Browse content similar to 12/03/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Ben Thompson and Rachel Burden. | :00:00. | :00:07. | |
Calls for a plan if Brexit talks collapse as a cross-party group | :00:08. | :00:11. | |
of MPs says failing to do so would be a "serious | :00:12. | :00:14. | |
As Parliament prepares to debate plans for leaving the EU, | :00:15. | :00:18. | |
the Brexit Secretary David Davis asks them not to "sabotage" | :00:19. | :00:21. | |
Also ahead, riot police break up a rally in support | :00:22. | :00:43. | |
of the Turkish President in Rotterdam after he described | :00:44. | :00:46. | |
Renewed calls for a centralised database for taxi drivers in England | :00:47. | :00:51. | |
In sport, England are Six Nations champions once again. | :00:52. | :00:59. | |
They win the Calcutta Cup after a 61-21 win over Scotland, | :01:00. | :01:02. | |
a world record-equalling 18th victory in a row for England. | :01:03. | :01:05. | |
Mike takes a spin with Esme Hawkey - the 18-year-old racer hoping to take | :01:06. | :01:12. | |
My stomach, my head, my senses are all over the place. That was what, | :01:13. | :01:23. | |
five laps? You do that for 50 minutes! Yes, 50 minutes. | :01:24. | :01:28. | |
Good morning. It is a messy Sunday morning with the weather. It is a | :01:29. | :01:42. | |
cloudy, mild start. There is some rain around but also some sun. I | :01:43. | :01:46. | |
will give you all the details coming up. | :01:47. | :01:46. | |
An influential committee of MPs has today warned that the government | :01:47. | :01:51. | |
would be guilty of "a serious dereliction of duty" if it fails | :01:52. | :01:54. | |
to plan for Brexit talks ending without a deal. | :01:55. | :01:56. | |
And in advance of a Commons debate tomorrow, Brexit Secretary David | :01:57. | :01:59. | |
Davis has called on MPs to reject the amendments put forward | :02:00. | :02:02. | |
Our diplomatic correspondent James Robbins reports. | :02:03. | :02:15. | |
We all know what is on the road to Brexit, last year's referendum for | :02:16. | :02:25. | |
Leave. But we don't know what Brexit will actually look and feel like. | :02:26. | :02:29. | |
Nine months on, a cross-party committee of MPs is warning that the | :02:30. | :02:32. | |
coming negotiations could stall or beta railed. Their report says a | :02:33. | :02:37. | |
complete breakdown in the talks would be very destructive, damaging | :02:38. | :02:41. | |
both the EU and the UK, and three MPs argue that the government is not | :02:42. | :02:47. | |
planning sufficiently for a painful no deal outcome. -- and the MPs. As | :02:48. | :02:52. | |
the Prime Minister prepares to trickle the film will start to the | :02:53. | :02:57. | |
Brexit versus later this month, a government spokesperson has | :02:58. | :02:59. | |
responded to the report by saying that David Davis, the Secretary of | :03:00. | :03:03. | |
State for exiting the European Union, had briefed the Cabinet last | :03:04. | :03:08. | |
month on the need to repair not just for a negotiated settlement but also | :03:09. | :03:12. | |
for the unlikely scenario in which no mutually satisfactory agreement | :03:13. | :03:15. | |
could be reached. -- repair not just. Ministers are said to be | :03:16. | :03:20. | |
confident Britain can achieve a positive new partnership with the | :03:21. | :03:23. | |
EU, including competence of agreement on trade. | :03:24. | :03:24. | |
Ahead of tomorrow's debate, Brexit Secretary David Davis has | :03:25. | :03:27. | |
called on MPs to leave the legislation unaltered. | :03:28. | :03:29. | |
Let's get more on this now from our political correspondent, | :03:30. | :03:32. | |
How significant is this intervention by this committee of MPs? Will it | :03:33. | :03:45. | |
have any influence? I think it will make people think again about what | :03:46. | :03:50. | |
happens after Brexit is triggered. Of course, David Davis wanting that | :03:51. | :03:54. | |
legislation to go through, as the government would like go through | :03:55. | :03:56. | |
without the amendments that the House of Lords put forward, what | :03:57. | :04:00. | |
they want is the government to commit to protecting the rights of | :04:01. | :04:04. | |
EU citizens, also to giving Parliament a say at the end of those | :04:05. | :04:09. | |
negotiations. But certainly, eyes are really looking now at Wendy | :04:10. | :04:15. | |
Article 50 process will be triggered, because if it does pass | :04:16. | :04:19. | |
through the House of Commons and the House of Lords unscathed this week, | :04:20. | :04:22. | |
potentially it could be triggered as soon as Wednesday. Then all eyes | :04:23. | :04:25. | |
will look to what happens thereafter. You heard in that report | :04:26. | :04:30. | |
that the Brexit secretary has said that he is thinking about the | :04:31. | :04:34. | |
potential of their being no deal at the end of it, but that is certainly | :04:35. | :04:38. | |
not the outcome the government will want. People will be looking at | :04:39. | :04:43. | |
whether a not the government has made the necessary plans in case | :04:44. | :04:46. | |
that is what ends up happening. Thank you. There is lots of | :04:47. | :04:50. | |
discussion about that in the papers this morning, we would come to those | :04:51. | :04:59. | |
later on. The Dutch government has prevented two Turkish ministers from | :05:00. | :05:00. | |
addressing a rally in Rotterdam. Dutch riot police used water canons | :05:01. | :05:02. | |
on supporters of President Erdogan as a diplomatic row between the two | :05:03. | :05:04. | |
countries intensifies. The crowds were incensed | :05:05. | :05:08. | |
when a Turkish minister was prevented from entering her | :05:09. | :05:10. | |
consulate in the city and later deported from the | :05:11. | :05:13. | |
Netherlands to Germany. In the centre of Rotterdam, Dutch | :05:14. | :05:22. | |
riot police were brought in to disperse hundreds of pro- Turkish | :05:23. | :05:27. | |
demonstrators. They are angry because the Dutch government banned | :05:28. | :05:32. | |
a rally in the city about next month's referendum to expand the | :05:33. | :05:36. | |
powers of the Turkish president. These extraordinary scenes came just | :05:37. | :05:40. | |
hours after the Turkish family minister was stop from entering her | :05:41. | :05:45. | |
consulate in the city. -- was stopped. She was later detained and | :05:46. | :05:49. | |
escorted out of the country. The Netherlands had rocked -- blocked | :05:50. | :05:56. | |
President Erdogan's supporters from holding referendum rallies because | :05:57. | :05:59. | |
of security concerns, but deporting an official takes this row to a new | :06:00. | :06:05. | |
level. In Ankara, protesters threw eggs at the Dutch embassy. There | :06:06. | :06:08. | |
were demonstrations in Istanbul as well. It all started on Saturday | :06:09. | :06:12. | |
when another minister was blocked from landing in the Netherlands. | :06:13. | :06:16. | |
That provoked these harsh words from President Erdogan. TRANSLATION: They | :06:17. | :06:22. | |
don't know anything about politics or international diplomacy. They are | :06:23. | :06:29. | |
very nervous, and cowards. They are Nazi remnants, they are fascists. | :06:30. | :06:36. | |
The Dutch Prime Minister described that fascist comparison as "Crazy". | :06:37. | :06:43. | |
This row was intensifying, and these scenes mark a new low in diplomatic | :06:44. | :06:47. | |
relations between Turkey and the Netherlands. | :06:48. | :06:48. | |
The Metropolitan Police have been given more money | :06:49. | :06:50. | |
to continue their investigation into the disappearance | :06:51. | :06:52. | |
of Madeleine McCann in Portugal ten years ago. | :06:53. | :06:54. | |
Operation Grange, which was launched in 2011, | :06:55. | :06:56. | |
Scotland Yard has refused to comment on newspaper reports that they have | :06:57. | :07:01. | |
identified an individual they want to question. | :07:02. | :07:08. | |
A BBC investigation has found taxi drivers who have had their licenses | :07:09. | :07:12. | |
taken away from them are in some cases being handed another | :07:13. | :07:15. | |
The findings have prompted the Association of Police | :07:16. | :07:25. | |
and Crime Commissioners to renew calls to introduce | :07:26. | :07:27. | |
a national database of taxi drivers in England and Wales, | :07:28. | :07:30. | |
For 25 years, Steve Mark Lamarr was the one behind the wheel of the | :07:31. | :07:43. | |
taxi. For him, the safety of hostages has always been paramount, | :07:44. | :07:46. | |
which is why he is supporting renewed calls for a national | :07:47. | :07:49. | |
database of drivers. The most urgent thing that needs to be resolved as | :07:50. | :07:53. | |
cross-border hiring, because at the moment, egg licensing... If we | :07:54. | :07:59. | |
prohibit cross-border hiring, limit cross-border hiring, that goes some | :08:00. | :08:03. | |
way to resolving the problem. The second thing that needs to be done | :08:04. | :08:07. | |
is that we need a good standard of licensing that must apply to all | :08:08. | :08:10. | |
authorities, a standard everybody has to comply with, and obviously of | :08:11. | :08:13. | |
certain authorities want a high standard, that is great. Currently, | :08:14. | :08:17. | |
individual councils are responsible. But across local authorities, the | :08:18. | :08:20. | |
requirements that need to be met before a licence is handed out can | :08:21. | :08:24. | |
be very different. Some drivers refused a licence in one area may be | :08:25. | :08:30. | |
approved in another. Though all drivers undergo a criminal records | :08:31. | :08:34. | |
check, it doesn't reveal if the driver has ever had a licence | :08:35. | :08:37. | |
refused or revoked for behaviour that hasn't ended up in court. In | :08:38. | :08:41. | |
the wake of the robber on child sex abuse scandal, where it emerged | :08:42. | :08:44. | |
hundreds of children had been sexually exploited ironmen, | :08:45. | :08:47. | |
including taxi drivers, there were calls for tighter controls. In | :08:48. | :08:53. | |
Scotland they already have a national database and some believe | :08:54. | :08:57. | |
without a similar system in England, passengers and other road users are | :08:58. | :09:01. | |
being put at risk. The Association for police and crime commission is | :09:02. | :09:05. | |
has written again to the transport Secretary, asking him to intervene. | :09:06. | :09:09. | |
-- police and crime commission is. -- commissioners. | :09:10. | :09:12. | |
"Fake news" has hardly been out of the headlines in the last few | :09:13. | :09:15. | |
weeks, and now the creator of the World Wide Web, | :09:16. | :09:18. | |
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has waded into the debate. | :09:19. | :09:20. | |
In an open letter to mark the web's 28th anniversary, | :09:21. | :09:23. | |
Sir Tim unveiled a plan to tackle data abuse and fake news, | :09:24. | :09:26. | |
and expressed concerns about how the web is being used. | :09:27. | :09:29. | |
Sir Tim said he wanted to start to combat the misuse of personal | :09:30. | :09:33. | |
data, which he said created a "chilling effect on free speech." | :09:34. | :09:37. | |
The singer Joni Sledge who, with her three sisters, | :09:38. | :09:40. | |
had a number of disco hits in the '70s, | :09:41. | :09:42. | |
The band Sister Sledge was formed in 1971 | :09:43. | :09:49. | |
with their biggest hit We Are Family hitting the charts | :09:50. | :09:51. | |
Three of the sisters have continued to record music, | :09:52. | :09:55. | |
last performing together in October last year. | :09:56. | :09:58. | |
They had high hopes, but Lincoln City's historic FA Cup | :09:59. | :10:01. | |
The first non-league side to reach the quarterfinals in over a century | :10:02. | :10:06. | |
Almost 9,000 Lincoln fans made the trip to North London | :10:07. | :10:10. | |
and roared their side on till the end, and despite the heavy | :10:11. | :10:14. | |
defeat, they weren't going home with heavy hearts, | :10:15. | :10:16. | |
Even when faced with the impossible... Lincoln city! Somehow, | :10:17. | :10:32. | |
some will always find a little hope. Nine thousands Lincoln City fans | :10:33. | :10:38. | |
making the journey, all armed with the same simple question: what if? | :10:39. | :10:44. | |
Even against the superstars of Arsenal, Lincoln refuse to know | :10:45. | :10:49. | |
their place. Nathan Arnold's search and shot was so nearly the moment | :10:50. | :10:52. | |
that Lincoln management stream golf. For half-time, those dreams were | :10:53. | :10:57. | |
fading, Theo Walcott putting Arsenal ahead. From there, they didn't look | :10:58. | :11:02. | |
back. Olivier Giroud added a second, before the moment Lincoln's luck | :11:03. | :11:05. | |
deserted them altogether. Luke Waterfall putting the ball into his | :11:06. | :11:10. | |
own net. Arsenal added two more to make it five. Lincoln's astonishing | :11:11. | :11:16. | |
run was brought to an abrupt end. For Lincoln, this perhaps was always | :11:17. | :11:20. | |
an impossible task. But these fans had home with their heads held high, | :11:21. | :11:24. | |
proud of their little bit of history that they have made, and pleased | :11:25. | :11:27. | |
with the memories they are taking away. We got this far and we have | :11:28. | :11:31. | |
done well. I think maybe we could have done a bit better, but you | :11:32. | :11:35. | |
can't blame the team, you can't blame Danny. It was a great day! It | :11:36. | :11:39. | |
is fine. The 45 minutes we managed it. Arsene Wenger was worried sick. | :11:40. | :11:46. | |
That is the best team that he can put out, which is a testament to | :11:47. | :11:50. | |
Lincoln, really. It is Arsenal who go on to Wembley, but it is Lincoln | :11:51. | :11:54. | |
who have written this story. Beaten, yes, proud, undoubtably. | :11:55. | :11:57. | |
It's not just the streets that are turning green in Chicago to mark | :11:58. | :12:00. | |
For over 40 years the city has been dying its river green the Saturday | :12:01. | :12:06. | |
It takes around 45 minutes for it to be turned completely | :12:07. | :12:10. | |
It's part of the wider celebrations which sees musicians and performers | :12:11. | :12:14. | |
parading through the streets of the Windy City. | :12:15. | :12:16. | |
Depending on which direction the wind is blowing, | :12:17. | :12:18. | |
the city's river can stay green for days. | :12:19. | :12:32. | |
It is a bit like the Olympic diving pool, do you remember that? Yes, | :12:33. | :12:38. | |
that is what the bright green, though, rather than just sludge | :12:39. | :12:42. | |
green. Good morning, this is BBC Breakfast. Let's look at the | :12:43. | :12:47. | |
newspapers. The front of the Sunday Times, as you would expect, it is | :12:48. | :12:52. | |
the news of the Six Nations yesterday, of course, England | :12:53. | :12:54. | |
beating Scotland in that final. But also the headline there, GCHQ: | :12:55. | :12:58. | |
Russian cyber threats to UK elections. GCHQ is of course the | :12:59. | :13:06. | |
central government intelligence agency, calling an emergency summit | :13:07. | :13:09. | |
with Britain's political parties, warning them that they are at risk | :13:10. | :13:13. | |
of Russian cyber attacks during the next general election. And a | :13:14. | :13:20. | |
cross-party committee of MPs warning that there will be problems if the | :13:21. | :13:24. | |
UK does not plan for no deal at the end of exit negotiations. At the | :13:25. | :13:28. | |
moment we are just at the start of trying to trigger this process. That | :13:29. | :13:31. | |
could formalised in the next couple of weeks depending on votes in the | :13:32. | :13:35. | |
House of Commons and the House of Lords. After that, the whole thorny | :13:36. | :13:38. | |
business of actually coming up with some kind of deal begins. What these | :13:39. | :13:43. | |
MPs are saying is, if we do not get a deal, what is the plan? David | :13:44. | :13:46. | |
Davis, the Brexit Secretary, has been criticised for saying that we | :13:47. | :13:50. | |
cannot plan for that, we don't know. They are saying that we need a plan. | :13:51. | :13:54. | |
That story is also on the front of the Sunday Telegraph. Their | :13:55. | :13:59. | |
political leaders the Cabinet War of the budget shambles. A furious row | :14:00. | :14:03. | |
over who is to blame over the budget shambles erupted last night, they | :14:04. | :14:07. | |
say, our city most that the Cabinet was never briefed that the Tory | :14:08. | :14:12. | |
manifesto was being breached. Philip Hammond spent on our breathing the | :14:13. | :14:16. | |
Cabinet but failed to mention that rise in tax for the self-employed. | :14:17. | :14:21. | |
Lots more on that, England winning in Scotland and Six Nations as well. | :14:22. | :14:25. | |
That is in the sport with Richard after 6:30am. You are watching | :14:26. | :14:31. | |
Breakfast with BBC News. The main stories: a committee of MPs as the | :14:32. | :14:34. | |
government will be guilty of a serious direction of duty if it does | :14:35. | :14:39. | |
not prepare for the possibility that Brexit negotiations could end | :14:40. | :14:42. | |
without an agreement. -- a dereliction of duty. Dutch police | :14:43. | :14:46. | |
have used water cannon to break up a demonstration by Turkish supporters | :14:47. | :14:50. | |
in Rotterdam. Also coming up, Mike has been taken for a 115 mph spin by | :14:51. | :14:56. | |
one of the teenagers hoping to make this an historic season for young | :14:57. | :15:03. | |
women in motorsport. Let's take our first look at what | :15:04. | :15:07. | |
the weather is doing this morning. Louise has the details for us. That | :15:08. | :15:11. | |
looks nice, but is that this morning? | :15:12. | :15:19. | |
This is Northern Ireland, the sunset of what was a beautiful day where we | :15:20. | :15:26. | |
saw temperatures at 16 degrees yesterday afternoon, the Wallace Day | :15:27. | :15:29. | |
of the year so far in Northern Ireland. Almost the warmest day of | :15:30. | :15:33. | |
the year so far, just shy by a few points of a degree. Fast forward | :15:34. | :15:43. | |
today, it is a mess. Showery aspect of rain, and putting some detail and | :15:44. | :15:47. | |
will be difficult. Rain pushing up from the Isle of Wight towards the | :15:48. | :15:51. | |
London area as we speak. Not too heavy the moment. Behind it a break | :15:52. | :15:56. | |
in the cloud and they will be some sunshine before another frontal | :15:57. | :15:58. | |
system moves through. So two main areas of rain, and going to be a | :15:59. | :16:03. | |
nuisance today but in between the two, likely to cross through the | :16:04. | :16:07. | |
spine of the country, we could see some decent and temperatures will | :16:08. | :16:11. | |
respond a little. But it will be a messy picture, I suspect, for many | :16:12. | :16:15. | |
of us. So we start off with the middle of the afternoon across the | :16:16. | :16:18. | |
south-east, where through Lincolnshire, East Anglia and down | :16:19. | :16:23. | |
into the London area, not as warm as yesterday, around 13 degrees. Not so | :16:24. | :16:27. | |
bad through the spine of the country and that next front ringing showery | :16:28. | :16:30. | |
outbreaks across Wales and north-west England. For Scotland and | :16:31. | :16:33. | |
Northern Ireland, a slightly quieter day with a bit of brightness into | :16:34. | :16:38. | |
the afternoon. A messy old story so much of Sunday, as we come out of | :16:39. | :16:42. | |
Sunday we will see some clearer skies and a touch of light frost | :16:43. | :16:45. | |
possible but are predominantly dry nights are many. Some showery bits | :16:46. | :16:50. | |
and pieces up into the far north of the country. As we move out of | :16:51. | :16:54. | |
Sunday towards Monday, through the day, well, we will see this ridge of | :16:55. | :16:57. | |
high pressure are looking from the west. That will quieten things down | :16:58. | :17:01. | |
quite considerably for most of us, so not a bad start to the new | :17:02. | :17:05. | |
working week. A good deal of dry weather in the story. More sunshine | :17:06. | :17:10. | |
returns and as a consequence of temperatures will be up around 16 | :17:11. | :17:13. | |
degrees. At a Monday into Tuesday, a weather front will move through. | :17:14. | :17:17. | |
Very weak affair, not much in the way of rain on it. Predominantly dry | :17:18. | :17:22. | |
for most of us and it looks as though this dry theme is set to | :17:23. | :17:26. | |
continue into the middle part of the week. So on Tuesday we will see | :17:27. | :17:29. | |
temperatures peaking around 13 or 14 degrees. There will be some cloud | :17:30. | :17:32. | |
and outbreaks of showery rain in that weather front. Wednesday, | :17:33. | :17:37. | |
mostly dry, fairly cloudy but if we get some breaks than temperatures | :17:38. | :17:40. | |
will respond. I will be back to train pinpoint the detail of that | :17:41. | :17:44. | |
rain throughout the rest of the morning. You have tidied up the mess | :17:45. | :17:47. | |
for us quite nicely. We will be back with a summary | :17:48. | :17:53. | |
of the news at 6:30am. Now it is time for The Film Review | :17:54. | :17:56. | |
with Jane Hill and Mark Kermode. Hello and welcome to | :17:57. | :18:06. | |
The Film Review on BBC News. To take us through this | :18:07. | :18:10. | |
week's cinema releases, We have Kong: Skull Island, | :18:11. | :18:12. | |
which does what it says on the tin. The Love Witch, a stylish | :18:13. | :18:25. | |
dream, and we have Elle. Isabelle Huppert on song | :18:26. | :18:30. | |
in a controversial film. Does the world need | :18:31. | :18:38. | |
another King Kong film? It's the Land That Time Forgot | :18:39. | :18:41. | |
meets Apocalypse Now. John Goodman manages to persuade | :18:42. | :18:46. | |
the US Army to escort him to Skull Island, where he thinks | :18:47. | :18:48. | |
something is going on. He says, if we don't get | :18:49. | :18:51. | |
there first, somebody else will. They arrive and they start carpet | :18:52. | :18:54. | |
bombing the island in order to shake A massive ape starts swatting | :18:55. | :18:58. | |
helicopters out of the sky. I'm probably not | :18:59. | :19:12. | |
meant to laugh, am I? No, it does have a great | :19:13. | :19:14. | |
sense of fun about it. We have Sam Jackson, | :19:15. | :19:17. | |
the soldier who is not John C Reilly, who has been | :19:18. | :19:20. | |
there since World War II. They are trying to get from one side | :19:21. | :19:24. | |
of the island to the other and there are major | :19:25. | :19:34. | |
beasties are afoot. I've taken enough photos of mass | :19:35. | :19:36. | |
graves to recognise one. The crash site is just on the other | :19:37. | :19:57. | |
side of this valley. We'll cross through and make it | :19:58. | :20:00. | |
to the highest point west. We need to be going to | :20:01. | :20:03. | |
the north side right now. And you are welcome | :20:04. | :20:08. | |
to do that, my man... I love the comment that said it's | :20:09. | :20:11. | |
jolly good fun as long as you check your brain | :20:12. | :20:26. | |
at the cloakroom. I think actually it's | :20:27. | :20:28. | |
smarter than that. The director made this lovely, | :20:29. | :20:30. | |
small film called Kings of Summer and very much like Gareth Edwards | :20:31. | :20:33. | |
who went from Monsters to Godzilla. He has managed to leave | :20:34. | :20:36. | |
his fingerprints on it. Yes, it is a huge monster franchise | :20:37. | :20:44. | |
movie, but it's also got loads and loads of very | :20:45. | :20:48. | |
slight jokes in it. I think there are a couple | :20:49. | :20:50. | |
of references to Cannibal Holocaust. I like the fact that what he does | :20:51. | :20:53. | |
is, he takes just enough liberties with how far you can | :20:54. | :21:01. | |
push the characters, but also remembers that what people | :21:02. | :21:03. | |
are there to see is the monsters. One of the things that is most | :21:04. | :21:07. | |
rewarding is when you see King Kong, who is like 100 feet tall, | :21:08. | :21:11. | |
a really big Kong, we're not getting the edit every quarter second | :21:12. | :21:14. | |
that the Transformers movie did. Almost like there's genuine beauty | :21:15. | :21:17. | |
in some of these shots. The iconic image of King Kong rising | :21:18. | :21:20. | |
up in front of the sun. You can see how camera is swirling | :21:21. | :21:23. | |
and we're not getting the stupid fast edits that have made so much | :21:24. | :21:27. | |
of this kind of cinema a headache. What you always get with this kind | :21:28. | :21:32. | |
of movie is a battle between the director | :21:33. | :21:40. | |
and what they want, their quirky personal vision, and | :21:41. | :21:43. | |
what the producers want. It's a matter of who | :21:44. | :21:45. | |
wins what battles. I think he won more | :21:46. | :21:47. | |
battles than he lost. There are things that are creaky, | :21:48. | :21:49. | |
I liked the jukebox soundtrack There were moments when I thought, | :21:50. | :22:01. | |
wow, that is an impressive, So I enjoyed it much more | :22:02. | :22:12. | |
than I expected to and I don't think The Love Witch, were | :22:13. | :22:20. | |
you bored in that? No, the best way of describing this, | :22:21. | :22:27. | |
imagine All That Heaven Allows, It's in an age where mobile phones | :22:28. | :22:31. | |
exist yet it has this late '60s, early '70s milieu of Beyond | :22:32. | :22:36. | |
the Valley of the Dolls. It's a white witch's | :22:37. | :22:39. | |
spell all men fall under. A magical incantation | :22:40. | :22:41. | |
and extraordinary detail. I mean, the strange thing about it, | :22:42. | :22:57. | |
there's also a lot of Wicker Man It is oddly sincere, | :22:58. | :23:02. | |
in a way which you don't expect. I went in thinking I would be | :23:03. | :23:14. | |
watching a parody, a pastiche, a homage, and it was | :23:15. | :23:28. | |
so much more than that. And I've met so many people | :23:29. | :23:31. | |
who felt the same thing. They thought, I'll go in and it | :23:32. | :23:34. | |
will be camp and fun. It is more than that, | :23:35. | :23:37. | |
although it is all of those Just looking at the pictures, I am | :23:38. | :23:40. | |
a bit worried it is not camp enough! Although, interestingly, | :23:41. | :23:50. | |
there is a strange sincerity It is a very strange movie | :23:51. | :23:54. | |
and I liked it very much. Now, the talking point | :23:55. | :24:03. | |
of the week is Elle. As a woman, I feel almost anxious | :24:04. | :24:06. | |
about going to see it actually. Yes, and I understand that | :24:07. | :24:10. | |
and I feel anxious having seen it. Basically, it can be read | :24:11. | :24:14. | |
in many different ways On the one hand it's a boundary | :24:15. | :24:16. | |
crossing tale of sexual violence, by the director who made Showgirls, | :24:17. | :24:22. | |
and has a track record On the other it's a showcase | :24:23. | :24:28. | |
for Isabelle Huppert, cinema's most fearlessly | :24:29. | :24:31. | |
independent screen presence. She plays a businesswoman | :24:32. | :24:35. | |
who is grotesquely attacked at the beginning of the film | :24:36. | :24:39. | |
and then almost doesn't She won't go to the police, | :24:40. | :24:41. | |
not least because as a child she was caught up in the arrest | :24:42. | :24:51. | |
of her monstrous father and was, She is so watchable, but I don't | :24:52. | :24:54. | |
know if I have the stomach. It is almost as if the character | :24:55. | :25:48. | |
becomes the author of the film. It has been described as a black | :25:49. | :26:01. | |
comedy, a social satire It is all and yet | :26:02. | :26:06. | |
none of these things. What is extraordinary is that nobody | :26:07. | :26:13. | |
else other than Huppert The director wanted to do it | :26:14. | :26:16. | |
in America but they couldn't get She went on to be | :26:17. | :26:22. | |
nominated for an Oscar. I think she's brilliant in this | :26:23. | :26:28. | |
and almost everything she's in. If it wasn't for the strength | :26:29. | :26:34. | |
of her performance, if it wasn't for the extraordinary sang froid | :26:35. | :26:38. | |
and the way in which she just dominates the screen, | :26:39. | :26:41. | |
this would be a very different film. That said, it is absolutely a film | :26:42. | :26:44. | |
which is designed to wrong-foot you, which is designed to make you feel | :26:45. | :26:48. | |
uncomfortable and awkward. It has been interesting | :26:49. | :26:51. | |
see the different ways The best way to describe it is it's | :26:52. | :26:53. | |
an Isabelle Huppert film. Moonlight, it is back | :26:54. | :27:11. | |
in the cinemas? It is such a marvellous work, | :27:12. | :27:17. | |
an absolute work of art and I love We have Logan which shows | :27:18. | :27:23. | |
what you can do with a superhero movie when you try to turn it | :27:24. | :27:32. | |
into a movie about ageing. Doctor Strange is basically | :27:33. | :27:35. | |
what would you do with a superhero movie if you make the kind of film | :27:36. | :27:38. | |
Ken Russell would make? Watching Doctor Strange, | :27:39. | :27:42. | |
Benedict Cumberbatch as a neurosurgeon that gets pulled | :27:43. | :27:43. | |
into this strange world. Sometimes you think, | :27:44. | :27:46. | |
that's an outtake from I love the hallucinogenic weirdness, | :27:47. | :27:48. | |
but in cinemas, taking Logan completely the other way, | :27:49. | :27:51. | |
it's almost not a superhero movie. Looking at Doctor Strange, | :27:52. | :27:54. | |
it is a superhero movie and we can A quick reminder of course, | :27:55. | :27:57. | |
you can find more film news and reviews from across the BBC | :27:58. | :28:18. | |
online at bbc.co.uk/MarkKermode and you can catch up on our previous | :28:19. | :28:25. | |
programmes on the BBC iPlayer. Hello, this is Breakfast | :28:26. | :28:29. | |
with Ben Thompson and Rachel Burden. Coming up before seven Louise | :28:30. | :29:43. | |
will have a full weather But first at 6:29, a summary of this | :29:44. | :29:46. | |
morning's main news. An influential committee of MPs has | :29:47. | :29:51. | |
today warned that government would be guilty of "a serious | :29:52. | :29:54. | |
dereliction of duty" if it fails to plan for Brexit talks | :29:55. | :29:57. | |
ending without a deal. The legislation to start the exit | :29:58. | :30:00. | |
process will be debated The Commons Foreign Affairs | :30:01. | :30:10. | |
Committee has said there is a real possibility that discussions with | :30:11. | :30:12. | |
the EU could end in failure. Brexit Secretary David | :30:13. | :30:15. | |
Davis has called on MPs to reject the amendments put forward | :30:16. | :30:18. | |
by the House of Lords. He says Theresa May must be allowed | :30:19. | :30:26. | |
to get on with the job of negotiating terms with the EU. He | :30:27. | :30:30. | |
will ask Parliament to throw out amendments to protect the rights of | :30:31. | :30:34. | |
EU citizens living in the UK and to allow free meaningful vote in the | :30:35. | :30:39. | |
Commons on the final deal. -- allow for a. | :30:40. | :30:42. | |
Dutch riot police have used water cannons to break up a large protest | :30:43. | :30:45. | |
outside the Turkish consulate in Rotterdam, as a diplomatic row | :30:46. | :30:48. | |
More than 1,000 people gathered outside the building when Turkey's | :30:49. | :30:52. | |
foreign minister, who was due to address a rally, had his plane | :30:53. | :30:55. | |
turned away from the city's airport because of security concerns. | :30:56. | :30:58. | |
Turkey's President Erdogan responded by calling the Dutch government | :30:59. | :31:01. | |
The Metropolitan Police have been given more money | :31:02. | :31:04. | |
to continue their investigation into the disappearance | :31:05. | :31:06. | |
of Madeleine McCann in Portugal ten years ago. | :31:07. | :31:08. | |
Operation Grange, which was launched in 2011, | :31:09. | :31:14. | |
Scotland Yard has refused to comment on newspaper reports that they have | :31:15. | :31:19. | |
identified an individual they want to question. | :31:20. | :31:22. | |
A BBC investigation has found taxi drivers who've had their licenses | :31:23. | :31:26. | |
taken away from them are in some cases being handed another | :31:27. | :31:29. | |
The findings have prompted the Association of Police | :31:30. | :31:35. | |
and Crime Commissioners to renew calls to introduce a national data | :31:36. | :31:38. | |
base of taxi drivers in England and Wales. | :31:39. | :31:48. | |
You can hear more on that story on the BBC's 5Live Investigates | :31:49. | :31:51. | |
The singer Joni Sledge who, with her three sisters, | :31:52. | :31:55. | |
had a number of disco hits in the '70s, has died | :31:56. | :32:04. | |
The band Sister Sledge was formed in 1971 with their biggest hit | :32:05. | :32:09. | |
We Are Family hitting the charts eight years later. | :32:10. | :32:12. | |
Three of the sisters have continued to record music, | :32:13. | :32:14. | |
last performing together in October last year. | :32:15. | :32:16. | |
"Fake news" has hardly been out of the headlines in the last few | :32:17. | :32:19. | |
weeks, and now the creator of the World Wide Web, | :32:20. | :32:22. | |
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has waded into the debate. | :32:23. | :32:24. | |
In an open letter to mark the web's 28th anniversary, | :32:25. | :32:27. | |
Sir Tim unveiled a plan to tackle data abuse and fake news, | :32:28. | :32:30. | |
and expressed concerns about how the web is being used. | :32:31. | :32:33. | |
Sir Tim said he wanted to start to combat the misuse of personal | :32:34. | :32:36. | |
data, which he said created a "chilling effect on free speech." | :32:37. | :32:40. | |
A turtle nicknamed Jolly has been returned to the wild after having | :32:41. | :32:43. | |
The 330-pound green sea turtle was hurt when she got tangled | :32:44. | :32:47. | |
But after vets treated her she made a speedy recovery and was released | :32:48. | :32:54. | |
off the Florida Keys last Friday, just in time for the turtle nesting | :32:55. | :33:00. | |
She is pretty big! Good luck to her. Shall we have a look at some of the | :33:01. | :33:13. | |
back pages this morning? Or one of them, at least. This probably tells | :33:14. | :33:17. | |
the story of the game yesterday. Hello, Richard, by the way. Jonathan | :33:18. | :33:21. | |
Josef, phenomenal performance for the England team yesterday. Yes, man | :33:22. | :33:26. | |
of the match, three tries. England hammered Scotland, no two ways about | :33:27. | :33:31. | |
it. 61- 21, retaining their Six Nations title as well. They also | :33:32. | :33:36. | |
equalled New Zealand's record of 18 straight victories. | :33:37. | :33:39. | |
So yes, it was a perfect day for England at Twickenham. | :33:40. | :33:42. | |
They can now look forward to next weekend's match against Ireland | :33:43. | :33:45. | |
A win in Dublin would see Eddie Jones' side become the only | :33:46. | :33:49. | |
team to win back-to-back Grand Slams since the Six Nations began. | :33:50. | :33:52. | |
They ran in seven tries at Twickenham, | :33:53. | :33:54. | |
JJ, two letters, two legs, too much for Scotland. Jonathan Josef started | :33:55. | :34:04. | |
the game, but he was England's finisher. Pace and angle, attacking, | :34:05. | :34:10. | |
running. It has in the efforts of rugby ever since somebody picked up | :34:11. | :34:16. | |
a ball. -- has been the essence of rugby. England now have to match any | :34:17. | :34:19. | |
in its history, at least statistically. -- now have a team to | :34:20. | :34:25. | |
match. By the time Josef completed his hat-trick early in the second | :34:26. | :34:29. | |
half, the game was settled. Scotland persevered, hampered by early | :34:30. | :34:33. | |
indiscipline and injuries, but as they made clear, they were not here | :34:34. | :34:37. | |
to be plucky losers. Their recent performances have merited more than | :34:38. | :34:40. | |
that. On this day, everything clicked for England. For tries get | :34:41. | :34:45. | |
your bonus point. 7mate a serious impression. So the Six Nations is | :34:46. | :34:50. | |
one, and Eddie Jones' England is still unbeaten. We have got good | :34:51. | :34:55. | |
players. They now have a mindset of wanting to be the best in the world. | :34:56. | :34:59. | |
They want to keep improving. And if we keep with that mindset, keep | :35:00. | :35:03. | |
working hard, we will be the best in the world. The memory of this match | :35:04. | :35:07. | |
will linger long after the sponsors' logo is removed from the Twickenham | :35:08. | :35:10. | |
pitch. The Calcutta Cup is a legacy of history. Eddie Jones and England | :35:11. | :35:15. | |
are looking to the future, and not just to Dublin next weekend. His | :35:16. | :35:18. | |
project is building towards the next World Cup. And he likes trophies. | :35:19. | :35:23. | |
In the day's other game, France ran in four tries | :35:24. | :35:26. | |
against Italy to seal a bonus point victory by 40 points to 18 in Rome. | :35:27. | :35:30. | |
Italy had gone in front through Sergio Parisse's try early | :35:31. | :35:33. | |
on, but they now look destined once again for the wooden spoon. | :35:34. | :35:39. | |
England's women have set up a Grand Slam decider with Ireland | :35:40. | :35:42. | |
next week after thrashing Scotland 64 points to nil. | :35:43. | :35:45. | |
Winger Kay Wilson set a new Six Nations record with seven | :35:46. | :35:48. | |
tries during the game as England maintained their 100 per cent record | :35:49. | :35:51. | |
Ireland also maintained their perfect run of results beating | :35:52. | :35:55. | |
Wales by 12 points to 7 at Cardiff Arms Park thanks | :35:56. | :35:58. | |
Leicester are through to the final of the Anglo-Welsh Cup after beating | :35:59. | :36:06. | |
The Tigers ran in four tries at Allianz Park, | :36:07. | :36:12. | |
the pick of which was this effort from Freddie Burns twelve minutes | :36:13. | :36:15. | |
Leicester will face Exeter or Harlequins who play the other | :36:16. | :36:24. | |
The final takes place at The Stoop on Saturday. | :36:25. | :36:27. | |
Ulster ran in ten tries to beat bottom club Zebre in the Pro 12. | :36:28. | :36:31. | |
The 68-21 win gives them a bonus point and takes them above Scarlets | :36:32. | :36:35. | |
Non-league side Lincoln City's remarkable run | :36:36. | :36:42. | |
They were beaten 5-0 by Arsenal who progress to the semi-finals. | :36:43. | :36:49. | |
Lincoln were the first non league side to reach this stage | :36:50. | :36:52. | |
of the competition for over a century. | :36:53. | :36:54. | |
And joining Arsenal in the last four are Manchester City, | :36:55. | :36:57. | |
That FA Cup run of 2016-17 finally at an end for nonleague Lincoln | :36:58. | :37:07. | |
City, with history and multiple memory is made. More came at | :37:08. | :37:12. | |
Arsenal. In fact, the underdogs could have gone ahead against the 12 | :37:13. | :37:16. | |
time winners. Otto chanced that was. But despite losing five of their | :37:17. | :37:20. | |
last seven games, the hosts had so much quality, and it eventually | :37:21. | :37:24. | |
showed. COMMENTATOR: Theo Walcott! Arsenal | :37:25. | :37:27. | |
have the lead on the stroke of half-time. Relief for some, | :37:28. | :37:31. | |
disappointment for others. It was not too surprising, really. 87 | :37:32. | :37:35. | |
places separated the sides, and we saw it in the second half. Olivier | :37:36. | :37:40. | |
Giroud made it 2-0, before an own goal and then something from Sanchez | :37:41. | :37:44. | |
wrapping the game up. Alexis Sanchez, brilliantly placed! While | :37:45. | :37:49. | |
they got fired in the end, given what Lincoln have done, it didn't | :37:50. | :37:54. | |
really matter. They have changed history. There is a reason why no | :37:55. | :37:58. | |
nonleague team in the last 100 years have been able to reach the last | :37:59. | :38:02. | |
eight of the FA Cup, and the fact that they have, that should make | :38:03. | :38:05. | |
them mightily proud. Of course we are disappointed with loss. -- we | :38:06. | :38:10. | |
lost. But we are able to draw breath, we are pretty proud of what | :38:11. | :38:14. | |
we have achieved in this FA Cup. And Pep Guardiola can be proud of | :38:15. | :38:17. | |
Manchester City's cup run as well. They have been away in every round, | :38:18. | :38:22. | |
beating Middlesbrough 2-0, away of course, yesterday. City are on their | :38:23. | :38:27. | |
way to Wembley again. And while there will be no appearance at the | :38:28. | :38:31. | |
home of football for Lincoln City, they found their home in the hearts | :38:32. | :38:33. | |
of football fans all over the world. Hull City kept their chances | :38:34. | :38:35. | |
Premier League survival alive with a two nil win over fellow | :38:36. | :38:37. | |
relegation strugglers Swansea City. Two goals from on loan Oumar Niasse | :38:38. | :38:41. | |
helped them to victory. They remain in the bottom three, | :38:42. | :38:44. | |
one point from safety, while Swansea are three points | :38:45. | :38:47. | |
clear of the drop zone. Bournemouth have pulled further away | :38:48. | :38:51. | |
from the bottom three after a dramatic 3-2 | :38:52. | :38:54. | |
win over West Ham. Josh King missed a penalty...but | :38:55. | :38:57. | |
scored a hat-trick, including They are now six points clear | :38:58. | :39:01. | |
of the relegation zone. West Ham are without a league | :39:02. | :39:04. | |
win in four matches. At the other end of the table, | :39:05. | :39:10. | |
Everton narrowed the gap on 6th-placed Manchester United | :39:11. | :39:14. | |
with a 3-0 win over West Brom. Kevin Mirallas, Morgan Schneiderlin | :39:15. | :39:16. | |
and Romelu Lukaku all scoring It's the Old Firm derby at midday | :39:17. | :39:19. | |
today and new Rangers manager Pedro Caixinha will be | :39:20. | :39:26. | |
watching from the stands. Celtic will re-establish a 27-point | :39:27. | :39:29. | |
lead at the top with victory. Second-placed Aberdeen beat | :39:30. | :39:34. | |
Motherwell yesterday and fourth placed Hearts narrowed the gap | :39:35. | :39:38. | |
on third place Rangers to five points with a 4-0 thrashing | :39:39. | :39:42. | |
of Hamilton Academical. There were also wins | :39:43. | :39:44. | |
for Kilmarnock and St Johnstone. Andy Murray has been knocked out | :39:45. | :39:46. | |
of the Indian Wells Tournament in California at the second round - | :39:47. | :39:54. | |
it's often seen as the fifth Grand The world number one lost | :39:55. | :39:58. | |
to Canadian qualifier Vasek Pospisil After being knocked out | :39:59. | :40:01. | |
of the Australian Open in the 4th round, Murray would've been | :40:02. | :40:09. | |
hoping for much better, as he'd just won the | :40:10. | :40:13. | |
Dubai Championship. Pospisi is ranked 128 | :40:14. | :40:14. | |
places below Murray. Elise Christie has become the first | :40:15. | :40:16. | |
British woman to win a title at the World Short Track Speed | :40:17. | :40:20. | |
Skating Championships. Christie claimed gold in the 1500m | :40:21. | :40:23. | |
finishing just ahead The win represents an excellent | :40:24. | :40:25. | |
comeback for Christie who was contemplating leaving | :40:26. | :40:28. | |
the sport after being disqualified from all three of her events | :40:29. | :40:31. | |
at the 2014 Winter Olympics. Chris and Gabby Adcock | :40:32. | :40:40. | |
lost in the semi finals against their Chinese opponents | :40:41. | :40:44. | |
in the third set but just when they least needed it, | :40:45. | :40:50. | |
Chris broke a string Lu and Huang won the next two points | :40:51. | :40:52. | |
to prevent the Adcocks becoming the first British pair | :40:53. | :41:01. | |
in a decade to reach the final Marco Fu will face Judd Trump | :41:02. | :41:05. | |
in the final of Snooker's Players Championship later today | :41:06. | :41:08. | |
after beating Ding Junhui in a tense Fu was trailing 5-3 but fought | :41:09. | :41:11. | |
back to level at 5-5. He then produced a confident 98 | :41:12. | :41:15. | |
to seal his third successive frame Team sky's Durant Thomas took second | :41:16. | :41:33. | |
place on stage for Taroona added to go while Adam Yates was close behind | :41:34. | :41:38. | |
to go up to second overall in the race. -- Tireno Adriatico. | :41:39. | :41:46. | |
Thomas was 18 seconds be high and. He is eighth in the standings. There | :41:47. | :41:54. | |
are three stages left to try to overhaul the 33 second. Let's hope | :41:55. | :42:00. | |
he can do that. Going back to the rugby, Eddie Jones has already said | :42:01. | :42:03. | |
he does not want England to take their eye off the ball. He has used | :42:04. | :42:07. | |
the word greatness to describe what they could do if they set this new | :42:08. | :42:10. | |
world record of consecutive victories. You know what, they meet | :42:11. | :42:14. | |
in Ireland, obviously. That is in double and in a week, isn't it? -- | :42:15. | :42:20. | |
in Dublin in a week. It was thought that might be the Grand Slam | :42:21. | :42:24. | |
decider, which it will not be on this occasion, and Ireland will be | :42:25. | :42:28. | |
doing absolutely everything they can to stop that from happening. Yes, | :42:29. | :42:32. | |
the last thing the Irish want is for England to be parading the Grand | :42:33. | :42:35. | |
Slam around Dublin. Many people expected it to be the decider, but | :42:36. | :42:39. | |
still, what a game we have to look forward to. I am not saying the | :42:40. | :42:42. | |
result should have been any different, but Scotland were unlucky | :42:43. | :42:46. | |
to lose Stuart Hogg so early. They were. Arguably the most exciting | :42:47. | :42:50. | |
player in world rugby at the moment is Stuart Hogg. They lost in very | :42:51. | :42:55. | |
early, with that Symbian. They were unfortunate, but England just cut | :42:56. | :43:00. | |
loose. You might remember yesterday we | :43:01. | :43:04. | |
showed you pick shares of that huge 3000 -year-old statue that was found | :43:05. | :43:11. | |
in a mud pit in Cairo. Yes, it has been hailed by Egypt's Antiquities | :43:12. | :43:16. | |
Ministry as one of the most significant finds ever. So could | :43:17. | :43:20. | |
there be more ancient treasures in the area? And what more do we know | :43:21. | :43:24. | |
about the one that has been discovered? We can speak to Doctor | :43:25. | :43:27. | |
Joyce Tyldesley, an archaeologist and Egyptologist from the University | :43:28. | :43:33. | |
of Manchester. Take us back to the specific statue, how significant is | :43:34. | :43:37. | |
it as a find, and how was it discovered? There has been a team | :43:38. | :43:40. | |
working on that site for some time. It is known that it was a major | :43:41. | :43:45. | |
temple to the sun god, but to find this statue is fantastic because it | :43:46. | :43:48. | |
shows they are looking in the right place, and it shows the potential of | :43:49. | :43:52. | |
what I -- what else might be found. They knew something might be there, | :43:53. | :43:57. | |
each at has a lot of temple sites. Tourists go to each of them go south | :43:58. | :44:01. | |
to Luxor, and look at the temples they are. But there were lots of big | :44:02. | :44:05. | |
temples in each at two the gods, but they have not survived in the same | :44:06. | :44:09. | |
way as some ring like Karnac Temple in the south. -- something. We are | :44:10. | :44:17. | |
looking at pictures here, and quite clearly it is in a difficult place | :44:18. | :44:22. | |
to excavate. It is underneath buildings, it is underneath rubble, | :44:23. | :44:25. | |
it is underneath rubbish. How do they know, when you find something | :44:26. | :44:29. | |
like that, how do you know that it is significant? It is huge, for a | :44:30. | :44:34. | |
start. And it is a temple site. Anything you find there is going to | :44:35. | :44:38. | |
be significant. But if you look at the size of it, it is about 26 feet | :44:39. | :44:42. | |
tall. It is massive. That would have been very hard to produce, it is | :44:43. | :44:47. | |
made of a very hard stone. The cost of getting it from the quarry, | :44:48. | :44:51. | |
transporting it and directing it, it suggests it is a very important | :44:52. | :44:55. | |
piece. You say it is a temple site. Is there an expectation they will be | :44:56. | :44:59. | |
more there than just this statue? Yes, there might well be. It is | :45:00. | :45:02. | |
already in the courtyard of the temple, we know that it was the | :45:03. | :45:06. | |
courtyard. We would expect this temple not just to be one fairly | :45:07. | :45:09. | |
small building, but a lot of associated buildings as well. It is | :45:10. | :45:13. | |
amazing, it is a reminder when we hear about stories like this, just | :45:14. | :45:16. | |
how sophisticated and advanced a society like ancient Egypt was, when | :45:17. | :45:20. | |
you compare it to an equivalent time in Britain, when we were basically | :45:21. | :45:24. | |
building roundhouses, they were building this gigantic statues and | :45:25. | :45:28. | |
temples. Ramses II himself, who was he? He was a king who reigned for a | :45:29. | :45:34. | |
very long time, 67 years, which is a fantastic amount of time. Even today | :45:35. | :45:39. | |
that is a long rain, but in ancient Egypt, even if you are an elite | :45:40. | :45:42. | |
Egyptian you could not expect to live much beyond 50. It is a | :45:43. | :45:46. | |
phenomenal rain, and it gave him time to be military campaigns. He | :45:47. | :45:49. | |
was a very ambitious king, wasn't it? Yes, and he put his name all | :45:50. | :45:53. | |
over Egypt. Even with this statue, although it might well be a statue | :45:54. | :45:57. | |
of him, it could actually be an earlier king, in mine tape, which he | :45:58. | :46:03. | |
has borrowed and put his own name on it. -- Imhonotep. He had this habit | :46:04. | :46:11. | |
of taking other people's monuments. Given the location of that it might | :46:12. | :46:15. | |
well be that this is an earlier king who has been repurposed as Ramses | :46:16. | :46:17. | |
II. How easy is it something this big? | :46:18. | :46:29. | |
Ayr it is really easy, it has been smashed up in antiquity and is | :46:30. | :46:34. | |
coming out in pieces, this is how it was abandoned. And the dirt on the | :46:35. | :46:38. | |
soil encroaches on the site, it gets abandoned, people start to live | :46:39. | :46:42. | |
around it and it gets lost. We have lost loads of stuff in Egypt, there | :46:43. | :46:46. | |
are pyramids and royal tombs which are missing, so this is not | :46:47. | :46:50. | |
surprising. And is expected that this will go in the new museum in | :46:51. | :46:54. | |
Cairo alongside all sorts of things which are so important the age. As | :46:55. | :46:59. | |
we said, we would imagine there will be a lot more found on this site so | :47:00. | :47:03. | |
there could be a lot more found. That is up to Egyptian authorities | :47:04. | :47:07. | |
and it would be a difficult thing to move but something special will be | :47:08. | :47:11. | |
planned for it when it is finally got out of the soil. What led you | :47:12. | :47:15. | |
into this particular field of study? Where does your interests come from? | :47:16. | :47:22. | |
I was at school when the Tutankhamen exhibition toured and a lot of my | :47:23. | :47:25. | |
generation were really influenced by that and I lived in the north-west | :47:26. | :47:31. | |
of England and we have a lot of Egyptology exhibitions up here. It | :47:32. | :47:35. | |
is a fantastic subject and it has something for everyone in geography, | :47:36. | :47:39. | |
history and language, and the more you learn, the more there is to | :47:40. | :47:44. | |
learn. I think it is amazing, the rich history which is underneath our | :47:45. | :47:47. | |
feet. All those people walking around in it, and we have no idea | :47:48. | :47:52. | |
what they are walking on top of, do we? We don't know what we are | :47:53. | :47:57. | |
walking on top of here, either? A slightly flimsy TV set! This will | :47:58. | :48:02. | |
not be here in thousands of years. It is really nice to see you, thank | :48:03. | :48:04. | |
you very much. You are watching | :48:05. | :48:06. | |
Breakfast from BBC News. The main stories this morning: | :48:07. | :48:08. | |
A Committee of MPs says the Government will be guilty | :48:09. | :48:10. | |
of a serious dereliction of duty if it doesn't plan for | :48:11. | :48:13. | |
the possibility that Brexit negotiations could end | :48:14. | :48:16. | |
without agreement. Dutch riot police have used water | :48:17. | :48:17. | |
cannons to break up a demonstration Here is Louise with a look | :48:18. | :48:20. | |
at this morning's weather. A bit of a mixed bag, is it fair to | :48:21. | :48:42. | |
say? It is a great phrase, which says a lot and sums up today's story | :48:43. | :48:49. | |
really perfectly. I'm concentrating on a beautiful day for some of us. | :48:50. | :48:54. | |
Northern Ireland, 16. 18 on the London area but a lot of cloud | :48:55. | :48:57. | |
sandwich between the two and that brought drizzly outbreaks of rain. | :48:58. | :49:01. | |
Fast forward a few hours, and this is the story at the moment. There | :49:02. | :49:08. | |
are two weather fronts moving across the country at no great pace and | :49:09. | :49:11. | |
producing drizzly bits and pieces which may pepper down towards the | :49:12. | :49:15. | |
south as we go through the morning. Another one hot on the heels, and as | :49:16. | :49:20. | |
it drifts inland, it will produce a band of cloud and nuisance showers | :49:21. | :49:24. | |
through the afternoon. So I suspect this morning there will be some wet | :49:25. | :49:29. | |
weather across the South Coast and up into the south-east corner. | :49:30. | :49:32. | |
Behind it a good slice of sunshine. You might be lucky and launched the | :49:33. | :49:36. | |
worst of the weather. By the middle of the afternoon it will not feel | :49:37. | :49:40. | |
the same as it did yesterday in the south-east. Maximum temperatures | :49:41. | :49:44. | |
around 12 or 13 degrees and there will be some rain stretching up in | :49:45. | :49:48. | |
the Lincolnshire and parts of East Yorkshire. Behind it, hopefully this | :49:49. | :49:51. | |
window is slightly dry and brighter weather, but in Wales some showery | :49:52. | :49:56. | |
bits and pieces of rain, and across the Lake District as well. For | :49:57. | :50:00. | |
Scotland and Northern Ireland you will not fare too badly, not as warm | :50:01. | :50:04. | |
as yesterday, a bit fresher but largely dry. The risk of a few | :50:05. | :50:08. | |
sharp, possibly thundery showers later on in the day. As we go | :50:09. | :50:12. | |
through the night we see some clearer skies as the rain eases away | :50:13. | :50:16. | |
and it will be a colder night and the ones just past. Let's | :50:17. | :50:19. | |
concentrate on those temperatures in a little more detail, because it | :50:20. | :50:23. | |
looks as though we could, in rural areas, see temperatures in those | :50:24. | :50:27. | |
clear skies low enough for a touch of light frost which is worth airing | :50:28. | :50:31. | |
in mind if you are a gardener and/or a grower. As we move into Monday, | :50:32. | :50:36. | |
high pressure will build from the south-west and there will not be too | :50:37. | :50:41. | |
much on the way of significant rain for the early half of the week, if | :50:42. | :50:45. | |
you are out and about, and with some sunshine at this time of year, it is | :50:46. | :50:49. | |
quite strong now, we will get some warmth again. 16 degrees is not out | :50:50. | :50:52. | |
of the question across the London area. And as I say, predominantly | :50:53. | :50:56. | |
dry. The next couple of days and Tuesday into Wednesday look mostly | :50:57. | :51:00. | |
cloudy. Bits and pieces of showery rain from a weak weather front | :51:01. | :51:07. | |
nothing but nothing particularly significant. | :51:08. | :51:09. | |
It promises to be a historic season for young women in motorsport. | :51:10. | :51:13. | |
Later in the programme we will be joined by 18-year-old | :51:14. | :51:15. | |
Jamie Chadwick, the youngest woman to race in Formula 3. | :51:16. | :51:18. | |
But, before that, Mike went for a spin with an endurance racer | :51:19. | :51:21. | |
who came second when she made her debut in the GT cup championship | :51:22. | :51:25. | |
last season, and is aiming to go one better this time round. | :51:26. | :51:28. | |
Another day at the office for trainee accountant Esmee Hawkey. On | :51:29. | :51:47. | |
her way to work in the city of London. But there is another side to | :51:48. | :51:51. | |
this 18-year-old, another world in which she uses those accountancy | :51:52. | :52:07. | |
skills to keep her alive. It is hard to believe she is still only 18, and | :52:08. | :52:12. | |
now she is putting those angles and sums into good use at all the major | :52:13. | :52:16. | |
motor racing circuits around the UK, and some in Europe as well, as she | :52:17. | :52:21. | |
blazes trail for young women in the GT Cup championship. At least this | :52:22. | :52:25. | |
season she doesn't have to worry about her A-levels as well. You are | :52:26. | :52:30. | |
always working out where you need to be for the corner, how fast you are | :52:31. | :52:34. | |
going into a corner to make the corner. The guys don't like it, to | :52:35. | :52:38. | |
say the least. They don't like a girl coming past them. But yes, I | :52:39. | :52:43. | |
think once you show who is boss, you just become a competitor at the end | :52:44. | :52:52. | |
of the day. As she goes for the GTA title in endurance racing, no one | :52:53. | :52:56. | |
can believe she is making her debut only a decade after her 19th | :52:57. | :53:07. | |
birthday. The fastest female I have seen in a long time, Esmee Hawkey | :53:08. | :53:11. | |
wins is in fine style. That cutting experience, age nine, had | :53:12. | :53:15. | |
transformed her life. I was doing ballet and tap dancing and things | :53:16. | :53:20. | |
like that. I love the speed and the adrenaline. Esmee Hawkey pass the | :53:21. | :53:24. | |
test first time last year, and I got a taste of her extreme, on the edge | :53:25. | :53:29. | |
handling skills. Speeds of over 150 mph while being thrown around by the | :53:30. | :53:34. | |
G-forces. I don't really get scared. I think the adrenaline just builds | :53:35. | :53:38. | |
up so much, you just get on with it. I believe it or not, Esmee Hawkey is | :53:39. | :53:43. | |
a smooth, careful driver. Not too aggressive, and wearing the tyres, | :53:44. | :53:48. | |
and make sure they last until the end of the race. It gets really hot, | :53:49. | :53:52. | |
and you need to be able to cope with the steering, because it gets quite | :53:53. | :53:56. | |
tiring on your arms, and things like that. My stomach, my head, my senses | :53:57. | :54:01. | |
are all over the place. And that was five laps. You do that for 50 | :54:02. | :54:07. | |
minutes. Yes, 50 minutes. I have eight -year-olds, nine-year-old, | :54:08. | :54:10. | |
same age as me coming up and speaking to me and saying it is | :54:11. | :54:14. | |
great, what you do, and I would love to get into this. And I say to them, | :54:15. | :54:16. | |
I started karting, you can. In an attempt to cut back on street | :54:17. | :54:22. | |
furniture last year, the Government gave local | :54:23. | :54:26. | |
authorities the power to remove But, in the last week, | :54:27. | :54:29. | |
legal rulings have gone against both Lancashire County Council | :54:30. | :54:32. | |
and Nottingham City Council for fining drivers for using bus | :54:33. | :54:34. | |
lanes without adequate signage. So is the attempt to declutter | :54:35. | :54:37. | |
leaving more drivers unclear on what the rules of | :54:38. | :54:40. | |
the road actually are? Caroline Sheppard is the chief | :54:41. | :54:42. | |
adjudicator at the Traffic Penalty Very good morning to you, nice to | :54:43. | :55:03. | |
see you. Let's start with that idea of decluttering. You sort of see the | :55:04. | :55:08. | |
purpose of it, the idea to make the places we live much nicer, more | :55:09. | :55:12. | |
clean, and simple. But that relies on local knowledge when it comes to | :55:13. | :55:16. | |
things like road rules, especially things like bus lanes. How big a | :55:17. | :55:21. | |
problem is that? It is an increasing problem, and you can understand why | :55:22. | :55:25. | |
they want to do it, and some of these initiatives are fantastic | :55:26. | :55:28. | |
people are unfamiliar with the area or returning to it after the scheme | :55:29. | :55:32. | |
has been put in place, they don't necessarily know what to do. So it | :55:33. | :55:36. | |
is a question of whether you have lots of warning signs and then the | :55:37. | :55:40. | |
traditional signs for bus lanes, or whether in fact there are other ways | :55:41. | :55:44. | |
that you need to educate the public to appreciate the environment in the | :55:45. | :55:49. | |
engineering of the environment that they have created. And this is where | :55:50. | :55:54. | |
the problem seems to be occurring. In one of these cases, then, we had | :55:55. | :55:59. | |
an appeal by a number of individuals which led to this decision that | :56:00. | :56:02. | |
actually they would refund anyone who put in an appeal, just because | :56:03. | :56:06. | |
the new bus lanes were not clearly shown. When you introduce a new bus | :56:07. | :56:10. | |
lane, as there a system that you have to follow to make sure you | :56:11. | :56:14. | |
adequately tell people, warned them, and is there a kind of grace period | :56:15. | :56:18. | |
than in case you get it wrong? They have to consult. There are all sorts | :56:19. | :56:22. | |
of systems in place before they do it, but unfortunately what seems to | :56:23. | :56:27. | |
happen is that the part of the councils or the authorities that are | :56:28. | :56:31. | |
responsible for enforcing these things, and the cameras, and things, | :56:32. | :56:35. | |
they don't necessarily work this out at the beginning of the scheme. And | :56:36. | :56:39. | |
so suddenly people start arriving and don't understand it, and that is | :56:40. | :56:43. | |
when they start complaining and appealing to us about it. And | :56:44. | :56:47. | |
ultimately the adjudicator has to decide whether in fact the signs | :56:48. | :56:50. | |
were adequate to bring to the attention of road users that they | :56:51. | :56:54. | |
shouldn't be doing it. The other problem is that a lot of these | :56:55. | :57:03. | |
restrictions are not 24/7, they mainly apply in the rush-hour, or at | :57:04. | :57:10. | |
the end of the day, and you have to decide by reading the signs whether | :57:11. | :57:14. | |
you can go down there or not. The other thing, can I ask, about | :57:15. | :57:18. | |
Lancashire County Council, they have said people are entitled to a refund | :57:19. | :57:22. | |
but they had to apply for it. Can they not just automatically refund | :57:23. | :57:26. | |
the fines? This is absolutely nothing to do with us. However, | :57:27. | :57:31. | |
there was one scheme where this had happened in the past and the council | :57:32. | :57:35. | |
said the everybody, look, it will cost us an arm and leg to pay you | :57:36. | :57:39. | |
back individually, so shall we give the money to the local hospice? | :57:40. | :57:43. | |
Everybody said, yes, you do that, you get my ?30 to the local hospice | :57:44. | :57:48. | |
and more than 1 million went to the local hospice instead of paying it | :57:49. | :57:51. | |
back individually. But this is entirely a matter for individual | :57:52. | :57:55. | |
councils. And the figures suggest it is absolutely worth appealing, | :57:56. | :57:59. | |
because you are very much likely to succeed if you appeal. Yes, because | :58:00. | :58:04. | |
we have this new online system which is very easy to use, and we want to | :58:05. | :58:08. | |
take the hassle out of appealing, because a lot of people think it is | :58:09. | :58:12. | |
very bureaucratic but you can upload pictures, and importantly view the | :58:13. | :58:15. | |
video evidence and comment on it. What do you need to prove? It is up | :58:16. | :58:20. | |
to you, really. If you want to go back and take ages, but often you | :58:21. | :58:25. | |
don't. If you are a visitor you don't want to drive back there and | :58:26. | :58:28. | |
take them. But the Council upload their pictures and you can comment | :58:29. | :58:32. | |
on it, so you can see them online, add your comment, send a message | :58:33. | :58:35. | |
saying you don't understand this, the adjudicator will explain it, and | :58:36. | :58:39. | |
if necessary you can have a telephone conversation with the | :58:40. | :58:45. | |
adjudicator. So it is very easy to do this, but quite often the | :58:46. | :58:48. | |
councils just... When they see what you have said or you said that you | :58:49. | :58:52. | |
took a particular route, they will say actually, do you know, fair | :58:53. | :58:55. | |
enough, and they won't contest it. So that sometimes happens very | :58:56. | :58:59. | |
quickly. So it is absolutely worth appealing if you think you have been | :59:00. | :59:03. | |
caught out. Thank you for talking to us. You can get in touch with us | :59:04. | :59:05. | |
about this. The Department for Transport said | :59:06. | :59:06. | |
road users should not be placed in a situation where they didn't | :59:07. | :59:09. | |
know what restrictions It said the Department does produce | :59:10. | :59:12. | |
guidance on signage, but it was up to local authorities | :59:13. | :59:15. | |
to decide where best to place them. Still to come on Breakfast: | :59:16. | :59:19. | |
We will have an in-depth look through the Sunday papers | :59:20. | :59:22. | |
in about 20 minutes' time. That is after the headlines, | :59:23. | :59:24. | |
in just a moment. This is Breakfast, | :59:25. | :59:27. | |
with Ben Thompson and Rachel Burden. Failure to prepare for a breakdown | :59:28. | :00:22. | |
in Brexit talks would be a serious "dereliction of duty," | :00:23. | :00:26. | |
according to MPs. The warning for the government comes | :00:27. | :00:27. | |
ahead of a debate on the EU Exit The Brexit Secretary is calling | :00:28. | :00:31. | |
for the House of Commons not Good morning, it's Sunday | :00:32. | :00:35. | |
the 12th of March. Riot police break up a rally | :00:36. | :00:51. | |
in support of the Turkish President in Rotterdam after he described | :00:52. | :00:54. | |
the Dutch as "fascists." Renewed calls for a centralised | :00:55. | :00:57. | |
database for taxi drivers in England Julia Derbyshire's father Adrian | :00:58. | :01:17. | |
tells us why he has decided to share photos of his deceased daughter | :01:18. | :01:22. | |
online, taking her life up bullying. -- after Lynn. | :01:23. | :01:24. | |
In sport, England are Six Nations champions once again. | :01:25. | :01:26. | |
They win the Calcutta Cup after a 61-21 win over Scotland, | :01:27. | :01:29. | |
a record equalling 18th victory in a row for England. | :01:30. | :01:32. | |
My stomach, my head, my senses are all over the place. | :01:33. | :01:35. | |
Mike takes a spin with Esme Hawkey - the 18-year-old racer hoping to take | :01:36. | :01:42. | |
Good morning. It is a messy Sunday morning with the weather. A cloudy, | :01:43. | :02:00. | |
mild start. There is some rain around, but also some sun. I will | :02:01. | :02:02. | |
have all the details coming up. An influential committee of MPs has | :02:03. | :02:04. | |
today warned that the government would be guilty of "a serious | :02:05. | :02:09. | |
dereliction of duty" if it fails to plan for Brexit talks | :02:10. | :02:12. | |
ending without a deal. The legislation to start the exit | :02:13. | :02:14. | |
process will be debated In advance, the Brexit Secretary | :02:15. | :02:17. | |
David Davis has called on MPs to reject the amendments put forward | :02:18. | :02:21. | |
by the House of Lords. Our diplomatic correspondent, | :02:22. | :02:24. | |
James Robbins reports. We all know what to set Britain on | :02:25. | :02:37. | |
the road to Brexit, last year's referendum victory for Leave. | :02:38. | :02:39. | |
But we don't know what Brexit will actually look and feel like. | :02:40. | :02:42. | |
Nine months on, a cross-party committee of MPs is warning | :02:43. | :02:45. | |
that the coming negotiations could stall or be derailed. | :02:46. | :02:48. | |
Their report says a complete breakdown in the talks | :02:49. | :02:50. | |
would be very destructive, damaging both the EU and the UK, | :02:51. | :02:53. | |
and the MPs argue that the government is not | :02:54. | :02:55. | |
planning sufficiently for a painful no deal outcome. | :02:56. | :02:58. | |
As the Prime Minister prepares to trigger the formal start | :02:59. | :03:01. | |
to the Brexit process later this month, a government spokesperson has | :03:02. | :03:04. | |
responded to the report by saying that David Davis, | :03:05. | :03:08. | |
the Secretary of State for Exiting the European | :03:09. | :03:13. | |
Union, had briefed the Cabinet last month on the need to prepare not | :03:14. | :03:16. | |
just for a negotiated settlement but also for the unlikely scenario | :03:17. | :03:26. | |
in which no mutually satisfactory agreement | :03:27. | :03:28. | |
Ministers are said to be confident Britain can achieve a positive | :03:29. | :03:32. | |
new partnership with the EU, including competence | :03:33. | :03:34. | |
Ahead of tomorrow's debate, Brexit Secretary David Davis has | :03:35. | :03:40. | |
called on MPs to leave the legislation unaltered. | :03:41. | :03:42. | |
Let's get more on this now from our political correspondent, | :03:43. | :03:44. | |
Just talk us through what he is saying. This is the amendments that | :03:45. | :03:58. | |
the Lords wanted the Commons to make. He is saying don't touch it, | :03:59. | :04:02. | |
send it back? He is worried that a handful of Tory MPs might rebel on | :04:03. | :04:08. | |
this. If that happens, potentially those amendments would have to | :04:09. | :04:11. | |
stand. Those amendments include guaranteeing the rights of EU | :04:12. | :04:15. | |
citizens to remain in the UK, and also giving Parliament a say in | :04:16. | :04:20. | |
looking at the final deal when it is made eventually. Now, what David | :04:21. | :04:25. | |
Davis is saying is that if that is set in law, it ties Theresa May's | :04:26. | :04:29. | |
hands behind her back, she will not be able to go into the negotiations | :04:30. | :04:33. | |
with freedom to, I suppose, get the deal she is after. So he is urging | :04:34. | :04:38. | |
those MPs not to take that stands. They have a verbal agreement that | :04:39. | :04:44. | |
Parliament would get to have a say on the deal at the end, but | :04:45. | :04:47. | |
certainly the government is clearly worried about that. Whatever happens | :04:48. | :04:51. | |
in the Commons, it then goes back to the Lords, so the question will be, | :04:52. | :04:55. | |
if it goes back to the laws without those amendments, whether the Lords | :04:56. | :05:01. | |
than reimpose them. -- the Lords. If everything goes as planned, the | :05:02. | :05:05. | |
government could potentially be in a position where it can trigger | :05:06. | :05:08. | |
Article 50 this week. We will be watching that very closely. | :05:09. | :05:09. | |
Susannah, thank you. A diplomatic row between | :05:10. | :05:10. | |
the Netherlands and Turkey has worsened as the Dutch government | :05:11. | :05:13. | |
prevented two Turkish ministers from addressing | :05:14. | :05:15. | |
a rally in Rotterdam. Dutch riot police used water cannons | :05:16. | :05:17. | |
to break up hundreds of Turkish supporters who'd gathered | :05:18. | :05:20. | |
to demonstrate against Earlier the Turkish President | :05:21. | :05:22. | |
described the Dutch as "Nazi remnants and fascists" | :05:23. | :05:25. | |
as Sarah Corker reports. In the centre of Rotterdam, | :05:26. | :05:31. | |
Dutch riot police were brought in to disperse hundreds | :05:32. | :05:34. | |
of pro-Turkish They are angry because | :05:35. | :05:35. | |
the Dutch government banned a rally in the city about next | :05:36. | :05:40. | |
month's referendum to expand These extraordinary scenes came just | :05:41. | :05:43. | |
hours after the Turkish foreign minister was stopped | :05:44. | :05:47. | |
from entering her consulate She was later detained | :05:48. | :05:50. | |
and escorted out of the country. The Netherlands had | :05:51. | :05:57. | |
blocked President Erdogan's supporters | :05:58. | :05:59. | |
from holding referendum rallies because of security | :06:00. | :06:02. | |
concerns, but deporting an official takes this | :06:03. | :06:09. | |
row to a new level. In Ankara, protesters threw eggs | :06:10. | :06:13. | |
at the Dutch embassy. There were demonstrations | :06:14. | :06:16. | |
in Istanbul as well. It all started on Saturday | :06:17. | :06:18. | |
when another minister was blocked That provoked these harsh words | :06:19. | :06:25. | |
from President Erdogan. TRANSLATION: They don't know | :06:26. | :06:33. | |
anything about politics They are Nazi remnants, | :06:34. | :06:36. | |
they are fascists. The Dutch Prime Minister described | :06:37. | :06:40. | |
that fascist comparison as "crazy." This row is intensifying, | :06:41. | :06:43. | |
and these scenes mark a new low in diplomatic relations | :06:44. | :06:47. | |
between Turkey and the Netherlands. The Metropolitan Police have | :06:48. | :07:04. | |
been given more money to continue their investigation | :07:05. | :07:07. | |
into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann | :07:08. | :07:11. | |
in Portugal ten years ago. Operation Grange, which | :07:12. | :07:13. | |
was launched in 2011, Scotland Yard has refused to comment | :07:14. | :07:15. | |
on newspaper reports that they have identified an individual | :07:16. | :07:19. | |
they want to question. The government is being urged | :07:20. | :07:29. | |
to create a central database for taxi drivers | :07:30. | :07:32. | |
in England and Wales. An investigation by 5LIVE has found | :07:33. | :07:34. | |
that some drivers who've had their licence revoked | :07:35. | :07:37. | |
are continuing to work after getting a licence from another council, | :07:38. | :07:39. | |
as Danni Hewson reports. You can hear more on that story at | :07:40. | :07:52. | |
11 o'clock this morning. The singer Joni Sledge who, | :07:53. | :07:56. | |
with her three sisters, had a number of disco | :07:57. | :07:58. | |
hits in the '70s, The band Sister Sledge | :07:59. | :08:01. | |
was formed in 1971 with their biggest hit | :08:02. | :08:05. | |
We Are Family hitting the charts Three of the sisters have | :08:06. | :08:07. | |
continued to record music, last performing together | :08:08. | :08:17. | |
in October last year. They had high hopes, | :08:18. | :08:19. | |
but Lincoln City's historic FA Cup The first non-league side to reach | :08:20. | :08:21. | |
the quarter finals in over a century Almost 9,000 Lincoln fans made | :08:22. | :08:27. | |
the trip to North London and roared their side on till | :08:28. | :08:31. | |
the end, and despite the heavy defeat, they weren't | :08:32. | :08:34. | |
going home with heavy hearts, Even when faced with | :08:35. | :08:36. | |
the impossible... ...somehow, some will always | :08:37. | :08:41. | |
find a little hope. 9,000 Lincoln City fans making | :08:42. | :08:47. | |
the journey, all armed with the same Even against the superstars | :08:48. | :08:50. | |
of Arsenal, Lincoln refused to know Nathan Arnold's surge and shot | :08:51. | :09:00. | |
was so nearly the moment Before half-time, those dreams | :09:01. | :09:03. | |
were fading, Theo Walcott putting Olivier Giroud added a second, | :09:04. | :09:11. | |
before the moment Lincoln's luck deserted them altogether - | :09:12. | :09:15. | |
Luke Waterfall putting the ball Arsenal added two | :09:16. | :09:19. | |
more to make it five. Lincoln's astonishing run | :09:20. | :09:31. | |
was brought to an abrupt end. For Lincoln, this perhaps | :09:32. | :09:33. | |
was always an impossible task. But these fans head home | :09:34. | :09:36. | |
with their heads held high, proud of their little bit of history | :09:37. | :09:38. | |
that they have made, and pleased with the | :09:39. | :09:41. | |
memories they are taking We got this far and | :09:42. | :09:43. | |
we have done well. I think maybe we could have done | :09:44. | :09:47. | |
a bit better, but you can't blame That is the best team | :09:48. | :09:50. | |
that he can put out, which is a testament | :09:51. | :10:02. | |
to Lincoln, really. It is Arsenal who go | :10:03. | :10:05. | |
on to Wembley, but it is Lincoln It's not just the streets that | :10:06. | :10:08. | |
are turning green in Chicago to mark Julia Derbyshire was 16 years | :10:09. | :10:19. | |
old when she died after attempting to take her own life | :10:20. | :10:28. | |
following years of bullying. She would have | :10:29. | :10:31. | |
turned 18 this week, and her father has decided | :10:32. | :10:33. | |
to share distressing photos of her in hospital to raise | :10:34. | :10:35. | |
awareness about bullying We're going to show one | :10:36. | :10:37. | |
of those pictures now, because he feels it's important | :10:38. | :10:41. | |
to make the image public. When this was taken, | :10:42. | :10:44. | |
Julia was in a coma Her father Adrian is here | :10:45. | :10:51. | |
this morning to talk about Julia, and his decision | :10:52. | :10:58. | |
to share these photos. Tell us about Julia. What an amazing | :10:59. | :11:09. | |
girl she was, vibrant, articulate, intellectual. Goofy. A typical | :11:10. | :11:17. | |
teenager, who loved music and just hanging out with her friends. She | :11:18. | :11:25. | |
was an amazing person. Talk us through that decision to take the | :11:26. | :11:29. | |
photo. It must have been incredibly distressing to do so at the time. I | :11:30. | :11:33. | |
know you have not been able to look at it since. Why release it now? If | :11:34. | :11:38. | |
I'm honest with you, it was because of my talks at schools. As a former | :11:39. | :11:42. | |
Great Britain athlete I wanted to inspire children in schools, to get | :11:43. | :11:46. | |
them to be the best they could eat, but also talk about accountability | :11:47. | :11:50. | |
in what they put online, and say online. And what they access. I have | :11:51. | :11:58. | |
been to speak to over 200,000 children. They lose faith. Children | :11:59. | :12:03. | |
loose faith very quickly in themselves, inhumanity, in the | :12:04. | :12:07. | |
community, due to what is going on around them. After speaking to | :12:08. | :12:17. | |
200,000, I just felt I had to do something more. 200,000 children, | :12:18. | :12:23. | |
that is a lot to do, but nothing is changing, unfortunately, regarding | :12:24. | :12:28. | |
awareness of mental health. It was Julia's 18th birthday, and instead | :12:29. | :12:34. | |
of sharing champagne with her to celebrate, I was delivering flowers | :12:35. | :12:38. | |
to her grave. I thought, something needs to be done. I need to engage a | :12:39. | :12:43. | |
bit more. I think it was a shock factor as well. I wanted to shock | :12:44. | :12:47. | |
people, to make them really understand that teenage self harm | :12:48. | :12:52. | |
and suicide needs to be wrought up a little bit more. -- brought up. I | :12:53. | :12:59. | |
took a series of four riches of Julia when she was literally minutes | :13:00. | :13:03. | |
of death, because I knew one day I would have to up the anti-to raise | :13:04. | :13:08. | |
awareness. -- series of four pictures. Everybody will appreciate | :13:09. | :13:14. | |
how difficult that was for Europe, it is a very private moment. But | :13:15. | :13:19. | |
also, it is important to say that the reason an individual might | :13:20. | :13:22. | |
attempt to take their own life is often extremely complex. Do you feel | :13:23. | :13:27. | |
that the abuse she received online was a significant factor? Hugely. | :13:28. | :13:32. | |
Julia was not born with mental health issues. Lots of people are | :13:33. | :13:36. | |
not. But they acquired as mental health issues, as they learnt | :13:37. | :13:39. | |
behaviour, it is what has happened in their life. Julia was a bubbly, | :13:40. | :13:46. | |
vivacious young woman, but coming out to her friends, who then let the | :13:47. | :13:51. | |
entire school no... So it was about her sexuality initially, that is how | :13:52. | :13:56. | |
it started? That is correct. She was beautiful and lovely, so there was | :13:57. | :14:00. | |
probably jealousy as well. It was initially regarding her sexuality, | :14:01. | :14:04. | |
her thinking, am I gay, am I not, just wanting to find herself. And | :14:05. | :14:09. | |
not being able to explore that in a safe space? Exactly. Unfortunately | :14:10. | :14:15. | |
she was surrounded by hate. She just couldn't get away from it. You have | :14:16. | :14:21. | |
talked a lot about speaking to young people and you talk about education. | :14:22. | :14:24. | |
There are many things here, but there are two EE shoes. One is | :14:25. | :14:29. | |
online bullying, another is used mental health. About education, what | :14:30. | :14:34. | |
you want to see change? We have sex education in schools. I don't see | :14:35. | :14:39. | |
why we don't have mental health education, bullying and | :14:40. | :14:42. | |
accountability and other types of education like that in schools. It | :14:43. | :14:47. | |
is rife. Seven out of ten teenagers are affected by mental health due to | :14:48. | :14:54. | |
bullying, one in three self harm. These are big numbers. I think | :14:55. | :14:58. | |
mental health is highly underfunded, even though it has risen by 78%, it | :14:59. | :15:02. | |
is still highly underfunded, and kids are still not getting this | :15:03. | :15:05. | |
opportunity to get help and parents are not getting the opportunity to | :15:06. | :15:09. | |
understand more with regards to what is going on with their children. And | :15:10. | :15:13. | |
I think it starts for me, awareness in schools and getting kids | :15:14. | :15:16. | |
accountable for their actions, talking about being the best that | :15:17. | :15:20. | |
they can be, and being positive role models for one another. Speaking | :15:21. | :15:23. | |
about who they are talking to online. Making sure that what they | :15:24. | :15:31. | |
put online is safe. It starts in schools, it starts in home | :15:32. | :15:34. | |
communication with their parents as well. All extremely important | :15:35. | :15:38. | |
messages, and we are very grateful new coming on and talking to us. I | :15:39. | :15:42. | |
appreciate it, thank you for having me. | :15:43. | :18:25. | |
A female judge's warning that drunk women are putting themselves | :18:26. | :18:28. | |
at greater risk of rape have caused a lot of controversy over the last | :18:29. | :18:32. | |
During the sentencing of a man who raped an 18-year-old woman, | :18:33. | :18:36. | |
Judge Lindsey Kushner QC said, "Girls are perfectly entitled | :18:37. | :18:38. | |
to drink themselves into the ground, but should be aware potential | :18:39. | :18:41. | |
defendants to rape gravitate towards girls who have been drinking. | :18:42. | :18:44. | |
If push comes to shove, a girl who has been drunk is less | :18:45. | :18:47. | |
likely to be believed than one who is sober at the time." | :18:48. | :18:52. | |
A female judge's warning that drunk women are putting themselves | :18:53. | :18:59. | |
at greater risk of rape have caused a lot of controversy over the last | :19:00. | :19:02. | |
During the sentencing of a man who raped an 18-year-old woman, | :19:03. | :19:06. | |
Judge Lindsey Kushner QC said, "Girls are perfectly entitled | :19:07. | :19:09. | |
to drink themselves into the ground, but should be aware potential | :19:10. | :19:12. | |
defendants to rape gravitate towards girls who have been drinking. | :19:13. | :19:14. | |
If push comes to shove, a girl who has been drunk is less | :19:15. | :19:18. | |
likely to be believed than one who is sober at the time." | :19:19. | :19:21. | |
Let's talk about this a bit more now, with Emily Jacob, | :19:22. | :19:24. | |
a rape survivor and sexual abuse campaigner. | :19:25. | :19:31. | |
the only way to avoid rape is for perpetrators to stop raping and the | :19:32. | :19:38. | |
fact that even if we were to stay at home for the whole of our lives we | :19:39. | :19:43. | |
would not be able to avoid rape, it is just really quite offensive, | :19:44. | :19:57. | |
actually, to be told that if you had only done them. And you work in this | :19:58. | :20:03. | |
field, providing support to beat them is of rape and assault. In the | :20:04. | :20:07. | |
immediate aftermath of your incident, was the fact that you had | :20:08. | :20:11. | |
been drinking a factor in preventing you, feeling less able to go and | :20:12. | :20:18. | |
talk to the police about it? I think the fact that I had been drinking | :20:19. | :20:24. | |
made me wonder if it was something that I would be believed about, | :20:25. | :20:30. | |
whereas actually the fact that I had been drinking or to have made it a | :20:31. | :20:34. | |
much more open and shut case, because I couldn't have been | :20:35. | :20:37. | |
consenting. Unfortunately that doesn't seem to be the pervasive | :20:38. | :20:47. | |
idea in society, or even in the law. But if somebody is blacked out | :20:48. | :20:51. | |
unconscious, surely they are unable to say yes and therefore it is | :20:52. | :20:59. | |
obviously rape. So it is kind of quite counterintuitive to me that | :21:00. | :21:03. | |
when people have been drinking they are less likely to be believed, | :21:04. | :21:07. | |
whereas actually they should be more likely to be believed. Where do you | :21:08. | :21:11. | |
draw the line between trying to educate young women on how best to | :21:12. | :21:17. | |
protect themselves, and when does that become victim blaming? Well, I | :21:18. | :21:26. | |
don't think that the conversation about how we should be protecting | :21:27. | :21:33. | |
ourselves as helpful at all. I feel that, yes, we should be open and | :21:34. | :21:42. | |
open eyed to the crazy... Not crazy, but to the people out there who are | :21:43. | :21:47. | |
going to try and take advantage of us. We should be open eyed to that, | :21:48. | :21:51. | |
but actually, all the rhetoric around how we can protect ourselves | :21:52. | :21:58. | |
just as to the self belief that we might have been able to, and | :21:59. | :22:01. | |
therefore we must have done something wrong, and therefore we | :22:02. | :22:06. | |
must have possibly stepped out of line in some way. And therefore | :22:07. | :22:10. | |
deserved it. Actually what society as a whole needs to do is to change | :22:11. | :22:14. | |
that rhetoric to one which is much more supportive of victims, one that | :22:15. | :22:20. | |
says that actually it was always just because the rapist raped you. | :22:21. | :22:25. | |
It wasn't that you were drinking, it wasn't that you address was too | :22:26. | :22:28. | |
short, it wasn't that you walked home at night. It wasn't that you | :22:29. | :22:32. | |
stayed home, it wasn't that you were running in the park. It wasn't all | :22:33. | :22:36. | |
the things that could have been that meant that you are in that position | :22:37. | :22:40. | |
at that time. The only thing that caused the rapist to rape you was | :22:41. | :22:44. | |
that he was a rapist. Thank you very much indeed. Appreciate your time, | :22:45. | :22:49. | |
and we will be talking more about this. | :22:50. | :22:49. | |
In the next hour, we will be speaking to a barrister | :22:50. | :22:52. | |
who specialises in sexual assault cases. | :22:53. | :22:54. | |
You are watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :22:55. | :22:56. | |
It is time now for a look at the newspapers. | :22:57. | :23:02. | |
Ibrahim Mogra is here to tell us what has caught his eye. | :23:03. | :23:06. | |
The Sunday Telegraph has the headline Cabinet war overbudget | :23:07. | :23:17. | |
shambles, senior Tories are furious that Philip Hammond failed to brief | :23:18. | :23:22. | |
them, they say, on a tax hike manifesto reach. The paper goes on | :23:23. | :23:25. | |
to say the Chancellor had an hour-long briefing to Cabinet | :23:26. | :23:29. | |
colleagues but failed to mention that a tax rise on the self-employed | :23:30. | :23:33. | |
would be included in the Budget, that clashing with a Tory election | :23:34. | :23:39. | |
promise. More politics on the front page, with the Brexit secretary | :23:40. | :23:47. | |
under fire for saying if we do not plan for if there is no deal, then | :23:48. | :23:52. | |
it will be a dereliction of duty. That is the lead on the front of the | :23:53. | :23:57. | |
Daily Mail. On the front of the Observer, the Prime Minister accused | :23:58. | :24:00. | |
of putting the national interest at risk by failing to prepare for a | :24:01. | :24:05. | |
real prospect that two years of those Brexit negotiations could end | :24:06. | :24:08. | |
without a deal. There has been so much talk about the potential | :24:09. | :24:11. | |
influence Russia may have, with their various spying activities, if | :24:12. | :24:19. | |
you want to put it like that. The Sunday Times addresses this saying | :24:20. | :24:24. | |
that GCHQ have called an emergency summit saying that there is a risk | :24:25. | :24:34. | |
of cyber attacks disrupting the next general election. And the | :24:35. | :24:39. | |
disappearance of Madeleine McCann. The paper says they have identified | :24:40. | :24:43. | |
a person they want to question and have been given an extra ?85,000 to | :24:44. | :24:47. | |
be able to follow up what the paper calls a crucial lead. Inside the | :24:48. | :24:55. | |
papers, we start off with a story about public services staff under | :24:56. | :24:58. | |
pressure. In particular we are looking at ambulance staff. Yes, | :24:59. | :25:04. | |
indeed. With regards to our health and well-being when it comes to the | :25:05. | :25:08. | |
NHS, when you are in need of medical help, in an emergency, this is the | :25:09. | :25:14. | |
first point of contact with any potential help that may be | :25:15. | :25:18. | |
forthcoming. So the 111 call handlers are under immense pressure. | :25:19. | :25:25. | |
Between one call in the next, they only have three seconds. Added to | :25:26. | :25:30. | |
that, they are not all adequately supported by nurses available who | :25:31. | :25:36. | |
can make a decision, a medical decision, whether the caller, | :25:37. | :25:39. | |
whoever they are calling for, their loved one, can be sent an ambulance | :25:40. | :25:43. | |
or not. There is a computer system that has been introduced that helps | :25:44. | :25:49. | |
make those judgement calls. The computer tells the caller whether an | :25:50. | :25:54. | |
ambulance should be sent or not, within 30 minutes. There is some | :25:55. | :25:59. | |
criticism that there is an overreliance on the computer to | :26:00. | :26:03. | |
decide when they should be sending the ambulance in the first place. | :26:04. | :26:07. | |
Clearly there is a need to identify how vital that ambulances. Computers | :26:08. | :26:13. | |
are very useful tools but when it comes to human to human encounter | :26:14. | :26:16. | |
and interaction of a phone call, there are things you can assess and | :26:17. | :26:20. | |
ascertain through a callout that the computer could not. One of the | :26:21. | :26:24. | |
examples, when this caller quits, the final straw for him was he spent | :26:25. | :26:28. | |
half an hour talking to a person who was on the verge of suicide and | :26:29. | :26:32. | |
killing themselves, and he managed to talk that person out of it. And | :26:33. | :26:36. | |
he was told off by his managers, because he had spent more than 6.5 | :26:37. | :26:40. | |
minutes, which is the maximum they are allowed to, per call. But he | :26:41. | :26:44. | |
saved a life. A computer could not have done that. So what we need | :26:45. | :26:48. | |
really is for these people who are saving lives to be adequately | :26:49. | :26:53. | |
supported, to make sure that the resources are available to them, and | :26:54. | :27:00. | |
the staff that can make those split-2nd decisions are available to | :27:01. | :27:05. | |
them. Let's move on to the story you have picked out here in the | :27:06. | :27:07. | |
Telegraph. Preach in English at mosques, Imams are to be told. This | :27:08. | :27:14. | |
is a long-awaited counter extremism proposal, suggestions that in | :27:15. | :27:18. | |
mosques of the sermons should be in English. I just feel the government | :27:19. | :27:22. | |
gets this horribly wrong, time and time again. And I am not sure where | :27:23. | :27:26. | |
they are getting their advice from. This is my business, this is what I | :27:27. | :27:32. | |
do, day in day out. To start with, we don't believe mosques are the | :27:33. | :27:37. | |
places where people are taught hatred or are being encouraged to | :27:38. | :27:43. | |
turn to violent extremism. We have had just one were two cases where | :27:44. | :27:48. | |
the mosques have been found, in all these years of being guilty of this | :27:49. | :27:53. | |
allegation, and they have been dealt with and everything has been sorted. | :27:54. | :27:59. | |
I am a product of teachers who hardly spoke any English. Six years | :28:00. | :28:05. | |
of study, full-time in a seminary. I am a product of such individuals. I | :28:06. | :28:09. | |
think what is important is the mindset. That is not the language. | :28:10. | :28:12. | |
The sermon can easily be translated into English. We have had two Imams | :28:13. | :28:18. | |
in our history, or recent history here in England, in Britain, who | :28:19. | :28:22. | |
have caused us the biggest problems. And they spoke English rather well. | :28:23. | :28:28. | |
They are very well-known, and for years they were known to be | :28:29. | :28:34. | |
preaching hatred. So language is not an indicator of extremism. We will | :28:35. | :28:37. | |
talk about this later on, I will quickly show you, eight -year-olds | :28:38. | :28:41. | |
to be given lessons in happiness. It is a diesel something we will get | :28:42. | :28:43. | |
into later on. -- keys of something. The Andrew Marr programme | :28:44. | :28:48. | |
is on BBC One at 9am. What have you got coming | :28:49. | :28:50. | |
up today, Andrew? The big news is MPs on the Commons | :28:51. | :28:58. | |
committee and the government, and what happens if there isn't a Brexit | :28:59. | :29:03. | |
deal. I am joined by the chairman of that committee and the Brexit | :29:04. | :29:08. | |
secretary himself, David Davis. I have also examined the big Budget | :29:09. | :29:13. | |
row. We have the shadow business Secretary and I am joined by Belfast | :29:14. | :29:16. | |
from Gerry Adams, the Sinn Fein leader. All of that plus Emily | :29:17. | :29:24. | |
Sunday singing us out and the lovely actress Tandy Newman. | :29:25. | :29:26. | |
Coming up in the next half-hour: Mike has been taken for a 150 mph | :29:27. | :29:29. | |
spin by one of the teenagers hoping to make this a historic season | :29:30. | :29:33. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with Ben Thompson and Rachel Burden. | :29:34. | :30:09. | |
Coming up before 8:00, Louise will have a full weather | :30:10. | :30:11. | |
But first at 7:30, a summary of this morning's main | :30:12. | :30:15. | |
An influential committee of MPs has today warned that government | :30:16. | :30:21. | |
would be guilty of "a serious dereliction of duty" if it fails | :30:22. | :30:24. | |
to plan for Brexit talks ending without a deal. | :30:25. | :30:27. | |
The Commons Foreign Affairs Committee said | :30:28. | :30:31. | |
a complete breakdown in talks would represent "a very destructive | :30:32. | :30:36. | |
outcome, leading to mutually assured damage for the EU and the UK." | :30:37. | :30:39. | |
The Brexit Secretary, David Davis, has warned MPs | :30:40. | :30:41. | |
against attempting to change the bill for exiting | :30:42. | :30:44. | |
the European Union when they debate it in the Commons tomorrow. | :30:45. | :30:47. | |
allowed to "get on with the job" of negotiating terms with the EU. | :30:48. | :30:52. | |
He will ask Parliament to throw out amendments to protect the rights | :30:53. | :30:56. | |
of EU citizens living in the UK and to allow for a "meaningful" vote | :30:57. | :31:00. | |
Dutch riot police have used water cannons to break up a large protest | :31:01. | :31:07. | |
outside the Turkish consulate in Rotterdam, as a diplomatic row | :31:08. | :31:09. | |
More than 1,000 people gathered outside the building when Turkey's | :31:10. | :31:14. | |
foreign minister, who was due to address a rally, had his plane | :31:15. | :31:17. | |
turned away from the city's airport because of security concerns. | :31:18. | :31:20. | |
Turkey's President Erdogan responded by calling the Dutch government | :31:21. | :31:27. | |
The Metropolitan Police have been given more money | :31:28. | :31:35. | |
to continue their investigation into the disappearance | :31:36. | :31:37. | |
of Madeleine McCann in Portugal ten years ago. | :31:38. | :31:40. | |
Operation Grange, which was launched in 2011, | :31:41. | :31:47. | |
Scotland Yard has refused to comment on newspaper reports that they have | :31:48. | :31:52. | |
identified an individual they want to question. | :31:53. | :31:54. | |
A BBC investigation has found taxi drivers who've had their licenses | :31:55. | :31:57. | |
taken away from them are in some cases being handed another | :31:58. | :32:00. | |
The findings have prompted the Association of Police | :32:01. | :32:03. | |
and Crime Commissioners to renew calls to introduce a national data | :32:04. | :32:06. | |
base of taxi drivers in England and Wales. | :32:07. | :32:09. | |
The singer Joni Sledge who, with her three sisters, | :32:10. | :32:11. | |
had a number of disco hits in the '70s, has died | :32:12. | :32:14. | |
The band Sister Sledge was formed in 1971 with their biggest hit | :32:15. | :32:19. | |
We Are Family hitting the charts eight years later. | :32:20. | :32:22. | |
Three of the sisters have continued to record music, | :32:23. | :32:25. | |
last performing together in October last year. | :32:26. | :32:29. | |
"Fake news" has hardly been out of the headlines in the last few | :32:30. | :32:33. | |
weeks, and now the creator of the World Wide Web, | :32:34. | :32:36. | |
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, has waded into the debate. | :32:37. | :32:39. | |
In an open letter to mark the web's 28th anniversary, | :32:40. | :32:42. | |
Sir Tim unveiled a plan to tackle data abuse and fake news, | :32:43. | :32:45. | |
and expressed concerns about how the web is being used. | :32:46. | :32:48. | |
Sir Tim said he wanted to start to combat the misuse of personal | :32:49. | :32:51. | |
data, which he said created a "chilling effect on free speech." | :32:52. | :32:54. | |
A turtle nicknamed Jolly has been returned to the wild after having | :32:55. | :32:57. | |
The 330-pound green sea turtle was hurt when she got tangled | :32:58. | :33:02. | |
But after vets treated her she made a speedy recovery and was released | :33:03. | :33:10. | |
off the Florida Keys last Friday, just in time for the turtle nesting | :33:11. | :33:13. | |
And it is the Scottish rugby team who were flailing around yesterday. | :33:14. | :33:31. | |
They were a bit, yes. Nothing went right for them. The early scene | :33:32. | :33:36. | |
binning, and then Stuart Hogg, the keeper, going off early. You have to | :33:37. | :33:40. | |
say, Jonathan Joseph and England, they really cut loose. They have | :33:41. | :33:45. | |
retained the Six Nations title... Jonathan Joseph had got man of the | :33:46. | :33:49. | |
match must by half-time. Yes, he was superb. They have equalled New | :33:50. | :33:53. | |
Zealand's record of 18 straight victories. | :33:54. | :33:54. | |
So yes, it was a perfect day for England at Twickenham. | :33:55. | :33:57. | |
They can now look forward to next weekend's match against Ireland | :33:58. | :34:00. | |
A win in Dublin would see Eddie Jones' side become the only | :34:01. | :34:04. | |
team to win back-to-back Grand Slams since the Six Nations began. | :34:05. | :34:07. | |
They ran in seven tries at Twickenham. | :34:08. | :34:09. | |
JJ - two letters, two legs, too much for Scotland. | :34:10. | :34:16. | |
Jonathan Joseph started the game, and he was England's | :34:17. | :34:19. | |
It's been the essence of rugby ever since somebody picked up | :34:20. | :34:29. | |
England now have a team to match any in its history, | :34:30. | :34:32. | |
By the time Joseph completed his hat-trick early in the second | :34:33. | :34:38. | |
Scotland persevered, hampered by early | :34:39. | :34:42. | |
indiscipline and injuries, but as they made clear, | :34:43. | :34:47. | |
they were not here to be plucky losers. | :34:48. | :34:49. | |
Their recent performances have merited more than | :34:50. | :34:51. | |
On this day, everything clicked for England. | :34:52. | :34:56. | |
So the Six Nations is won, and Eddie Jones' England | :34:57. | :35:02. | |
They now have a mindset of wanting to be the best in the world. | :35:03. | :35:12. | |
And if we keep with that mindset, keep | :35:13. | :35:16. | |
working hard, we will be the best in the world. | :35:17. | :35:19. | |
The memory of this match will linger long after the sponsors' | :35:20. | :35:22. | |
logo is removed from the Twickenham pitch. | :35:23. | :35:24. | |
The Calcutta Cup is a legacy of history. | :35:25. | :35:26. | |
Eddie Jones and England are looking to the future, | :35:27. | :35:28. | |
His project is building towards the next | :35:29. | :35:32. | |
In the day's other game, France ran in four tries | :35:33. | :35:43. | |
against Italy to seal a bonus point victory by 40 points to 18 in Rome. | :35:44. | :35:47. | |
Italy had gone in front through Sergio Parisse's try early | :35:48. | :35:50. | |
on, but they now look destined once again for the wooden spoon. | :35:51. | :35:53. | |
England's women have set up a Grand Slam decider with Ireland | :35:54. | :35:58. | |
next week after thrashing Scotland 64-0. | :35:59. | :36:00. | |
Winger Kay Wilson set a new Six Nations record with seven | :36:01. | :36:03. | |
tries during the game as England maintained their 100% record | :36:04. | :36:05. | |
Ireland also maintained their perfect run of results beating | :36:06. | :36:14. | |
Wales by 12-7 at Cardiff Arms Park thanks to Hannah Tyrrell's winning | :36:15. | :36:18. | |
Leicester are through to the final of the Anglo-Welsh Cup after beating | :36:19. | :36:24. | |
The Tigers ran in four tries at Allianz Park, | :36:25. | :36:33. | |
the pick of which was this effort from Freddie Burns 12 minutes | :36:34. | :36:38. | |
Leicester will face Exeter or Harlequins who play the other | :36:39. | :36:42. | |
The final takes place at The Stoop on Saturday. | :36:43. | :36:45. | |
Ulster ran in ten tries to beat bottom club Zebre in the Pro 12. | :36:46. | :36:49. | |
The 68-21 win gives them a bonus point and takes them above Scarlets | :36:50. | :36:52. | |
Non-league side Lincoln City's remarkable run | :36:53. | :36:55. | |
They were beaten 5-0 by Arsenal who progress to the semi-finals. | :36:56. | :37:00. | |
Lincoln were the first non league side to reach this stage | :37:01. | :37:03. | |
of the competition for over a century. | :37:04. | :37:08. | |
And joining Arsenal in the last four are Manchester City, | :37:09. | :37:11. | |
That FA Cup run of 2016-17 finally at an end for nonleague | :37:12. | :37:16. | |
Lincoln City, with history and multiple memories made. | :37:17. | :37:18. | |
In fact, the underdogs could have gone ahead | :37:19. | :37:21. | |
But despite losing five of their last seven games, | :37:22. | :37:28. | |
the hosts had so much quality, and it eventually showed. | :37:29. | :37:31. | |
Arsenal have the lead on the stroke of half-time. | :37:32. | :37:39. | |
Relief for some, disappointment for others. | :37:40. | :37:44. | |
87 places separated the sides, and we saw it in the second half. | :37:45. | :37:51. | |
Olivier Giroud made it 2-0 before an own goal and then something | :37:52. | :37:54. | |
special from Sanchez wrapping the game up. | :37:55. | :37:58. | |
While they got by in the end, given what Lincoln have done, | :37:59. | :38:04. | |
There is a reason why no nonleague team in the last 100 years have been | :38:05. | :38:12. | |
able to reach the last eight of the FA Cup, | :38:13. | :38:15. | |
and the fact that they have, that should make them mightily proud. | :38:16. | :38:18. | |
Of course we are disappointed we lost. | :38:19. | :38:20. | |
But we are able to draw breath, we are pretty proud of what we have | :38:21. | :38:24. | |
And Pep Guardiola can be proud of Manchester City's FA Cup | :38:25. | :38:30. | |
They have been away in every round, beating Middlesbrough 2-0, | :38:31. | :38:37. | |
City are on their way to Wembley again. | :38:38. | :38:43. | |
And while there will be no appearance at the home of football | :38:44. | :38:46. | |
for Lincoln City, they found their home in the hearts of football | :38:47. | :38:49. | |
Hull City kept their chances Premier League survival alive | :38:50. | :38:53. | |
with a two nil win over fellow relegation strugglers Swansea City. | :38:54. | :38:56. | |
Two goals from on loan Oumar Niasse helped them to victory. | :38:57. | :38:59. | |
They remain in the bottom three, one point from safety, | :39:00. | :39:02. | |
while Swansea are three points clear of the drop zone. | :39:03. | :39:05. | |
Bournemouth have pulled further away from the bottom three | :39:06. | :39:08. | |
after a dramatic 3-2 win over West Ham. | :39:09. | :39:11. | |
Josh King missed a penalty...but scored a hat-trick, including | :39:12. | :39:14. | |
They are now six points clear of the relegation zone. | :39:15. | :39:20. | |
West Ham are without a league win in four matches. | :39:21. | :39:23. | |
At the other end of the table, Everton narrowed the gap on | :39:24. | :39:26. | |
6th-placed Manchester United with a 3-0 win over West Brom. | :39:27. | :39:29. | |
Kevin Mirallas, Morgan Schneiderlin and Romelu Lukaku all scoring | :39:30. | :39:31. | |
It's the Old Firm derby at midday today and new Rangers manager | :39:32. | :39:39. | |
Pedro Caixinha will be watching from the stands. | :39:40. | :39:42. | |
Celtic will re-establish a 27-point lead at the top with victory. | :39:43. | :39:45. | |
Second-placed Aberdeen beat Motherwell yesterday and fourth | :39:46. | :39:48. | |
placed Hearts narrowed the gap on third place Rangers to five | :39:49. | :39:53. | |
points with a 4-0 thrashing of Hamilton Academical. | :39:54. | :39:55. | |
There were also wins for Kilmarnock and St Johnstone. | :39:56. | :39:57. | |
Andy Murray has been knocked out of the Indian Wells Tournament | :39:58. | :40:03. | |
in California at the second round - it's often seen as the fifth Grand | :40:04. | :40:07. | |
The world number one lost to Canadian qualifier Vasek Pospisil | :40:08. | :40:10. | |
After being knocked out of the Australian Open in the 4th | :40:11. | :40:15. | |
round, Murray would've been hoping for much better, | :40:16. | :40:17. | |
as he'd just won the Dubai Championship. | :40:18. | :40:20. | |
Pospisi is ranked 128 places below Murray. | :40:21. | :40:29. | |
An unusual defeat for Sandy Murray. -- Andy Murray. | :40:30. | :40:35. | |
We're here on the BBC News Channel until 9:00 this morning, | :40:36. | :40:38. | |
and coming up in the next hour, the Travel Show team have been | :40:39. | :40:41. | |
on an Arctic adventure, deep in Finnish Lapland - | :40:42. | :40:44. | |
We all know not to park on double yellow lines, | :40:45. | :40:49. | |
but is it always so easy to understand the rules of the road? | :40:50. | :40:59. | |
All that to come, but it is by by Furnell on BBC One. | :41:00. | :41:01. |