on | :18:28. | :18:30. | |
Trident. You say there is no commentary when something went | :18:31. | :18:33. | |
wrong. Something went fundamentally wrong and I understand the security | :18:34. | :18:37. | |
issues around it, but when something has gone wrong and we are spending | :18:38. | :18:44. | |
such a huge amount of money on it, surely should have mentioned it. | :18:45. | :18:51. | |
Irra the point is that across all of the areas, lots of tests are made. | :18:52. | :18:58. | |
-- the point is. When it comes to individual tests, if you have a | :18:59. | :19:04. | |
policy that you don't comment on that each time one takes Place, | :19:05. | :19:09. | |
however tempting and convenient it might be, you have to stick to the | :19:10. | :19:17. | |
policy. The Prime Minister will meet Donald Trump this week. Will you | :19:18. | :19:20. | |
talk about in the Cabinet meeting today? Advice on what she should say | :19:21. | :19:25. | |
at the way she should go about that first meeting with the new | :19:26. | :19:28. | |
president? It is very encouraging and significant that the first | :19:29. | :19:31. | |
global leader that Donald Trump is going to meet his the Prime | :19:32. | :19:34. | |
Minister. They've already had conversations on the telephone, as | :19:35. | :19:40. | |
you know. They've got a lot to talk about, including how we can forge | :19:41. | :19:44. | |
better trade links, but security is one of the things that unites as | :19:45. | :19:49. | |
strongly. Again it is very encouraging that they've been having | :19:50. | :19:54. | |
a conversation to reflect that strength of that special | :19:55. | :19:59. | |
relationship. So the Prime Minister has a lot of things to talk about. | :20:00. | :20:04. | |
In Cabinet we will talk about all of the different aspects. I think it's | :20:05. | :20:08. | |
great that she will have the chance to have those discussions with | :20:09. | :20:11. | |
Donald Trump. Good to talk to you this morning. | :20:12. | :20:12. | |
You're watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :20:13. | :20:16. | |
Lots of you probably having issues with the fog and ice. Carol has all | :20:17. | :20:26. | |
of the details. There is fog and widespread frost and the risk of | :20:27. | :20:29. | |
ice. Lovely Weather Watchers pictures sent in this morning. You | :20:30. | :20:33. | |
can see the frost on the roads. We've also got mist and fog patches. | :20:34. | :20:39. | |
Fog in Greater London. Not just Greater London, a lot of fog around | :20:40. | :20:42. | |
this morning, especially in southern counties. Dense in some parts. | :20:43. | :20:50. | |
Visibility about 50 metres. It is causing problems with the airports. | :20:51. | :20:54. | |
Check the flight before you leave if you are heading out. | :20:55. | :20:59. | |
You can find out more details on your BBC local radio station and the | :21:00. | :21:05. | |
travel pages as well. Temperatures below freezing in many parts of the | :21:06. | :21:10. | |
UK and we have the freezing fog as well. Some of it is patchy, which | :21:11. | :21:14. | |
can do it you in a false sense of security because it is thick in | :21:15. | :21:18. | |
places. Not so much in the south-west of England, but we have | :21:19. | :21:22. | |
patchy fog in Wales and north-west England. Northern Ireland, mostly | :21:23. | :21:30. | |
fog free, but cold. Temperatures down to -6 in places. Scotland, a | :21:31. | :21:35. | |
lot of cloud, which is giving way to clear skies, so the temperature has | :21:36. | :21:41. | |
dropped. Widespread frost again. Patchy fog across the Central | :21:42. | :21:44. | |
Lowlands and southern uplands. Across the Pennines, into north-east | :21:45. | :21:49. | |
England, we also have patchy fog. The Vale of York, it could be slow | :21:50. | :21:54. | |
to clear. In the south it will take longer to clear. Some lifting into | :21:55. | :21:59. | |
low cloud. If you are stuck under either of those things it will feel | :22:00. | :22:03. | |
cold. Temperatures struggling. Away from the fog, beautiful day. | :22:04. | :22:08. | |
Sunshine, bright spells and temperature still nippy, 5-8. Later | :22:09. | :22:13. | |
in the day the wind picks up in Northern Ireland and western | :22:14. | :22:17. | |
Scotland. Some rain comes our way. With that in the west we shouldn't | :22:18. | :22:20. | |
have any fog issues. Away from western areas, through the rest of | :22:21. | :22:25. | |
Wales, central and eastern England, back into fog and frost. Widespread | :22:26. | :22:31. | |
frost. Freezing fog which tomorrow morning will take longer to clear | :22:32. | :22:35. | |
than it has today. Some of it not lifting the -- at all. As the | :22:36. | :22:41. | |
weather front bears the rain across Scotland and Northern Ireland, it | :22:42. | :22:44. | |
gets into northern England and Northwest Wales. It will be | :22:45. | :22:47. | |
producing patchy light rain and drizzle. The highest temperatures | :22:48. | :22:52. | |
towards the west. Again, feeling cold in central and eastern areas, | :22:53. | :22:56. | |
especially under the fog. As we move into Wednesday, things start to | :22:57. | :23:01. | |
change. You can see from the isobars it will turn windier and we have an | :23:02. | :23:05. | |
Atlantic front coming in and bringing rain. By the end of the | :23:06. | :23:09. | |
weekend or this week it will turn a little bit milder than it has been | :23:10. | :23:11. | |
of late. Thanks very much. A cluster of rural villages | :23:12. | :23:18. | |
in the mid-'60s, Milton Keynes was conceived 50 years ago | :23:19. | :23:21. | |
as a brand new town to ease In the decades that followed it | :23:22. | :23:24. | |
became the UK's fastest growing economy, and while some | :23:25. | :23:29. | |
people associate it w -- associated with endless roads and | :23:30. | :23:34. | |
roundabouts, those who live there have a very different view. Graham | :23:35. | :23:39. | |
Satchell went to see how the town is evolving. Milton Keynes, this is our | :23:40. | :23:46. | |
home... Milton Keynes, a place of our own. A love song to Milton | :23:47. | :23:51. | |
Keynes. Lizzie moved here in 1968. Milton Keynes, takes life in its | :23:52. | :23:56. | |
stride. I don't think I have spoken to | :23:57. | :24:00. | |
somebody who lives here who has said they don't like living here or they | :24:01. | :24:03. | |
regret moving here. They get it and they realise what a fantastic place | :24:04. | :24:08. | |
it is to be. A beautiful name for a lovely village. Milton Keynes was | :24:09. | :24:11. | |
the last of the post-war new towns, a collection of villages halfway | :24:12. | :24:15. | |
between London and Birmingham. It would become home to 250,000 people. | :24:16. | :24:19. | |
The big inspiration behind Milton Keynes is an American urban design | :24:20. | :24:24. | |
called Melbourne weather, we wanted to create community without | :24:25. | :24:29. | |
propinquity. -- Melbourne weather. That meant lots of people together | :24:30. | :24:33. | |
but not densely packed in. From the air you can see it, agreed, each | :24:34. | :24:37. | |
square a community with no real centre. An American-style town. | :24:38. | :24:43. | |
Built in the master plan were principles. One was freedom of | :24:44. | :24:47. | |
choice. If you think about the grid it always gives you the options Ken | :24:48. | :24:52. | |
Baker was part of the original design team 50 years ago. Milton | :24:53. | :24:59. | |
Keynes has the choice and the grid. The grid gives freedom? Yes. Maybe, | :25:00. | :25:07. | |
but on the ground Milton Keynes can feel uninspiring. Big roads and | :25:08. | :25:11. | |
roundabouts means you can drive through it and not really see it or | :25:12. | :25:17. | |
notice it. Critics of Milton Keynes have been brutal. Francis Tybalt, | :25:18. | :25:23. | |
the great urban designer, called it bland, rigid, sterile and totally | :25:24. | :25:29. | |
boring. And while some do hate it, Milton Keynes is surprising. It has | :25:30. | :25:34. | |
180 miles off parts and cycle tracks, the fastest growing economy | :25:35. | :25:38. | |
in the UK. 22 million trees and shrubs. This man has taken a series | :25:39. | :25:43. | |
of photographs called unexpected Milton Keynes. -- this woman. It's a | :25:44. | :25:49. | |
fantastic place to live. It has 40% green space. The parks and gardens | :25:50. | :25:59. | |
are lovely. And it is an absolutely brilliant place to build a business, | :26:00. | :26:05. | |
grow a family, anything you want to do. The government has announced 14 | :26:06. | :26:13. | |
new garden towns and villages, so can they learn lessons from Milton | :26:14. | :26:17. | |
Keynes? Isn't part of the original master plan of Milton Keynes. It is | :26:18. | :26:22. | |
very narrow... Milton Keynes itself is expanding rapidly. Campaign is a | :26:23. | :26:26. | |
new developments are to densely populated and the original | :26:27. | :26:29. | |
principles of the town have been lost. Mayo pick people with the | :26:30. | :26:34. | |
wrong agenda who don't realise the greatness of what they've got, it is | :26:35. | :26:39. | |
being copied all over the world. But here they are busy destroying it. | :26:40. | :26:46. | |
Love it or hate it, nothing with the open spaces, the high-minded design | :26:47. | :26:51. | |
principles, has been tried since and 50 years on nothing like it is | :26:52. | :26:53. | |
planned today. That is a rather lovely site. We | :26:54. | :27:03. | |
will be talking about post later. I've driven around Milton Keynes. | :27:04. | :27:06. | |
I think most people have. And? Graham makes a good point, you | :27:07. | :27:12. | |
can drive through it without feeling like you've been there. | :27:13. | :27:13. | |
A 21st century update for the '90s cult classic, | :27:14. | :27:17. | |
We catch up with the stars of Danny Boyle's sequel T2 | :27:18. | :27:21. | |
as they hit the orange carpet at last night's | :27:22. | :27:23. | |
Time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. | :27:24. | :30:42. | |
Now though it's back to Dan and Louise. | :30:43. | :30:52. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :30:53. | :30:59. | |
The Prime Minister is launching her industrial strategy, | :31:00. | :31:05. | |
promising to intervene more to help businesses. | :31:06. | :31:07. | |
The key proposal is the creation of deals to assist | :31:08. | :31:10. | |
certain industry sectors, including nuclear power | :31:11. | :31:12. | |
Mrs May will launch the plans at her first regional cabinet | :31:13. | :31:17. | |
meeting, which is taking place in the north-west of England. | :31:18. | :31:22. | |
The Labour Party is calling on Theresa May to make a statement | :31:23. | :31:25. | |
to Parliament clarifying whether she knew about a reported | :31:26. | :31:28. | |
Trident missile misfire before a vote to renew the system. | :31:29. | :31:30. | |
During a BBC interview, the Prime Minister repeatedly | :31:31. | :31:33. | |
avoided the question, although she insisted she had | :31:34. | :31:35. | |
"absolute faith" in the Trident system. | :31:36. | :31:37. | |
An unarmed missile is reported to have veered off course | :31:38. | :31:40. | |
during a test in June last year, just weeks before a Commons vote | :31:41. | :31:43. | |
in the last few minutes, cabinet minister Greg Clark told us why it | :31:44. | :31:55. | |
had not been right to release the information about the test. If you | :31:56. | :32:02. | |
have a policy, you have it for a good reason. You have tests all the | :32:03. | :32:06. | |
time and obviously that sensitive information to our enemies, to the | :32:07. | :32:12. | |
very people that we have this protection against. So you have to | :32:13. | :32:17. | |
abide by that policy, that you don't, every time there's a test, | :32:18. | :32:21. | |
metacommentary on it, and if you do that and I think you've got to stick | :32:22. | :32:23. | |
either. Government scientists are advising | :32:24. | :32:24. | |
that starchy foods like toast and potatoes are not cooked | :32:25. | :32:26. | |
beyond a golden colour to reduce The Food Standards Agency's Go | :32:27. | :32:29. | |
For Gold campaign says over-browning food for more flavour | :32:30. | :32:34. | |
and crunch produces a potentially It also recommends that raw potatoes | :32:35. | :32:37. | |
are not stored in the fridge. The clarification, we're not telling | :32:38. | :32:56. | |
you how to cook your toast or make your toes. These are guidelines. -- | :32:57. | :32:58. | |
toast. Talks aimed at resolving | :32:59. | :33:02. | |
the Syrian conflict are due The negotiations have the backing | :33:03. | :33:04. | |
of Russia and Iran, which support the Syrian | :33:05. | :33:08. | |
government, and Turkey, It's the first time a group made up | :33:09. | :33:10. | |
entirely of rebel forces will negotiate with | :33:11. | :33:14. | |
the Syrian government. Police say one man has been arrested | :33:15. | :33:21. | |
after an officer was shot The officer is in a stable condition | :33:22. | :33:24. | |
after being hit twice in the arm when a number of shots | :33:25. | :33:28. | |
were fired from a car on the Crumlin Road | :33:29. | :33:32. | |
in the north of the city. The Northern Ireland Secretary | :33:33. | :33:34. | |
James Brokenshire said Dense fog and widespread frost | :33:35. | :33:36. | |
are causing travel disruption in the south-east of England | :33:37. | :33:42. | |
as temperatures plunge below This is the scene in | :33:43. | :33:44. | |
Central London this morning. Around 100 flights out | :33:45. | :33:47. | |
of Heathrow Airport have been cancelled with a further 15 grounded | :33:48. | :33:50. | |
at London City Airport. Drivers have been urged to prepare | :33:51. | :33:52. | |
for poor conditions on the roads. I genuinely thought that was the | :33:53. | :34:01. | |
moon earlier. It looks very lovely. Another shot. Sometimes Carol does | :34:02. | :34:08. | |
the weather from here. It is the top of our new broadcasting house. It | :34:09. | :34:13. | |
looks down, not that you can see it! I promise you, that is our shot down | :34:14. | :34:18. | |
towards Oxford Street. You can see why 100 flights have been counselled | :34:19. | :34:24. | |
out of Heathrow -- cancelled. If you just switched on your TV, there is a | :34:25. | :34:28. | |
reason we are showing you this. There is fog in London. Drivers are | :34:29. | :34:37. | |
urged to take care. It's barely the time it takes | :34:38. | :34:41. | |
to fill the kettle - but ten seconds is all it took | :34:42. | :34:44. | |
for 19 buildings to be reduced to rubble in a controlled | :34:45. | :34:48. | |
explosion in China yesterday. Demolition experts waited until dark | :34:49. | :34:50. | |
had fallen before detonating five tons of explosives which brought | :34:51. | :34:53. | |
down 150,000 square metres of concrete, glass and steel to make | :34:54. | :34:55. | |
way for a skyscraper. Coming up, Carol will have | :34:56. | :34:59. | |
the weather in around ten minutes. You need to see this forecast | :35:00. | :35:17. | |
because there is so much fog. If you are going to work on taking the kids | :35:18. | :35:21. | |
to school, give yourself extra time. Carol would give you an update on | :35:22. | :35:29. | |
all of that. Also, we have Ryan Mason. People have gone to bed | :35:30. | :35:32. | |
hearing that this whole player was in hospital with a fractured skull. | :35:33. | :35:42. | |
You heard about the clash of heads. It was with Gary Cahill in their | :35:43. | :35:49. | |
game against Chelsea yesterday. They were built -- beaten 2-0. He was | :35:50. | :35:56. | |
tricked on the pitch but eight minutes before being taken to St | :35:57. | :36:00. | |
Mary 's Hospital in London. We know that he has been treated their | :36:01. | :36:03. | |
overnight and is expected to stay there for several days. You can see | :36:04. | :36:10. | |
he is conscious. Gary Cahill stayed on the pitch? Yes. Really disturbing | :36:11. | :36:16. | |
for everybody who saw it. Diego Costa and Cahill went on to spell | :36:17. | :36:19. | |
calls. They extended Chelsea's lead at the top of the table by eight | :36:20. | :36:21. | |
points. Chelsea and I, the players, | :36:22. | :36:24. | |
we wish for him the best We hope to see him very | :36:25. | :36:27. | |
soon on the pitch, yeah. Arsene Wenger was unhappy with that | :36:28. | :36:48. | |
decision. There was late drama at the Emirates | :36:49. | :36:56. | |
with two penalties in extra time. With ten-man Arsenal leading, | :36:57. | :37:00. | |
Burnley thought they'd got a draw when Andre Gray scored | :37:01. | :37:03. | |
from the penalty spot in the 93rd minute but Arsenal got | :37:04. | :37:06. | |
their own penalty in the 97th Alexis Sanchez securing a 2-1 | :37:07. | :37:08. | |
victory that moves Arsenal up Southampton beat Premier League | :37:09. | :37:12. | |
champions Leicester 3-0. Leicester haven't won a game away | :37:13. | :37:15. | |
from home all season. Celtic will play Inverness in | :37:16. | :37:20. | |
the fifth round of the Scottish Cup after a 3-0 win over | :37:21. | :37:23. | |
League One Albion Rovers. Scott Sinclair scored | :37:24. | :37:25. | |
the pick of the goals. Britain's Johanna Konta | :37:26. | :37:28. | |
is through to the quarter-finals The world number nine beat | :37:29. | :37:30. | |
Russia's Ekaterina Makarova 6-1, 6-4 to reach the last eight | :37:31. | :37:33. | |
without dropping a set. Konta is the last remaining Brit | :37:34. | :37:36. | |
in the singles draw and will now play 22-time Grand Slam | :37:37. | :37:40. | |
champion Serena Williams. It will be the first time I am on | :37:41. | :37:49. | |
court against her and I am just looking forward to really competing | :37:50. | :37:56. | |
against her. She is one of the, if not the best player for us to ever | :37:57. | :38:00. | |
have in the game. I think to play against someone like that who you | :38:01. | :38:05. | |
also grew up watching, I think it's another great opportunity to take a | :38:06. | :38:10. | |
big load of experience from. Wasps are into the quarter-final | :38:11. | :38:13. | |
of the European Champions Cup after a convincing 41-27 win | :38:14. | :38:16. | |
over Italian side Zebre. They scored seven tries, | :38:17. | :38:18. | |
including one for man of the match Elliot Daley, who was making his | :38:19. | :38:21. | |
150th appearance for the club. They'll face Leinster in the last | :38:22. | :38:24. | |
eight while Saracens will play Ronnie O'Sullivan has won a record | :38:25. | :38:27. | |
seventh Masters title. He beat Joe Perry 10-7 | :38:28. | :38:30. | |
at Alexandra Palace, despite having had problems | :38:31. | :38:32. | |
with the tip of his cue, which he bit off at | :38:33. | :38:35. | |
the end of the match. O'Sullivan had been 4-1 down before | :38:36. | :38:37. | |
winning seven frames in a row He had shared the record of six | :38:38. | :38:41. | |
Masters wins with Stephen Hendry, but victory number seven puts him | :38:42. | :38:45. | |
out in front on his own. England finished their disappointing | :38:46. | :38:48. | |
one day series against India with victory in the third and final | :38:49. | :38:51. | |
match - the first on the entire Ben Stokes was named man | :38:52. | :38:54. | |
of the match, hitting a half century Chasing 322 - India needed six | :38:55. | :38:58. | |
to win from the final four balls - but failed to score any more, | :38:59. | :39:03. | |
losing five five runs. England's Tommy Fleetwood has won | :39:04. | :39:06. | |
for just the second time on the European tour with victory | :39:07. | :39:12. | |
at the Abu Dhabi Championship. His first was back in 2013, | :39:13. | :39:16. | |
but using a new claw-like putting grip he finished on 17 under par, | :39:17. | :39:19. | |
one shot better than US Open Cup competitions are | :39:20. | :39:22. | |
a very serious business. Rod Stewart was in charge | :39:23. | :39:37. | |
of the Scottish Cup Draw yesterday. And decided to liven | :39:38. | :39:42. | |
things up a bit. He even cheered draws that he liked | :39:43. | :39:44. | |
- when he gave Celtic a home draw - and at one point prodded SFA | :39:45. | :39:48. | |
president Alan McRae under the desk There are suggestions he might have | :39:49. | :40:13. | |
been enjoying the hospitality. I love the way he did it with a | :40:14. | :40:17. | |
flourish. I think he was having a really good day. I am going to do my | :40:18. | :40:23. | |
next sport bulletin in the next style. You have a bit of time. Thank | :40:24. | :40:25. | |
you, Sally. Samsung says faulty batteries | :40:26. | :40:34. | |
are what caused some of its Galaxy Note 7 | :40:35. | :40:37. | |
smartphones to catch fire, leading to a worldwide recall | :40:38. | :40:39. | |
of the device last year. After investigating what went wrong, | :40:40. | :40:42. | |
the Korean electronics giant has apologised, and said it has | :40:43. | :40:44. | |
learned lessons from what happened. The first reports of | :40:45. | :40:48. | |
Samsung Note 7s exploding while charging emerged | :40:49. | :40:51. | |
in August last year, less than a week after | :40:52. | :40:53. | |
they first went on sale. The company recalled two | :40:54. | :40:55. | |
and a half million devices on the second of September, | :40:56. | :40:58. | |
and put them back on sale with batteries made | :40:59. | :41:01. | |
by a different company a month later but the problems continued | :41:02. | :41:03. | |
and less than two months after it launched the Note seven, | :41:04. | :41:06. | |
Samsung told customers to stop using it for safety | :41:07. | :41:09. | |
reasons and they stopped Joining us now is digital marketing | :41:10. | :41:11. | |
and technology expert, Lovely to see you again. We have | :41:12. | :41:27. | |
been talking about it. What went wrong question mark on the Mac | :41:28. | :41:31. | |
couple of friends were smiling at about it. -- what went wrong? . | :41:32. | :41:41. | |
People were talking about maybe this is a cry for help. Of course, it is | :41:42. | :41:45. | |
not the case. It is simply the batteries. They were not made | :41:46. | :41:49. | |
particularly well. The compartment that Sam Sumyk made might not have | :41:50. | :41:55. | |
been big enough. -- Samsung. Because of that, they made it a bit smaller, | :41:56. | :41:59. | |
tried to cram in a bit too much technology and that could have been | :42:00. | :42:03. | |
a problem. They are really saying it is the batteries fault. -- | :42:04. | :42:08. | |
battery's. Do you think this may have been rushed through and perhaps | :42:09. | :42:14. | |
be not tested as successfully as it should have had been done? Once they | :42:15. | :42:19. | |
knew it was a problem, it came back quickly again. Absolutely. Can't say | :42:20. | :42:25. | |
they don't test enough and they didn't race at three because they | :42:26. | :42:29. | |
only do two releases per year. It is not as though they did a third | :42:30. | :42:32. | |
release and that was the problem. Maybe there was too much technology. | :42:33. | :42:36. | |
They have said they learnt their lesson. I thought on this is really, | :42:37. | :42:40. | |
they were lessons they should have already known. Batteries are known | :42:41. | :42:46. | |
for problems. They should have had this in place beforehand. I don't | :42:47. | :42:49. | |
think it's just technology being rushed through that maybe we should | :42:50. | :42:53. | |
be thinking more about the human cost than that just the profit. | :42:54. | :42:57. | |
Samsung is a very profitable company. It is still going up, it is | :42:58. | :43:01. | |
going well. Realistically, we should be talking about human cost as well. | :43:02. | :43:06. | |
This has got to be pretty damaging for them. Even though it is one | :43:07. | :43:12. | |
product. In a strange way, you kind of hope so. We are quite fickle as | :43:13. | :43:17. | |
consumers. This is a little bit like football teams. We have our | :43:18. | :43:23. | |
favourites and we stick with it, no matter what happens. As soon as the | :43:24. | :43:27. | |
Galaxy eight comes along, it will be all forgotten. It is 3 million | :43:28. | :43:33. | |
phones. Statistically is that a huge number? We have to be careful. There | :43:34. | :43:37. | |
are other product in the world that go on fire statistically a little | :43:38. | :43:42. | |
bit more. Of course, Samsung makes a huge number of products, not just | :43:43. | :43:46. | |
phones. To fear from a Samsung point of view, you are in there looking at | :43:47. | :43:50. | |
televisions and you see the name and you think hold on a minute, don't | :43:51. | :43:54. | |
their phones explode? That is the sort of damage. Yorker set of a | :43:55. | :44:04. | |
brand halo. -- the opposite. I don't think we will fill the brand effect | :44:05. | :44:10. | |
until maybe the next couple of cycles. I had to be agnostic. I was | :44:11. | :44:21. | |
literally pulling it in thinking oh, did I leave it on charge? Should I? | :44:22. | :44:30. | |
I didn't. Even you are slightly sceptical. Tell us a bit about | :44:31. | :44:33. | |
batteries in the technology because that seems to be... That we have | :44:34. | :44:39. | |
seen so many leaps in technology with phones. | :44:40. | :44:43. | |
It is the bulk of the problem but there was an aggressive design | :44:44. | :44:48. | |
problem as well. It might not have been the batteries but the spacing. | :44:49. | :44:52. | |
The battery life in phones is like a secret war that is going on at the | :44:53. | :44:57. | |
moment. It is the case with a lot of technology stock is the battery life | :44:58. | :45:00. | |
that is a big one. These new batteries that are now bendable and | :45:01. | :45:04. | |
other things, that is where you will see that huge technology leaps will | :45:05. | :45:07. | |
stop they will come around battery life and would you can do with | :45:08. | :45:11. | |
batteries. We are talking about them being waterproof now. That will be | :45:12. | :45:18. | |
the next godsend. I dropped my phone in a swimming pool. Most people drop | :45:19. | :45:24. | |
them in the toilet, don't they? Apparently at the chlorine that | :45:25. | :45:25. | |
causes most of the damage. Can you put it in a bag of rice? | :45:26. | :45:39. | |
With chlorine that doesn't work. We have digressed! Thank you. | :45:40. | :45:43. | |
You're watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :45:44. | :45:46. | |
The main stories this morning: Theresa May is due to to outline | :45:47. | :45:51. | |
the Government's new industrial strategy for post-Brexit Britain, | :45:52. | :45:53. | |
with investment in technology, research and training. | :45:54. | :45:55. | |
Ministers are coming under increasing pressure to reveal | :45:56. | :45:57. | |
what they knew about a reported misfire during a Trident missile | :45:58. | :46:00. | |
If you've just pulled back the curtain this morning and thinking, | :46:01. | :46:14. | |
what on earth is that outside? Carol can give us the latest. Especially | :46:15. | :46:19. | |
foggy in certain parts of the UK this morning? | :46:20. | :46:23. | |
That's right. We have dense fog around. The Weather Watchers have | :46:24. | :46:26. | |
been sending us some fabulous pictures. This one from London. This | :46:27. | :46:31. | |
is frosty as well, so watch out for ice as well. Fog could be an issue | :46:32. | :46:36. | |
for you when you are travelling. It has already affected flights at some | :46:37. | :46:40. | |
southern airports and we have it across southern parts of England | :46:41. | :46:44. | |
especially as well. Some of it is dense, visibility down to 50 metres | :46:45. | :46:50. | |
and some of it is patchy. We have dense patch, then it clears, then we | :46:51. | :46:54. | |
have more fog. The other thing is air pollution across parts of | :46:55. | :46:58. | |
eastern England, Greater London and the south-east is very high today | :46:59. | :47:03. | |
and that comes from Defra. Travel Wise, freezing fog, so do take extra | :47:04. | :47:08. | |
care. Further travel disruption is likely. You can find out more about | :47:09. | :47:14. | |
where you are from a busy local radio station or your BBC travel | :47:15. | :47:19. | |
pages. Some of the fog will be slow to lift and some of it would lift at | :47:20. | :47:24. | |
all. With temperatures already freezing in some areas, are below, | :47:25. | :47:29. | |
here it will feel especially cold. At the moment it is -5 in Exeter, | :47:30. | :47:35. | |
but dry. Moving across Wales we have showers at the moment, but they will | :47:36. | :47:40. | |
tend to fade, then we run back into fog, pockets of fog, in north-west | :47:41. | :47:44. | |
England, are largely dry in Northern Ireland, but cold. Temperatures in | :47:45. | :47:49. | |
the west is down to -5 four minus six. In Scotland with had a lot of | :47:50. | :47:54. | |
cloud, which is giving way to clearer skies. Widespread frost | :47:55. | :47:59. | |
again and pockets of fog in the Central Lowlands and southern | :48:00. | :48:01. | |
uplands, then more fog in the Pennines and into north-east | :48:02. | :48:08. | |
England. The Vale of York. It will be slow to clear in the south and if | :48:09. | :48:13. | |
you are stuck in an area where it is just lifting in the low cloud, | :48:14. | :48:16. | |
temperatures will struggle even to break freezing. Elsewhere, away from | :48:17. | :48:23. | |
the fog, a fine, crisp winter day. Later in the day the wind is going | :48:24. | :48:26. | |
to strengthen across Northern Ireland and western Scotland and | :48:27. | :48:29. | |
then a weather front will arrive, bringing rain. Ahead of that a lot | :48:30. | :48:34. | |
of cloud building, away from the west of England and Wales we once | :48:35. | :48:38. | |
again have a widespread frost and some fog patches forming. They will | :48:39. | :48:43. | |
be slow to clear tomorrow morning. Some of them weren't clear at all. | :48:44. | :48:47. | |
Meanwhile, the rain moves across the rest of Scotland and Northern | :48:48. | :48:51. | |
Ireland, in the north Wales and northern England, and patchy rain | :48:52. | :48:56. | |
comes in and drizzle. No heat wave in prospect, unless you are in the | :48:57. | :49:02. | |
west, where we have highs of 10-11. But towards the end of the week it | :49:03. | :49:06. | |
turns milder and we lose the fog risk. | :49:07. | :49:12. | |
Before you go, I know fog is a big issue today. You know you are the | :49:13. | :49:15. | |
best weather centre in the country. How many times have you won that | :49:16. | :49:19. | |
gong? Eight. You know what you are doing | :49:20. | :49:26. | |
them. So we will see you on Wednesday for the awards, because we | :49:27. | :49:31. | |
are up for some awards. We need everybody who votes for you | :49:32. | :49:36. | |
to vote for all of us! See you on Wednesday. Let's make Carol wheat | :49:37. | :49:41. | |
and other award as part of the BBC Breakfast team. -- wind and other | :49:42. | :49:44. | |
award. As we've been hearing, | :49:45. | :49:48. | |
the Prime Minister is due to outline how she plans to intervene more | :49:49. | :49:51. | |
to help British businesses as part Ben's out and about at a fuel | :49:52. | :49:54. | |
processing plant in Warrington to find out what | :49:55. | :49:59. | |
companies want to hear. Good morning. | :50:00. | :50:03. | |
Good morning to both of you. Yes, they want to hear a lot and they are | :50:04. | :50:08. | |
keen to get some detail from Theresa May when she speaks me here later | :50:09. | :50:12. | |
today. As you say, we are at this oil processing plant and we are here | :50:13. | :50:18. | |
to see all of the stuff they do. Motorcycle oil, machinery oil, all | :50:19. | :50:22. | |
of the stuff that keeps the gears of manufacturing moving. This is the | :50:23. | :50:27. | |
important point, it is made in England. Many suggest we do too | :50:28. | :50:31. | |
little manufacturing in the UK at the moment, so what we are expecting | :50:32. | :50:35. | |
to hear from the PM later is a template plant to get us | :50:36. | :50:39. | |
manufacturing more staff and improving skills, research and | :50:40. | :50:42. | |
development and all that sort of stuff in the UK. But what difference | :50:43. | :50:46. | |
would it make for business and what do they want to hear this week from | :50:47. | :50:52. | |
the Prime Minister? Good morning. What do you want to hear from the | :50:53. | :50:56. | |
Prime Minister later? Some would say the government shouldn't be too | :50:57. | :50:59. | |
involved in business, they should let successful businesses like yours | :51:00. | :51:02. | |
get on with it. For a mature business like ours, we want to get | :51:03. | :51:09. | |
on with what we do. But the other aspect we want to hear is the skills | :51:10. | :51:13. | |
gap, which has to be met. We will see that in trading so when people | :51:14. | :51:17. | |
come to our place they can start from day one, rather than six months | :51:18. | :51:23. | |
down the line. In your local enterprise partnership, what will | :51:24. | :51:30. | |
you use the money you've had in the past four and how will you put the | :51:31. | :51:34. | |
new money to good use? We have already had ?150 million from | :51:35. | :51:38. | |
previous groups. We've used that money for the bus station, a bypass, | :51:39. | :51:47. | |
if you look down the M62 those logistical warehouses are there | :51:48. | :51:50. | |
because we built a road to enable those sites to be opened up for | :51:51. | :51:54. | |
employment. In some cases it is relatively easy stuff, putting in a | :51:55. | :51:59. | |
road or extra bus route. Those are the things that make people get | :52:00. | :52:02. | |
jobs. Yes, they are the enable us. We are hoping from the money the | :52:03. | :52:09. | |
Chancellor announced in the statement that we can open more | :52:10. | :52:14. | |
projects, more sites for more businesses and more housing. That | :52:15. | :52:19. | |
idea of skills is really important, it is about getting the right people | :52:20. | :52:22. | |
for the jobs you've got available at both ends, either the entrance level | :52:23. | :52:28. | |
or the high skill level, so you've then spent time and money before | :52:29. | :52:31. | |
they can even start work. Absolutely. We want people ready to | :52:32. | :52:36. | |
work on day one, so they can use the machines and understand how they | :52:37. | :52:39. | |
work. Right up to senior management positions. They need the basic | :52:40. | :52:44. | |
skills to work in a manufacturing environment and understand the | :52:45. | :52:47. | |
processes they are managing. Thanks very much. We will be here all | :52:48. | :52:51. | |
morning finding out what business makes of this and crucially how all | :52:52. | :52:55. | |
of that will be implemented. It is one thing to hear the announcement | :52:56. | :52:58. | |
from the Prime Minister, but what she intends to do and how she will | :52:59. | :53:01. | |
implement it across the economy... We will hear this from Theresa May | :53:02. | :53:07. | |
later, that she wants all people in all corners of the country to feel | :53:08. | :53:11. | |
the benefit from economic growth are and of course as we've heard that | :53:12. | :53:15. | |
hasn't always been the case. So she is trying to address some of that. | :53:16. | :53:22. | |
We will get the detail later. Thanks, Ben. | :53:23. | :53:23. | |
It was the film that defined the Cool Britannia era, | :53:24. | :53:25. | |
and made household names of its cast. | :53:26. | :53:27. | |
More than 20 years later, the sequel to Trainspotting | :53:28. | :53:30. | |
T2 Trainspotting had its world premiere in Edinburgh last night. | :53:31. | :53:33. | |
Our Entertainment Correspondent Colin Paterson was there. | :53:34. | :53:37. | |
After more than 20 years, the Trainspotting gang back | :53:38. | :53:40. | |
together, on the orange carpet of the long-awaited sequel. | :53:41. | :53:45. | |
What have you been up to for the last 20 years? | :53:46. | :53:56. | |
We had a real duty not to disappoint people because the film has | :53:57. | :54:01. | |
affection in people's hearts, so you don't | :54:02. | :54:03. | |
want to ruin it and tarnish that image, so I hope | :54:04. | :54:06. | |
Aside from all the fun stuff in the first movie, | :54:07. | :54:10. | |
Even though it was maybe about subjects they weren't involved | :54:11. | :54:14. | |
in, it was still relatable in some way. | :54:15. | :54:16. | |
It's carrying such a cultural weight associated with it | :54:17. | :54:19. | |
that it feels like no event that I've been to before. | :54:20. | :54:24. | |
Choose life, choose a job, choose a career... | :54:25. | :54:29. | |
Trainspotting was the defining film of mid-'90s Cool Britannia. | :54:30. | :54:32. | |
The movie poster was on students' walls, the soundtrack in CD players. | :54:33. | :54:35. | |
For the sequel, Ewan McGregor's famous speech has had an update. | :54:36. | :54:46. | |
Choose life, choose Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and hope | :54:47. | :54:48. | |
There's something very deep and moving about finding out | :54:49. | :54:55. | |
where they all are now, and there aren't many films that | :54:56. | :55:01. | |
I've done, and there aren't very many that we've seen, | :55:02. | :55:04. | |
where the characters become almost like people we know. | :55:05. | :55:12. | |
It is fair to say the four guys have lived the bet. | :55:13. | :55:16. | |
There was always a moment in every shooting day where there was that 20 | :55:17. | :55:22. | |
years later moment, where you felt 20 years had gone | :55:23. | :55:24. | |
by since you was last playing this guy. | :55:25. | :55:27. | |
It isn't getting out of your body that's the problem, | :55:28. | :55:40. | |
You think I haven't heard that 100,000 times? | :55:41. | :55:44. | |
After Trainspotting came out we were like the oasis | :55:45. | :55:49. | |
So there was a part of me that yearns for that again, | :55:50. | :55:55. | |
And he might not be finished with the role. | :55:56. | :56:03. | |
The cast are already talking about Trainspotting 3, | :56:04. | :56:05. | |
using Irvine Welsh's latest novel as a starting point. | :56:06. | :56:13. | |
I mean...I think Irvine's just arrived now. | :56:14. | :56:20. | |
I'm up for it, he's up for it, so I don't think you've seen | :56:21. | :56:24. | |
Why is Ewan McGregor wearing a hat? That's because he is filming the | :56:25. | :56:44. | |
series three of Fargo at the moment, in which he plays twins and he needs | :56:45. | :56:51. | |
to wear two wigs. He has no hair, that's why he's wearing a hat at the | :56:52. | :56:53. | |
moment. Time now to get the news, | :56:54. | :56:53. | |
travel and weather where you are. Hello, this is Breakfast, | :56:54. | :00:14. | |
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. The Prime Minister announces | :00:15. | :00:26. | |
a new plan for industry Theresa May says the government | :00:27. | :00:28. | |
is stepping up to a new active The Prime Minister once people in | :00:29. | :00:45. | |
all corners of the country to feel the benefits of economic growth. But | :00:46. | :00:51. | |
what does it mean for business, our jobs, what does it mean for all of | :00:52. | :00:54. | |
us? I'm in Warrington to find out. | :00:55. | :01:05. | |
Good morning, it's Monday the 23rd of January. | :01:06. | :01:10. | |
Calls for the government to give a full explanation to parliament | :01:11. | :01:14. | |
about a reported misfire of a Trident missile. | :01:15. | :01:19. | |
A warning from the Food Standards Agency that overcooked foods | :01:20. | :01:22. | |
like toast and potatoes could increase the risk | :01:23. | :01:24. | |
It started as a small group of villages, but now contributes | :01:25. | :01:31. | |
billions to the economy - the post-war new town, | :01:32. | :01:33. | |
Milton Keynes, is 50 years old today. | :01:34. | :01:37. | |
In sport, Ryan Mason is in a stable condition in hospital | :01:38. | :01:39. | |
The Hull City midfielder suffered a fractured skull in a clash | :01:40. | :01:44. | |
of heads with Gary Cahill, during their 2-0 defeat at Chelsea. | :01:45. | :01:51. | |
I just wish everybody could have seen the speed with which you ran | :01:52. | :01:59. | |
across the studio! Big power slide in as well! | :02:00. | :02:02. | |
Good morning. There is quite a bit of fog around, particularly in | :02:03. | :02:12. | |
southern counties. Also fog in northern England and northern | :02:13. | :02:17. | |
Scotland. Most of it will lift slowly and then it will be dry with | :02:18. | :02:21. | |
sunny spells. More details in 15 minutes. | :02:22. | :02:23. | |
Plans to boost British industry will be announced | :02:24. | :02:27. | |
by the Prime Minister, Theresa May, later. | :02:28. | :02:28. | |
She'll be outlining a strategy, which she says will give | :02:29. | :02:31. | |
It will be unveiled at a cabinet meeting | :02:32. | :02:34. | |
Our Industry Correspondent, John Moylan, has more. | :02:35. | :02:40. | |
How can the government ensure the economy is fit for the future? | :02:41. | :02:42. | |
For the Business Secretary, Greg Clark, places like this are part | :02:43. | :02:45. | |
It is a new automotive innovation centre in Warwick, | :02:46. | :02:50. | |
backed by government and industry money, designed | :02:51. | :02:53. | |
to keep our carmakers firing on all cylinders. | :02:54. | :02:57. | |
The industrial strategy will be committed to driving very hard, | :02:58. | :03:02. | |
to spread the opportunities right across the country and to drive, | :03:03. | :03:08. | |
not just jobs, but really good, well paying jobs in all parts | :03:09. | :03:11. | |
It will be a big part of our strategy. | :03:12. | :03:14. | |
Today, the strategy will be outlined in a new green | :03:15. | :03:16. | |
paper, aimed at kickstarting a wide-ranging consultation | :03:17. | :03:18. | |
That will include plans for sector deals | :03:19. | :03:25. | |
where businesses and stakeholders in specific sectors can make | :03:26. | :03:28. | |
That is just one of ten so-called strategic pillars | :03:29. | :03:33. | |
which are all designed to increase productivity and | :03:34. | :03:35. | |
In the past, governments used industrial strategies as an excuse | :03:36. | :03:43. | |
As we prepare for the challenge of leaving the EU, the big test | :03:44. | :03:52. | |
of this plan will be that it doesn't just | :03:53. | :03:55. | |
deliver for successful firms like this but that it reaches out | :03:56. | :03:57. | |
to a part of the UK to deliver the government's aim of an economy | :03:58. | :04:02. | |
The Labour Party is calling on Theresa May to make | :04:03. | :04:11. | |
a statement to Parliament, clarifying whether she knew | :04:12. | :04:12. | |
about a reported Trident missile misfire before a vote | :04:13. | :04:15. | |
The Prime Minister repeatedly avoided the question in an interview | :04:16. | :04:19. | |
These test launches are pretty rare events. They take place only every | :04:20. | :04:41. | |
few years. In the past when that trigger has been pulled, it has | :04:42. | :04:44. | |
released not only the test missile but a certain amount of publicity | :04:45. | :04:49. | |
about the event taking place. When this misfire happened, we heard | :04:50. | :04:52. | |
nothing about it at all. That matters politically because our? | :04:53. | :04:57. | |
Weeks after that, Theresa May stored up here and asked MPs to back the | :04:58. | :05:05. | |
spending of billions of pounds to renew Trident. That was something | :05:06. | :05:08. | |
she asked repeat -- she was asked repeatedly about yesterday. Did you | :05:09. | :05:10. | |
know that misfire had occurred? I have absolute faith | :05:11. | :05:14. | |
in our Trident missiles. I think we should defend our | :05:15. | :05:23. | |
country. I think we should play our Rohlin Nato. Did you know it had | :05:24. | :05:26. | |
misfired? When I made that speech | :05:27. | :05:29. | |
in the House of Commons, what we were talking | :05:30. | :05:31. | |
about was whether or not we should That's what we were talking about in | :05:32. | :05:39. | |
the House of Commons. That's what the House of Commons voted for. I | :05:40. | :05:43. | |
believe in defending our country. Jeremy Corbyn does not want to | :05:44. | :05:47. | |
defend our country with a nuclear deterrent. The government has | :05:48. | :05:50. | |
repeated its line it will not comment on the test. Business | :05:51. | :05:56. | |
Secretary Greg Clark said earlier it could give information to Britain's | :05:57. | :05:59. | |
enemies of the government were to talk about this in any detail. | :06:00. | :06:04. | |
Labour is continuing to pile on the pressure. It says ministers need to | :06:05. | :06:10. | |
explain themselves in Parliament. We can see if his body there. We will | :06:11. | :06:11. | |
have an off -- update on that later. Government scientists | :06:12. | :06:14. | |
are warning that overcooked foods such as potatoes, | :06:15. | :06:16. | |
toast, crisps and waffles could increase the risk | :06:17. | :06:18. | |
of developing cancer. The Food Standards Agency's | :06:19. | :06:19. | |
Go For Gold campaign says over-browning food for more flavour | :06:20. | :06:22. | |
and crunch produces a potentially Our Health Correspondent, | :06:23. | :06:24. | |
Robert Pigott, reports. The warning includes some | :06:25. | :06:31. | |
of the most popular foods in the British diet, | :06:32. | :06:34. | |
such as crisps, chips, The longer they're cooked | :06:35. | :06:36. | |
above 120 Celsius, the more Those foods go through a browning | :06:37. | :06:41. | |
process, which many of us like in terms of flavour | :06:42. | :06:48. | |
and taste, but it also The sugars in starchy foods such | :06:49. | :06:50. | |
as your breakfast toast, combine with the molecules that make up | :06:51. | :06:57. | |
protein, to produce acrylamide that We know that in animal studies | :06:58. | :07:00. | |
it can create cancer, and so we are concerned | :07:01. | :07:07. | |
if there is the same mechanism in people that high exposure | :07:08. | :07:11. | |
could increase people's risk. The FSA says people should go | :07:12. | :07:14. | |
for gold, aiming for gold and yellow in baking, roasting, | :07:15. | :07:17. | |
frying or toasting rather It says eating a balanced | :07:18. | :07:19. | |
diet rich in vegetables Cancer Research UK says acrylamide | :07:20. | :07:25. | |
might be harmful to people, but insists there are other far | :07:26. | :07:31. | |
bigger proven dangers - being obese, drinking too much | :07:32. | :07:34. | |
and especially smoking. The White House says it's | :07:35. | :07:42. | |
in the initial stages of discussions about moving the US embassy | :07:43. | :07:45. | |
in Israel from Tel The United Nations does | :07:46. | :07:48. | |
not recognise Jerusalem Israelis and Palestinians both claim | :07:49. | :07:54. | |
Jerusalem as their capital city, and Palestinian leaders have warned | :07:55. | :07:58. | |
that moving the US embassy Police say one man has been arrested | :07:59. | :08:02. | |
after an officer was shot The officer is in a stable condition | :08:03. | :08:13. | |
after being hit twice in the arm, when a number of shots | :08:14. | :08:17. | |
were fired from a car on the Crumlin Road | :08:18. | :08:20. | |
in the north of the city. The Northern Ireland Secretary, | :08:21. | :08:22. | |
James Brokenshire, said This incident underlines the risks | :08:23. | :08:24. | |
that they take an equally, the nature of some | :08:25. | :08:30. | |
of the challenges we People will use violence | :08:31. | :08:32. | |
to achieve their twisted, This has no place | :08:33. | :08:37. | |
in Northern Ireland. The political engagement, | :08:38. | :08:46. | |
the peace process, we stand Dense fog and widespread frost | :08:47. | :08:48. | |
are causing travel disruption in the South East of England, | :08:49. | :08:52. | |
as temperatures plunge This is the scene in | :08:53. | :08:55. | |
Central London this morning. Around 100 flights out of Heathrow | :08:56. | :09:04. | |
airport have been cancelled, with a further 15 grounded | :09:05. | :09:09. | |
at London City airport. You can hardly even see Big Ben. We | :09:10. | :09:14. | |
were struggling to see the clock this morning in the darkness. Real | :09:15. | :09:20. | |
fog across London and other parts of the UK. We have got another shot as | :09:21. | :09:26. | |
well. You can see vaguely the spire of the church. This is where Carol | :09:27. | :09:34. | |
sometimes does the weather from. The top of New Broadcasting House in | :09:35. | :09:37. | |
central London. Normally you can see down the street. Clearly not today. | :09:38. | :09:44. | |
If you are out and about, do take care. Carroll will have all the | :09:45. | :09:46. | |
details. It's quite extraordinary. Talks aimed at resolving | :09:47. | :09:50. | |
the Syrian conflict are due The negotiations have the backing of | :09:51. | :09:58. | |
Russia and Iran. For the first time the negotiations | :09:59. | :10:08. | |
will include representatives Our Chief International | :10:09. | :10:10. | |
Correspondent, Lyse Doucet, joins us from Astana in Kazakhstan, | :10:11. | :10:16. | |
where the talks are taking place. We talked about the significance of | :10:17. | :10:28. | |
this because Syrian government will meet with rebel forces for the first | :10:29. | :10:31. | |
time. What chance of some sort of success? Even that little measure of | :10:32. | :10:42. | |
success is not 100% advance. We just spoke to the spokesperson for the | :10:43. | :10:47. | |
Syrian opposition, which is made up of the rebel commanders. He says | :10:48. | :10:51. | |
this is what it will be on the agenda. It will be ceasefire, which | :10:52. | :10:57. | |
is partially holding in Syria. Humanitarian aid to get to millions | :10:58. | :11:01. | |
of people living in besieged areas. Release of prisoners. Will they do | :11:02. | :11:05. | |
that directly with the Syrian government? He said they will sit | :11:06. | :11:10. | |
together around the same table, but when it gets to the talks, they will | :11:11. | :11:14. | |
be at different tables in different rooms and they will be mediated. The | :11:15. | :11:20. | |
old hostilities, the old obstacles to ending the Syrian war, have not | :11:21. | :11:25. | |
gone away. We are in Kazakhstan for the first time. The sponsors are | :11:26. | :11:30. | |
different. Russia, Turkey and Iran. The people at the table are | :11:31. | :11:34. | |
different. The same old problems are rearing their head from the start. | :11:35. | :11:38. | |
Thank you very much. No fog in Astala. | :11:39. | :11:42. | |
A police crackdown on motorists who illegally use mobile | :11:43. | :11:44. | |
phones at the wheel, resulted in nearly 8,000 | :11:45. | :11:46. | |
drivers being caught in the space of seven days. | :11:47. | :11:48. | |
36 forces took part in the operation in November. | :11:49. | :11:50. | |
The National Police Chiefs Council has released the figures, | :11:51. | :11:54. | |
as a new operation gets under way today. | :11:55. | :12:02. | |
If you are a firefighter at this morning, how do you feel about doing | :12:03. | :12:11. | |
your work with a jet pack? This has been trialled in Dubai. This is what | :12:12. | :12:14. | |
they are using to elevate themselves. In the Middle East what | :12:15. | :12:21. | |
they are using our jet packs to help them rise up like this one to | :12:22. | :12:26. | |
address a proposed fire on a bridge. It is a bizarre sight. It looks | :12:27. | :12:34. | |
incredibly weird and futuristic. Incredibly distracting. But if it | :12:35. | :12:40. | |
works, it works. You have to be incredibly skilled to do that. I am | :12:41. | :12:44. | |
worried about driving past. They are trialling it. They say it will be so | :12:45. | :12:49. | |
difficult with traffic sometimes using your jet ski to get around. It | :12:50. | :12:51. | |
is the future. The weather in five minutes. As we | :12:52. | :13:04. | |
have already told you, there is so much fog out there. People are | :13:05. | :13:07. | |
talking about toast today as well. Thank you for the pictures you have | :13:08. | :13:13. | |
sent in. Fog and toast are the major talking points. | :13:14. | :13:15. | |
How do you like your toast in the morning? | :13:16. | :13:18. | |
If you prefer it well-browned, government scientists are advising | :13:19. | :13:21. | |
a lighter shade to reduce the risk of developing cancer. | :13:22. | :13:26. | |
The Food Standards Agency says over-cooking starchy foods | :13:27. | :13:31. | |
like bread and potatoes, causes an increased level of a carcinogenic | :13:32. | :13:34. | |
It's launching a campaign to raise awareness. | :13:35. | :13:39. | |
Before we talk about that, we went out to discover if people | :13:40. | :13:41. | |
are willing to sacrifice a bit of extra crunch for | :13:42. | :13:44. | |
I wouldn't eat burnt toast anyway because I don't think it's very | :13:45. | :13:57. | |
pleasant. I wouldn't be worried about getting cancer. I like them of | :13:58. | :14:03. | |
it more burnt. It would be burnt toast. I would just scraped the bits | :14:04. | :14:11. | |
of it! I like toast burnt. I would never eat burnt toast, so that's | :14:12. | :14:17. | |
fine! If you found any food was carcinogenic you would probably stop | :14:18. | :14:21. | |
eating it, wouldn't you? I like it golden. So there's no contest for | :14:22. | :14:27. | |
me. So many of you talking about that. | :14:28. | :14:33. | |
You have done a survey as well. Only 8% of people like that toast like | :14:34. | :14:37. | |
this. The vast majority like it golden brown. This is particularly | :14:38. | :14:41. | |
the issue we are talking about this morning. | :14:42. | :14:43. | |
Simon Wood is a former Masterchef winner who is now a full-time chef. | :14:44. | :14:46. | |
He's here to give us some tips on how to cook tasty food | :14:47. | :14:49. | |
And Professor Guy Poppy is from the Food Standards Agency. | :14:50. | :14:52. | |
Let's start with you, guide, we have talked about this before. How | :14:53. | :15:03. | |
serious is this as a risk? I think what we are releasing today is, we | :15:04. | :15:09. | |
have done a survey looking at the diet that a typical consumer in the | :15:10. | :15:14. | |
UK eats. If you look at that as a shopping basket example, the amount | :15:15. | :15:17. | |
of acrylic might in that diet is significantly higher than we would | :15:18. | :15:24. | |
like. World experts, including the World Health Organisation, have said | :15:25. | :15:28. | |
it would be very useful to reduce the levels of acrylamide in your | :15:29. | :15:29. | |
diet. When is it too much? How would you | :15:30. | :15:39. | |
know that? What we know from our studies in animals is high exposure | :15:40. | :15:45. | |
levels can create cancer and other genetic mutations and there is no | :15:46. | :15:48. | |
reason to believe the same isn't true in humans, but what we are | :15:49. | :15:54. | |
talking about here is some products are much more acrylamide forming | :15:55. | :15:57. | |
than others. You mentioned starchy foods. When they are cooked and that | :15:58. | :16:02. | |
cooking process is important because it creates the flavours and the | :16:03. | :16:05. | |
tastes that we really like, but if they are overcooked then the amounts | :16:06. | :16:08. | |
of acrylamide become a little bit high and it would be useful to | :16:09. | :16:12. | |
reduce that. Loads of people getting in contact. Graham says, "It is the | :16:13. | :16:17. | |
chemical acrylamide which is the problem. Overcooking any food | :16:18. | :16:20. | |
destroys the goodness and can cause harm. It is good to remind people of | :16:21. | :16:29. | |
things." Another viewer says, "My grandmother ate burnt toast every | :16:30. | :16:35. | |
day and lived to 85." Outside of that, let's say, perfect golden | :16:36. | :16:40. | |
spuds. What's your advice for doing that without causing the acrylamide | :16:41. | :16:52. | |
to form? With a potato I would make a 50/50 mix and use olive oil spray | :16:53. | :17:01. | |
than goose fat. You get the same feel for it without the over baking | :17:02. | :17:08. | |
and excessive fat. What about if people like their toast? Lots of | :17:09. | :17:13. | |
people are saying they do? We all make lifestyle changes in the | :17:14. | :17:18. | |
interests of health. It is a small change to make from the benefit you | :17:19. | :17:24. | |
can get from it, I feel. There are people furious saying toast, why are | :17:25. | :17:28. | |
you going on about how we like our toast? When there is things like | :17:29. | :17:32. | |
fizzy drinks and other areas which are causing far more problems and | :17:33. | :17:36. | |
bringing diabetes into question and sugary foods and things like that, | :17:37. | :17:41. | |
whereas these things, general knowledge and common sense can lead | :17:42. | :17:45. | |
you not to fall into the pit falls that we are talking about here? | :17:46. | :17:54. | |
PROBLEM WITH SOUND Professor, that was a question for | :17:55. | :17:59. | |
you? What we are trying to be here is reasonable and proportionate. It | :18:00. | :18:02. | |
would be wrong of us to be aware of this potential problem and not to | :18:03. | :18:05. | |
say anything. But what we are saying here is if you have toast, potatoes | :18:06. | :18:13. | |
and the occasional slices are overcooked amongst a mixed and | :18:14. | :18:15. | |
balanced diet there will be no concern. However, if that's | :18:16. | :18:21. | |
something that you eat regularly and is actually a principle part of your | :18:22. | :18:26. | |
diet then it is worth making that easy, lifestyle change as the chef | :18:27. | :18:30. | |
in your studio has mentioned. One of the other things the FSA is pointing | :18:31. | :18:36. | |
out as well is that, Simon, you shouldn't keep potatoes in the | :18:37. | :18:40. | |
fridge, but you have got other advice with regards to vegetables? I | :18:41. | :18:45. | |
wouldn't keep potatoes or carrots, eggs, tomatoes. It is not the way | :18:46. | :18:49. | |
that nature intended them to be. I naturally just wouldn't put them in | :18:50. | :18:56. | |
there. I would cook cook them from room testimony ture. | :18:57. | :18:59. | |
Thank you very much indeed. Thank you both. Thank you for your | :19:00. | :19:02. | |
comments. So many of you getting in touch. You do not want to be told | :19:03. | :19:09. | |
how to take your toast! We've all learnt that this morning! | :19:10. | :19:17. | |
It's 8.19am and you're watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :19:18. | :19:19. | |
Theresa May is due to outline the Government's | :19:20. | :19:22. | |
new industrial strategy for post-Brexit Britain | :19:23. | :19:23. | |
with investment in technology, research and training. | :19:24. | :19:25. | |
Ministers are coming under increasing pressure to reveal | :19:26. | :19:27. | |
what they knew about a reported misfire during a Trident | :19:28. | :19:29. | |
We are telling you that toast and fog were the two major issues of fog | :19:30. | :19:46. | |
F we've dealt with toast. Let's deal with fog. Good morning, Carol. | :19:47. | :19:56. | |
Look at this beautiful picture from the Mumbles, but fog is an issue. We | :19:57. | :20:08. | |
have quite a bit of fog across southern counties. Some of it is | :20:09. | :20:14. | |
dense. I know myself when I was driving in this morning it was so | :20:15. | :20:18. | |
dense I couldn't see the white lines on the road. It has affected | :20:19. | :20:24. | |
flights. We have got fog across northern and Central Scotland. If | :20:25. | :20:27. | |
you are travelling, take it easy. It is freezing fog and it let to flight | :20:28. | :20:35. | |
cancellations. Keep up-to-date on your BBC local radio station. We | :20:36. | :20:39. | |
will hang on to the fog for a long time. It is freezing fog. | :20:40. | :20:42. | |
Temperatures are below freezing at the moment and it extends over in | :20:43. | :20:46. | |
the direction of the south-west. But the south-west, although it is | :20:47. | :20:50. | |
clear, it is cold. Watch out for ice where we've got damp surfaces as | :20:51. | :20:53. | |
wellment for Wales, there is showers around. They should fade. Some | :20:54. | :21:01. | |
pockets of fog. More fog across north-west England, but fog-free | :21:02. | :21:03. | |
across Northern Ireland. Having said that, where we have got breaks, | :21:04. | :21:07. | |
temperatures well below freezing. It was a cloudy night across Scotland. | :21:08. | :21:11. | |
That's given way to clear skies allowing the temperature to plummet. | :21:12. | :21:16. | |
Still patchy fog across the Central Lowlands and the central uplands and | :21:17. | :21:19. | |
we have got more fog across the Pennines and across the vale of | :21:20. | :21:26. | |
York. Equally slow to clear across southern counties, but we expect it | :21:27. | :21:30. | |
to lift. Some of it into low cloud. If you're stuck in an area with | :21:31. | :21:34. | |
stubborn fog, the temperature will be down. It will be a cold feel to | :21:35. | :21:38. | |
the day, but for many of us, away from the fog it will be a beautiful | :21:39. | :21:42. | |
day. Sparkly, clear skies for some. A little bit of cloud for others, | :21:43. | :21:47. | |
but it will feel cold. Temperatures four to seven as well as. Later on | :21:48. | :21:50. | |
the wind picks up across Northern Ireland and Western Scotland and | :21:51. | :21:54. | |
then we see the arrival of rain and away from western parts of England | :21:55. | :21:58. | |
and Wales, all points moving east. We're looking at fog reforming and | :21:59. | :22:02. | |
with a widespread frost again, it will be freezing fog which will take | :22:03. | :22:06. | |
longer to clear tomorrow than we're expecting today. So again, if you're | :22:07. | :22:10. | |
stuck under that, it will feel cold. The front moving across Scotland and | :22:11. | :22:13. | |
Northern Ireland weakens as it pushes into Northern England and | :22:14. | :22:17. | |
north-west Wales. Still producing spots of drizzle and light and | :22:18. | :22:21. | |
patchy rain, but note the temperature contrast. | :22:22. | :22:26. | |
But the end of the week, it is looking like we will have fewer fog | :22:27. | :22:30. | |
problems and it will turn milder, Dan and Lou. | :22:31. | :22:35. | |
Carol, we will look forward to that, thank you. | :22:36. | :22:42. | |
It was a cluster of rural villages in the mid-60s, | :22:43. | :22:44. | |
but 50 years ago today it was decided to make Milton Keynes | :22:45. | :22:47. | |
a brand-new town to ease the housing shortages in London. | :22:48. | :22:50. | |
In the decades that followed it became the UK's fastest growing | :22:51. | :22:53. | |
economy, and while some people associate it with endless | :22:54. | :22:55. | |
roads and roundabouts, those who live there | :22:56. | :22:56. | |
Breakfast's Graham Satchell has been to see how the town is evolving. | :22:57. | :23:01. | |
# Milton Keynes, a place of our own.# | :23:02. | :23:07. | |
# Milton Keynes, takes life in its stride.# | :23:08. | :23:17. | |
I don't think I have spoken to somebody who lives | :23:18. | :23:20. | |
here who has said they don't like living here | :23:21. | :23:22. | |
They get it and they realise what a fantastic place it is to be. | :23:23. | :23:28. | |
A beautiful name for a lovely village... | :23:29. | :23:30. | |
Milton Keynes was the last of the post-war new towns, | :23:31. | :23:33. | |
a collection of villages half-way between London and Birmingham. | :23:34. | :23:35. | |
It would become home to 250,000 people. | :23:36. | :23:39. | |
The big inspiration behind Milton Keynes is an American urban | :23:40. | :23:41. | |
designer called Melvin Webber who wanted to create community | :23:42. | :23:43. | |
Which basically means loads of people together, but not all densely | :23:44. | :23:53. | |
packed in. From the air you can see it, a grid, | :23:54. | :23:56. | |
each square a community An American-style town | :23:57. | :23:59. | |
built for the car. In the master | :24:00. | :24:18. | |
plan were principles. If you think about the grid it | :24:19. | :24:20. | |
always gives you the options. Ken Baker was part of the original | :24:21. | :24:28. | |
design team 50 years ago. Milton Keynes has the | :24:29. | :24:31. | |
choice and the grid. Maybe, but on the ground | :24:32. | :24:33. | |
Milton Keynes can feel uninspiring. Big roads and roundabouts means | :24:34. | :24:38. | |
you can drive through it and not Critics of Milton Keynes | :24:39. | :24:41. | |
have been brutal. Francis Tybalt, the great urban | :24:42. | :24:44. | |
designer, called it "bland, rigid, And while some do hate it, | :24:45. | :24:47. | |
Milton Keynes is surprising. It has 180 miles of parks | :24:48. | :24:52. | |
and cycle tracks, the fastest Gill Prince has taken a series | :24:53. | :24:55. | |
of photographs called It's an absolutely brilliant place | :24:56. | :25:03. | |
to build a business, grow a family, anything | :25:04. | :25:24. | |
you want to do. The Government has announced 14 | :25:25. | :25:28. | |
new garden towns and villages, so can they learn lessons | :25:29. | :25:31. | |
from Milton Keynes? It isn't part of the original master | :25:32. | :25:35. | |
plan of Milton Keynes. Milton Keynes itself | :25:36. | :25:39. | |
is expanding rapidly. But campaigners say new developments | :25:40. | :25:45. | |
are too densely populated and the original principles | :25:46. | :25:47. | |
of the town have been lost. Myopic people with the wrong agenda, | :25:48. | :25:52. | |
who don't realise the greatness That's being copied all over | :25:53. | :25:55. | |
the world, but here Love it or hate it nothing | :25:56. | :26:02. | |
with the open spaces, the high-minded design principles, | :26:03. | :26:11. | |
nothing like it's been tried since, and 50 years on nothing | :26:12. | :26:13. | |
like it is planned today. It is rather lovely. | :26:14. | :26:31. | |
Many inquests ago maybe we wouldn't where we are now, but... Toast | :26:32. | :26:38. | |
should be dark and crispy, anything is wrong. Tom says, "I like my toast | :26:39. | :26:43. | |
pale." Still to come on Breakfast, | :26:44. | :26:54. | |
a 21st century update for the 90s cult film, | :26:55. | :26:56. | |
Trainspotting. Choose life. Choose Facebook, | :26:57. | :27:02. | |
Twitter and Instagram and hope someone, somewhere cares. | :27:03. | :27:05. | |
We catch up with the stars of Danny Boyle's sequel, T2, | :27:06. | :27:07. | |
as they hit the orange carpet at last night's | :27:08. | :27:09. | |
Time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. | :27:10. | :30:37. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | :30:38. | :30:48. | |
The Prime Minister is launching her industrial strategy - | :30:49. | :30:50. | |
promising to intervene more to help businesses. | :30:51. | :30:54. | |
The key proposal is the creation of deals to assist certain industry | :30:55. | :30:57. | |
sectors, including nuclear power and life sciences. | :30:58. | :31:01. | |
Mrs May will launch the plans at her first regional cabinet | :31:02. | :31:05. | |
meeting, which is taking place in the North West of England. | :31:06. | :31:12. | |
Labour says ministers have put enough money aside for the plans. | :31:13. | :31:16. | |
The Labour Party is calling on Theresa May to make a statement | :31:17. | :31:19. | |
to Parliament clarifying whether she knew about a reported | :31:20. | :31:21. | |
Trident missile misfire before a vote to renew the system. | :31:22. | :31:24. | |
During a BBC interview, the Prime Minister repeatedly | :31:25. | :31:26. | |
avoided the question - although she insisted | :31:27. | :31:27. | |
she had "absolute faith" in the Trident system. | :31:28. | :31:29. | |
An unarmed missile is reported to have veered off course | :31:30. | :31:32. | |
during a test in June last year, just weeks before a Commons vote | :31:33. | :31:35. | |
Earlier, Cabinet minister Greg Clark told Breakfast why it had been right | :31:36. | :31:41. | |
not to release information on the test last year. | :31:42. | :31:48. | |
If you have a policy, you have it for a good reason. You have tests | :31:49. | :31:58. | |
all the time, and obviously, that is very sensitive information to our | :31:59. | :32:03. | |
enemies, to the very people that we have this protection against. So I | :32:04. | :32:07. | |
think you have to abide by that policy, that every time there is a | :32:08. | :32:10. | |
test, you don't make a commentary on it. If you do that, you have to | :32:11. | :32:13. | |
stick by that. Government scientists are advising | :32:14. | :32:15. | |
that starchy foods like toast and potatoes are not cooked | :32:16. | :32:17. | |
beyond a golden colour to reduce The Food Standards Agency's | :32:18. | :32:20. | |
"Go For Gold" campaign says over-browning food for more flavour | :32:21. | :32:23. | |
and crunch produces a potentially It also recommends that raw potatoes | :32:24. | :32:27. | |
are not stored in the fridge. Talks aimed at resolving | :32:28. | :32:38. | |
the Syrian conflict are due The negotiations have the backing | :32:39. | :32:40. | |
of Russia and Iran, which support the Syrian government, | :32:41. | :32:45. | |
and Turkey, which It's the first time a group made | :32:46. | :32:46. | |
up entirely of rebel forces will negotiate | :32:47. | :32:50. | |
with the Syrian government. Police say one man has been arrested | :32:51. | :32:56. | |
after an officer was shot The officer is in a stable condition | :32:57. | :32:59. | |
after being hit twice in the arm when a number of shots were fired | :33:00. | :33:04. | |
from a car on the Crumlin Road The Northern Ireland Secretary | :33:05. | :33:07. | |
James Brokenshire said This incident underlines the risks | :33:08. | :33:23. | |
that they take. And equally, the nature of some of the challenges | :33:24. | :33:26. | |
that we continue to see in Northern Ireland, where people will use | :33:27. | :33:32. | |
violence to achieve their twisted or seek to advance some ends. That has | :33:33. | :33:37. | |
no place in Northern Ireland. It is the peace process that we stand | :33:38. | :33:39. | |
behind. Many of us are waking up to dense | :33:40. | :33:50. | |
fog and widespread frost, which is causing travel disruption in the | :33:51. | :33:52. | |
south-east of England as temperatures plunge below zero this | :33:53. | :33:56. | |
morning. This is the scene in central London this morning. That is | :33:57. | :34:01. | |
actually better than it was half an hour ago. Where is that? Is that | :34:02. | :34:06. | |
near our Broadcasting House? It is slightly better. 100 flights out of | :34:07. | :34:12. | |
Heathrow have been cancelled, with a further 37 cancelled at London City | :34:13. | :34:15. | |
Airport. Drivers have been urged to prepare for poor conditions on the | :34:16. | :34:19. | |
roads. Carroll will have the details for you in ten minutes. | :34:20. | :34:23. | |
The world's biggest smartphone maker, Samsung, has blamed faulty | :34:24. | :34:25. | |
batteries for the fires that led to the recall of its | :34:26. | :34:28. | |
The company was forced to discontinue the device | :34:29. | :34:32. | |
after a chaotic recall that saw replacement phones | :34:33. | :34:34. | |
The Korean electronics giant said it apologised for the defect, | :34:35. | :34:37. | |
and had learned lessons from what had happened. | :34:38. | :34:44. | |
It's barely the time it takes to fill the kettle - | :34:45. | :34:49. | |
but ten seconds is all it took for 19 buildings to be reduced | :34:50. | :34:52. | |
to rubble in a controlled explosion in China yesterday. | :34:53. | :34:56. | |
Demolition experts waited until it was dark before detonating | :34:57. | :35:00. | |
five tonnes of explosives which brought down 150,000 | :35:01. | :35:02. | |
square metres of concrete, glass and steel to make way | :35:03. | :35:05. | |
Very nice of them to like it for us. Otherwise, we would not have been | :35:06. | :35:20. | |
able to see it. Amazing footage from China this morning. | :35:21. | :35:23. | |
Still to come on Breakfast this morning... | :35:24. | :35:24. | |
The MP turned travel presenter Michael Portillo will be on the sofa | :35:25. | :35:27. | |
to tell us how his latest railway adventure takes him on a journey | :35:28. | :35:30. | |
On the contrary, I have been defending free speech against | :35:31. | :35:42. | |
someone who wanted to abuse it. The woman who had to go | :35:43. | :35:44. | |
to court to defend the truth of the Holocaust joins us to reveal | :35:45. | :35:47. | |
what it was like being played by Rachel Weisz in Denial - | :35:48. | :35:50. | |
a film about her incredible case. And Prince Charles | :35:51. | :35:53. | |
puts pen to paper. We take a look at the new Ladybird | :35:54. | :35:55. | |
guide to climate change and find out why the Prince was so keen | :35:56. | :35:58. | |
to help write it. Right now, Sally is here with a look | :35:59. | :36:09. | |
at some of the weekend sport and looking ahead as well. And hopefully | :36:10. | :36:14. | |
an update on why Mason. People will have seen Hull play Chelsea | :36:15. | :36:17. | |
yesterday. We know he went to hospital. We have an upstate from | :36:18. | :36:23. | |
Hull. He was involved in a clash of heads with Gary Cahill yesterday. A | :36:24. | :36:28. | |
statement from the club says he is in a stable condition. We know | :36:29. | :36:36. | |
suffered a fractured skull. There is also chat about the other players | :36:37. | :36:39. | |
who were on the pitch because for a time, it was really for everybody, | :36:40. | :36:45. | |
and everybody who was there on the day is obviously concerned. It was | :36:46. | :36:51. | |
quite a long delay. All the players were saying, yes, we won the game, | :36:52. | :36:56. | |
but we want to know whether Ryan is OK. It was seven or eight minutes | :36:57. | :37:04. | |
and he came off with an oxygen mask. The Chelsea boss spoke very clearly | :37:05. | :37:05. | |
about Ryan Mason's condition. Chelsea and I, the players, we wish | :37:06. | :37:18. | |
for him the best and to recover very soon. Yeah, only this. We hope to | :37:19. | :37:28. | |
see him very soon on the pitch. Arsene Wenger was sent | :37:29. | :37:31. | |
to the stands during his sides victory over Bunley - | :37:32. | :37:33. | |
he was unhappy with that decision there | :37:34. | :37:35. | |
to award the visitors But Arsenal got their own penalty | :37:36. | :37:37. | |
in the 97th minute of the game, Celtic will play Inverness in the | :37:38. | :37:58. | |
fifth round of the Scottish Cup after a 3-0 win over League 1 Albion | :37:59. | :38:00. | |
Rovers. Britain's Johanna Konta | :38:01. | :38:03. | |
is through to the quarter-finals The world number nine beat | :38:04. | :38:05. | |
Russia's Ekaterina Makarova 6-1, 6-4 to reach the last eight | :38:06. | :38:08. | |
without dropping a set. Konta is the last remaining Briton | :38:09. | :38:10. | |
in the singles draw and will now play 22-time Grand Slam champion | :38:11. | :38:14. | |
Serena Williams. It will be the first time I'm | :38:15. | :38:23. | |
on court against her and I am just looking forward to really | :38:24. | :38:26. | |
competing against her. She is one of the, if not | :38:27. | :38:28. | |
the best player for us I think to play against someone | :38:29. | :38:32. | |
like that who you also grew up watching, I think it's another great | :38:33. | :38:38. | |
opportunity to take a big Ronnie O'Sullivan has won | :38:39. | :38:41. | |
a record 7th Masters title. He beat Joe Perry 10-7 | :38:42. | :38:51. | |
at Alexandra Palace. O'Sullivan had been 4-1 down | :38:52. | :38:53. | |
before winning 7 frames He had shared the record of six | :38:54. | :38:56. | |
Masters wins with Stephen Hendry, Dave Ryding has become the first | :38:57. | :39:01. | |
British skier to claim a World Cup He finished second in the men's | :39:02. | :39:10. | |
slalom at Kitzbuhel. He was quickest after the first run | :39:11. | :39:16. | |
but was eventually beaten into second place by home favourite | :39:17. | :39:19. | |
Marcel Hirscher. No Brit has won an Alpine World | :39:20. | :39:21. | |
Cup Ski Race in the 50 We had someone come second in 1981. | :39:22. | :39:36. | |
Huge congratulations to him. Ski Sunday was quite a watch last night. | :39:37. | :39:40. | |
And there has one of the best theme tunes. I am not going to do it. | :39:41. | :39:50. | |
From the heart of the Grand Canyon and along the Mississippi River | :39:51. | :39:53. | |
through America's Mid West and into the Deep South. | :39:54. | :39:56. | |
It sounds like the road-trip of a lifetime. | :39:57. | :39:58. | |
But these are just some of the destinations | :39:59. | :39:59. | |
Michael Portillo explored by train during a 3,000 mile | :40:00. | :40:02. | |
journey across the world's largest rail network. | :40:03. | :40:03. | |
I have crossed the Atlantic to ride the railroads of North America | :40:04. | :40:14. | |
Appleton's General Guide to North America will direct me | :40:15. | :40:23. | |
to all that's novel, beautiful, memorable and striking | :40:24. | :40:29. | |
As I journey across this vast continent, I'll discover | :40:30. | :40:36. | |
how pioneers and cowboys conquered the West. | :40:37. | :40:42. | |
And how the railroads tied this nation together, | :40:43. | :40:45. | |
helping to create the global superstate of today. | :40:46. | :40:51. | |
I love train journeys, so I love these programmes. Thank you! You | :40:52. | :41:05. | |
have an avid fan. Tell us about the latest one. You have been to America | :41:06. | :41:10. | |
before. Yes, in the first series, we were mainly Dundee East coast, I | :41:11. | :41:14. | |
would say my comfort zone, the big cities of the East. This time, well | :41:15. | :41:19. | |
outside my comfort zone, heading west all the way to the Grand | :41:20. | :41:21. | |
Canyon, following the route of the wagon trains and the cowboys. I'm | :41:22. | :41:30. | |
afraid the extermination of the buffalo and the suppression of the | :41:31. | :41:35. | |
Native American, all the way through Milwaukee, Chicago and ending up in | :41:36. | :41:40. | |
Elvis's city of Memphis, Tennessee. We were also talking about | :41:41. | :41:45. | |
Trainspotting, the film, but this is Trainspotting of a different type. | :41:46. | :41:51. | |
It is harder Trainspotting in the United States, because they are few | :41:52. | :41:55. | |
and far between. In many places, there is only one train a day. There | :41:56. | :41:59. | |
was a trend that leaves Chicago all the data and goes all the way to Los | :42:00. | :42:02. | |
Angeles, taking about 40 hours. It is slow and a bit unreliable, but it | :42:03. | :42:09. | |
is will train travel. Super observation cars, sleeping | :42:10. | :42:12. | |
compartments, food that is freshly cooked on the train. Real train | :42:13. | :42:16. | |
travel. And the programme is packed with history. Did you learn things | :42:17. | :42:24. | |
you didn't know before? Oh, yes. I know nothing! I hope that is why I | :42:25. | :42:27. | |
am the right person to do the show, because I am learning everything as | :42:28. | :42:30. | |
I hope the viewer is learning everything. To begin with, we | :42:31. | :42:34. | |
discover that the United States has doubled in size overnight. This is | :42:35. | :42:42. | |
the very thing. Lewis and Clark were two explorers in 1804 who set off | :42:43. | :42:47. | |
down the Missouri River. Here, I am replicating their journey. This is a | :42:48. | :42:50. | |
replica of the keelboat that those brave men used for 30 months. They | :42:51. | :42:53. | |
set off down the Missouri River to find out what Thomas Jefferson had | :42:54. | :42:58. | |
bought from Napoleon, the Louisiana purchase with which he had doubled | :42:59. | :43:02. | |
the size of the United States overnight by buying it for $15 | :43:03. | :43:06. | |
million. But someone had to explore it, and Lewis and Clark were the | :43:07. | :43:10. | |
guys who did it and came back to the report is enormous extension of | :43:11. | :43:14. | |
territory. And not only were they exploring, they were negotiating | :43:15. | :43:19. | |
with the Native Americans. Dealing with the Native Americans, the | :43:20. | :43:22. | |
wildlife and the diseases. All of them bar one got back. There was a | :43:23. | :43:26. | |
group of 30 or 40 went on that little boat. Most of the way, you | :43:27. | :43:31. | |
have to have a person on the shore, pulling the boat along. If you | :43:32. | :43:35. | |
imagine walking along a sure no one has walked along before, that is not | :43:36. | :43:40. | |
easy. You were also filming during a fascinating time for American | :43:41. | :43:46. | |
politics and life. Was that an eye-opener as well? The only thing I | :43:47. | :43:50. | |
really noticed, because I wasn't talking about politics, was that | :43:51. | :43:53. | |
Trump was the only story on the news wherever you were. Hillary Clinton | :43:54. | :43:59. | |
was never in the news. That was when I first began to think, well, this | :44:00. | :44:03. | |
is not going to end well for Hillary Clinton. But on the whole, I wasn't | :44:04. | :44:08. | |
talking about politics, I was talking about American history and | :44:09. | :44:11. | |
enjoying these beautiful modes of transport. And you were not just on | :44:12. | :44:17. | |
trains. No, here are some camera systems. The pony express is another | :44:18. | :44:22. | |
historical feature. For about a year, they had this relay of ponies | :44:23. | :44:26. | |
that covered a distance of about 1000 miles in 12 days. There were | :44:27. | :44:31. | |
only in business for a year, because they were replaced by the Telegraph. | :44:32. | :44:35. | |
Nonetheless, the heroism of those young boys who used to ride hell for | :44:36. | :44:40. | |
leather, carrying mail, it cost about $5 to carry a letter. It have | :44:41. | :44:44. | |
to be a pretty important letter for you to invest $5 in the middle of | :44:45. | :44:48. | |
the 19th century to send it. I am told the clip we are about to show | :44:49. | :44:52. | |
is your favourite part of the programme. I am see. | :44:53. | :45:01. | |
Completed in 1965 to commemorate Saint Lewis' role as the gateway to | :45:02. | :45:08. | |
the West. It is astonishing. I have seen it around the city, but when | :45:09. | :45:13. | |
you get beneath it, you can't believe the scale of it. This don't | :45:14. | :45:16. | |
believe the biggest money man in the United States. It is the tallest | :45:17. | :45:20. | |
freestanding monument in the United States at 630 feet. To my delight, | :45:21. | :45:24. | |
the way to ascend the highest monument in the country is by train, | :45:25. | :45:32. | |
running inside the arch. Ayew ready for a four-minute ride to the top? I | :45:33. | :45:38. | |
can't wait. Extraordinary journeys. We can't have you here without | :45:39. | :45:43. | |
talking a little bit about Theresa May, who is due to meet Donald Trump | :45:44. | :45:47. | |
soon. Are you optimistic about the relationship between the UK and the | :45:48. | :45:49. | |
United States? It is difficult to know. I find him | :45:50. | :45:59. | |
puzzling. One day he is talking about protectionism, the next day he | :46:00. | :46:03. | |
is talking about trade with Britain. These two things are contradictory. | :46:04. | :46:06. | |
It is difficult to know what will come out of it. If Theresa May comes | :46:07. | :46:10. | |
out of it with a banking deal, allowing the banks in the two | :46:11. | :46:14. | |
countries to do business as though they were of the same nationality, | :46:15. | :46:18. | |
that would be helpful in shoring up the City of London at a time when | :46:19. | :46:22. | |
people are worried about Brexit. There was a lot of love for your | :46:23. | :46:27. | |
jacket on our social media channels this morning. Was that purchased on | :46:28. | :46:32. | |
your travels? This one comes from London, England. There are about 20 | :46:33. | :46:37. | |
of these now. I add them at a rate of about two or three per year. | :46:38. | :46:46. | |
Perfect the TV. What next? You've been to America twice. We will | :46:47. | :46:49. | |
probably go to America again. There's plenty to do there, as well | :46:50. | :46:55. | |
in Canada. I hope we will be in Asia this coming year. Watch this space. | :46:56. | :47:00. | |
I expect we will be in Britain and Europe, as well. I think we are | :47:01. | :47:03. | |
gradually pushing east. So much of the world to explore. Had he been on | :47:04. | :47:09. | |
the trans-Siberian express yet? I haven't. -- have you been. It is a | :47:10. | :47:16. | |
12 day journey. We don't film that long. What we might do was have. | :47:17. | :47:17. | |
Along the way. Great American Railroad Journeys | :47:18. | :47:20. | |
is on BBC Two tonight at 6:30pm. Here's Carol with a look | :47:21. | :47:22. | |
at this morning's weather. It is foggy this morning, what is | :47:23. | :47:33. | |
going on? For some it really is. This was | :47:34. | :47:40. | |
taken earlier in Brighton. Some slippery conditions this morning. | :47:41. | :47:46. | |
Watch out. This picture, as well, taking in west Sussex. You can see | :47:47. | :47:49. | |
how dense the fog is. Beautiful start of the day in the mumbles. But | :47:50. | :47:53. | |
we have fog across southern counties. We have it across the | :47:54. | :47:59. | |
Midlands, central points of England, into northern England, southern | :48:00. | :48:01. | |
Scotland and parts of central Scotland. Northern Ireland is free | :48:02. | :48:06. | |
of fog. But if you are travelling, it is freezing fog, take extra care. | :48:07. | :48:10. | |
It has already disrupted some flights. It may disrupt further. | :48:11. | :48:15. | |
Keep in touch with what is happening where you are on your local BBC | :48:16. | :48:19. | |
radio station. You can see that we still hang on to some of this dense | :48:20. | :48:25. | |
fog. It is patchy. Do not be lulled into a full sense of security you | :48:26. | :48:30. | |
are out of it. But largely fog free in the south-west, but not frost | :48:31. | :48:38. | |
free. Fog across Merseyside and into the north-west of England. And fog | :48:39. | :48:43. | |
free across Northern Ireland, but it is cold and frosty. After a cloudy | :48:44. | :48:48. | |
night, the cloud is broken. We have sunshine in parts of Scotland, but | :48:49. | :48:52. | |
voter bridges and patchy fog still across the central lowlands and part | :48:53. | :48:56. | |
of the Southern uplands. Then we are back into this fog as we move across | :48:57. | :49:00. | |
the Pennines and into the Vale of York. Across the Vale of York that | :49:01. | :49:03. | |
fog could be slow to left. Same across southern counties and the | :49:04. | :49:08. | |
Midlands. But we expect it to left. Some of it into just some low cloud. | :49:09. | :49:12. | |
If you are stuck under that it'll feel cold. Away from it it'll be a | :49:13. | :49:16. | |
beautiful day. Chris, cold, winter's sunshine. -- crisp. Air quality | :49:17. | :49:26. | |
today, it is very high air pollution across Northern Ireland, eastern | :49:27. | :49:28. | |
parts of England, Greater London, and into the south-east. But it is | :49:29. | :49:33. | |
also high over other parts of the UK, as well. Into the evening and | :49:34. | :49:37. | |
overnight, the wind picks up over western Scotland and Northern | :49:38. | :49:40. | |
Ireland. This front coming in introduces rain. Ahead of that there | :49:41. | :49:44. | |
will be some cloud. This will move away from western parts of England | :49:45. | :49:47. | |
and Wales. It'll be another foggy night. We are looking at freezing | :49:48. | :49:54. | |
fog and tomorrow it will be slower to clear, we think, than today. Some | :49:55. | :49:58. | |
of it lifting into low cloud. It'll feel cold under that. As this | :49:59. | :50:01. | |
weather front comes to this article we can. -- as this weather front | :50:02. | :50:13. | |
comes in, the cloud will weaken. Things will turn mild, as well, | :50:14. | :50:17. | |
tomorrow. Thanks very much. You are a | :50:18. | :50:23. | |
brilliant, award-winning broadcaster, we need your help on | :50:24. | :50:27. | |
this. We always need Carol's help. Carol | :50:28. | :50:31. | |
always winds Best weather present in the world. | :50:32. | :50:33. | |
So, Breakfast-related news now and we've been nominated in the best | :50:34. | :50:36. | |
Live Magazine Show category at the National Television Awards. | :50:37. | :50:38. | |
We thought that was a good excuse for a montage, | :50:39. | :50:41. | |
so here's a compilation of some highlights from the programme. | :50:42. | :50:45. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Louise Minchin and Dan Walker. | :50:46. | :50:48. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt. | :50:49. | :50:50. | |
What an incredible year 2016 has been. | :50:51. | :50:52. | |
I can see Charlie's sneaking up behind me. | :50:53. | :51:18. | |
We've clearly run the wrong pictures. | :51:19. | :51:31. | |
Some people said it was a slice of Battenberg. | :51:32. | :51:34. | |
I can touch him and everything, he's real! | :51:35. | :51:38. | |
It is a very difficult category. A tough category. | :51:39. | :51:54. | |
If you would like to vote, you can find it on the website. | :51:55. | :51:59. | |
We would appreciate it. Details are expected later today on how the | :52:00. | :52:02. | |
government plans to intervene more to boost British businesses post | :52:03. | :52:06. | |
Brexit. Theresa May announces the new industrial strategy today. | :52:07. | :52:14. | |
Welcome to Warrington. Theresa May will be down the road later. She | :52:15. | :52:23. | |
will be talking about the so-called industrial strategy, what the | :52:24. | :52:25. | |
government can do to kick-start businesses in this country. We are | :52:26. | :52:28. | |
in Warrington at this oil processing plant. This is cold base oil, this | :52:29. | :52:34. | |
is how it arrives in this place. It is refined here and blended, blended | :52:35. | :52:38. | |
into stuff like this. You might recognise this sort of thing from | :52:39. | :52:42. | |
your local garage. It goes into all sorts of things like engines, car | :52:43. | :52:49. | |
parks, tractors, and all sorts. -- car parts. They will be talking | :52:50. | :52:56. | |
about hard infrastructure, things like roads and railways, which is | :52:57. | :52:59. | |
good for these trucks because they need to get them at the stuff around | :53:00. | :53:02. | |
the country. They will need good networks to do that. At the same | :53:03. | :53:06. | |
time it is also about soft infrastructure. Things like | :53:07. | :53:10. | |
investment and research and development, investment in all sorts | :53:11. | :53:13. | |
of things that will make better quality, more improved, more | :53:14. | :53:17. | |
efficient services and goods in places like this. ?3 million on that | :53:18. | :53:22. | |
project. It is opening in the next couple of months. Let's discuss what | :53:23. | :53:27. | |
we are expecting to hear. Greg is the boss and it is from the local | :53:28. | :53:32. | |
think tank. Looking at this building you spent a lot of money, it isn't | :53:33. | :53:36. | |
just about manufacturing production lines, it is about research and | :53:37. | :53:40. | |
development, isn't it? Absolutely. We have a British brand. Its popular | :53:41. | :53:44. | |
abroad because of the quality of the we produce. The facility we will | :53:45. | :53:53. | |
build will ensure that. We will hopefully maintain manufacturing | :53:54. | :53:57. | |
excellence in this field. Growing a successful business here, and | :53:58. | :53:59. | |
listening to the Prime Minister, there is a tendency to think | :54:00. | :54:03. | |
Westminster is making decisions that will affect the whole country. Is it | :54:04. | :54:06. | |
right they are all done in the south-east? It is fantastic we are | :54:07. | :54:10. | |
getting a strategy. But the key element of that is to allow local | :54:11. | :54:14. | |
areas to decide for themselves what their main priorities are. Alongside | :54:15. | :54:19. | |
the strategy we need evolution to places like Cheshire and Warrington | :54:20. | :54:22. | |
to invest in the best businesses like this one here. What are your | :54:23. | :54:29. | |
priorities? What would you like to see? We need stability first and | :54:30. | :54:35. | |
foremost. A development in the skills sector, people coming into | :54:36. | :54:38. | |
work here, from the ground up, all the way up to senior management. | :54:39. | :54:42. | |
When it comes to how that is commended, there is a question of | :54:43. | :54:47. | |
when and how, it is all good talking about headlines, but the reality is | :54:48. | :54:51. | |
when these things start filtering into business. Skills as a great | :54:52. | :54:55. | |
example. Most of our skilled strategies are developed out of | :54:56. | :55:01. | |
Whitehall. If you want to bring the skills needed at this business to | :55:02. | :55:04. | |
colleges, you need to develop the packs to get them out local level. | :55:05. | :55:09. | |
Great stuff. Nice to talk to you. We will hear from Prime Minister later. | :55:10. | :55:14. | |
It is a ten point plan. It includes all sorts of things. Some of it | :55:15. | :55:17. | |
about network infrastructure, broadband, all of that stuff, but | :55:18. | :55:22. | |
crucially it'll be about skills. The Prime Minister says she wants to | :55:23. | :55:24. | |
make sure people, wherever they are in the country, feel the benefits of | :55:25. | :55:29. | |
economic growth. And in the wake of the vote from Brexit that could be | :55:30. | :55:34. | |
more important than ever. She will be speaking later. We will have the | :55:35. | :55:37. | |
details for you on the BBC News Channel. | :55:38. | :55:39. | |
Thanks very much. A month-long legal trial focused | :55:40. | :55:42. | |
on the claims made by one historian against another might not | :55:43. | :55:45. | |
immediately jump out as classic But when Deborah Lipstadt | :55:46. | :55:47. | |
was accused of libel by David Irving what actually followed | :55:48. | :55:52. | |
was a dramatic and high-profile case with consequences on how | :55:53. | :55:54. | |
we view the Holocaust. We will be speaking | :55:55. | :55:57. | |
to Deborah in a moment but first here is a clip of, | :55:58. | :56:00. | |
Denial, a new film which In your book, why do you continually | :56:01. | :56:03. | |
denigrate the work of David Irving? He's discovered all sorts | :56:04. | :56:12. | |
of primary sources no Well, to be honest, I don't | :56:13. | :56:18. | |
think I do denigrate him. Actually, I don't think | :56:19. | :56:22. | |
about him that much. Professor Lipstadt, let me | :56:23. | :56:24. | |
reveal something to you. I am that David Irving | :56:25. | :56:33. | |
about whom you've been so rude. And it puzzles me that you think | :56:34. | :56:37. | |
yourself qualified to attack me, given that I have 30 years' | :56:38. | :56:46. | |
experience in the archives, and my books have been published | :56:47. | :56:51. | |
by some of the greatest publishing houses in the world, | :56:52. | :56:54. | |
Viking Press, William Morrow. I have to conclude that the reason | :56:55. | :56:56. | |
you don't engage with people you disagree with is | :56:57. | :56:59. | |
because you can't, and you might learn some facts, | :57:00. | :57:03. | |
facts, Miss Lipstadt, It is so interesting watching you | :57:04. | :57:15. | |
watching that, Deborah, because it clearly still makes you very | :57:16. | :57:19. | |
uncomfortable. Yes, that was a horrible moment. Rachel cold me. I | :57:20. | :57:23. | |
was in Barcelona when they filmed that. She cold me, I think she was | :57:24. | :57:27. | |
about to go into rehearsal, or she had just done the rehearsal. -- | :57:28. | :57:36. | |
Rachel called me. She said what were you feeling at the time? I said I | :57:37. | :57:41. | |
was like a deer in the headlights. I didn't know what to do. If I debated | :57:42. | :57:47. | |
him it would suggest to the students that there were two asides to the | :57:48. | :57:51. | |
issue, as opposed to fax, and that he had his point and I had mine. -- | :57:52. | :57:57. | |
two asides to the issue, as opposed to the facts. It was my greatest | :57:58. | :58:02. | |
moment. It was a difficult moment and the beginning of the story of | :58:03. | :58:06. | |
his coming after me. I think she played beautifully. It turned into | :58:07. | :58:11. | |
this elaborate court case. There is a lot of story behind it. You accuse | :58:12. | :58:16. | |
Tim in your books and questioned him historically. What eventually | :58:17. | :58:20. | |
happened is that he brought a case against you which was tried in | :58:21. | :58:29. | |
British court. -- you accuse him. To some degree. We followed his | :58:30. | :58:32. | |
footnotes back to the sources. We showed that in every case where he | :58:33. | :58:36. | |
made a claim, and I have a source that proves whatever it might be, | :58:37. | :58:40. | |
that the source didn't prove that. But nobody had ever checked his | :58:41. | :58:45. | |
sources. People either dismissed him or supported him. We were going | :58:46. | :58:49. | |
after him. But in the course of doing that we demonstrated many | :58:50. | :58:52. | |
things about the Holocaust that hadn't been fully demonstrated | :58:53. | :58:56. | |
before. It really was, to take that case to court, a very concerning | :58:57. | :59:02. | |
thing to do, wasn't it? Because had it gone the other way... That it | :59:03. | :59:07. | |
would have been a disaster, but I had no choice. He sued me. Because | :59:08. | :59:13. | |
of the nature of British libel law, hope and I don't have to explain | :59:14. | :59:17. | |
it... Had I not fought him he would have won by default. Had that | :59:18. | :59:24. | |
happened, it would've been his version of the Holocaust, no | :59:25. | :59:31. | |
chambers, etc, that would have been the correct version. People wanted | :59:32. | :59:34. | |
me to settle because he would have got so much publicity. But settling | :59:35. | :59:39. | |
would have been me apologising and saying that your version is correct. | :59:40. | :59:46. | |
And my books would have been pulped. British libel law is actually | :59:47. | :59:51. | |
explained beautifully in the film. We can show another clip of Rachel | :59:52. | :59:57. | |
speaking to one of your lawyers. There is a reason why he is bringing | :59:58. | :00:01. | |
the case in London. I wondered about that. Villa thank you very much. | :00:02. | :00:07. | |
Yes, his advantage, over in America, if you are accused of defaming | :00:08. | :00:15. | |
someone... In Britain it is the other way around. But I have to | :00:16. | :00:19. | |
prove what I have said is true? But I'm the innocent party. That is | :00:20. | :00:25. | |
against natural justice. It is different in the UK. He is very | :00:26. | :00:32. | |
matter of fact. I know you are still very good friends with him to this | :00:33. | :00:35. | |
day. One of the things about the film which are excellent, one of the | :00:36. | :00:39. | |
things, from your point of view, you were not allowed to speak in the | :00:40. | :00:43. | |
trial. Some of my friends say that is the biggest miracle of this case. | :00:44. | :00:47. | |
It was actually more than a month, it was two and a half months that I | :00:48. | :00:51. | |
kept my mouth shut. People said it was an unnatural act on my part. It | :00:52. | :00:58. | |
must have been frustrating for you at the time. I was being sued for | :00:59. | :01:03. | |
what I wrote my book. Everything was in that book. There was no reason to | :01:04. | :01:07. | |
put me on the stand. For him to go on a fishing exhibition. There was | :01:08. | :01:15. | |
nothing for me to hide from. We wanted the confrontation, we wanted | :01:16. | :01:21. | |
to deny him. And there was your struggle, as well, Holocaust | :01:22. | :01:25. | |
survivors who wanted to go on the stand. But you didn't want that | :01:26. | :01:29. | |
because he would have questioned them and confuse them. That's right. | :01:30. | :01:34. | |
We assumed our intention was to humiliate them. And we also wanted | :01:35. | :01:40. | |
the focus to be on him. He lies and distorts. The judge agreed with us | :01:41. | :01:44. | |
amazingly. More than we ever imagined would be the case. We | :01:45. | :01:50. | |
wanted the focus to remain on him. I'm interested to see if you think | :01:51. | :01:55. | |
there are implications for where we are now, and so-called fake news, | :01:56. | :01:57. | |
what is your take? No one imagined when we started to | :01:58. | :02:06. | |
make this film, even a little more than a year ago, when they started | :02:07. | :02:10. | |
filming in London, that it would have such contemporary relevance. | :02:11. | :02:17. | |
But between the new president of my country, one of his major advisers | :02:18. | :02:22. | |
yesterday going on television and saying what we were talking about | :02:23. | :02:27. | |
were alternative facts about how many people were at the | :02:28. | :02:32. | |
inauguration. We have alternative facts. As one of the commentators | :02:33. | :02:36. | |
who was interviewing him said, alternative facts? We call those | :02:37. | :02:42. | |
falsehoods. I wish he had fed lies. -- I wish he had said lies. There | :02:43. | :02:47. | |
are lies, opinions and facts. The earth is flat - that is an opinion. | :02:48. | :02:56. | |
But what the deniers want to do, of course this film is about the | :02:57. | :02:59. | |
Holocaust, but it has a bigger message, that there are certain | :03:00. | :03:03. | |
facts. There are certain things that can't be debated. You can debate why | :03:04. | :03:07. | |
or how or what could have been done, what could have stopped it, whose | :03:08. | :03:11. | |
idea it was, but not that it happened. And deniers want to do | :03:12. | :03:15. | |
that and today, there are sadly too many people who want to do the same | :03:16. | :03:20. | |
thing. And how has Rachel played you? You'll agree she is great. She | :03:21. | :03:25. | |
is a professional's professional and she wanted to know as much about me | :03:26. | :03:30. | |
as she could. It is nice to meet the real woman as well. | :03:31. | :03:33. | |
It was the film that defined the Cool Britannia era, | :03:34. | :03:41. | |
and made household names of its cast. | :03:42. | :03:43. | |
More than 20 years later, the sequel to Trainspotting | :03:44. | :03:45. | |
T2 Trainspotting" ha its world premiere | :03:46. | :03:51. | |
Our Entertainment Correspondent Colin Paterson was there. | :03:52. | :03:53. | |
After more than 20 years, the Trainspotting gang back | :03:54. | :03:56. | |
together, on the orange carpet of the long-awaited sequel. | :03:57. | :03:58. | |
So what have you been up to for the last 20 years? | :03:59. | :04:05. | |
We had a real duty not to disappoint people because the film has | :04:06. | :04:09. | |
grown in affection in people's hearts, so you don't want to ruin it | :04:10. | :04:12. | |
and tarnish that image, so I hope we haven't done that. | :04:13. | :04:15. | |
Aside from all the fun stuff in the first movie, | :04:16. | :04:18. | |
Even though it was maybe about subjects they weren't | :04:19. | :04:21. | |
involved in, it was still relatable in some way. | :04:22. | :04:27. | |
This is carrying such a cultural weight associated | :04:28. | :04:28. | |
like no event that I've been to before. | :04:29. | :04:35. | |
Choose life, choose a job, choose a career... | :04:36. | :04:38. | |
Trainspotting was the defining film of mid-'90s Cool Britannia. | :04:39. | :04:44. | |
The movie poster was on students' walls, the soundtrack | :04:45. | :04:46. | |
It dealt with addiction, hedonism and friendship. | :04:47. | :04:55. | |
For the sequel, Ewan McGregor's famous Choose Life speech | :04:56. | :04:57. | |
'Choose life, choose Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and hope that | :04:58. | :05:00. | |
There's something very deep and moving about finding out | :05:01. | :05:08. | |
where they all are now, and I don't know of any movie | :05:09. | :05:13. | |
that I've done, and there aren't very many that | :05:14. | :05:18. | |
we've seen, where the characters become almost like people we know. | :05:19. | :05:24. | |
It's fair to say the four guys have lived a bit. | :05:25. | :05:26. | |
There was always a moment in every shooting day where there was that | :05:27. | :05:33. | |
20 years later moment, where you felt 20 years had gone by | :05:34. | :05:36. | |
since you were last playing this guy. | :05:37. | :05:38. | |
It isn't getting it out of your body that's the problem, | :05:39. | :05:48. | |
You think I haven't heard that 100,000 times? | :05:49. | :05:54. | |
we were like the Oasis of the movie industry in Britain. | :05:55. | :06:02. | |
So there was a part of me that yearns for that again, I suppose. | :06:03. | :06:16. | |
And he might not be finished with the role. | :06:17. | :06:18. | |
The cast are already talking about Trainspotting 3, | :06:19. | :06:21. | |
using Irvine Welsh's latest novel as the starting point. | :06:22. | :06:25. | |
I mean...I think Irvine's just arrived now. | :06:26. | :06:34. | |
I'm up for it, he's up for it, so I don't think you've seen | :06:35. | :06:37. | |
In a moment, we'll be finding out why Prince Charles | :06:38. | :06:49. | |
a new Ladybird guide to climate change. | :06:50. | :06:52. | |
But first a last, brief look at the headlines | :06:53. | :06:54. | |
Prince Charles is well known for his interest in environmental | :06:55. | :08:50. | |
issues and now he's put pen to paper to co-write a Ladybird | :08:51. | :08:53. | |
The idea for a simple book explaining the key scientific facts | :08:54. | :08:59. | |
came to the Prince after he spoke at the Paris Climate Change Summit | :09:00. | :09:03. | |
The guide was co-authored by a climate scientist | :09:04. | :09:08. | |
as well as the environmentalist Dr Tony Juniper, who joins us now. | :09:09. | :09:16. | |
I grew up reading Ladybird books and forgive me, but I thought they were | :09:17. | :09:23. | |
for primary school children? Well, they have done a range of styles | :09:24. | :09:26. | |
over the years. This is a new set of books for adults, and the idea is to | :09:27. | :09:31. | |
bring straightforward information to people who may know something about | :09:32. | :09:35. | |
ideas like evolution or quantum physics or climate change, but might | :09:36. | :09:38. | |
struggle to explain it to their friends and family. So this is a | :09:39. | :09:42. | |
briefing that enables people to get their head round complex subjects, | :09:43. | :09:45. | |
but based upon good science and information. | :09:46. | :09:52. | |
This is a contentious subject. Is it something Prince Charles should be | :09:53. | :09:58. | |
involved in? It is not contentious amongst the scientific community. We | :09:59. | :10:02. | |
have clear information that the climate is changing. Temperatures | :10:03. | :10:05. | |
are rising and we know this is down to the build-up of greenhouse gases | :10:06. | :10:10. | |
arising from human activities, including power generation, | :10:11. | :10:12. | |
transport, agriculture and the clearance of forests. All of that is | :10:13. | :10:16. | |
basic, clear science. I would say it is perfectly right for the Prince of | :10:17. | :10:20. | |
Wales to draw attention to this subject, because part of his role in | :10:21. | :10:26. | |
life is surely about taking the long view and warning of danger and the | :10:27. | :10:29. | |
extent to which we are able to cope with these things require somebody | :10:30. | :10:32. | |
to take the long view. He does do that, and I know he spends a lot of | :10:33. | :10:36. | |
time understanding the science of all of this. So it is not | :10:37. | :10:39. | |
controversial when you go to the data and look at what the scientific | :10:40. | :10:43. | |
community are saying. It becomes controversial when of course, people | :10:44. | :10:47. | |
resist the medications in terms of going towards clean energy or | :10:48. | :10:50. | |
electric vehicles or stopping the destruction of the tropical | :10:51. | :10:53. | |
rainforests or whatever else it might be. I know you have been | :10:54. | :11:00. | |
passionate about this for years. I'm going to be a git of making this too | :11:01. | :11:05. | |
simple, but at what state would you describe where we are now -- I'm | :11:06. | :11:08. | |
going to be accused of making this too simple. We need to be taking | :11:09. | :11:13. | |
urgent action. That is the simple summary. At the Paris climate summit | :11:14. | :11:18. | |
where Prince Charles spoke, the world's governments agreed that we | :11:19. | :11:20. | |
need to limit the warming to below 1.5 degrees compared with the | :11:21. | :11:24. | |
preindustrial time. Last year was the warmest year ever recorded | :11:25. | :11:28. | |
following 2015, which was the warmest before that and 2014, the | :11:29. | :11:32. | |
warmest before that. We are now about 1.1 degrees above the long | :11:33. | :11:44. | |
term average. If we want to avoid 1.5, we need to act right away, | :11:45. | :11:46. | |
otherwise we will be potentially triggering some unpleasant | :11:47. | :11:47. | |
consequences including the melting of ice caps, the changing of | :11:48. | :11:49. | |
ecosystems including the tropical rainforests, thereby emitting more | :11:50. | :11:51. | |
carbon into the atmosphere, and triggering more extreme weather of | :11:52. | :11:54. | |
the kind we have seen in this country recently in the form of | :11:55. | :11:58. | |
flooding. We know all of this is happening, and the longer we leave | :11:59. | :12:03. | |
it, the more hazard we cause in terms of risks to the human economy. | :12:04. | :12:07. | |
It is not simply about the environment, this is about the | :12:08. | :12:09. | |
economy and the well-being of people. We are seeing some flooding | :12:10. | :12:15. | |
pictures now. To go back to the book, you must be proud of being | :12:16. | :12:19. | |
part of this Ladybird legacy. Louise was saying generations of people | :12:20. | :12:23. | |
have read these books growing up. When the Prince first mooted the | :12:24. | :12:26. | |
idea, I had a conversation with my wife. The Prince has had a chat with | :12:27. | :12:32. | |
Sir Nicholas Soames, saying, why do you do a book? And my wife said, why | :12:33. | :12:37. | |
not do a Ladybird book? I thought, that obviously has to be the right | :12:38. | :12:41. | |
answer, because of the way you get this vivid conveying of ideas | :12:42. | :12:45. | |
through the pictures and the words together and the short format text. | :12:46. | :12:50. | |
We have some of the pictures here. You can create a clear impression | :12:51. | :12:54. | |
with a small amount of space. It seemed to be the right thing to do. | :12:55. | :12:58. | |
I think it is fair to say that some of the people who are more sceptical | :12:59. | :13:03. | |
about the climate change idea tend to be slightly older. Sorry Ladybird | :13:04. | :13:06. | |
books struck me as something that might connect with them. One of them | :13:07. | :13:13. | |
is quite powerful, Mr Trump. Ambush were Ladybird books have travelled | :13:14. | :13:17. | |
to the United States before, but maybe now they will. Thank you very | :13:18. | :13:19. | |
much. We're back tomorrow from 6 | :13:20. | :13:22. | |
when we'll be catching up with the team from | :13:23. | :13:26. | |
BBC's Winterwatch. | :13:27. | :13:28. |