03/04/2017 Breakfast


03/04/2017

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LineFromTo

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:00:00.:00:08.

A big change in the way police bail is used.

:00:09.:00:11.

A new 28-day limit has come in to force in England and Wales

:00:12.:00:15.

but some officers are unhappy with the move.

:00:16.:00:32.

Good morning, it's Monday 3rd of April.

:00:33.:00:35.

Gibraltar insists it won't be used as a bargaining chip

:00:36.:00:38.

to be costing the NHS ?1.2 billion a year.

:00:39.:00:55.

The apprenticeship levy comes into force this week designed

:00:56.:01:01.

to help more people into training, but critics say firms are unprepared

:01:02.:01:04.

In sport, six titles in a row for Celtic.

:01:05.:01:09.

They take the Scottish Premiership with eight games to spare.

:01:10.:01:11.

Good morning from Bristol were four years it has been rumoured someone

:01:12.:01:25.

has been going out late at night correcting bad punctuation. This

:01:26.:01:27.

morning the man who describes himself as a vigilante talks to us

:01:28.:01:31.

on Breakfast. A cold start for some, some frost

:01:32.:01:39.

around and fog too but that will give way to a bright day with sunny

:01:40.:01:44.

spells. But in the west, expect some rain in Northern Ireland and western

:01:45.:01:48.

Scotland. More details in 15 minutes. Thank you.

:01:49.:01:49.

Significant restrictions on the use of bail by police in England

:01:50.:01:54.

The amount of time a suspect released from custody can

:01:55.:01:58.

remain on bail will be limited to 28 days in most cases.

:01:59.:02:02.

The decision is in response to concerns that people

:02:03.:02:04.

were being left in limbo for months or even years.

:02:05.:02:07.

But police have questioned the move, as our home affairs correspondent,

:02:08.:02:10.

Famous faces who have been under police investigation, finally told

:02:11.:02:22.

they wouldn't be facing charges but only after long months on bail. They

:02:23.:02:27.

were among the 5000 still on bail after a year. The government says

:02:28.:02:31.

the system needed rebalancing. Well, what happened in the past is people

:02:32.:02:36.

could be put on bail with no end in sight and no check all balance,

:02:37.:02:39.

which means we have thousands of people on bail for 12 months or

:02:40.:02:44.

more, in fact there were examples of people on bail for several years and

:02:45.:02:53.

that's not acceptable, we need to make sure we have a proper system

:02:54.:02:56.

that is appropriate and proportionate. It's part of an

:02:57.:02:59.

overall of the system in England and Wales. For those who are bailed, in

:03:00.:03:03.

most places the limit will be 28 days. But a senior police officer

:03:04.:03:06.

will be able to grant 13-month extinction in convex cases. The

:03:07.:03:09.

police will have to seek the permission of a magistrate for

:03:10.:03:14.

anything longer that complex. -- complex. 28 days in the cycle of a

:03:15.:03:19.

police officer is not a long time to investigate a crime. You've also got

:03:20.:03:23.

to bear in mind in relation to external enquiries, what we tend to

:03:24.:03:29.

have is external resource, so we got the Forensic Science Service, CPS,

:03:30.:03:32.

and 28 days is not realistic for them to come back to us with the

:03:33.:03:36.

information we need to make decisions.

:03:37.:03:41.

We will be speaking to a criminal barrister about the changes

:03:42.:03:46.

Gibraltar has insisted it won't be used as a bargaining chip in any

:03:47.:03:51.

Brexit deal the EU wants to reach with the UK.

:03:52.:03:54.

Spain, which claims sovereignty of the British territory,

:03:55.:03:56.

culd be given a veto over decisions affecting it.

:03:57.:03:59.

But yesterday Theresa May said the UK remains steadfastly

:04:00.:04:01.

Police are holding eight people in connection with an attack

:04:02.:04:09.

on a teenage asylum seeker on Friday night.

:04:10.:04:15.

Three arrests were made yesterday and the Met Police have now released

:04:16.:04:18.

images of three more people they wish to identify.

:04:19.:04:20.

The victim, a 17-year-old boy, is in a serious but stable condition

:04:21.:04:24.

after he was allegedly chased and beaten by 20-strong gang

:04:25.:04:26.

Donald Trump has said the US will solve the North Korean

:04:27.:04:35.

In an interview with the Financial Times,

:04:36.:04:40.

the President is quoted as saying, "If China is not going to solve

:04:41.:04:43.

Mr Trump confirmed he was referring to direct, unilateral action.

:04:44.:04:47.

The comments come ahead of a visit to the US

:04:48.:04:50.

There's a warning that a third of adults in the UK,

:04:51.:05:03.

or 20 million people, are physically inactive and at risk

:05:04.:05:06.

The British Heart Foundation says it's costing the health service

:05:07.:05:15.

as Breakfast's Graham Satchell reports.

:05:16.:05:18.

Harriet had no warnings, no symptoms.

:05:19.:05:19.

She was climbing the stairs at home when she had a heart attack

:05:20.:05:23.

It was like having the rug pulled from under your feet.

:05:24.:05:28.

I have a very young family, I had a very demanding job

:05:29.:05:31.

which I loved and really enjoyed, so then to suddenly be struck

:05:32.:05:34.

by such a traumatic incident was very difficult.

:05:35.:05:37.

I didn't make time for activity or exercise so looking I think,

:05:38.:05:40.

looking back on it now, I was fairly sedentary.

:05:41.:05:45.

Harriet is not alone, research from the British Heart Foundation,

:05:46.:05:48.

shows the most inactive part of the UK is the Northwest

:05:49.:05:51.

of England where 47% of adults do not take enough exercise.

:05:52.:05:54.

Followed by Northern Ireland - where 46% are inactive.

:05:55.:05:56.

In Wales and the northeast of England it is 42%.

:05:57.:05:59.

London and the west Midlands - 40% and in Scotland,

:06:00.:06:02.

We estimate that on average most of us spend 78 days of our lives

:06:03.:06:08.

Physical activity is important but you also need to reduce

:06:09.:06:19.

the amount of time each day that you spend sitting at your computer

:06:20.:06:24.

Harriet has now changed her lifestyle, regular exercise,

:06:25.:06:31.

walking, playing with her kids, but inactivity is fast becoming one

:06:32.:06:34.

of the leading causes of premature death.

:06:35.:06:35.

Caring for a relative with terminal cancer takes an average of 70 hours

:06:36.:06:41.

a week in their final months, and costs the carer nearly 400

:06:42.:06:44.

Research published in the Palliative Medicine journal

:06:45.:06:52.

says volunteer carers are crucial to the National Health Service

:06:53.:06:54.

but need more support and training to preserve their own mental

:06:55.:06:57.

Rescue teams in Colombia are continuing to search

:06:58.:07:05.

through tons of mud and debris for anyone who might have survived

:07:06.:07:08.

the devastating mudslides in the south of the country.

:07:09.:07:15.

In the last few hours, the President has said 254

:07:16.:07:17.

people are known to have died, 43 of them children.

:07:18.:07:20.

The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa, burying entire neighbourhoods.

:07:21.:07:28.

The political parties in Northern Ireland will begin fresh

:07:29.:07:31.

talks today at Stormont aimed at restoring the devolved government.

:07:32.:07:33.

Power sharing collapsed in January because of a row

:07:34.:07:36.

between Sinn Fein and the Democratic Unionists about a botched

:07:37.:07:39.

Last week, a deadline to form a new administration

:07:40.:07:47.

Some sick and disabled claimants of the out-of-work benefit

:07:48.:07:54.

will now receive nearly ?30 a week less.

:07:55.:07:58.

The Government says bringing the benefit in line

:07:59.:08:02.

with Jobseekers Allowance will incentivise people to get

:08:03.:08:04.

Our correspondent Nikki Fox has more.

:08:05.:08:10.

Ulan Bator wants to work. But like many others with learning

:08:11.:08:16.

difficulties, she finds it difficult to get a job -- Belinda. She's

:08:17.:08:22.

getting by financially because she receives Employment and Support

:08:23.:08:25.

Allowance, an out of work benefit for people whose ill health or

:08:26.:08:28.

disability limits their ability to work. Lovely. Employment and Support

:08:29.:08:35.

Allowance is important to me because it helps for me to pay my

:08:36.:08:39.

essentials, my bills, my gas, my electric and basically to get my

:08:40.:08:45.

food in and it helps me to get out and about. Those eligible for the

:08:46.:08:50.

benefit are placed in one of two groups. Claimants in the support

:08:51.:08:53.

group are judged as being unable to work or look for work. Others, like

:08:54.:08:58.

Belinda, are placed in the work-related activity group because

:08:59.:09:02.

they've been deemed as being able to work at some point in the future.

:09:03.:09:07.

From today, all new claimants in this group will receive ?73 a week

:09:08.:09:13.

instead of ?102. Existing recipients and those in the support group

:09:14.:09:17.

aren't affected by the changes so Belinda won't see a reduction in the

:09:18.:09:22.

amount she receives. But like many disability charities, and MPs, she

:09:23.:09:25.

concerned cuts will be counter-productive and has

:09:26.:09:29.

campaigned against them. The theory is if you reduce benefits more

:09:30.:09:32.

people get into work but the truth is disabled people face lots of

:09:33.:09:37.

barriers to getting into work. Someone on an ordinary jobseekers

:09:38.:09:41.

allowance may back in work typically in six months, for a disabled person

:09:42.:09:45.

typically it takes at least two years. Try living for two years on

:09:46.:09:49.

that really low level benefit, it's really tough. The government says

:09:50.:09:53.

new claimants placed in the affected group will receive a personal

:09:54.:09:56.

support package with practical help to re-enter the workforce when they

:09:57.:09:59.

are ready. Nikki Fox, BBC News. Now this would be one to show

:10:00.:10:04.

off on your Instagram It might look like a

:10:05.:10:07.

picture of some dark, parallel universe but it's actually

:10:08.:10:10.

an image of swirling graphene ink and it's scooped the top

:10:11.:10:13.

prize in a prestigious James Macleod's picture beat more

:10:14.:10:16.

than 100 entries to claim first place in two categories

:10:17.:10:20.

in this year's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research

:10:21.:10:22.

Council photography competition. Can you see a face? I can. Tip your

:10:23.:10:39.

face a little bit to the left. Quite close together eyes. If you look at

:10:40.:10:41.

it long enough! I don't know if it is smiling or

:10:42.:10:47.

not. Slightly grumpy with a big nose. Good morning, Kat. Good

:10:48.:10:57.

morning. Did you see the face? I couldn't, I was squinting. Graphene

:10:58.:11:02.

is a wonder substance, look it up, it's amazing. I will read about it,

:11:03.:11:06.

I have been reading all morning about Celtic winning six straight

:11:07.:11:10.

titles so I haven't been able to look up graphene think facts. But I

:11:11.:11:13.

will do! -- Inc. Celtic have clinched their sixth

:11:14.:11:26.

Scottish Premiership title in a row, They did it with eight games

:11:27.:11:29.

to spare, Scott Sinclair scored a hat-trick which helped put

:11:30.:11:33.

Brendan Rodgers' side 25 points Arsenal came from behind

:11:34.:11:36.

twice to earn a 2-2 draw at home

:11:37.:11:42.

to Manchester City. It ended a run of two

:11:43.:11:44.

straight defeats for them, but leaves Arsene Wenger's side

:11:45.:11:46.

seven points outside the top four. Saracens are the only British side

:11:47.:11:49.

left in rugby union's The reigning champions beat Glasgow

:11:50.:11:52.

38-13 to secure their place in the semi-finals,

:11:53.:11:56.

where they'll face Munster. And Oxford's men win the boat race

:11:57.:11:57.

for the fourth time in five years. Their women's boat lost

:11:58.:12:01.

after getting an oar stuck Heartbreak for Oxford's women, they

:12:02.:12:09.

couldn't claw that one back. That's a look at the sports headlines for

:12:10.:12:14.

now. Hang around for the papers. Now Carol with the weather, I should

:12:15.:12:18.

look at the weather more often, it was very cold this morning?

:12:19.:12:21.

Us started off with some frost. Not just frost but patchy fog -- some of

:12:22.:12:28.

us. Yesterday in London it was very pleasant, temperatures got to 17 and

:12:29.:12:34.

we could see similar in some parts today. As we go through this week it

:12:35.:12:38.

will be mostly dry, a little bit fresher as we go through the week,

:12:39.:12:42.

chilly nights once again, some frost if you're tempted into the garden,

:12:43.:12:46.

bear that in mind, your tender plants will feel the draft. High

:12:47.:12:50.

pressure still endured but you can see a set of fronts coming in from

:12:51.:12:58.

the Atlantic. -- Dill in charge. -- still in charge. Default we have at

:12:59.:13:02.

the moment will lift, bright skies, sunny spells coming through -- the

:13:03.:13:07.

fog. We could see some low cloud. Through the afternoon we see the

:13:08.:13:11.

rain coming in, becoming quite in squads in western Scotland whereas

:13:12.:13:15.

in eastern Scotland, something drier -- in sconce. The rain pushing into

:13:16.:13:20.

Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man but for much of England we are

:13:21.:13:24.

looking at bright skies and sunny spells, highs of 16 or 17. If you're

:13:25.:13:30.

stuck under lower cloud on the coast for example, temperatures will be

:13:31.:13:34.

depressed and cloud building in south-west England and Wales just

:13:35.:13:37.

ahead of the weather fronts coming in. But for most of the UK, a

:13:38.:13:42.

pleasant and update. Through the evening and overnight, our first

:13:43.:13:45.

front is pushing through the south-east -- pleasant enough day.

:13:46.:13:50.

Some patchy rain, maybe some low cloud around once again. A

:13:51.:13:54.

particularly cold night for most but these temperatures are indicative of

:13:55.:13:58.

what you can expect in towns and cities. We're looking at between six

:13:59.:14:05.

nine. Tomorrow we've got the dregs of the rain in the south-east and

:14:06.:14:08.

Channel Islands, pushing away, leaving quite a bit of cloud behind

:14:09.:14:12.

it. The cloud thicken for drizzle and as we go further north, brighter

:14:13.:14:17.

skies, windy in the far north of Scotland and the north-west. -- the

:14:18.:14:21.

cloud thicken of. We could see some drizzle on the Western hills. --

:14:22.:14:27.

thick enough. We could see 8-15, not the high values we're looking at

:14:28.:14:32.

today. As we go from Tuesday into Wednesday, you can see the high

:14:33.:14:36.

pressure remaining across our shores, at times, windy in the

:14:37.:14:40.

north, as you can tell from the squeeze on the isobars with the

:14:41.:14:43.

weather front trotting past introducing rain at times. On

:14:44.:14:48.

Wednesday, after a chilly start, some dry weather around, not

:14:49.:14:51.

wall-to-wall blue skies by any stretch, some cloud around, but

:14:52.:14:57.

again, a pleasant springlike day with highs between 8-14. That

:14:58.:15:01.

temperature dropping a couple of degrees as we go through the week,

:15:02.:15:05.

but the weather remaining fairly settled.

:15:06.:15:07.

Thank you very much indeed, Carol, see you later on!

:15:08.:15:12.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:15:13.:15:13.

A new 28 day limit is introduced England and Wales but some officers

:15:14.:15:29.

A warning that more than 20 million people in the UK are physically

:15:30.:15:36.

inactive, costing the NHS around ?1.2bn each year.

:15:37.:15:51.

Let's look at the papers. The front page of the Times, they have done an

:15:52.:16:04.

interview with Donald Trump about North Korea. They are calling at

:16:05.:16:18.

exclusive. "It Dott" --" if China is not going to solve North Korea, we

:16:19.:16:25.

will." A 17-year-old silence it is viciously chased by a mob while

:16:26.:16:31.

bystanders do nothing. The Guardian are talking to a welfare shakeup to

:16:32.:16:36.

hit children and the bereaved. Lots of them have pictures. This is Lydia

:16:37.:16:40.

Wilkinson at her family house in the West Midlands after an attack that

:16:41.:16:48.

killed her mother and brother. On the express, daily walk to save your

:16:49.:16:56.

life. One of our main stories this morning. 20 million lazy Britons are

:16:57.:17:02.

being told to get more exercise. It's costing the NHS a lot of money.

:17:03.:17:10.

Also trump to take on North Korea also on the front of the Daily

:17:11.:17:17.

Telegraph. And also the Italian town amateur Che which was struck by an

:17:18.:17:30.

earthquake. -- Amatrice. The story on the left want to talk about.

:17:31.:17:40.

Booker and Tesco are proposing to merge. The biggest shareholder says

:17:41.:17:45.

it will give it too much power over convenience stores. It doesn't

:17:46.:17:50.

convenience stores supplied by are forced to close could it would give

:17:51.:17:59.

Tesco's too much power. A row is brewing in Rome. They are replacing

:18:00.:18:04.

the old street lights with the new LED ones. Local council says it is

:18:05.:18:08.

good because it saves money but it is a bit cold, it's not very

:18:09.:18:13.

romantic. There is a great quote. Look, if you are struggling to see

:18:14.:18:17.

the difference, I can only compare it to a candlelit dinner versus the

:18:18.:18:22.

frozen food isle of your local food grocery store. Roma residents aren't

:18:23.:18:25.

happy. They say they love that yellow romantic glow, not the harsh

:18:26.:18:35.

white light. I share the view. A bit too stark. Another shame,

:18:36.:18:52.

particularly if you are decent man who took this spectacular swallow

:18:53.:18:55.

dived into the Thames but emerged with the murky depths without his

:18:56.:18:59.

winner 's medal that had just been put around his neck minutes before.

:19:00.:19:03.

What makes it even worse is that they were to others, James and Ollie

:19:04.:19:16.

Cook. James will go back with his medal and Ollie will not. Fizzy

:19:17.:19:25.

drinks, I have done some research and most fizzy drinks seem to kill

:19:26.:19:32.

the bugs from the river. After going in? Yet. This young man, he was told

:19:33.:19:44.

he had cancer and went on a spending spree. This was 15 years ago.

:19:45.:19:51.

Another good thing, he did all the jobs. He said he had to do the

:19:52.:19:58.

kitchen and bathroom. He did it all. He spent ?650 on coy carp. It is a

:19:59.:20:08.

lot to then have to live with them for 15 more years. Remember this

:20:09.:20:15.

picture? Wait for it, wait for it. That dress. Sold it for Children In

:20:16.:20:32.

Need for ?4000. -- ?400. Battenberg dressing, they say. This is an's

:20:33.:20:38.

colours also happen to be the colours of the world 's best cake.

:20:39.:20:50.

All I can ... You are a head of the curb, Louise Minchin. Whoever has

:20:51.:20:57.

that dress, ahead of the curve. If you're the kind of person whose

:20:58.:21:02.

blood begins to boil when you spot a spelling or grammatical mistake

:21:03.:21:06.

on a sign, here's a story for you. In Bristol it's been rumoured

:21:07.:21:09.

for years that there's somebody who goes out under

:21:10.:21:12.

the cover of darkness - correcting mistakes on street

:21:13.:21:14.

signs and shop fronts. Breakfast's Jon Kay has tracked down

:21:15.:21:17.

the mysterious individual who describes himself

:21:18.:21:19.

as a "grammar vigilante". Good morning. Yes, he takes this

:21:20.:21:36.

really, really seriously and goes to great lengths to get it right it is

:21:37.:21:41.

one thing, you are talking about your blood boiling and seizing

:21:42.:21:44.

inside. It is another thing to take matters into their own hands. --

:21:45.:21:51.

seething. There are three shops up there where he has changed the

:21:52.:21:55.

signs. There is one he which is a good example. Gentle men's

:21:56.:22:01.

hairstylist. It did not have an apostrophe and now it does. He

:22:02.:22:05.

matched it in with the font and goes to great lengths to get it right.

:22:06.:22:09.

He is the Banksy of bad punctuation. Roaming the streets of Bristol,

:22:10.:22:20.

righting wrongs. I'm a grammar vigilante. I've been doing it for

:22:21.:22:26.

quite a lot of years now. I believe it is the cause worth pursuing.

:22:27.:22:31.

Working alone and in secret, he makes punctuation marks to stick on

:22:32.:22:35.

errant signs. Try to match the colour of the apostrophe that is

:22:36.:22:40.

needed on the shop... He has even made a special device which he

:22:41.:22:44.

called The Apostrophiser which all out into reach the highest shops. A

:22:45.:22:49.

quick demonstration on the dining room wall. What I need to do is turn

:22:50.:22:55.

the cost of Pfizer are around so I can get the roly-poly end. -- The

:22:56.:23:02.

Apostrophiser. By day, he is a highly qualified professional. Only

:23:03.:23:06.

a handful of his closest friends and family know what he gets up to after

:23:07.:23:13.

dark. My heart has been thumping. I have got to make sure it is

:23:14.:23:18.

technically right. He started his campaign 13 years ago. This was the

:23:19.:23:30.

first sign he tackled. Amy's Nail's. The apostrophe, it deleted. He has

:23:31.:23:35.

left his mark throughout this city, his punctuation mark. There will be

:23:36.:23:43.

some people, maybe the owners of these shops are saying, hang on a

:23:44.:23:46.

minute, you have got permission, we haven't asked you, what you are

:23:47.:23:51.

doing is a crime, vandalism. What you think? I think it's more of a

:23:52.:23:54.

crime to have the apostrophe is wrong in the first place. I think I

:23:55.:24:00.

can do it without causing offence and just discreetly do it. There is

:24:01.:24:06.

one sign he has been desperate to correct for years. Cambridge

:24:07.:24:18.

Motor's. It just makes me feel... I just think, this is just wrong. It's

:24:19.:24:22.

not meant to be like this. It really does need sorting out. The garage is

:24:23.:24:27.

right outside Bristolposmac- curate it present but tonight, he is going

:24:28.:24:41.

for it. -- Bristol 's high security prison. He covers the Rogue'. Notice

:24:42.:24:54.

anything? Not really. We went to find the man who owned the garage.

:24:55.:25:07.

Who has done that? I thank him. It's good to find people that care about

:25:08.:25:14.

English grammar, isn't it? When you go past a sign you have corrected,

:25:15.:25:19.

you feel all it says the word you are thinking of is pride. I'm the

:25:20.:25:24.

one who has been bad, sorted it out and gotten it grammatically correct.

:25:25.:25:28.

It makes my heart swell slightly when I seek the correct apostrophe.

:25:29.:25:39.

See what I meant when I said he takes it very seriously? He takes it

:25:40.:25:43.

very, very seriously. When you start looking and start talking to the

:25:44.:25:47.

sky, everywhere you go, you start seeing apostrophes. You will start

:25:48.:25:59.

to look at things differently. Let us know this morning if you have any

:26:00.:26:04.

signs that drive you mad. Any bits of punctuation that you don't like

:26:05.:26:08.

that infuriate you, we have had one already this morning from Katherine

:26:09.:26:17.

via Twitter. Errant apostrophes in there. I think it would sort out any

:26:18.:26:25.

apostrophe. He has opened up a can of worms. That's a worms without an

:26:26.:26:31.

apostrophe. I'm so glad you cleared that up. I was putting something on

:26:32.:26:44.

social media and then you start becoming convinced when you're

:26:45.:26:47.

putting something up on Twitter and Facebook, is that right? Is that

:26:48.:26:53.

wrong? You know what? You are worrying me. He does take very

:26:54.:26:55.

seriously. The Apostrophiser, presented

:26:56.:26:55.

by Jon Kay, is on BBC Radio 4 I have corrected at sign in a

:26:56.:27:13.

dressing room before. At West Ham's old ground. I found the picture. The

:27:14.:27:26.

sign in the old dressing room and said winning, its what we're here

:27:27.:27:27.

for. There was no'. -- spostrophe. You're watching

:27:28.:27:44.

Breakfast from BBC News. Grabbing a coffee

:27:45.:27:46.

on the way to work? Spare a thought about what happens

:27:47.:27:49.

to the take-away cup - seven million of them are thrown

:27:50.:27:52.

away in the UK every day and most We'll find out about a new scheme

:27:53.:27:56.

to get us to recycle them. Time now to get the news,

:27:57.:28:01.

travel and weather where you are. Plenty more on our website

:28:02.:31:20.

at the usual address. Now, though, it's back

:31:21.:31:22.

to Louise and Dan. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:31:23.:31:25.

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. and sport in a moment,

:31:26.:31:41.

but also on Breakfast this morning: Caring for a relative with cancer

:31:42.:31:49.

can be all consuming, We'll hear about the hidden costs

:31:50.:31:52.

of looking after a loved one. Also this morning,

:31:53.:31:56.

from using underhand tactics on suppliers, to

:31:57.:31:58.

buy-one-get-one-free offers, are supermarkets working

:31:59.:32:00.

hard enough to improve? The woman in charge of regulating

:32:01.:32:04.

our biggest retailers will be And may we introduce

:32:05.:32:07.

you to the one and only Sergeant Pepper's Lonely

:32:08.:32:12.

Hearts Club Band. The famous Beatles' album

:32:13.:32:13.

turns 50 this year. But now a summary of this

:32:14.:32:17.

morning's main news. Significant restrictions on the use

:32:18.:32:21.

of bail by police in England The amount of time a suspect

:32:22.:32:24.

released from custody can remain on bail will be limited

:32:25.:32:29.

to 28 days in most cases. According to the Home Office,

:32:30.:32:32.

the move will end the injustice of people left in limbo

:32:33.:32:35.

for months or even years. But the Police Federation has warned

:32:36.:32:38.

the change will be unrealistic 28 days in the cycle of a police

:32:39.:32:41.

officer is not a long time You've also got to bear in mind

:32:42.:32:54.

in relation to external enquiries, what we tend to have

:32:55.:32:58.

is external resource, so we've got the Forensic

:32:59.:33:00.

Science Service, CPS, and 28 days is not realistic

:33:01.:33:02.

for them to come back to us with the information

:33:03.:33:06.

we require to make decisions. Gibraltar has insisted it won't be

:33:07.:33:14.

used as a bargaining chip in any

:33:15.:33:20.

Brexit deal the EU wants Spain, which claims

:33:21.:33:22.

sovereignty of the British territory, could be given a veto

:33:23.:33:26.

over decisions affecting it. But yesterday Theresa May said

:33:27.:33:28.

the UK remains steadfastly Police are holding eight people

:33:29.:33:31.

in connection with an attack on a teenage asylum

:33:32.:33:34.

seeker on Friday night. Three arrests were made

:33:35.:33:36.

yesterday and the Met Police have

:33:37.:33:39.

now released images of three more The victim, a 17-year-old boy,

:33:40.:33:41.

is in a serious but stable condition after he was allegedly chased

:33:42.:33:46.

and beaten by gang of 20 people Donald Trump has said the US

:33:47.:33:49.

will solve the North Korean In an interview with

:33:50.:33:54.

the Financial Times, the President is quoted as saying,

:33:55.:34:02.

"If China is not going to solve Mr Trump confirmed he was referring

:34:03.:34:05.

to direct, unilateral action. The comments come ahead

:34:06.:34:09.

of a visit to the US There's a warning that a third

:34:10.:34:12.

of adults in the UK, or 20 million people,

:34:13.:34:17.

are physically inactive and at risk The British Heart Foundation says

:34:18.:34:20.

it's costing the health service over ?1 billion a year as

:34:21.:34:25.

Breakfast's Graham Satchell reports. Harriet had no

:34:26.:34:31.

warnings, no symptoms. She was climbing the stairs at home

:34:32.:34:32.

when she had a heart attack It was like having the rug pulled

:34:33.:34:36.

from under your feet. I have a very young family,

:34:37.:34:45.

I had a very demanding job which I loved and really enjoyed,

:34:46.:34:48.

so then to suddenly be struck by such a traumatic incident

:34:49.:34:51.

was very difficult. I didn't make time for activity

:34:52.:34:54.

or exercise so I think looking back on it now,

:34:55.:34:57.

I was fairly sedentary. Harriet is not alone, research

:34:58.:34:59.

from the British Heart Foundation, shows the most inactive part

:35:00.:35:02.

of the UK is the Northwest of England where 47% of adults

:35:03.:35:07.

do not take enough exercise. Followed by Northern Ireland -

:35:08.:35:09.

where 46% are inactive. In Wales and the northeast

:35:10.:35:12.

of England it is 42%. London and the west Midlands -

:35:13.:35:15.

40% and in Scotland, We estimate that on average most

:35:16.:35:18.

of us spend 78 days of our life Physical activity is important

:35:19.:35:29.

but you also need to reduce the amount of time each day that

:35:30.:35:36.

you spend sitting at your computer Harriet has now changed her

:35:37.:35:40.

lifestyle, regular exercise, walking, playing with her kids,

:35:41.:35:47.

but inactivity is fast becoming one of the leading causes

:35:48.:35:51.

of premature death. Rescue teams in Colombia

:35:52.:35:53.

are continuing to search through tons of mud and debris

:35:54.:35:59.

for anyone who might have survived the devastating mudslides

:36:00.:36:02.

in the south of the country. In the last few hours,

:36:03.:36:06.

the President has said 254 people are known to have died,

:36:07.:36:09.

43 of them children. The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa,

:36:10.:36:12.

burying entire neighbourhoods. The political parties

:36:13.:36:28.

in Northern Ireland will begin fresh talks today at Stormont aimed at

:36:29.:36:30.

restoring the devolved government. Power sharing collapsed

:36:31.:36:33.

in January because of a row between Sinn Fein and the Democratic

:36:34.:36:35.

Unionists about a botched Last week, a deadline to form

:36:36.:36:38.

a new administration Doris Day has received an unusual

:36:39.:36:41.

and perhaps unwelcome surprise on her birthday,

:36:42.:36:47.

she's two years older Day always said that her

:36:48.:36:48.

date of birth was April But her original birth certificate

:36:49.:36:54.

has been uncovered showing she was born in 1922,

:36:55.:36:58.

which makes her 95. Do you think that... I think lots of

:36:59.:37:15.

things. Do you think that she was in her 30s when she stole a few years

:37:16.:37:20.

off her age. Does it matter? I always say I'm older than I am. Do

:37:21.:37:27.

you? I forget. How old are you? She's 75! Honestly, I go through

:37:28.:37:33.

years thinking I'm a year older than I am and then I think, I'm only...

:37:34.:37:40.

She's 38! It's all on Wikipedia, that well-known website! This is the

:37:41.:37:49.

most unsurprising football news of the season, eight games to spare,

:37:50.:37:54.

Rangers... Celtic, that would have been a terrible mistake! They are

:37:55.:37:59.

once again the Scottish Premiership champions.

:38:00.:38:02.

They were head and shoulders above the rest of the competition,

:38:03.:38:08.

unbeaten domesticly, of a mockable achievement. -- a remarkable

:38:09.:38:12.

achievement. It may be only the first week

:38:13.:38:13.

of April but Celtic have clinched their sixth

:38:14.:38:16.

Scottish Premiership title in a row So they've done it in style

:38:17.:38:18.

with eight games to spare, Scott Sinclair scored a hat-trick

:38:19.:38:23.

which helped put Brendan Rodgers' side 25 points clear

:38:24.:38:25.

of second-placed Aberdeen. Six titles in a row equals a record

:38:26.:38:27.

set by Rangers 88 years ago. I'm very honoured and very

:38:28.:38:39.

privileged to manage Glasgow Celtic. Win you support a team like this as

:38:40.:38:43.

a boy and you know the great history of the club -- when. I was happy to

:38:44.:38:49.

take on the responsibility to make the supporters dream, make them

:38:50.:38:52.

happy and hopefully we've done that this coming season and hopefully for

:38:53.:38:54.

the years to come. There were two games

:38:55.:38:55.

in the Premier League. Arsenal are still sixth

:38:56.:38:57.

and Manchester City fourth after a 2-2 draw at

:38:58.:39:00.

the Emirates stadium. City, twice took the lead

:39:01.:39:02.

through Leroy Sane then Walcott and Mustafi

:39:03.:39:04.

scored for the Gunners. The point means they remain

:39:05.:39:07.

seven points behind City It was a game where we weren't

:39:08.:39:21.

completely at our best on the fluency and the technical front

:39:22.:39:25.

because we were under huge pressure but we showed strong mental

:39:26.:39:29.

resources and refused to lie down against a team who is always

:39:30.:39:33.

dangerous going forward and, at the end of the day, we got a point that

:39:34.:39:35.

will help us. At the other end of the table,

:39:36.:39:36.

Middlesbrough wasted as they shared a goalless draw

:39:37.:39:39.

with Swansea at the Liberty Stadium. The result keeps Swansea just

:39:40.:39:43.

above the relegation zone. The 163rd Boat Race

:39:44.:39:45.

went the way of Oxford as they beat Cambridge by just over

:39:46.:39:52.

a length for their fourth Oxford, who were favourites entering

:39:53.:39:56.

the race on the Thames, and Cambridge never quite

:39:57.:40:01.

able close the gap. Oxford now trail

:40:02.:40:05.

Cambridge 82-80 overall. I think of the three races, that's

:40:06.:40:15.

probably my favourite. The harder it is the more you can savour it at the

:40:16.:40:20.

end. Hats off to Cambridge, they did well, but we were just better on the

:40:21.:40:23.

day and that's what it's all about. A disastrous start cost Oxford

:40:24.:40:25.

in the women's race. One of their oars got stuck handing

:40:26.:40:27.

Cambridge a simple victory. The light blues won by half a minute

:40:28.:40:31.

in a course record time too. Saracens will be the only

:40:32.:40:36.

British club in rugby union's European

:40:37.:40:43.

Champions Cup semi-finals. too strong for Glasgow

:40:44.:40:44.

Warriors. Chris Ashton scored two of Saracens

:40:45.:40:47.

four tries as they won 38-13. They'll face Munster

:40:48.:40:50.

for a place in the final. Roger Federer says he'll probably

:40:51.:40:53.

not play again until the French Open at the end of May after winning his

:40:54.:40:56.

third title of the year. He beat Rafa Nadal in straight sets

:40:57.:41:00.

to lift the Miami Open title 24 hours after Britain's Johanna

:41:01.:41:03.

Konta won the women's event. Federer moves up to fourth

:41:04.:41:06.

in the world rankings but will take the next

:41:07.:41:08.

month off to rest. Spare a thought for American

:41:09.:41:13.

golfer Lexi Thompson, she was leading the first women's

:41:14.:41:32.

golf major of the season by three She was left in tears

:41:33.:41:36.

when she was approached by a rules official and told she would be

:41:37.:41:41.

punished for an infringement spotted by a television viewer

:41:42.:41:44.

in her previous round. It cost her four shots

:41:45.:41:46.

and ultimately the title which went She had to go into a play-off and

:41:47.:41:55.

she was so rattled by the four shot penalty in the final round that

:41:56.:41:58.

mentally she didn't have what it took to finish it off,

:41:59.:42:01.

understandably, all because someone at home was watching and said, I

:42:02.:42:06.

don't think that was right. E-mailed in... If you watch the video, she

:42:07.:42:11.

does put her ball down in a slightly different position but it's one of

:42:12.:42:15.

those things, golf is struggling to get people involved, if you look at

:42:16.:42:20.

it and you think, do I really want to be involved in that sport? The

:42:21.:42:24.

same with Dustin Johnson at the U.S. Open and whether his ball was moved

:42:25.:42:28.

or not. It's so frustrating, haven't you got to go with what happens at

:42:29.:42:33.

that moment? That's the other argument, someone said today a new

:42:34.:42:39.

rule in golf, you can't e-mail in 24 hours after. Tiger Woods said since

:42:40.:42:43.

when are the people at home the officials? If it worked like that,

:42:44.:42:47.

there would never be a decision made at all. Imagine being cold when you

:42:48.:42:52.

are six holes away from winning and someone comes and says you are being

:42:53.:42:56.

penalised for shots for something you did yesterday -- being told.

:42:57.:43:00.

Poor old Lexi Thompson! Around 30,000 people live

:43:01.:43:02.

in Gibraltar but it's already entered centre-stage

:43:03.:43:05.

in negotiations over Britain's exit After its overwhelming vote

:43:06.:43:07.

to remain in the EU in last year's referendum, our correspondent

:43:08.:43:11.

Tom Burridge reports from the territory on the mood

:43:12.:43:13.

surrounding the Brexit talks. Distinct and disputed. The rock's

:43:14.:43:25.

relationship with its neighbour has always been fractious. But Spain is

:43:26.:43:35.

emboldened by Brexit. Cue defiance from this very Gibraltarian and

:43:36.:43:39.

British cabbie. You can close the border down, starve us economically,

:43:40.:43:42.

at the end of the day whoever remains in Gibraltar, there's only

:43:43.:43:48.

one person, one Gibraltarian, Gibraltar will be British. That's

:43:49.:43:53.

all that counts, that's all that matters. Britain's support for this

:43:54.:43:57.

British territory unflinchingly. But there is concern here about what

:43:58.:44:03.

Brexit will mean -- unflinching. You have to look at our interests.

:44:04.:44:09.

30,000 people in Gibraltar, are they that important, I don't think so --

:44:10.:44:14.

look at important is. We always manage to get by so I'm sure we will

:44:15.:44:19.

find a way -- look at importance. Gibraltar's moneymaking machine is

:44:20.:44:26.

an success story. Paul Graham owns an investment company here -- is a

:44:27.:44:34.

success story. We need the EU market. I think Gibraltar will be

:44:35.:44:40.

fully exposed and I think Spain will have some sort of sovereignty on

:44:41.:44:44.

Gibraltar because of the economic aspect. And with southern Spain just

:44:45.:44:48.

over the border still struggling with low growth and high

:44:49.:44:53.

unemployment, Madrid has long argued Gibraltar's setup is unfair.

:44:54.:44:59.

Gibraltar in the EU has it all. It's an economic sweet spot with low

:45:00.:45:04.

taxes and access to Spain just over there and the rest of Europe. But

:45:05.:45:08.

the rock is now a bargaining chip for the European side and the wider

:45:09.:45:13.

negotiation between Britain and the EU looks even more complicated. But

:45:14.:45:20.

a bad deal for Gibraltar and Spaniards will also suffer.

:45:21.:45:25.

Thousands come here for work. Mercedes is hoping for the best.

:45:26.:45:30.

Many, many people are working in Gibraltar. Also Gibraltar can go out

:45:31.:45:37.

to enjoy our place. There needs to be a friendly agreement? Yes, of

:45:38.:45:42.

course. Gibraltar thrives on being a place apart. And with our exit from

:45:43.:45:48.

the EU, its rocky relationship with its neighbour is in British hands.

:45:49.:45:52.

Tom Burridge, BBC News, in Gibraltar.

:45:53.:45:54.

We will be live in Gibraltar a bit later.

:45:55.:46:04.

Here's Carol with a look at this morning's weather.

:46:05.:46:08.

The weather isn't too bad today. Though it is a chilly start.

:46:09.:46:14.

Particularly across England and Wales with temperatures widely

:46:15.:46:18.

between freezing and plus two. As we head through the course of this

:46:19.:46:22.

week, we will find it will remain fairly settled. It will be a little

:46:23.:46:27.

bit fresher than wheat -- it was over the weekend and that will lead

:46:28.:46:31.

us into some chilly nights. If you have been tempted into the garden,

:46:32.:46:37.

buried in mind. Pressure still largely in charge. We have weather

:46:38.:46:41.

front coming in from the West. That will introduce rain. Some frost and

:46:42.:46:46.

fog and most of it will lift. Exception around the English Channel

:46:47.:46:50.

were at times it will laugh onshore. We will see how the band of rain

:46:51.:46:54.

through the course of the day will to advance. It will be moving across

:46:55.:47:04.

Northern Ireland, across the Isle of Man. The cloud just building all the

:47:05.:47:09.

time. Moving through Central parts of England and Wales. A fine

:47:10.:47:12.

afternoon with sunny spells or at least dry spells. Back into the

:47:13.:47:20.

south-west. As you can see, the cloud will build. If you stop under

:47:21.:47:26.

the low cloud or the fog, it will feel more like nine Celsius and that

:47:27.:47:30.

will feel a bit nippy. Through the evening and overnight, he comes the

:47:31.:47:36.

weather front. As it pushes towards the east and south-east, another

:47:37.:47:39.

week one comes in hot on its heels. There will also be an other lot of

:47:40.:47:43.

cloud around tonight with fog forming. Generally speaking for

:47:44.:47:47.

most, it won't be as cold and night as the one that has just gone. We

:47:48.:47:52.

are looking at between six and nine Celsius. Then tomorrow, we start off

:47:53.:47:57.

with the patchy rain in the south-east. It will be fairly patchy

:47:58.:48:01.

and will clear quite readily, leaving a bit of cloud behind it.

:48:02.:48:05.

Again a sick enough for the odd bit of drizzle. As we move further

:48:06.:48:10.

north, some bright skies summer sunshine shine and show us. --

:48:11.:48:21.

showers. Temperatures 82 to 15. -- 8- 15. The winter dominates except

:48:22.:48:28.

for in the north. It will squeeze those isobars. It will also be

:48:29.:48:34.

weighed at times. For the rest of the week, it doesn't remain fairly

:48:35.:48:41.

settled with a bit more clout and a bit of drizzle. Sorry about my

:48:42.:48:48.

voice. -- cloud. Going have a cup of tea. Maybe something stronger... If

:48:49.:48:57.

it was something stronger than the next weather will be brilliant! It

:48:58.:48:58.

always is. I can't wait until 715. The Government's new Apprenticeship

:48:59.:49:04.

Levy comes into force this week - it's a tax on businesses to pay

:49:05.:49:07.

for training young people. But the scheme has been

:49:08.:49:10.

criticised as "unfocused" This was announced by George Osborne

:49:11.:49:12.

back in 2015, and it's to raise ALL larger businesses have to pay

:49:13.:49:21.

into a centralised fund every month and then those firms can apply

:49:22.:49:26.

for funding to train apprentices. It affects about 22,000

:49:27.:49:29.

businesses in the UK. The levy will mean that we will be

:49:30.:49:46.

able to spend by 2022.5 billion on apprenticeships. Not just big

:49:47.:49:50.

business but supporting small business. -- spend 2.5 billion x 20

:49:51.:50:04.

20. One group concerned about the impact

:50:05.:50:04.

of the fund is the think tank With me now is policy

:50:05.:50:07.

adviser Joe Dromey. On one hand, good news but we know

:50:08.:50:14.

that tactical skills are desperately needed but you don't think the

:50:15.:50:17.

scheme is quite right? No, it's worth saying first that we did

:50:18.:50:21.

welcome the introduction in the apprenticeship levy. Recognition in

:50:22.:50:25.

the government long overdue that more needs to be done to boost

:50:26.:50:34.

employee involvement. We have some concerns about the exact way in

:50:35.:50:38.

which the apprenticeship levy will be implemented. Particularly the

:50:39.:50:45.

emphasis on quantity over quality. It won't address the deep regional

:50:46.:50:52.

inequalities that scar our country. There was a thing that you did. Is

:50:53.:51:03.

there an image issue with apprenticeships? I think this is as

:51:04.:51:06.

a result of the last Labour governments. There was a strong

:51:07.:51:12.

emphasis of young people going to university which was really

:51:13.:51:14.

important and achieved some impressive results. Much less

:51:15.:51:20.

attention was paid to the other end. The 50% plus that don't go to

:51:21.:51:25.

university and equipping them for with the skills they needed to

:51:26.:51:29.

succeed in the economy. It is great to have a bit more of a focus on

:51:30.:51:34.

apprenticeships. But we think that focusing on boosting the numbers,

:51:35.:51:39.

the government hitting their target is their main aim and it might

:51:40.:51:42.

actually devalue the apprenticeship branch. They might not necessarily

:51:43.:51:51.

be the quality. Some focus on raising the money but also it would

:51:52.:51:55.

make the north-south divide bigger, you believe. How does it work? The

:51:56.:52:03.

levy only affects employers with ?3 million of more. On average, there

:52:04.:52:11.

is higher pay in the south. The levy will raise more money in London and

:52:12.:52:15.

the south-east and we believe will stimulate training them all.

:52:16.:52:19.

Arguably, it is needed there less because levels of qualification,

:52:20.:52:23.

productivity and indeed pay, are higher in London and the south-east.

:52:24.:52:27.

We think more needs to be done to boost skills and quality and pay in

:52:28.:52:31.

the rest of the country and that's why we are calling for a skills levy

:52:32.:52:35.

where some of the money will be devolved to local areas to invest in

:52:36.:52:40.

local training. So difficult to get it right, isn't it? More from me

:52:41.:52:43.

after seven. Fans have bought it

:52:44.:52:50.

in their millions, musicians the world over have talked

:52:51.:52:53.

about its lasting influence and it's been voted the most

:52:54.:52:56.

important album of all time Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts

:52:57.:52:58.

Club Band was recorded by The Beatles 50-years ago

:52:59.:53:01.

and all this week on Breakfast we're taking a fresh listen

:53:02.:53:04.

to the album widely considered Our arts editor

:53:05.:53:07.

Will Gompertz has been to Abbey Road Studios

:53:08.:53:10.

where it was recorded. # We hope you enjoy the show. It was

:53:11.:53:28.

the time of Sergeant Pepper. According to the guys, what we

:53:29.:53:34.

should do, make this record now under another persona. We will be

:53:35.:53:40.

this other band. It will free us. The idea was we could bring anything

:53:41.:53:45.

we wanted because now, there was no lead on what we could do.

:53:46.:53:51.

It was 1967, the Beatles had stopped touring and wanted to make a record

:53:52.:53:59.

unlike any other. Paul McCartney's idea of a concept album was

:54:00.:54:08.

inspired. Sergeant Pepper was recorded at the now legendary Abbey

:54:09.:54:12.

Road Studios in London. The so-called fifth Beatle was looking

:54:13.:54:15.

after the sound with a little help from his friends. Upstairs here is

:54:16.:54:18.

wet George Martin will be twiddling all the knobs with any town centre

:54:19.:54:23.

was in charge of the technical side of music and hopefully if we go

:54:24.:54:27.

here, we will be there -- he will be there. Hello, can. Nice to meet you.

:54:28.:54:34.

This is where it all happened? This is number two in Abbey Road. It is

:54:35.:54:38.

when charge of Pepper was made. It is amazing that you can come up in

:54:39.:54:44.

50 years after we made it. Downstairs and they are in the

:54:45.:54:48.

studio is whether boys were. Absolutely. Could you give me a

:54:49.:54:54.

quick tour? Absolutely. This is where the Beatles made all of their

:54:55.:54:59.

recordings. 190 here at Abbey Road. Usually the setup was only here.

:55:00.:55:03.

Drums were over here. The vocals were normally placed here and the

:55:04.:55:07.

guitar amps here. Obviously things like pianos, we moved around.

:55:08.:55:12.

Without this machine, Sergeant Pepper could not have been made.

:55:13.:55:17.

Through this tape machine that I invented artificial double tracking.

:55:18.:55:22.

What is artificial double tracking? Well, we want to double trap a

:55:23.:55:28.

voice. Laying down twice. Yes, you put the second was on top of the

:55:29.:55:31.

first and it makes a completely different sound. It was matched by

:55:32.:55:37.

the Beatles's appetite a variety. Indian classical and even tried Chas

:55:38.:55:48.

included on the album. -- trad jazz. The key is how you mix all of those

:55:49.:55:53.

styles because sometimes, you know, curry for breakfast doesn't work but

:55:54.:55:57.

if you put something in there that makes it more anglicised, it kind of

:55:58.:56:01.

works. For me, that's what the Beatles did. They found a way of

:56:02.:56:05.

mixing all of those amazing world elements into an element that is

:56:06.:56:10.

predominantly their own from daytime but that flavours. -- their tongue.

:56:11.:56:24.

Everybody has their own favourite track on Sergeant Pepper. For me it

:56:25.:56:29.

is this song, a day in the life. Still resonating among fans, dans...

:56:30.:56:43.

# He blew his mind out in a car. # He didn't notice that hit the

:56:44.:56:49.

lights had changed. The crowd of people stopped instead... So many

:56:50.:57:04.

amazing stats. The original lyrics were would you throw tomatoes at me.

:57:05.:57:13.

It quite brilliantly refused. He changed it because people would

:57:14.:57:14.

fling tomatoes at him. We will be discussing the legacy

:57:15.:57:16.

of Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band with music

:57:17.:57:20.

journalist Paul Gambaccini, Now, though, it's back

:57:21.:57:21.

to Louise and Dan. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:57:22.:00:43.

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. A big change in the way

:00:44.:00:50.

police bail is used. A new 28-day limit has come

:00:51.:00:53.

in to force in England and Wales but some officers are

:00:54.:00:57.

unhappy with the move. Good morning, it's

:00:58.:01:15.

Monday 3rd of April. Gibraltar insists it won't be used

:01:16.:01:18.

as a bargaining chip How our physical inactivity is said

:01:19.:01:21.

to be costing the NHS ?1.2 After a year long review,

:01:22.:01:28.

the City regulator warns that more In sport, six titles

:01:29.:01:42.

in a row for Celtic. They take the Scottish Premiership

:01:43.:01:49.

with eight games to spare. Do spelling mistakes drive you nuts?

:01:50.:02:08.

Bad punctuation on signs makes your blood boil? We meet the man from

:02:09.:02:14.

this city taking the issue into his own hands, calling himself a grammar

:02:15.:02:16.

vigilante. some frost around and fog too

:02:17.:02:19.

but that will give way to a bright But in the west, expect some rain

:02:20.:02:25.

in Northern Ireland and western Significant restrictions on the use

:02:26.:02:30.

of bail by police in England The amount of time a suspect

:02:31.:02:36.

released from custody can remain on bail will be limited

:02:37.:02:41.

to 28 days in most cases. The decision is in response

:02:42.:02:46.

to concerns that people were being left in limbo

:02:47.:02:49.

for months or even years. But police have questioned the move,

:02:50.:02:51.

as our home affairs correspondent, Famous faces who have been under

:02:52.:02:54.

police investigation, finally told they wouldn't be facing

:02:55.:03:03.

charges but only after long They were among the 5,000

:03:04.:03:06.

still on bail after a year. The government says the system

:03:07.:03:12.

needed rebalancing. Well, what's happened in the past

:03:13.:03:14.

is people could be put on bail with no end in sight

:03:15.:03:18.

and no check or balance, which means we had thousands

:03:19.:03:22.

of people could be on bail for 12 months or more, in fact

:03:23.:03:25.

there were examples of people on bail for several years

:03:26.:03:28.

and that's not acceptable, we need to make sure

:03:29.:03:31.

we have a proper system that's It's part of an overall of the bail

:03:32.:03:33.

system in England and Wales. From now on, some suspects won't be

:03:34.:03:38.

subject to police bail at all. For those who are bailed,

:03:39.:03:41.

in most places the limit But a senior police officer will be

:03:42.:03:44.

able to grant one 3-month extinction The police will have to seek

:03:45.:03:49.

the permission of a magistrate The Police Federation,

:03:50.:03:53.

which represents rank-and-file officers, is highly

:03:54.:03:56.

critical of the changes. 28 days in the cycle of a police

:03:57.:03:59.

officer is not a long time You've also got to bear in mind

:04:00.:04:03.

in relation to external enquiries, what we tend to have

:04:04.:04:08.

is external resource, so we've got the Forensic

:04:09.:04:11.

Science Service, CPS, and 28 days is not realistic

:04:12.:04:14.

for them to come back to us with the information

:04:15.:04:17.

we require to make decisions. The Police Federation said

:04:18.:04:19.

the old system protected complainants and victims and helped

:04:20.:04:22.

prevent further offending. We will be speaking to a criminal

:04:23.:04:24.

barrister about the changes to police bail in just

:04:25.:04:32.

under ten minutes. Gibraltar has insisted it won't be

:04:33.:04:36.

used as a bargaining chip in any Brexit deal the European Union wants

:04:37.:04:40.

to reach with the UK. Spain, which claims

:04:41.:04:43.

sovereignty of the British territory, could be given a veto

:04:44.:04:44.

over decisions affecting it. But yesterday Theresa May said

:04:45.:04:48.

the UK remains steadfastly Our correspondent Tom Burridge

:04:49.:04:50.

is there for us this morning. Good morning, Tom. How much more

:04:51.:05:04.

difficult does this make negotiating for Theresa May do you think? Good

:05:05.:05:10.

morning, Dan. It gives an added dimension to that already

:05:11.:05:13.

complicated negotiation between Britain and the EU. The Spanish

:05:14.:05:16.

government have been quiet over the weekend about the idea that Spain

:05:17.:05:20.

could have a veto or the final say about whether that Brexit deal that

:05:21.:05:24.

Britain might get with the EU can apply to Gibraltar or not. One

:05:25.:05:28.

interview from the Spanish Foreign Minister saying he was happy about

:05:29.:05:37.

that. What could happen is if, when Britain gets that final dealmaker

:05:38.:05:40.

vitiated with the European Union, then it's quite possible now that

:05:41.:05:44.

Spain can wade in and say aspects of that deal can't apply to Gibraltar.

:05:45.:05:48.

And it probably would do that on economic grounds, because in the

:05:49.:05:51.

last few years Spain's grievance about Gibraltar has really been

:05:52.:05:56.

economic, it hasn't really attacked the sovereignty issue because

:05:57.:05:59.

Gibraltar has low taxes, the corporation tax rate is around 10%

:06:00.:06:03.

and over the border in southern Spain it's around 35%. But Britain

:06:04.:06:09.

and Gibraltar putting on a united front. Tom, thanks for that. Good to

:06:10.:06:11.

talk to you. Police are holding eight people

:06:12.:06:12.

in connection with an attack on a teenage asylum

:06:13.:06:14.

seeker on Friday night. Three arrests were made yesterday

:06:15.:06:16.

and the Met Police have now released images of three more people

:06:17.:06:20.

they wish to identify. The victim, a 17-year-old boy,

:06:21.:06:22.

is in a serious but stable condition after he was allegedly chased

:06:23.:06:25.

and beaten by a gang of 20 people Donald Trump has said the US

:06:26.:06:29.

will solve the North Korean In an interview with

:06:30.:06:36.

the Financial Times, the President is quoted as saying,

:06:37.:06:40.

"If China is not going to solve Mr Trump confirmed he was referring

:06:41.:06:43.

to direct, unilateral action. The comments come ahead

:06:44.:06:49.

of a visit to the US There's a warning that a third

:06:50.:06:52.

of adults in the UK, or 20 million people,

:06:53.:07:01.

are physically inactive and at risk The British Heart Foundation says

:07:02.:07:04.

it's costing the health service as Breakfast's Graham Satchell

:07:05.:07:07.

reports. Harriet had no

:07:08.:07:12.

warnings, no symptoms. She was climbing the stairs at home

:07:13.:07:14.

when she had a heart attack It was like having the rug pulled

:07:15.:07:18.

from under your feet. I have a very young family,

:07:19.:07:23.

I had a very demanding job which I loved and really enjoyed,

:07:24.:07:26.

so then to suddenly be struck by such a traumatic incident

:07:27.:07:29.

was very difficult. I didn't make time for activity

:07:30.:07:32.

or exercise so I think looking back on it now,

:07:33.:07:35.

I was fairly sedentary. Harriet is not alone, research

:07:36.:07:39.

from the British Heart Foundation, shows the most inactive part

:07:40.:07:42.

of the UK is the Northwest of England where 47% of adults

:07:43.:07:45.

do not take enough exercise. Followed by Northern Ireland -

:07:46.:07:49.

where 46% are inactive. In Wales and the northeast

:07:50.:07:51.

of England it is 42%. London and the west Midlands -

:07:52.:07:54.

40% and in Scotland, We estimate that on average most

:07:55.:07:57.

of us spend 78 days of our life Physical activity is important

:07:58.:08:10.

but you also need to reduce the amount of time each day that

:08:11.:08:16.

you spend sitting at your computer Harriet has now changed her

:08:17.:08:19.

lifestyle, regular exercise, walking, playing with her kids,

:08:20.:08:26.

but inactivity is fast becoming one of the leading causes

:08:27.:08:28.

of premature death. In the last a few moments the City

:08:29.:08:30.

regulator has announced new plans to keep our credit card

:08:31.:08:40.

bills under control. It's a pretty heavy document, we've

:08:41.:08:53.

been looking at this for about 15 months and this is the results of

:08:54.:08:58.

the findings. It is looking at persistent debt, people in debt for

:08:59.:09:01.

so long it is costing them more, they define that as the amount of

:09:02.:09:05.

money they pay back in interest and charges being more than the amount

:09:06.:09:09.

you borrowed in the first place. We know credit cards can be useful to

:09:10.:09:12.

get us through difficult periods, but at the same time many people are

:09:13.:09:24.

relying on them. The FCA, the regulator, says 3.3 million people

:09:25.:09:27.

are in what's known as persistent debt and they say that's costing

:09:28.:09:31.

them to pound 50 for every ?1 they have spent. Proposals to try to

:09:32.:09:34.

bring that down, three main proposals, it will require the

:09:35.:09:36.

credit card companies to offer advice and warnings they need to pay

:09:37.:09:40.

this back quicker. -- ?2 50. People who can afford it will be encouraged

:09:41.:09:46.

to do it quicker so they don't rack up interest charges. If they can

:09:47.:09:50.

afford it but refused to do so, the proposal is they suspend the use of

:09:51.:09:56.

that card, but lastly the people they are most worried about are the

:09:57.:10:01.

people in this spiral of debt that can't afford to pay it back, in that

:10:02.:10:07.

instance it says they waive or cancel any interests or charges on

:10:08.:10:13.

that card. -- interest. Visa proposals, there's nothing set in

:10:14.:10:16.

stone, but nonetheless the regulator is trying to get tough on the credit

:10:17.:10:21.

card thirds -- credit card thirds -- these are proposals. -- firms. This

:10:22.:10:28.

is one way they say they can bring these costs down.

:10:29.:10:29.

Rescue teams in Colombia are continuing to search

:10:30.:10:31.

through tons of mud and debris for anyone who might have survived

:10:32.:10:34.

the devastating mudslides in the south of the country.

:10:35.:10:37.

In the last few hours, the President has said 254

:10:38.:10:39.

people are known to have died, 43 of them children.

:10:40.:10:42.

The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa, burying entire neighbourhoods.

:10:43.:10:52.

Caring for a relative with terminal cancer takes an average of 70 hours

:10:53.:10:56.

a week in their final months and costs the carer nearly ?400

:10:57.:10:59.

Research published in the Palliative Medicine journal

:11:00.:11:03.

says volunteer carers are crucial to the National Health Service

:11:04.:11:06.

but need more support and training to preserve their own mental

:11:07.:11:08.

Some sick and disabled claimants of the out-of-work benefit

:11:09.:11:21.

will now receive nearly ?30 a week less.

:11:22.:11:28.

The government says bringing the benefit in line

:11:29.:11:31.

with Jobseekers Allowance will incentivise people to get

:11:32.:11:33.

But disability rights campaigners are worried the changes will drive

:11:34.:11:36.

The theory is if you reduce benefits more people get into work,

:11:37.:11:41.

but the truth is disabled people face lots of barriers

:11:42.:11:44.

Someone on an ordinary Jobseekers Allowance may back

:11:45.:11:47.

in work typically in six months, for a disabled person typically it

:11:48.:11:50.

Try living for two years on that really low level benefit,

:11:51.:11:54.

Now this would be one to show off on your Instagram

:11:55.:12:05.

It might look like a picture of some dark,

:12:06.:12:08.

parallel universe but it's actually an image of swirling graphene ink

:12:09.:12:11.

and it's scooped the top prize in a prestigious

:12:12.:12:13.

James Macleod's picture beat more than 100 entries to claim first

:12:14.:12:17.

place in two categories in this year's Engineering

:12:18.:12:19.

and Physical Sciences Research Council photography competition.

:12:20.:12:32.

It is very impressive, it is magic stuff, graphene. It is, 200 times

:12:33.:12:40.

stronger than steel, you can make it incredibly thin. I did a programme

:12:41.:12:45.

on it once, it's amazing, it is well worth looking into, it is like a

:12:46.:12:50.

super material. Let's go back to our main story.

:12:51.:12:51.

It has been described by the Home Office as an end to injustice.

:12:52.:12:54.

From today, police will no longer be able to keep suspects on bail

:12:55.:12:58.

The move follows criticism of the use of police bail

:12:59.:13:02.

in several recent investigations but some critics say the change

:13:03.:13:05.

Criminal barrister Christoper Moran joins us now.

:13:06.:13:12.

Thank you very much for coming in this morning. Can we get your

:13:13.:13:18.

reaction to these changes. What do you think are the positives and

:13:19.:13:25.

negativess? Overall it is a welcome change and currently suspects can be

:13:26.:13:29.

kept for well over a year while on police bail, after their initial

:13:30.:13:34.

arrest, awaiting the outcome, of course that's also the same for

:13:35.:13:38.

complainants and victims and witnesses in cases. That's really

:13:39.:13:42.

the positive, there are cases where you can sometimes wait up to two

:13:43.:13:47.

years. The problem of course is that there are a number of cases going

:13:48.:13:51.

through the system and the police are having to investigate a number

:13:52.:13:55.

of cases and prioritise. The difficulty I think with that is if

:13:56.:14:01.

the police are having difficulty investigating their caseload then

:14:02.:14:04.

that might be an issue to do with the resource in the police rather

:14:05.:14:08.

than the amount of time people are on police bail. The police have made

:14:09.:14:12.

the point that there might be some cases where it is particularly

:14:13.:14:16.

relevant to have a longer period because for example with cyber

:14:17.:14:20.

crime, the sheer volume of what they might have to go through could take

:14:21.:14:25.

more than 28 days. Yes, especially for cyber crime, that can be

:14:26.:14:29.

incredibly complex, a number of experts sometimes have to look at a

:14:30.:14:32.

number of computers. Within the system coming into force, there are

:14:33.:14:37.

options to be able to extend the initial 28 day period, at up to

:14:38.:14:45.

three months initially and then by applications to the magistrates

:14:46.:14:48.

court. When those cases are shown to be complex then they should be able

:14:49.:14:52.

to get the extensions. On a day-to-day basis, how would this

:14:53.:14:57.

affect your role as a criminal barrister? One thing I had to do in

:14:58.:15:01.

a recent case I was involved in, quite a serious sex case, the

:15:02.:15:05.

prosecution were asked to explain in open court why there had been such a

:15:06.:15:10.

delay. One of the problems is when you have witnesses in cases, they're

:15:11.:15:15.

having to recall some horrendous events, and further back in time

:15:16.:15:20.

those events are, the harder it is to recall the finer details. It

:15:21.:15:24.

should make my job easier to get the best out of witnesses, but of course

:15:25.:15:29.

make the role a bit easier for them because there remembering things not

:15:30.:15:32.

so long ago and have some closure sooner. They will benefit.

:15:33.:15:43.

there are always unintended consequences. Will there be pressure

:15:44.:15:48.

on police to put forward information quicker than they feel happy doing

:15:49.:15:54.

so? That could be won. What we hope is in order to charge somebody,

:15:55.:15:59.

there would have to be charging standards. -- there could be one. If

:16:00.:16:08.

they don't hit those charges, the Crown Prosecution Service would say

:16:09.:16:12.

and they would ask extensions but there is that danger. And what about

:16:13.:16:16.

the victims? You talked about making it easy for them but perhaps one of

:16:17.:16:21.

their priorities is things going to court and people are prosecuted for

:16:22.:16:26.

the crimes. One of the more serious crimes, of course, is sex cases.

:16:27.:16:33.

Historically, one of the problems is many people would be charged when

:16:34.:16:37.

they should have been. In those cases, the them is often thought

:16:38.:16:41.

they weren't believed. One problem with leaving people on police bail

:16:42.:16:45.

for quite some time is it leaves complainants and victims in legal

:16:46.:16:49.

limbo as to whether they are believed not so hopefully that

:16:50.:16:53.

should assist and give them some clarity earlier. Thank for your

:16:54.:16:54.

time. You're watching

:16:55.:16:55.

Breakfast from BBC News. Restrictions on the use of police

:16:56.:16:57.

bail come into force today. A new 28 day limit is introduced

:16:58.:17:03.

England and Wales - but some officers are

:17:04.:17:06.

unhappy with the move. A warning that more than 20 million

:17:07.:17:10.

people in the UK are physically inactive, costing the NHS around

:17:11.:17:13.

?1.2 billion each year. Here's Carol with a look

:17:14.:17:27.

at this morning's weather. The blossom is out. Good morning to

:17:28.:17:38.

both of you. Yesterday, temperatures soared up to 17 in London. A

:17:39.:17:42.

beautiful Weather Watcher speech. Today, we could see similar but as

:17:43.:17:46.

we get through the course of this week, although we will remain mostly

:17:47.:17:49.

drive, it will feel a bit fresher. We will lose a degree temperature

:17:50.:17:53.

wise day by day. At times, chilly nights. Today, what we have is high

:17:54.:17:58.

pressure still dominating a large chunk of the weather across the UK

:17:59.:18:02.

but we have a cold front coming in from the West. That will inch juice

:18:03.:18:07.

some rain. It is not far away from western Scotland and northern

:18:08.:18:10.

Ireland at the moment. It will continue to advance East. Quite a

:18:11.:18:14.

cool start this morning across England and Wales. A touch of trust

:18:15.:18:20.

and fog, leading sunshine. The sunshine will be in the east because

:18:21.:18:24.

the rain will continue to push in from the West. It will continue to

:18:25.:18:27.

move across Northern Ireland, leaving brighter skies and a few

:18:28.:18:31.

showers. The cloud building ahead of our band of rain across western

:18:32.:18:34.

parts of England through the afternoon but the bulk of England

:18:35.:18:38.

and Wales, at dry day, bright spells sunny spells. We have some low cloud

:18:39.:18:42.

and fog across the English Channel. At times, we might find that lapping

:18:43.:18:49.

onshore. When that happens, it will fill chilly underneath it. Through

:18:50.:18:54.

the evening and underneath it, the wind pushes eastwards. There will be

:18:55.:19:02.

fog around and lots of cloud. One or two breaks but generally speaking,

:19:03.:19:06.

not as called a night as the one just gone. There will also be

:19:07.:19:09.

showers across the far north of Scotland and here, too, a strong

:19:10.:19:16.

wind. Tomorrow, across Shetland, there could be some areas of rain.

:19:17.:19:28.

Some brighter breaks across England and Wales and you can see what I

:19:29.:19:31.

mean about the temperatures, just coming down by a degree or two.

:19:32.:19:36.

Heading on through Tuesday and into Wednesday, high pressure still in

:19:37.:19:40.

charge of our weather but we have to squeeze of isobars in the north of

:19:41.:19:43.

the country. Here, it will be windy and with the weather front scooting

:19:44.:19:47.

across, we will also see some showers. We start off on Wednesday

:19:48.:19:52.

under some clear skies. On a cold note. A bit of cloud at times so

:19:53.:19:57.

bright rather than wall-to-wall blue skies. Here is our weather front

:19:58.:20:01.

coming in introducing some rain or showers and temperatures 10- 14

:20:02.:20:08.

Celsius. Then as we head on to Thursday, again, actually start for

:20:09.:20:11.

some of us that a fairly quiet day. High pressure still in charge. There

:20:12.:20:16.

will be brighter skies, some sunny skies but in the West, particularly

:20:17.:20:20.

with any height, we are looking at some showers. The temperature in

:20:21.:20:25.

Aberdeen and 14 Celsius. The letter does remain settled over the next

:20:26.:20:30.

couple of days as well. -- the weather.

:20:31.:20:31.

If you're the kind of person whose blood begins to boil when you spot

:20:32.:20:35.

a spelling or grammatical mistake on a sign, here's a story for you.

:20:36.:20:38.

In Bristol it's been rumoured for years that there's somebody

:20:39.:20:41.

who goes out under the cover of darkness -

:20:42.:20:44.

correcting mistakes on street signs and shop fronts.

:20:45.:20:46.

Breakfast's Jon Kay has tracked down the mysterious individual

:20:47.:20:48.

who describes himself as a "grammar vigilante".

:20:49.:21:05.

It's very clear that he takes this extremely seriously. Good morning.

:21:06.:21:16.

It's not possible to explain quite how serious he takes it.

:21:17.:21:21.

For asking me this morning if this is an April full, I can tell you it

:21:22.:21:29.

is true. This man comes out at about one or 2am, armed with sticky backed

:21:30.:21:34.

plastic and a special ladder and correct signs. Here is one he has

:21:35.:21:46.

done. A gentle men's hairstylist. He corrected it because it was wrong.

:21:47.:21:58.

It now has an apostrophe and it is just one of loads of signs he has

:21:59.:22:00.

done around here. Roaming the streets

:22:01.:22:03.

of Bristol, righting wrongs. I do take it to heart,

:22:04.:22:07.

I've been doing it for quite a lot I believe it is a cause

:22:08.:22:12.

worth pursuing. Working alone and in secret,

:22:13.:22:15.

he makes punctuation marks to stick Trying to match the colour

:22:16.:22:18.

of the apostrophe that is needed He has even made

:22:19.:22:25.

a special device which he called The Apostrophiser

:22:26.:22:28.

which lets him reach Oh, look at that,

:22:29.:22:30.

that's worked perfectly. A quick demonstration

:22:31.:22:33.

on the dining room wall. What I need to do now is turn

:22:34.:22:35.

the Apostrophiser around so I can By day, he is a highly

:22:36.:22:39.

qualified professional. Only a handful of his

:22:40.:22:46.

closest friends and family know what he gets

:22:47.:22:48.

up to after dark. I have felt extremely nervous,

:22:49.:22:53.

the heart has been thumping. I've got to make sure

:22:54.:22:56.

it is technically right. He started his campaign

:22:57.:23:01.

13 years ago. He's left his mark throughout

:23:02.:23:04.

this area of Bristol, Apostrophes added,

:23:05.:23:20.

apostrophes removed. There will be some people,

:23:21.:23:25.

maybe the owners of these shops who say,

:23:26.:23:28.

hang on a minute, you have got permission, we haven't

:23:29.:23:31.

asked you to do this, what you are doing

:23:32.:23:33.

is a crime, vandalism. I would say it's more of a crime

:23:34.:23:35.

to have the apostophes wrong I think I can do it

:23:36.:23:42.

without causing too much offence There is one sign he has been

:23:43.:23:46.

desperate to correct for years. The garage is right outside

:23:47.:23:51.

Bristol's high security prison. Using a purpose-built,

:23:52.:24:12.

home made trestle, he climbs up, cuts a piece of yellow sticky-backed

:24:13.:24:20.

plastic to size and covers We went to see the man who owned

:24:21.:24:27.

the garage for 30 years. ..Who lives around these parts,

:24:28.:24:39.

I can't tell you about him. It's good to see people

:24:40.:24:46.

still caring about When you go past a sign you have

:24:47.:24:53.

corrected, and you know The word you are

:24:54.:24:59.

looking for is pride. I'm the one who has been

:25:00.:25:02.

there and sorted it out It does make my heart swell slightly

:25:03.:25:08.

when I see the correct apostrophe. See what I mean when I said he takes

:25:09.:25:31.

it seriously? I know some people have been getting in touch this

:25:32.:25:35.

morning. Get a life, you are saying. Is there any point in this day and

:25:36.:25:43.

age? Some of you are seeing this man as some kind of superhero. Some

:25:44.:25:46.

examples sent in this morning. Mother's Day, at cake. Mum, your the

:25:47.:25:57.

best. It should of course be you're. This one on the back of a car. Dont

:25:58.:26:05.

needs an'. You start this and it is a

:26:06.:26:18.

minefield. You start seeing spelling mistakes everywhere. Keep them

:26:19.:26:21.

coming this morning. We would love to hear from you and what you think

:26:22.:26:26.

of the man who is now known as The Apostrophiser.

:26:27.:26:30.

Loving his work. Pam says "My hero". Correct punctuation helps us

:26:31.:26:43.

understand each other and stops me wanting to scream when I see them in

:26:44.:26:52.

the wrong place. People have seen fish and chip shops with an

:26:53.:27:05.

apostrophe in the wrong place. The Apostrophiser, presented

:27:06.:27:06.

by Jon Kay, is on BBC Radio 4 You're watching

:27:07.:27:09.

Breakfast from BBC News. Grabbing a coffee

:27:10.:27:12.

on the way to work? Spare a thought about what happens

:27:13.:27:15.

to the take-away cup - seven million of them are thrown

:27:16.:27:18.

away in the UK every day and most We'll find out about a new scheme

:27:19.:27:22.

to get us to recycle them. Good morning. You might be surprised

:27:23.:27:34.

to hear that one in 100 of these coffee cups ever get recycled. The

:27:35.:27:39.

vast majority of -- majority are incinerated or go to landfill. I

:27:40.:27:44.

will be reporting on this pioneering recycling scheme in London.

:27:45.:31:03.

You are watching breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:31:04.:31:20.

Significant restrictions on the use of bail by police in England

:31:21.:31:23.

The amount of time a suspect released from custody can

:31:24.:31:28.

remain on bail will be limited to 28 days in most cases.

:31:29.:31:31.

According to the Home Office, the move will end the injustice

:31:32.:31:34.

of people left in limbo for months or even years.

:31:35.:31:36.

But the Police Federation has warned the change will be unrealistic

:31:37.:31:39.

After 28 days it's appropriate for a senior police officer to look at the

:31:40.:32:04.

case and say we need a bit more time and they can sign that of, and even

:32:05.:32:08.

complex cases where they need three months ago, a magistrate, and that's

:32:09.:32:10.

an appropriate way to go forward. Gibraltar has insisted it won't be

:32:11.:32:21.

used as a bargaining chip in any

:32:22.:32:24.

Brexit deal the EU wants Spain, which claims

:32:25.:32:26.

sovereignty of the British territory, could be given a veto

:32:27.:32:29.

over decisions affecting it. But yesterday Theresa May said

:32:30.:32:32.

the UK remains steadfastly Police are holding eight people

:32:33.:32:35.

in connection with an attack on a teenage asylum

:32:36.:32:38.

seeker on Friday night. Three arrests were made yesterday

:32:39.:32:40.

and the Met Police have now released images of three more people

:32:41.:32:44.

they want to speak to. The victim, a 17-year-old boy,

:32:45.:32:46.

is in a serious but stable condition after he was allegedly chased

:32:47.:32:50.

and beaten by gang of 20 people Donald Trump has said the US

:32:51.:32:53.

will solve the North Korean In an interview with

:32:54.:32:57.

the Financial Times, the President is quoted as saying,

:32:58.:33:00.

"If China is not going to solve Mr Trump confirmed he was referring

:33:01.:33:04.

to direct, unilateral action. The comments come ahead

:33:05.:33:08.

of a visit to the US People stuck in a spiral

:33:09.:33:10.

of credit card debt could get more help under new

:33:11.:33:18.

proposals from the City regulator. In the last half hour,

:33:19.:33:21.

the Financial Conduct Authority has said credit card firms must do more

:33:22.:33:24.

to help the 3.3 million people in persistent debt where interest

:33:25.:33:27.

payments and charges exceed It also calls on customers to pay

:33:28.:33:30.

back debts more quickly There's a warning that a third

:33:31.:33:35.

of adults in the UK, or 20 million people,

:33:36.:33:46.

are physically inactive and at risk it's costing the NHS

:33:47.:33:49.

over ?1 billion a year. Their research also reveals women

:33:50.:33:58.

are more sedentary than men and that the north-west of England

:33:59.:34:00.

has the highest rate of inactivity. Rescue teams in Colombia

:34:01.:34:03.

are continuing to search through tons of mud and debris

:34:04.:34:06.

for anyone who might have survived the devastating mudslides

:34:07.:34:09.

in the south of the country. In the last few hours,

:34:10.:34:11.

the President has said 254 people are known to have died,

:34:12.:34:14.

43 of them children. The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa,

:34:15.:34:17.

burying entire neighbourhoods. Caring for a relative with terminal

:34:18.:34:30.

cancer takes an average of 70 hours a week in their final months

:34:31.:34:34.

and costs the carer nearly ?400 Research published in

:34:35.:34:37.

the Palliative Medicine journal says volunteer carers are crucial

:34:38.:34:40.

to the National Health Service but need more support and training

:34:41.:34:43.

to preserve their own mental Doris Day has received an unusual

:34:44.:34:46.

and perhaps unwelcome surprise on her birthday,

:34:47.:34:58.

she's two years older Day always said that her date

:34:59.:35:00.

of birth was April 3 But her original birth certificate

:35:01.:35:03.

has been uncovered showing she was born in 1922,

:35:04.:35:07.

which makes her 95. Are used to work with a bloke called

:35:08.:35:28.

Darren who was 34 at least eight years -- are used to. If you're

:35:29.:35:34.

watching, you know who you are! -- I used to. What's wrong with that?

:35:35.:35:40.

Nothing. Our BBC Breakfast teams think that Doris Day looks a bit

:35:41.:35:47.

like Carol. -- our BBC Breakfast team. I think you're absolutely

:35:48.:35:53.

right. It is Carol in a polka dot dress. Not a dress, though, its

:35:54.:35:56.

trousers, isn't it crazy Celtic, not a surprise, they've been

:35:57.:36:09.

there for a long time but six titles on the trot? It's what everyone saw

:36:10.:36:14.

coming, winning their sixth title in a row, but the statistics are

:36:15.:36:21.

fantastic. It equals a record set by Rangers in 1988, 25 points clear

:36:22.:36:26.

they were ahead of their nearest rivals, Aberdeen, eight games to

:36:27.:36:30.

spare and they are champions and they could still do the domestic

:36:31.:36:34.

treble. They are still in the Scottish cup and the League Cup. And

:36:35.:36:36.

they are unbeaten. It may be only the first week

:36:37.:36:37.

of April but Celtic have clinched their sixth

:36:38.:36:40.

Scottish Premiership title in a row So they've done it in style

:36:41.:36:43.

with eight games to spare, Scott Sinclair scored a hat-trick

:36:44.:36:47.

which helped put Brendan Rodgers' side 25 points clear

:36:48.:36:50.

of second-placed Aberdeen. Six titles in a row equals a record

:36:51.:36:52.

set by Rangers 88 years ago. We're very honoured and very

:36:53.:36:56.

privileged to manage Glasgow Celtic when you support a team like this

:36:57.:36:58.

as a boy and you know the great I was happy to take

:36:59.:37:02.

on the responsibility to make the supporters dream,

:37:03.:37:06.

make them happy and hopefully we've done that this coming season

:37:07.:37:09.

and hopefully for the years to come. There were two games

:37:10.:37:13.

in the Premier League. Arsenal are still sixth

:37:14.:37:15.

and Manchester City fourth after a 2-2 draw at

:37:16.:37:17.

the Emirates stadium. City, twice took the lead

:37:18.:37:20.

through Leroy Sane then Walcott and Mustafi

:37:21.:37:22.

scored for the Gunners. The point means they remain

:37:23.:37:25.

seven points behind City It was a game where we're not

:37:26.:37:27.

completely at our best on the fluency and

:37:28.:37:39.

the technical front because we were under huge pressure,

:37:40.:37:41.

but we showed strong mental resources and refused to lie down

:37:42.:37:44.

against a team who is always dangerous going forward and,

:37:45.:37:47.

at the end of the day, At the other end of the table,

:37:48.:37:50.

Middlesbrough wasted as they shared a goalless draw

:37:51.:38:00.

with Swansea at the Liberty Stadium. The result keeps Swansea just

:38:01.:38:04.

above the relegation zone. Saracens will be the only British

:38:05.:38:06.

club in rugby union's European

:38:07.:38:14.

Champions Cup semi-finals. too strong for Glasgow

:38:15.:38:15.

Warriors. Chris Ashton scored two of Saracens'

:38:16.:38:20.

four tries as they won 38-13. They'll face Munster

:38:21.:38:24.

for a place in the final. Roger Federer says he'll probably

:38:25.:38:26.

not play again until the French Open at the end of May after winning his

:38:27.:38:29.

third title of the year. He beat Rafa Nadal in straight sets

:38:30.:38:33.

to lift the Miami Open title 24 hours after Britain's Johanna

:38:34.:38:36.

Konta won the women's event. Federer moves up to fourth

:38:37.:38:39.

in the world rankings but will take the next

:38:40.:38:42.

month off to rest. Spare a thought for American

:38:43.:38:48.

golfer Lexi Thompson, she was leading the first women's

:38:49.:38:50.

golf major of the season by three She was left in tears

:38:51.:38:53.

when she was approached by a rules official and told she would be

:38:54.:38:59.

punished for an infringement spotted by a television viewer

:39:00.:39:01.

in her previous round. It cost her four shots

:39:02.:39:04.

and ultimately the title which went The 163rd Boat Race

:39:05.:39:07.

went the way of Oxford as they beat Cambridge by just over

:39:08.:39:15.

a length for their fourth Oxford, who were favourites entering

:39:16.:39:18.

the race on the Thames, and Cambridge never quite

:39:19.:39:23.

able close the gap. Oxford now trail

:39:24.:39:27.

Cambridge 82-80 overall. I think of my three Boat Races,

:39:28.:39:31.

that's probably my favourite. The harder it is the more you can

:39:32.:39:35.

savour it at the end. Hats off to Cambridge,

:39:36.:39:40.

that was a good boat, but we were just better on the day

:39:41.:39:42.

and that's what it's about. A disastrous start cost Oxford

:39:43.:39:47.

in the women's race. One of their oars got stuck handing

:39:48.:39:50.

Cambridge a simple victory. The light blues won by half a minute

:39:51.:39:55.

in a course record time too. But the moment of the weekend goes

:39:56.:40:02.

to Dan Walker who donned This was the celebrity race. You

:40:03.:40:16.

won, Dan. When you say I won, I was sat behind Helen Glover and George

:40:17.:40:23.

Nash, he won Olympic gold in the coxless fours in Rio, Helen Glover

:40:24.:40:28.

has won it twice. I didn't spot any Olympic rowers in the pink team.

:40:29.:40:32.

They had a Paralympic Brower, James Fox, and Emma Spruce, who has won

:40:33.:40:38.

the boat race before. Evenly matched. That was our cox.

:40:39.:40:44.

Apparently you have to do that at the end. Manner Jo money raised for

:40:45.:40:51.

cancer research. How hard was it? -- money raised. It is physically

:40:52.:40:56.

demanding, obviously. One of the guys was sick at the end. Unless you

:40:57.:41:02.

are going full tilt, it isn't as physically demanding as it should

:41:03.:41:06.

beat but we had a couple of people in our boat, me included, when

:41:07.:41:10.

you're not going full tilt or quite as good as a full role, you slow the

:41:11.:41:14.

boat down so you can't physically exhausted yourself -- full roller.

:41:15.:41:23.

It was so close. Two feet in the end. -- roller. I will take all the

:41:24.:41:27.

credit to myself! Millions of us will pick up a latte

:41:28.:41:28.

or cappuccino on the way into work this morning for that caffeine kick

:41:29.:41:32.

to get our week started. But the huge number of paper cups

:41:33.:41:35.

we use are difficult to recycle and are causing huge

:41:36.:41:38.

levels of waste. Andy Moore is in central London this

:41:39.:41:40.

morning looking at an initiative That looks impressive. Good morning.

:41:41.:41:57.

Good morning. The humble coffee cup, you might think it's just made of

:41:58.:42:02.

paper, that's easily recyclable but that's not the case, there's a

:42:03.:42:06.

plastic layer inside that makes it difficult to recycle so millions

:42:07.:42:11.

every day I incinerated or go to landfill or to create art

:42:12.:42:16.

installations like this one -- everyday are incinerated. You can

:42:17.:42:24.

see the Gherkin on the left and St Paul's Cathedral here. There's a new

:42:25.:42:28.

scheme in London to recycle them, dozens of yellow containers will be

:42:29.:42:32.

scattered around the city for people to put in their coffee cups and with

:42:33.:42:37.

me is Gavin Ellis from the environmental charity Hubub. How

:42:38.:42:43.

will it work? We have a number of these bright bins, they looked like

:42:44.:42:48.

dried coffee cups, they are on the streets for people to dispose of

:42:49.:42:53.

their cups and we have 35 big employees in the city -- employers

:42:54.:42:57.

in the city to help and you can also do that in your store regardless of

:42:58.:43:02.

where you bought your coffee, all the major coffee chains. Are these

:43:03.:43:07.

giant yellow containers up for a few days? That's right. What has the

:43:08.:43:12.

reaction been like? Really positive, the weekend is quiet around here so

:43:13.:43:17.

today is when we will see how people respond because it is busier during

:43:18.:43:22.

the week. Millions might get a coffee later today if they're not in

:43:23.:43:26.

the City of London, what is your advice, what should they do with

:43:27.:43:30.

them? You can use reusable cups and then you don't have the issue. Apart

:43:31.:43:35.

from that it is tricky at the moment, the issue is only relatively

:43:36.:43:40.

recent, the difficulty of recycling the cups. What we're looking to do

:43:41.:43:45.

off the back of this campaign in the City of London is extend it

:43:46.:43:48.

throughout London and elsewhere in the UK. You had a smaller scale

:43:49.:43:53.

scheme in Manchester, what lessons did you learn from that one? It was

:43:54.:43:58.

on one street, Oxford Road in Manchester at the end of last year

:43:59.:44:02.

and we recycle 20,000 cups from that one street. It worked really well

:44:03.:44:07.

when you have managed locations where people drink coffee from

:44:08.:44:10.

disposable cups and they don't take them away, so we did trials in the

:44:11.:44:18.

hospital and university. That's why we've teamed up with 35 of the

:44:19.:44:22.

biggest employers in the City of London so when you have the

:44:23.:44:25.

concentrations of people, if you get the system in people will use it.

:44:26.:44:29.

The coffee chains, the big chains, are they doing enough? This is a

:44:30.:44:33.

good start, there's always more. Our aim is to extend it beyond the City

:44:34.:44:38.

of London and Manchester so we get good coverage nationwide so everyone

:44:39.:44:42.

has a good opportunity to recycle their cup. Thanks very much, Gary.

:44:43.:44:47.

They're hoping to get around 500,000 of these by the end of the month, 5

:44:48.:44:55.

million recyclable cups in these containers by the end of the year.

:44:56.:44:59.

Back to you two, Dan and Louise. It's incredibly obvious, it looks

:45:00.:45:02.

like a cup, that's what you do with it,.

:45:03.:45:07.

shall hands to Carol -- shall we hand to Carol? Or is it Doris Day?

:45:08.:45:22.

You have to wait for this, Carol. We think that looks like a dead ringer

:45:23.:45:29.

for you. In my dreams. I wouldn't mind looking like Doris Day.

:45:30.:45:36.

Chiles doubts of the day if you are just stepping out. It will still be

:45:37.:45:44.

at warm day for this time of year. -- chilly start. Although it will be

:45:45.:45:50.

mostly drive, it will be fresh. We will also see some cold nights, too.

:45:51.:45:57.

Watch out if you have been planting some plants this weekend in your

:45:58.:46:01.

garden. High pressure still firmly in charge but we have a weather

:46:02.:46:05.

front coming in from the West and that is introducing some rain. The

:46:06.:46:09.

wind will also strengthen in the north of the country. Some patchy

:46:10.:46:14.

fog that will lift but we have some fog across the English Channel. At

:46:15.:46:19.

times that will lap onshore. When it does do that, it will suppress the

:46:20.:46:24.

temperature. Meanwhile, our weather front makes progress into Northern

:46:25.:46:28.

Ireland and western Scotland. Then there is a gap before the next

:46:29.:46:32.

system comes in. The parts of north-east Scotland, we will hang on

:46:33.:46:37.

to the rain for the longest -- sunshine for the longest. The rain

:46:38.:46:41.

comes into the east. Across come from -- come to a chair and

:46:42.:46:48.

Lancashire, it heads down towards East Anglia and Kent. Again, a fair

:46:49.:46:55.

bit of sunshine as there will be towards the Isle of Wight.

:46:56.:47:00.

Temperatures getting up to 16 or 17. Into the south-west, the cloud

:47:01.:47:04.

continues to build a head of the rain. The same for Wales. Here is

:47:05.:47:10.

our first weather front going through. The rain is turning more

:47:11.:47:13.

patchy as it heads to the south-east. A second weather front

:47:14.:47:17.

comes in and there will be a lot of cloud around tonight. There will

:47:18.:47:22.

also be fog forming an temperature wise, for five in the north and

:47:23.:47:27.

seven or eight or perhaps nine in the south. Not quite as cold as the

:47:28.:47:31.

one just gone. The weather front in the south-east, through the course

:47:32.:47:36.

of tomorrow morning, will slowly clear away. Behind it, quite a lot

:47:37.:47:42.

of cloud that will showers. The Northern England, Wales, south-west

:47:43.:47:45.

England and Northern Ireland, a bit more sunshine but a bit more cloud

:47:46.:47:51.

across Scotland. Particularly those across as Shetland will be wintry.

:47:52.:48:05.

Thank you, Carol. Were you listening? I was looking at the

:48:06.:48:09.

wrong screen, Carol. There you are! Lovely to see you. I don't know.

:48:10.:48:19.

There's tough competition between supermarkets.

:48:20.:48:20.

They've been cutting prices to win customers.

:48:21.:48:22.

But does it mean they're squeezing farmers and suppliers too

:48:23.:48:25.

Good news for all of us. But at what cost to the people that supply all

:48:26.:48:35.

of that food? Our supermarket shop might have been

:48:36.:48:36.

a bit cheaper recently - as supermarkets battle it out

:48:37.:48:39.

in fierce price wars But - at what cost to

:48:40.:48:41.

suppliers and farmers? The woman responsible

:48:42.:48:44.

for maintaining relations between our biggest retailers,

:48:45.:48:46.

farmers and food processors is Christine Tacon

:48:47.:48:57.

and she's with me now. Most people have a gripe with their

:48:58.:49:05.

supermarket. What does your job involve? I make sure they all abide

:49:06.:49:14.

by a legally binding code. I take issues from suppliers so lots of

:49:15.:49:17.

people talk to me, tell me what's going on. At the moment, I have a

:49:18.:49:21.

survey open which is vital for direct suppliers to tell me that

:49:22.:49:24.

these retails are the most compliant and these are the issues that I have

:49:25.:49:29.

and at any one time, I work with all of the retailers on probably about

:49:30.:49:32.

five issues. At the moment, the biggest one people are talking to me

:49:33.:49:37.

about it forecasting so I am trying to get to the bottom of that and try

:49:38.:49:41.

to get the retailers to change their ways. Is that supply and demand? We

:49:42.:49:48.

have seen high-profile examples of when they get it wrong. The

:49:49.:49:51.

courgette crisis when our shells were empty. How are your relations

:49:52.:49:58.

with suppliers? We see prices coming down and down and certainly of late

:49:59.:50:02.

as they try to keep Comp -- customers. That put a lot of

:50:03.:50:07.

pressure on farmers. The big thing about the forecasting is trying to

:50:08.:50:11.

get the orders right in the first place because that makes the supply

:50:12.:50:14.

chain more efficient. The sorts of things people are talking to me

:50:15.:50:18.

about particularly importing, because retailers can't talk to them

:50:19.:50:22.

about the consumer price, they might decide to increase the price by

:50:23.:50:25.

something like 20% and the person has all these stock and their sales

:50:26.:50:29.

were halved and they don't it know was going to happen. That is one of

:50:30.:50:33.

the issues raised in the other is about promotions and the retailers

:50:34.:50:37.

mustn't over order for promotions, buying things at cheap, and then

:50:38.:50:42.

selling to cheaply bought stuff at full price. That is another bit of

:50:43.:50:47.

the code that is legally binding. What power do you have to regulate

:50:48.:50:52.

them. You talk about the legally binding code. Annabel says, look, in

:50:53.:50:59.

it advanced maths to check out the deals in supermarkets. Martin says

:51:00.:51:03.

he saw products he usually buys at ?3 and it was priced at ?4 50 but it

:51:04.:51:10.

was on offer for ?246. A lot of confusion about what is supposedly

:51:11.:51:22.

deal. --2 for ?6. You can imagine what that has on the suppliers.

:51:23.:51:27.

Getting the forecast right so that the retailers are collaborative

:51:28.:51:38.

collaboratively putting it together. The code is really good at making

:51:39.:51:42.

sure suppliers get paid on time, they don't get deductions, they

:51:43.:51:49.

don't get overcharged. Things like consumer complaints and if they are

:51:50.:51:54.

delisted, it happens at reasonable notice. The code is about working

:51:55.:51:58.

with suppliers unfairly and I'm really pleased that over the 3.5

:51:59.:52:03.

years I have been in the job, my annual survey is saying that

:52:04.:52:06.

retailers are getting better. Also the best thing about my annual

:52:07.:52:11.

survey is it gives me a leak table. Which retailers are the most

:52:12.:52:14.

compliant, which ones are getting better and which is getting worse.

:52:15.:52:19.

On the whole, they are all getting better. Good to see you. The

:52:20.:52:25.

regulator of the supermarkets and some of our biggest retailers.

:52:26.:52:26.

50 years ago The Beatles headed into the Abbey Road Studios

:52:27.:52:29.

to record what would become one of the biggest and most influential

:52:30.:52:33.

We'll be celebrating the legacy of Sergent Pepper's

:52:34.:52:37.

Lonely Hearts Club Band and taking a fresh listen to some of its most

:52:38.:52:42.

famous tracks all this week on Breakfast.

:52:43.:52:44.

Our arts editor Will Gompertz has been delving into the archives

:52:45.:52:47.

to find out how the album came about.

:52:48.:52:54.

# We're Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

:52:55.:52:59.

I put it to the guys that what we should do,

:53:00.:53:19.

make this record now under another persona.

:53:20.:53:21.

The idea was we could bring anything we wanted because now,

:53:22.:53:29.

there was no lid on what we could do.

:53:30.:53:32.

The Beatles had stopped touring and wanted to make a record

:53:33.:53:36.

Although never fully realised, Paul McCartney's idea of a concept

:53:37.:53:44.

Sergeant Pepper was recorded at the now legendary Abbey

:53:45.:53:48.

Road Studios in London with producer George Martin,

:53:49.:53:50.

the so-called fifth Beatle, looking after the sound with a little

:53:51.:53:53.

Upstairs here is where George Martin would be, twiddling all the knobs,

:53:54.:53:59.

with Ken Townsend who was in charge of the technical side

:54:00.:54:02.

of music and hopefully if we go here, he will be

:54:03.:54:05.

This is where it all happened, right?

:54:06.:54:14.

Yeah, this is number two control room in Abbey Road.

:54:15.:54:17.

It is amazing to come up here 50 years after we made it.

:54:18.:54:34.

Downstairs there in the studio was where the boys were,

:54:35.:54:37.

This is where the Beatles made all of their recordings.

:54:38.:54:43.

The vocals were normally placed here and the

:54:44.:54:49.

Obviously things like pianos, we moved around.

:54:50.:54:52.

Without this machine, the Studer J37 4-track,

:54:53.:54:54.

Sergeant Pepper could not have been made.

:54:55.:54:56.

It's through this tape machine that I invented

:54:57.:54:58.

Well, we want to double track a voice.

:54:59.:55:02.

Yes, you put the second voice on top of the first and it makes

:55:03.:55:07.

Ken's technical innovations were matched by the Beatles'

:55:08.:55:10.

The sound of northern brass bands, Indian classical and even trad jazz

:55:11.:55:15.

The key is how you mix all of those styles because sometimes,

:55:16.:55:29.

you know, curry for breakfast doesn't work but if you put

:55:30.:55:32.

something in there that makes it more anglicised,

:55:33.:55:38.

They found a way of mixing all of those amazing world

:55:39.:55:55.

elements into an element that is predominantly their own

:55:56.:55:58.

from their tongue but it had flavours from all over.

:55:59.:56:00.

Everybody has their own favourite track on Sergeant Pepper.

:56:01.:56:05.

For me it is this song, A Day in the Life.

:56:06.:56:08.

Recorded half a century ago but still resonating in 2017

:56:09.:56:11.

..And these students at the London music school.

:56:12.:56:23.

# He didn't notice that the lights had changed.

:56:24.:56:26.

# A crowd of people stopped and stared...

:56:27.:56:33.

Thank you for all the memories you are sharing on that. We have lots of

:56:34.:56:42.

facts about this album. When I'm 64 was written by Paul McCartney on the

:56:43.:56:47.

age of 16 on the family piano that he released it on the piano -- album

:56:48.:56:55.

20 years later because it was his dad 's birthday.

:56:56.:57:01.

Still to come this morning, are you a stickler for apostrophes? I know a

:57:02.:57:14.

man who is. He goes around correcting signs in the middle of

:57:15.:57:18.

the night. This is one he has done. Greengrocers called gardener's

:57:19.:57:26.

patch. We will meet him shortly that first, let's joined

:57:27.:00:44.

Plenty more on our website at the usual address.

:00:45.:00:46.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:00:47.:00:53.

A big change in the way police bail is used.

:00:54.:00:56.

A new 28-day limit has come in to force in England and Wales,

:00:57.:00:59.

but some officers are unhappy with the move.

:01:00.:01:17.

Also this morning, the price of doing nothing -

:01:18.:01:23.

how physical inactivity is said to be costing the NHS

:01:24.:01:25.

In the business, we are talking about getting tough on credit card

:01:26.:01:42.

firms. After a year-long review, the City regulator has outlined plans to

:01:43.:01:47.

stop more us racking up huge debts. In sport, six titles in a row. They,

:01:48.:01:51.

they take the Scottish Premiership with eight games to spare. -- --

:01:52.:01:58.

Celtic take. Once voted the most

:01:59.:02:01.

important album of all time, we're celebrating Sergeant Pepper's

:02:02.:02:04.

Lonely Hearts Club Band 50 years after it was

:02:05.:02:06.

first recorded. Some kind of armadillo are no

:02:07.:02:07.

bigger than an orange, but this rare one

:02:08.:02:10.

is the size of the pig. They're one of the most elusive

:02:11.:02:12.

creatures in the natural world. We'll meet the man who has managed

:02:13.:02:16.

to capture them on camera. Amazing footage!

:02:17.:02:25.

Good morning, a jelly start, there is frost around and fog, but it will

:02:26.:02:29.

give way to a dry day with Sunnis bells. We also got rain across

:02:30.:02:33.

Northern Ireland and western Scotland. -- sunny spells. Rain

:02:34.:02:39.

pushing into western part of the mend and Wales by dark. I will tell

:02:40.:02:43.

you all about it in 15 minutes. Thank you, Doris!

:02:44.:02:50.

He does mean Carol, more of that later!

:02:51.:02:52.

Significant restrictions on the use of bail by police in England

:02:53.:02:55.

The amount of time a suspect released from custody can remain

:02:56.:02:59.

on bail will be limited to 28 days in most cases.

:03:00.:03:02.

The decision is in response to concerns that people

:03:03.:03:05.

were being left in limbo for months, or even years.

:03:06.:03:07.

But police have questioned the move, as our home affairs correspondent

:03:08.:03:10.

Famous faces who've been under police investigation,

:03:11.:03:16.

finally told they wouldn't be facing charges,

:03:17.:03:18.

They were among the 5000 still on bail after a year.

:03:19.:03:23.

The Government says the system needed rebalancing.

:03:24.:03:26.

Well, what's happened in the past is people that could be put on bail

:03:27.:03:30.

with no end in sight and no check or balance, which means we had

:03:31.:03:33.

thousands of people could be on bail for 12 months or more.

:03:34.:03:37.

In fact, there were examples of people on for several years,

:03:38.:03:41.

We've got to make sure we've got a proper system that is

:03:42.:03:45.

It's part of an overhaul of the bail system in England and Wales.

:03:46.:03:49.

From now on, some suspects won't be subject to police bail at all.

:03:50.:03:52.

For those who are bailed, in most cases, the limit will be 28 days.

:03:53.:03:56.

But a senior police officer will be able to grant one three-month

:03:57.:03:59.

The police will have to seek the permission of a magistrate

:04:00.:04:04.

The Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers,

:04:05.:04:07.

28 days, in the cycle of a police officer,

:04:08.:04:12.

is not a long time for them to investigate the crime.

:04:13.:04:15.

You've also got to bear in mind, in relation to external inquiries,

:04:16.:04:20.

what we tend to have is external resource, so we have got

:04:21.:04:23.

the Forensic Science Service, CPS, and 28 days is not realistic

:04:24.:04:26.

for them to come back to us with the information

:04:27.:04:28.

The Police Federation said the old system protected

:04:29.:04:32.

complainants and victims and helped prevent further offending.

:04:33.:04:34.

Gibraltar has insisted it won't be used as a bargaining chip in

:04:35.:04:44.

any Brexit deal the European Union wants to reach with the UK.

:04:45.:04:50.

Spain, which claims sovereignty over the British territory,

:04:51.:04:53.

could be given a veto over decisions affecting it.

:04:54.:04:55.

the UK remains "steadfastly committed" to Gibraltar.

:04:56.:04:59.

is at the border with Spain for us this morning.

:05:00.:05:07.

Feelings are running high over this, morning.

:05:08.:05:14.

Good morning from an and character to Kaleka lardy Rock of Gibraltar,

:05:15.:05:21.

let's show you down there, you can probably make out a flow of traffic,

:05:22.:05:26.

a lot of people walking out on southern Spain into Gibraltar,

:05:27.:05:32.

because thousands of people work, sorry, live over that side of the

:05:33.:05:36.

border and work in Gibraltar. The free movement of people is

:05:37.:05:39.

guaranteed, because Gibraltar and Britain are members of the European

:05:40.:05:43.

single market. Now, when Britain comes to negotiate its Brexit deal

:05:44.:05:48.

with the rest of the European Union, in theory now, according to the

:05:49.:05:52.

European Union, Spain will have a say on whether the deal can apply to

:05:53.:05:57.

Gibraltar or not. And what is possible is that Spain might say

:05:58.:06:02.

that, actually, aspects of any deal can't apply to Gibraltar, and it

:06:03.:06:07.

might do so on economic grounds, because Spain has always complained

:06:08.:06:10.

that taxes are much lower on this side of the border than in southern

:06:11.:06:13.

Spain. Of course, Britain and Gibraltar putting on a united front,

:06:14.:06:18.

saying any deal for Britain is 84 Gibraltar, take it or leave it, that

:06:19.:06:24.

is the kind of poker game we are in. -- is a deal for Gibraltar.

:06:25.:06:27.

Police are holding eight people in connection with an attack

:06:28.:06:29.

on a teenage asylum seeker on Friday night.

:06:30.:06:31.

Three arrests were made yesterday, and the Met Police have now released

:06:32.:06:34.

images of three more people they want to speak to.

:06:35.:06:37.

The victim, a 17-year-old boy, is in a serious but stable condition

:06:38.:06:40.

after he was allegedly chased and beaten by gang of 20 people

:06:41.:06:43.

Donald Trump has said the US will solve the North Korean nuclear

:06:44.:06:49.

In an interview with the Financial Times,

:06:50.:06:53.

"If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will."

:06:54.:06:58.

Mr Trump confirmed he was referring to direct unilateral action.

:06:59.:07:02.

The comments come ahead of a visit to the US

:07:03.:07:06.

There's a warning that a third of adults in the UK,

:07:07.:07:13.

or 20 million people, are physically inactive

:07:14.:07:15.

and at risk from coronary heart disease.

:07:16.:07:18.

it's costing the health service over ?1 billion a year,

:07:19.:07:22.

as Breakfast's Graham Satchell reports.

:07:23.:07:27.

Harriet had no warnings, no symptoms.

:07:28.:07:29.

She was climbing the stairs at home

:07:30.:07:31.

when she had a heart attack at the age of just 44.

:07:32.:07:35.

It was like having the rug pulled from under your feet.

:07:36.:07:41.

I have a very young family, I had a demanding job,

:07:42.:07:44.

which I loved, really enjoyed, so then to suddenly be

:07:45.:07:46.

struck by such a traumatic incident was very difficult.

:07:47.:07:48.

I didn't make time for activity or exercise, so I think,

:07:49.:07:53.

looking back on it now, I was fairly sedentary.

:07:54.:07:55.

Research from the British Heart Foundation shows the most inactive

:07:56.:08:01.

part of the UK is the northwest of England, where 47% of adults

:08:02.:08:04.

followed by Northern Ireland, where 46% are inactive.

:08:05.:08:08.

In Wales and the northeast of England, it is 42%.

:08:09.:08:12.

London and the West Midlands 40%,

:08:13.:08:13.

and in Scotland 37% are too sedentary.

:08:14.:08:18.

most of us spend 78 days of our life each year in a sedentary position.

:08:19.:08:27.

Physical activity is important, but you also need to reduce

:08:28.:08:31.

the amount of time each day that you spend sitting at your computer,

:08:32.:08:35.

Harriet has now changed her lifestyle - regular exercise,

:08:36.:08:41.

walking, playing with her kids - but inactivity is fast becoming

:08:42.:08:44.

one of the leading causes of premature death.

:08:45.:08:48.

Rescue teams in Colombia are continuing to search

:08:49.:08:57.

through tonnes of mud and debris for anyone who might have survived

:08:58.:09:01.

the devastating mudslides in the south of the country.

:09:02.:09:03.

In the last few hours, the President has said

:09:04.:09:06.

254 people are known to have died, 43 of them children.

:09:07.:09:10.

The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa, burying entire neighbourhoods.

:09:11.:09:22.

Some sick and disabled claimants of the out-of-work benefit

:09:23.:09:24.

will now receive nearly ?30 a week less.

:09:25.:09:29.

The Government says bringing the benefit in line with jobseeker's

:09:30.:09:31.

allowance will incentivise people to get back into work.

:09:32.:09:38.

But like many others with learning difficulties,

:09:39.:09:53.

She's getting by financially because she receives employment

:09:54.:09:57.

and support allowance, an out of work benefit for people

:09:58.:09:59.

whose ill health or disability limits their ability to work.

:10:00.:10:02.

Employment and support allowance is important to me, because it helps

:10:03.:10:07.

for me to pay my essentials, my bills, my gas, my electric

:10:08.:10:10.

and basically just get my food in, and it helps me to get

:10:11.:10:14.

Those eligible for the benefit are placed in one of two groups.

:10:15.:10:20.

are judged as being unable to work or look for work.

:10:21.:10:24.

Others, like Belinda, are placed in the work-related

:10:25.:10:26.

activity group because they've been deemed as being able to work

:10:27.:10:30.

From today, all new claimants in this group will receive ?73

:10:31.:10:35.

Existing recipients and those in the support group

:10:36.:10:42.

so Belinda won't see a reduction in the amount she receives.

:10:43.:10:51.

But like many disability charities and MPs, she's concerned the cuts

:10:52.:10:53.

will be counter-productive and has campaigned against them.

:10:54.:10:56.

The theory is if you reduce benefits more people get into work,

:10:57.:10:59.

but the truth is disabled people face lots of barriers

:11:00.:11:01.

Whereas someone on an ordinary jobseekers allowance may be back

:11:02.:11:13.

for a disabled person typically it takes at least two years.

:11:14.:11:17.

Try living for two years on that really low level

:11:18.:11:19.

The Government says new claimants placed in the affected group

:11:20.:11:23.

will receive a personal support package with practical

:11:24.:11:24.

help to re-enter the workforce when they are ready.

:11:25.:11:27.

It's a job with long hours, high levels of stress,

:11:28.:11:35.

and one which can cost more than it pays.

:11:36.:11:37.

But tens of thousands of people would not dream of turning it down.

:11:38.:11:41.

of caring for a relative with terminal cancer.

:11:42.:11:45.

It found that, in the final three months,

:11:46.:11:48.

the average carer spends 70 hours per week on tasks.

:11:49.:11:51.

personal and medical care and emotional support.

:11:52.:11:57.

They also incur average costs of ?370

:11:58.:11:59.

for the final three months of their loved one's life.

:12:00.:12:05.

Tony Bonser has experienced this first hand.

:12:06.:12:07.

who died of cancer at the age of 35 in 2009.

:12:08.:12:11.

a professor in palliative care and co-author of this study.

:12:12.:12:19.

Morning, both, thank you very much indeed for joining us. Tony, you

:12:20.:12:29.

have been through this experience of looking after your son, and of

:12:30.:12:33.

course it takes a toll - what for you was the impression that you got,

:12:34.:12:37.

what was most difficult? I suppose, first of all, his intense

:12:38.:12:42.

independence, so for most of the time he was ill, he insisted on

:12:43.:12:45.

staying in his own flat, but the time came, that was difficult,

:12:46.:12:49.

because we had to look after him despite the fact that he was

:12:50.:12:53.

pretending that everything was OK. We were all in denial, which didn't

:12:54.:12:57.

help the situation. The time came when he couldn't manage on his own,

:12:58.:13:01.

and we brought him to our house. At that stage, it became really

:13:02.:13:07.

difficult for us, because he... You could never tell from day to day,

:13:08.:13:12.

things like his appetite, because of chemotherapy, his appetite change,

:13:13.:13:16.

what he could eat and wanted to each changed radically. He desperately

:13:17.:13:19.

needed to talk but couldn't really cope with the subject, so we spent a

:13:20.:13:24.

lot of time talking around it. He would say things like, do you

:13:25.:13:28.

believe in life after death? And I missed the signs, I have to say, I

:13:29.:13:33.

regret this enormously, I believe he was trying to talk about something

:13:34.:13:37.

more serious. He were text us and say, can I have ageing? That is the

:13:38.:13:42.

new technology, we would be sitting watching television, and because he

:13:43.:13:45.

couldn't move out of his bed at that stage. He would ask for a favourite

:13:46.:13:50.

book, because he absolutely loved book and a vinyls. We were looking

:13:51.:13:54.

after him and never quite knowing what he wanted, and that all in an

:13:55.:14:00.

atmosphere of extreme emotional tension, because we were trying to

:14:01.:14:04.

avoid the thought that he might be close to death. Of course, you are

:14:05.:14:07.

looking after your son, spending an awful lot of time doing this, and

:14:08.:14:12.

from the research, an average of 70 hours a week, but some people

:14:13.:14:16.

spending more than 100 hours a week doing this. We are looking at the

:14:17.:14:22.

top 25%, they reported spending 115 hours per week, which is 16 hours

:14:23.:14:28.

per day every day. So that is all your waking hours, and of course a

:14:29.:14:31.

lot of carers also have their sleep disrupted, so it is immense, it is

:14:32.:14:36.

an immense undertaking. What are you asking for help for? Echoes this is

:14:37.:14:41.

something that people want to do, it is their loved ones and all the rest

:14:42.:14:50.

of it. -- because. What carers have told us in past research is that

:14:51.:14:56.

they need help with two main things. They need help with knowing how to

:14:57.:15:01.

look after their family member, you know, having the know-how, skills

:15:02.:15:08.

and confidence to do so. So for instance, health care professionals

:15:09.:15:12.

can provide a lot of input in terms of inspiration, showing carers how

:15:13.:15:16.

to do things, knowing what to expect. The other key thing they

:15:17.:15:20.

need more help with is looking after their own health and well-being, so

:15:21.:15:23.

that is their own psychological health, physical health. But there

:15:24.:15:28.

is also issues like dealing with work, dealing with financial

:15:29.:15:33.

matters, and also making sure that people sometimes get a break from

:15:34.:15:36.

caring during the daytime or night-time.

:15:37.:15:40.

You talked about financial matters and that's something you have spoken

:15:41.:15:45.

about in the past, as well as the emotional issues and the timing and

:15:46.:15:49.

food for Neil because his tastes changed as well during the

:15:50.:15:52.

treatment? Yes. So you couldn't actually budget in advance and buy

:15:53.:15:56.

standard stuff in. Clothing, yes his size changed. When you have cancer,

:15:57.:16:00.

your body size, body dimensions change. He was in a job where a lot

:16:01.:16:06.

of his pay was performance related and he couldn't perform. The company

:16:07.:16:10.

were very good and sometimes gave him bonuses he hadn't earned, but he

:16:11.:16:16.

to rely on us for some that. He felt the cold intensely. A lot of people

:16:17.:16:20.

with cancer felt the cold intensely. He couldn't afford his electricity

:16:21.:16:25.

bills and we had a dispute with the electricity company about that, when

:16:26.:16:29.

he was at our house, we had to have the heating and the electricity on

:16:30.:16:34.

flat-out. You don't notice it at the time, you just spend it because

:16:35.:16:38.

that's what is necessary. But at some stage, in the future, it

:16:39.:16:41.

catches up with you and you find out, you have been spending a lot of

:16:42.:16:45.

money. Of course. Thank you both very much indeed for talking to us.

:16:46.:16:50.

Please keep your comments coming in on that.

:16:51.:17:02.

Here's Carol with a look at this morning's weather.

:17:03.:17:08.

A lovely picture sent in from Kent this morning. Now, it is not foggy

:17:09.:17:14.

everywhere. For some of us, we're off to a beautiful startment this

:17:15.:17:17.

week, it will be mostly dry. However, over the next few days it

:17:18.:17:21.

will feel fresher and some chilly nights. But the coming night won't

:17:22.:17:25.

be as cold as the one that's just gone. So what's happening is we have

:17:26.:17:28.

got high pressure dominating our weather. As you can see, it is

:17:29.:17:31.

dominating much of Western Europe a the moment. So if you're head off to

:17:32.:17:36.

Iberia and France, there is a lot of dry weather around. Low pressure

:17:37.:17:39.

bringing showers across parts of central of the Mediterranean, around

:17:40.:17:43.

Italy, some of those will be thundery and we've got a weather

:17:44.:17:46.

front coming in from the west introducing rain across our shores

:17:47.:17:50.

of the it is already affecting parts of Northern Ireland and also Western

:17:51.:17:55.

Scotland. So a foggy start for some. A frosty start for some. That should

:17:56.:17:58.

lift. The exception is where we have got sea fog and low cloud across the

:17:59.:18:02.

English Channel. Through the day at tile that will lap on shore. But

:18:03.:18:06.

away from that, we are looking at blue skies. Beautiful afternoon

:18:07.:18:10.

across London, highs of 17 Celsius. Don't forget if you are caught under

:18:11.:18:13.

the low cloud, it will feel rather chilly. A fine afternoon across the

:18:14.:18:18.

Channel Islands, but the cloud building across Cornwall and Devon.

:18:19.:18:24.

It should be dry at this stage. For Somerset, Gloucestershire and Wales,

:18:25.:18:27.

it is dry. But it is similarly so, we will see more cloud build ahead

:18:28.:18:31.

of the rain. The rain getting in across the Isle of Man and pushing

:18:32.:18:34.

through Northern Ireland, but than we have got another weather front

:18:35.:18:37.

waiting in the wings and we have rain coming in from the west towards

:18:38.:18:41.

the east of Scotland with showers across the Northern Isles, but

:18:42.:18:44.

Eastern Scotland, much of central and Eastern England, staying fine

:18:45.:18:49.

and dry with sunny spells. Through the evening and overnight, here

:18:50.:18:52.

comes that weather front drifting down towards the South East and

:18:53.:18:55.

taking the patchy rain with it. The second one comes in in hot pursuit,

:18:56.:18:59.

so it will abcloudy night. There will be fog around and as a result

:19:00.:19:03.

not as cold a night as the one that's just gone. But the wind will

:19:04.:19:07.

be picking up and continuing to blow in showers not just tonight, but

:19:08.:19:11.

tomorrow and some of the showers across Shetland will be wintry. At

:19:12.:19:14.

the other end of the country, our weather front pushes away taking the

:19:15.:19:18.

rain with it, but there will be more cloud left behind it with the odd

:19:19.:19:21.

shower and in between brighter skies and some sunshine, but note the

:19:22.:19:25.

temperature, we are looking at highs of 17 Celsius, we are looking at

:19:26.:19:28.

temperatures dipping a little bit and it will continue to do that as

:19:29.:19:31.

we go through the week, but Dan and Lou, by no means, are we entering

:19:32.:19:40.

the next ice age! That's good news, Carol.

:19:41.:19:44.

There is lots going on in the business world this morning.

:19:45.:19:49.

People stuck in a spiral of credit card debt could get more

:19:50.:19:55.

help under new proposals from the City regulator.

:19:56.:19:57.

The Financial Conduct Authority has said credit card firms must do more

:19:58.:20:00.

to help the 3.3 million people in persistent debt where interest

:20:01.:20:02.

payments and charges exceed the amount they borrowed.

:20:03.:20:07.

The pound is "significantly undervalued" - that's the view

:20:08.:20:09.

They say sterling was only weaker against the dollar at the height

:20:10.:20:22.

of the financial crisis and the IMF bail out of the UK in the 1970s.

:20:23.:20:25.

The pound is currently down about 15% since the vote to leave

:20:26.:20:28.

Supermarkets need to get better at forecasting demand from customers

:20:29.:20:32.

to cut the amount of food wasted every year.

:20:33.:20:34.

Speaking to me on this programme, the Groceries Code Adjudicator says

:20:35.:20:37.

failure to plan how much it needs to order from suppliers means

:20:38.:20:40.

excessive pressure on suppliers, food is being wasted unnecessarily

:20:41.:20:42.

Lloyds Bank says it is to shrink hundreds of its branches,

:20:43.:20:46.

not close them, just make them smaller.

:20:47.:20:47.

That could mean boarding up the old counter sections.

:20:48.:20:54.

The new smaller branches will be staffed by just two people, to help

:20:55.:20:57.

Lloyds says it is because more of us are doing our banking

:20:58.:21:05.

Dan, I worry that we will not fit into the smaller branches because I

:21:06.:21:16.

don't know about head height! It will absqueeze. So they will be

:21:17.:21:21.

smaller, but maybe not in the head debt, the height department. We'll

:21:22.:21:25.

have to go in and check! Thank you for your comments about

:21:26.:21:30.

grammar this morning. It really does get under people's

:21:31.:21:31.

skin. If you're the kind of person whose

:21:32.:21:35.

blood begins to boil when you spot a spelling or grammatical mistake

:21:36.:21:38.

on a sign, here's a story for you. In Bristol it has been rumoured

:21:39.:21:41.

for years that there's somebody who goes out under the cover

:21:42.:21:44.

of darkness, correcting mistakes Breakfast's Jon Kay has tracked down

:21:45.:21:46.

this mysterious individual who describes himself

:21:47.:21:52.

as a "grammar vigilante". Jon, loads of people contacting us

:21:53.:22:00.

this morning saying this has got to be an April Fools' Day joke which is

:22:01.:22:04.

a few days too late? Yeah, I know. I thought it was a joke when I heard

:22:05.:22:08.

about it as well. Surely, it can't be truement nobody can take

:22:09.:22:14.

punctuation this seriously, but I promise you, it is true. He goes

:22:15.:22:19.

around Bristol and checks signs. This bakery belongs to Herbert. Now

:22:20.:22:32.

it is Herbert's. That's how seriously he takes punctuation and

:22:33.:22:34.

this is just one of many! Roaming the streets

:22:35.:22:43.

of Bristol, righting wrongs. I've been doing it for quite

:22:44.:22:46.

a lot of years now. I do think it's a cause

:22:47.:22:53.

worth pursuing. Working alone and in secret,

:22:54.:22:57.

he makes punctuation marks I'm trying to match

:22:58.:22:59.

the colour of the apostrophe He has even made a special device

:23:00.:23:05.

which he called The Apostrophiser which lets him reach

:23:06.:23:11.

the higher shops. Oh, look at that,

:23:12.:23:18.

that's worked perfectly. A quick demonstration

:23:19.:23:19.

on the dining room wall. What I need to do now is turn

:23:20.:23:21.

the Apostrophiser around so I can By day, he's a highly

:23:22.:23:25.

qualified professional. Only a handful of his closest

:23:26.:23:27.

friends and family know I have felt extremely nervous,

:23:28.:23:30.

the heart has been thumping. I've got to make sure that

:23:31.:23:41.

it's technically right. He started his campaign

:23:42.:23:44.

13 years ago. This was the first sign

:23:45.:23:51.

he tackled, Amys Nail's. He's left his mark throughout

:23:52.:23:53.

this area of Bristol, There will be some people,

:23:54.:23:58.

maybe the owners of these shops who say, hang on a minute,

:23:59.:24:11.

you haven't got permission, we haven't asked you to do

:24:12.:24:16.

this, what you're doing I'd say it's more of a crime

:24:17.:24:18.

to have the apostrophes I think I can do it without causing

:24:19.:24:24.

anybody too much offence There's one sign he has been

:24:25.:24:28.

desperate to correct for years - The garage is right outside

:24:29.:24:33.

Bristol's high security prison. Using a purpose-built,

:24:34.:24:54.

home-made trestle, he climbs up, cuts a piece of yellow sticky-backed

:24:55.:25:04.

plastic to size and covers We went to see the man who has owned

:25:05.:25:08.

the garage for 30 years. Who lives around these parts,

:25:09.:25:22.

I can't tell you about him. No, it's good to see

:25:23.:25:28.

people still caring When you go past a sign

:25:29.:25:34.

that you've corrected, The word you are

:25:35.:25:42.

looking for is pride. Yeah, I've been the one who has been

:25:43.:25:45.

there and sorted it out and got it It does make my heart swell slightly

:25:46.:25:53.

when I see the correct apostrophe. Here is another one he has done.

:25:54.:26:16.

Gardner's Patch. Let's see some of the ones that you've spotted that

:26:17.:26:30.

have driven you have seen written. , "Please clean after you're dogs."

:26:31.:26:39.

Jeff saw, "Pizza fired." There will be one man who is going to be very

:26:40.:26:46.

busy after the submissions from you. I understand his levels of

:26:47.:26:50.

irateness! Thank you for the examples today. We

:26:51.:26:58.

have got so many coming in brought and bought.

:26:59.:27:00.

That was Jon Kay. Time now to get the news,

:27:01.:27:04.

travel and weather where you are. Hello this is Breakfast,

:27:05.:30:26.

with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. We are still concerned about

:30:27.:30:41.

grammatical errors! Significant restrictions on the use

:30:42.:30:47.

of bail by police in England The amount of time a suspect

:30:48.:30:50.

released from custody can remain on bail, will be limited

:30:51.:30:55.

to 28 days in most cases. According to the Home Office,

:30:56.:31:00.

the move will end the injustice of people left in limbo for months

:31:01.:31:03.

or even years. But the Police Federation has warned

:31:04.:31:06.

the change will be unrealistic Gibraltar has insisted it won't be

:31:07.:31:09.

used as a "bargaining chip" in any Brexit deal the European Union wants

:31:10.:31:16.

to reach with the UK. Spain, which claims sovereignty

:31:17.:31:20.

of the British territory, could be given a veto over

:31:21.:31:22.

decisions affecting it. But yesterday, Theresa May said

:31:23.:31:29.

the UK remains "steadfastly Police are holding eight people

:31:30.:31:31.

in connection with an attack on a teenage asylum seeker

:31:32.:31:34.

on Friday night. Three arrests were made yesterday,

:31:35.:31:38.

and the Met Police have now released images of three more people

:31:39.:31:41.

they want to speak to. The victim, a 17-year-old boy,

:31:42.:31:44.

is in a serious but stable condition after he was allegedly chased

:31:45.:31:47.

and beaten by gang of 20 people Donald Trump has said the US

:31:48.:31:49.

will solve the North Korean In an interview with

:31:50.:32:00.

the Financial Times, the President is quoted as saying:

:32:01.:32:06.

"If China is not going to solve Mr Trump confirmed he was referring

:32:07.:32:09.

to direct, unilateral action. The comments come ahead

:32:10.:32:12.

of a visit to the US Rescue teams in Colombia

:32:13.:32:15.

are continuing to search through tonnes of mud and debris,

:32:16.:32:25.

for anyone who might have survived the devastating mudslides

:32:26.:32:28.

in the south of the country. In the last few hours,

:32:29.:32:31.

the President has said 254 people are known to have died -

:32:32.:32:34.

43 of them children. The mud engulfed the town of Mocoa,

:32:35.:32:40.

burying entire neighbourhoods. There's a warning that a third

:32:41.:32:50.

of adults in the UK - or 20 million people -

:32:51.:32:53.

are physically inactive The British Heart Foundation says

:32:54.:32:55.

it's costing the NHS over Their research also reveals women

:32:56.:32:59.

are more sedentary than men, and that the north west of England

:33:00.:33:03.

has the highest rate of inactivity. Doris Day has received an unusual

:33:04.:33:11.

and perhaps unwelcome surprise on her birthday -

:33:12.:33:13.

she's two years older The Hollywood star always said

:33:14.:33:16.

that her date of birth was April 3rd, 1924 -

:33:17.:33:22.

making her 93 today. But her original birth certificate

:33:23.:33:24.

has been uncovered showing she was born in 1922,

:33:25.:33:27.

which makes her 95. Whichever way, she looks amazing.

:33:28.:33:40.

Everybody saying she looks like our lovely Carol. That could be Carol on

:33:41.:33:45.

the bike. It could! And coming up here

:33:46.:33:49.

on Breakfast this morning... It's the ultimate test of pedal

:33:50.:33:51.

power - Mark Beaumont is trying to break his own record, and cycle

:33:52.:33:54.

round the world in 80 days. After nine, they're rare, nocturnal,

:33:55.:33:58.

and live mostly underground. But now never-before-seen pictures

:33:59.:34:02.

suggest the giant armadillo could hold the key to saving one

:34:03.:34:04.

of the wildest places on earth. We'll speak to the cameraman who

:34:05.:34:08.

filmed these incredible pictures. And may we introduce

:34:09.:34:14.

you to the one and only Sergeant Pepper's Lonely

:34:15.:34:16.

Hearts Club Band? The famous Beatles album

:34:17.:34:19.

turns 50 this year. We will be talking about about all

:34:20.:34:34.

week. Share your memories and we will get through those in the next

:34:35.:34:35.

few days. And we have Scottish

:34:36.:34:37.

Premiership champions - Six times in a row now. It's not

:34:38.:34:47.

much of a surprise since they were so far ahead. But cast your mind

:34:48.:34:52.

back to the beginning of the season, they were beaten by an amateur side

:34:53.:34:57.

from Gibraltar in the Champions League qualifiers, the worst loss in

:34:58.:35:02.

their history. They have been unbeaten all season. They are still

:35:03.:35:06.

on for the domestic travel. -- trouble.

:35:07.:35:07.

It may be only the first week of April, but Celtic have clinched

:35:08.:35:10.

the Scottish Premiership again, after beating Hearts 5-0 yesterday.

:35:11.:35:12.

Scott Sinclair scored a hat-trick which helped put Brendan Rodgers'

:35:13.:35:15.

side 25 points clear of second-placed Aberdeen.

:35:16.:35:18.

I'm very honoured and very privileged to manage Glasgow Celtic.

:35:19.:35:24.

When you support a team like this as a boy and you know the great

:35:25.:35:29.

history of the club, I was happy to take

:35:30.:35:31.

on the responsibility to make the supporters dream and make them

:35:32.:35:34.

happy and hopefully we've done that this coming season

:35:35.:35:37.

There were two games in the Premier League -

:35:38.:35:42.

all four teams needed a win to revive their seasons,

:35:43.:35:44.

Arsenal and Manchester City drew 2-2 at the Emirates stadium.

:35:45.:35:48.

City twice took the lead through Leroy Sane, then

:35:49.:35:51.

Walcott and Mustafi scored for the Gunners.

:35:52.:35:56.

Arsenal remain seven points behind them,

:35:57.:35:59.

At the other end of the table, Middlesbrough wasted

:36:00.:36:06.

a late chance as they shared a goalless draw

:36:07.:36:08.

The result keeps Swansea just above the relegation zone.

:36:09.:36:13.

30 years after they won the FA Cup, Coventry City were victorious

:36:14.:36:20.

at Wembley again - this time in the final of the

:36:21.:36:22.

They beat Oxford United 2-1 in front of 43,000 fans,

:36:23.:36:31.

for their first trophy since that 1987 triumph.

:36:32.:36:33.

It's some comfort in a dismal season for coventry

:36:34.:36:36.

Roger Federer says he'll probably not play again

:36:37.:36:43.

until the French Open at the end of May,

:36:44.:36:45.

after winning his third title of the year.

:36:46.:36:47.

He beat Rafa Nadal in straight sets to lift

:36:48.:36:50.

the Miami Open title, 24 hours after Britain's Johanna

:36:51.:36:52.

Federer moves up to fourth in the world rankings,

:36:53.:36:57.

but will take the next month off to rest.

:36:58.:37:01.

The 163rd Men's Boat Race went the way of Oxford -

:37:02.:37:04.

they beat Cambridge by just over a length for their fourth victory

:37:05.:37:07.

in five years. Oxford, who were favourites entering

:37:08.:37:09.

the race on the Thames, took the lead in the early stages.

:37:10.:37:12.

Cambridge never quite able close the gap.

:37:13.:37:15.

Oxford now trail Cambridge 82-80 overall.

:37:16.:37:25.

One of their oars got stuck, handing Cambridge a simple victory.

:37:26.:37:31.

The light blues won by half a minute in a course record time too.

:37:32.:37:40.

So you can see how hard that was for Oxford. There is no way they could

:37:41.:37:46.

have recovered. They had to stop the boat, restart their race. Cambridge

:37:47.:37:51.

were so far ahead. You have two rode the whole race

:37:52.:37:54.

knowing that Cambridge are the favourites.

:37:55.:38:00.

There is no consolation in the boat race. You either win or my clues.

:38:01.:38:06.

You could always say you've finished second!

:38:07.:38:11.

Millions of us will pick up a latte or cappuccino on the way

:38:12.:38:14.

into work this morning, for that caffeine kick

:38:15.:38:16.

You had a little espresso, didn't you?

:38:17.:38:20.

Yes. But only one in every

:38:21.:38:22.

400 of the paper cups Andy Moore is in Central London this

:38:23.:38:25.

morning, looking at the launch of the biggest initiative to date

:38:26.:38:29.

to increase recycling. There is the offender.

:38:30.:38:39.

Yes, the offender. The humble coffee cup. You may think it is made of

:38:40.:38:43.

paper and if it -- it can be recycled. It is not that easy. There

:38:44.:38:48.

is a plastic lining inside. Millions of them go to landfill or are

:38:49.:38:54.

incinerated. There is a pioneering scheme in London with these giant

:38:55.:39:00.

yellow bins, where you can recycle your coffee cup. This scheme is

:39:01.:39:04.

starting in the city of London. They hope it will spread to other places.

:39:05.:39:10.

Wendy meters from the City of London Corporation. How will this work? We

:39:11.:39:15.

are enormously excited by this scheme. It is the first large-scale

:39:16.:39:20.

scheme for recycling paper coffee cups we have had in the city of

:39:21.:39:25.

London or nationally. We are hoping to encourage people to think about

:39:26.:39:29.

the coffee cup and to actually recycle it in proper opinions, so

:39:30.:39:34.

that they can go away, the lining will be stripped out and the paper

:39:35.:39:40.

cups can be recycled. You have got co-operation from a lot of people?

:39:41.:39:44.

Absolutely. We have 30 large-scale businesses involved and 131 coughing

:39:45.:39:50.

outlets. Many of those are national chains. We hope that will be panned

:39:51.:39:56.

out across the nation. We throw away 7 million copy cups a day. In less

:39:57.:40:02.

than 1% of that is recycled. They hope to get half a million cough

:40:03.:40:08.

teacups in these bins by the end of the month, and 5 million by the end

:40:09.:40:11.

of the year. Thank you.

:40:12.:40:13.

In 2008, Mark Beaumont spent 195 days pedalling

:40:14.:40:15.

more than 18,000 miles around the world in an attempt

:40:16.:40:17.

to break the record for the fastest circumnavigation

:40:18.:40:24.

Not happy with that feat, he plans to do it again but this

:40:25.:40:30.

Mark is here dressed in all the gear. Are you leaving now? Not

:40:31.:40:43.

imminently. But I am doing a massive training ride starting at 4am

:40:44.:40:47.

tomorrow. That is why I'm ready to go.

:40:48.:40:48.

Before we speak to him let's take a look at him in action.

:40:49.:40:51.

I don't know how many people have been to the darkest places of

:40:52.:40:54.

endurance sport because that is a hole it's hard to put into words.

:40:55.:41:03.

Amazing. Can we show the giraffe again? Where did this happen, when

:41:04.:41:57.

you are riding alongside the giraffe? That was Botswana. The last

:41:58.:42:03.

world record I said was the length of Africa. What about to do this

:42:04.:42:09.

year has been three years in the planning. Those 6000 year -- 6000

:42:10.:42:16.

mile ride was year one. Going around the world in 80 days is still quite

:42:17.:42:20.

a feat, let alone doing it on a bicycle? Yes. I know what I'm

:42:21.:42:25.

getting into. I cycled around the world ten years ago. It was not

:42:26.:42:32.

supported them. This time it's almost Tour de France style. I have

:42:33.:42:36.

a support vehicle. It is just about performance. That makes a

:42:37.:42:42.

difference. I will have to do 240 miles a day, riding 16 hours a day.

:42:43.:42:47.

There aren't many reference points for this level of endurance. I have

:42:48.:42:52.

an amazing team. The whole point in the next two and a half weeks going

:42:53.:42:55.

around the entire coastline of Britain is to test the theory, to

:42:56.:43:01.

know that I can hold that A.D. David Paice. You are feeding on the bike.

:43:02.:43:10.

What time do start? On the bike at four. Taking half an hour off every

:43:11.:43:15.

four hours. Get some recovery at half past nine every night. Into

:43:16.:43:20.

bed. The alarm goes off at half past three and back onto the bike. You

:43:21.:43:25.

have to be extremely fit going into this. Some neat things to think

:43:26.:43:28.

about. Getting the amount of calories you need. How will you be

:43:29.:43:34.

doing that. That's my? I have got a lot of food. If you need to pile up

:43:35.:43:40.

on a meal in front of you, one of the first things to cope with his

:43:41.:43:46.

digestive. We have to make that food is readily available as possible. I

:43:47.:43:52.

have a fantastic support team. Laura Penfold. You're covered her amazing

:43:53.:43:55.

story when she wrote across the Pacific ocean. She is a Team GB

:43:56.:44:03.

physio. She knows what I need. That performance side of things is

:44:04.:44:07.

absolutely critical. My job this time around is actually much

:44:08.:44:11.

simpler. I just need to turn the paddles and ride the bike. I'm used

:44:12.:44:16.

to being out there doing the wild man adventure. Who starred in Paris?

:44:17.:44:22.

Yeah. The race around the world starts in Paris on July the 2nd. I

:44:23.:44:29.

go to Beijing. Europe, Russia, Mongolia, China, across Australia,

:44:30.:44:34.

up New Zealand, across North America from Anchorage. The final sprint

:44:35.:44:39.

finishes Lisbon through Madrid, back to Paris. You have to do more than

:44:40.:44:43.

18,000 miles and you have to go through two points on the opposite

:44:44.:44:44.

side of the planet. I have got an idea of what it is

:44:45.:45:01.

like to cycle 50 miles a day. Paramount is a staggering amount.

:45:02.:45:09.

Two decades later, I realised I could cycle around the world in 80

:45:10.:45:14.

days. I haven't rolled back the bed and decided to do it. I understand

:45:15.:45:17.

what I am taking on and it scares me but I am putting all my chips on the

:45:18.:45:21.

table and I believe it is possible. What a leap, the current record 123

:45:22.:45:28.

days. Can you get around the world in 80? We will see. You are nervous

:45:29.:45:32.

and worried, which is right. What are you most worried about? I put a

:45:33.:45:36.

lot of pressure on myself in terms of performance and I need to stay

:45:37.:45:40.

fit and healthy. The big concerns are like one, through to Beijing,

:45:41.:45:44.

the border crossings and the unknowns, the part of the world that

:45:45.:45:47.

I don't know. Once we get to Australia it is a much straighter by

:45:48.:45:57.

Chris. May was killed in Australia this weekend. -- Mike. Many people

:45:58.:46:04.

have paid tribute to him. Mike went for the same record and broke my

:46:05.:46:08.

record a number of years later. A very quietly spoken guy and a real

:46:09.:46:12.

inspiration and he got a lot of people out there passionate about

:46:13.:46:17.

exploring the world on two wheels. We are sending our thoughts to his

:46:18.:46:21.

friends and family at this very tough time. He was out there doing

:46:22.:46:25.

what he loved, racing across Australia. Will you stay in touch

:46:26.:46:29.

with us? You will not have much time off the bike. Will you stay in touch

:46:30.:46:34.

and let us know how you do? Absolutely. For the next few weeks

:46:35.:46:40.

you can follow us online. England, Wales, my homeland in Scotland, an

:46:41.:46:45.

exciting journey. It starts the race around the planet on July the 2nd.

:46:46.:46:49.

And Will you come on when you have finished, if you can walk? I really

:46:50.:46:55.

might need a seat at that point! The very best of luck. Thank you. Now

:46:56.:47:02.

the weather. Good morning. It is certainly varied around our

:47:03.:47:06.

coastline today. This is what we have got at the moment in Kent,

:47:07.:47:11.

quite a bit of fog first thing. As we put into Scotland, quite a lot of

:47:12.:47:15.

cloud and further south in Scotland we have still got cloud with

:47:16.:47:20.

brighter skies, and then into Wales, a beautiful start to the day. But it

:47:21.:47:24.

is quite chilly to start for some of us and there has been frost around

:47:25.:47:28.

and there is also fog. In Reading it is freezing at the moment and in

:47:29.:47:32.

Cardiff and Edinburgh it is six, eight in Belfast or even nine. This

:47:33.:47:42.

cloud is a rain bearing cloud. Clear skies around and some fog patches

:47:43.:47:46.

lapping in from the English Channel. It will continue to do that as we go

:47:47.:47:49.

through the course of the day but inland fog will tend to burn away

:47:50.:47:53.

and for many of us we are looking at a dry day, with sunshine and bright

:47:54.:47:58.

spells at worst. But we have a weather front coming in from the

:47:59.:48:01.

west introducing some rain and also quite breezy. In the south-east,

:48:02.:48:07.

fine afternoon when we lose the fog but we are prone to it along the

:48:08.:48:11.

south coast and wherever that happens, it will depress the

:48:12.:48:15.

temperature. A fine afternoon in the Channel Islands with cloud

:48:16.:48:18.

developing ahead of the weather front in Cornwall and Devon but in

:48:19.:48:23.

south Gloucestershire, sunny skies, cloud in Cardigan Bay and in Wales

:48:24.:48:27.

ahead of the weather front. That weather front will be crossing

:48:28.:48:30.

Northern Ireland through the course of the day living brighter skies

:48:31.:48:33.

behind and another weather front follows on. The same weather front

:48:34.:48:37.

pushing rain across Scotland south-eastern parts staying dry and

:48:38.:48:41.

fine. Across much of northern England, especially the North East,

:48:42.:48:44.

heading towards the Midlands and the wash, we are looking at a fine

:48:45.:48:49.

afternoon. Really evening and overnight, this first weather front

:48:50.:48:52.

continues its journey to the south-east taking patchy rain with

:48:53.:48:55.

it and the second one comes in as the week feature, but tonight there

:48:56.:49:02.

will be more cloud around than the night just gone so not as cold. Some

:49:03.:49:06.

fog patches forming. Tomorrow the fog patches will lift and the rain

:49:07.:49:09.

will push into the south-east. Behind it there will be a lot of

:49:10.:49:14.

cloud, which will be thick enough for some drizzle. We will also see

:49:15.:49:17.

sunshine across northern England, Wales, the south-west and Northern

:49:18.:49:22.

Ireland, but for Scotland a bit more cloud and some showers, which will

:49:23.:49:25.

be blown across quite quickly in the north on a strong wind. Some of the

:49:26.:49:29.

showers in Shetland will be wintery. Temperatures tomorrow between eight

:49:30.:49:43.

and 15, so down a notch on today, and that process will continue as we

:49:44.:49:45.

go through the next couple of days but for most of us the weather will

:49:46.:49:48.

remain fairly settled. Before you go, our graphics department has been

:49:49.:49:50.

busy. Many people have likened view to Doris Day. In my dreams! Can you

:49:51.:49:59.

lift up your left leg a little bit? Doris Day at 95? What are you

:50:00.:50:01.

saying? Thank you! For many of us, it's

:50:02.:50:11.

our worst nightmare. Turning up in a new job,

:50:12.:50:13.

halfway through the day, with no idea where things

:50:14.:50:16.

are or what you have to do. But our next guest has turned

:50:17.:50:19.

working in unfamiliar James Cathcart is part of a band

:50:20.:50:21.

of chefs who provide cover for kitchens in an emergency

:50:22.:50:25.

with often little or no notice. He's worked in hundreds

:50:26.:50:27.

of establishments from five-star I've been in the kitchen

:50:28.:50:29.

for about 37 seconds. I haven't even had a chance

:50:30.:50:36.

to look at the menu yet. We're going to have

:50:37.:50:40.

to do that later. We've got one linguine,

:50:41.:50:42.

one gammon steak, pineapple and egg, two chicken burgers,

:50:43.:50:45.

one chicken pie, one chicken burger extra french fries, one scampi,

:50:46.:50:47.

two fish goujon lemon mayo salads, one large fish and chips,

:50:48.:50:50.

one chicken burger. James's first challenge is a hectic

:50:51.:50:51.

lunchtime with an inexperienced assistant who has an unusual way

:50:52.:50:58.

of making pesto. So we've got a linguine

:50:59.:51:02.

without pesto. We've just been chopping

:51:03.:51:16.

basil and putting it in. I love that. Making linguine with

:51:17.:51:36.

pesto with peas? Traditionally made with? Garlic, basil, oil. They were

:51:37.:51:44.

short of stock that day. My goodness. It must be an incredibly

:51:45.:51:50.

stressful situation to go into. Sometimes you get dragged into a

:51:51.:51:54.

kitchen in a rural pub after a 5-star hotel. Indeed. It is the role

:51:55.:51:58.

of the dice and you never know where you will be until the last minute

:51:59.:52:02.

but it keeps me on my toes. It brings out the challenge. Tell us

:52:03.:52:05.

where you were in this kitchen and at what stage you were called in.

:52:06.:52:09.

This kitchen is just outside of Birmingham and I was called in the

:52:10.:52:12.

day before to cover for a busy weekend shift, where the head chef,

:52:13.:52:18.

who was no longer with the company, and on Friday night it was 80 covers

:52:19.:52:26.

and a trainee chef, you just saw. You must like stress! Being head

:52:27.:52:31.

chef is stressful enough anyway but to be dragged in when you literally

:52:32.:52:33.

don't know what ingredients they have got and how many people you are

:52:34.:52:37.

catering for and what the event is and how many people will turn up?

:52:38.:52:42.

That is one way to look at it. I try to spin the positive side of it.

:52:43.:52:46.

Whenever you start the first job, the first day of work, you are more

:52:47.:52:52.

alert and you want to perform as best you can. In this trait we do it

:52:53.:52:57.

three or four times a week so in the long run, it really does bring out

:52:58.:53:02.

the best in your trade. What is the first thing you try to get sorted

:53:03.:53:06.

out when you arrive in a kitchen. Where everything is, really. It is

:53:07.:53:12.

finding the pots and pans for the task at hand and getting used to the

:53:13.:53:16.

fridges. Everyone has a slightly different set-up and it is keeping

:53:17.:53:20.

an eye on that. Hygiene must be a big issue. There must be terrible

:53:21.:53:24.

examples of things that you have seen over the years. There have been

:53:25.:53:28.

some horror stories over the years. Can you tell us the worst one? I

:53:29.:53:33.

don't want to put anyone off their breakfast! I have been at the cafe

:53:34.:53:37.

where people have been deep frying sausages in a deep fat fryer, and

:53:38.:53:42.

bacon, and that was quite shocking to me that they were oblivious to

:53:43.:53:48.

what they were doing. It is a bit of friendly advice and training on

:53:49.:53:53.

certain methodologies of what to use. We find some mouldy things here

:53:54.:53:57.

and there but as long as it is in the kitchen and not on the plate

:53:58.:54:01.

that is OK. If you find a mouldy thing, what do you do? In the

:54:02.:54:06.

scenario for what happens on the show, it wasn't really the young

:54:07.:54:10.

chef's fault. He was liable but I wanted him to understand that was a

:54:11.:54:15.

no-no and how it got to that stage and we went through the basics.

:54:16.:54:20.

Deeply required? Deep clean, organisation. You have got to have a

:54:21.:54:30.

certain type of personality to be an emergency chef. Yes, you take it

:54:31.:54:35.

with a pinch of salt, you keep your composure. I just like the

:54:36.:54:41.

spontaneity of it all. I can imagine. If you would like to see

:54:42.:54:44.

James dealing with the stress and the changes and whatever he gets

:54:45.:54:48.

thrown into, the programme is coming up.

:54:49.:54:50.

Kitchen 999: Emergency Chefs is on Channel 4 on Thursday at 10pm.

:54:51.:54:57.

All this morning, we have been celebrating one of the most

:54:58.:55:00.

A work that has brought us classic after classic.

:55:01.:55:04.

With A Little Help From My Friends, When I'm 64 and

:55:05.:55:08.

of course the title track, Sergent Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club

:55:09.:55:10.

We're going to talk about the legacy of The Beatles' most famous album

:55:11.:55:14.

But first arts editor Will Gompertz has been finding out

:55:15.:55:19.

# We're Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

:55:20.:55:22.

# We hope you will enjoy the show.

:55:23.:55:24.

I put it to the guys that what we should do,

:55:25.:55:32.

we could make this record now under another persona.

:55:33.:55:35.

We'll be this other band and it will free us.

:55:36.:55:39.

The idea was we could bring anything we wanted because now there was no

:55:40.:55:43.

The Beatles had stopped touring and wanted to make

:55:44.:55:53.

Although never fully realised, Paul McCartney's idea

:55:54.:55:58.

Sergeant Pepper was recorded at the now legendary

:55:59.:56:05.

Abbey Road Studios in London with producer George Martin,

:56:06.:56:09.

the so-called fifth Beatle, looking after the sound

:56:10.:56:11.

Upstairs here is where George Martin would be, twiddling all the knobs,

:56:12.:56:19.

with Ken Townsend who was in charge of the technical side of the music

:56:20.:56:23.

and hopefully if we go through here, he will be there for me to meet.

:56:24.:56:27.

This is where it all happened, right?

:56:28.:56:32.

Yeah, this is number two control room in Abbey Road.

:56:33.:56:34.

It's amazing to come up here 50 years after we made it.

:56:35.:56:41.

Downstairs there in the studio is where the boys were, is that right?

:56:42.:56:48.

This is where The Beatles made nearly all of their recordings.

:56:49.:56:56.

They made 192 recordings here at Abbey Road.

:56:57.:56:58.

The vocals were normally placed here and the guitar amps here.

:56:59.:57:03.

Obviously things like pianos we moved around.

:57:04.:57:11.

Without this machine, the Studer J37 four-track,

:57:12.:57:12.

Sergeant Pepper could not have been made.

:57:13.:57:15.

It's through this tape machine that I invented

:57:16.:57:17.

Well, we want to double track a voice.

:57:18.:57:21.

Yes, you put the second voice on top of the first and it makes

:57:22.:57:28.

Ken's technical innovations were matched by The Beatles'

:57:29.:57:31.

The sound of northern brass bands, Indian classical and even trad jazz

:57:32.:57:38.

The key to it is how you mix all those styles

:57:39.:57:50.

curry for breakfast doesn't work but if you put something

:57:51.:57:54.

in there that makes it more anglicised, it kind of works.

:57:55.:57:57.

They found a way of mixing all of those amazing world

:57:58.:58:04.

elements into an element that is predominantly

:58:05.:58:08.

their own from their tongue but it had flavours from all over.

:58:09.:58:11.

Everybody has their own favourite track on Sergeant Pepper.

:58:12.:58:23.

For me it's this song, A Day In The Life.

:58:24.:58:26.

Recorded half a century ago but still resonating in 2017

:58:27.:58:29.

And these students at the London Music School.

:58:30.:58:36.

# He didn't notice that the lights had changed.

:58:37.:58:41.

# A crowd of people stopped and stared...#

:58:42.:58:49.

Joining us from our London newsroom is the music broadcaster

:58:50.:58:51.

And with us on the sofa is Clark Gilmour, a Beatles tribute

:58:52.:58:56.

act member and a singer at the Cavern Club in Liverpool.

:58:57.:59:05.

Just put this in context. How important was this as an album? It

:59:06.:59:12.

is the supreme achievement of the album era, which began in 1948 with

:59:13.:59:19.

the invention of the album, and fizzled out in the last decade as

:59:20.:59:22.

people turned to downloading and streaming. Sergeant Pepper was a

:59:23.:59:27.

classic example of an artist choosing the order in which you

:59:28.:59:32.

heard their musical selections. You put the needle on the beginning, it

:59:33.:59:35.

goes all the way through, you turn it over, played on the way through.

:59:36.:59:43.

Nowadays with CD priming -- it was the list only choose the order in

:59:44.:59:46.

which they heard the tracks. This was a complete programme designed to

:59:47.:59:50.

be heard from beginning to end. No singles on the album. Penny Lane and

:59:51.:59:55.

Strawberry Fields, which were meant to be on the album, were offered EMI

:59:56.:00:01.

as a single. And so consequently, the entire listening experience was

:00:02.:00:09.

new. And a social commentator said that for the first time since 1815,

:00:10.:00:15.

the Congress of Vienna, generations were united by the Beatles album. I

:00:16.:00:19.

walk from one side of my college campus to another, and from every

:00:20.:00:23.

window came the new album, Sergeant Pepper. It was an extraordinary

:00:24.:00:28.

moment of unity. Some people say there are better musical Beatles

:00:29.:00:33.

albums, such as revolver. But as an event, Sergeant Pepper is the main

:00:34.:00:37.

achievement. It is still having that influence today. Was it well

:00:38.:00:43.

reviewed when it came out? By everybody except the New York Times,

:00:44.:00:47.

which panned it mercilessly. Paul McCartney still remembers it. It is

:00:48.:00:50.

the most infamous review of all time. We only ran -- remember

:00:51.:00:56.

Richard Goldstein, who wrote it, because of the bad review.

:00:57.:01:00.

Nonetheless, it was praised, it was number one for long periods of time

:01:01.:01:04.

in both Britain and the United States. In fact, it was the first

:01:05.:01:08.

album to sell over 10 million copies in the United States, beginning the

:01:09.:01:17.

truly, what is that, eight digit, units in album sales. Clerk, when --

:01:18.:01:25.

word is your satiation with this album go back to? When I was younger

:01:26.:01:31.

my dad was on stars in their eyes as Paul McCartney. From an early age we

:01:32.:01:34.

had the albums in the house. The cover itself, you could look at that

:01:35.:01:40.

all day. It's one of those amazing album covers. This is your dad with

:01:41.:01:47.

Paul McCartney. He always gets himself on the telly! Do you have a

:01:48.:01:53.

favourite song? I think a day in the life is the biggest achievement on

:01:54.:01:56.

the album. Incredible track. She's leaving home is another one. It is

:01:57.:02:05.

so unique. It is not poppy or Rocky. Like a show tune something. You

:02:06.:02:10.

mentioned that it was meant to be listening to in its entirety. They

:02:11.:02:17.

were trying to change how music sounded, how the album sound. The

:02:18.:02:20.

engineer was certainly put through it, wasn't he? Yes. And also, George

:02:21.:02:30.

Martin. He was so musically knowledgeable he played on three of

:02:31.:02:33.

the tracks, playing instruments that for the Beatles were exotic. You

:02:34.:02:38.

know the woman who came into play the harp. It was a real

:02:39.:02:47.

collaboration. There was a group of horn players for Sergeant Pepper 's

:02:48.:02:50.

Lonely Hearts Club Band. They could just use that studio as an

:02:51.:02:55.

instrument -- instrument, and they could try things they had never

:02:56.:02:58.

tried before. Now they had the time to do it. This was probably the

:02:59.:03:03.

greatest example of all time of how valuable it is to take your time and

:03:04.:03:08.

get it right. I have to second by the way, a day in the life as the

:03:09.:03:13.

greatest track on the album. When I heard the first, I just thought,

:03:14.:03:20.

that's it, it's over. There will never be a better one. Thank you,

:03:21.:03:26.

Paul. We will be looking at the influence of different songs on the

:03:27.:03:28.

album this week. What are you going to play? This was

:03:29.:03:33.

originally banned by the BBC. With a little help from my friends.

:03:34.:03:45.

# What would you think if I sang at June?

:03:46.:03:48.

# Would you stand out and walk out on me?

:03:49.:03:53.

# Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song.

:03:54.:03:57.

# And I'll try not to sing out of key.

:03:58.:04:01.

# I get by with a little help from my friends.

:04:02.:04:05.

I get high with a little help from my friends.

:04:06.:04:09.

# I'm going to try with a little help from my friends.

:04:10.:04:20.

# What do I do when my lovers away? # Does it worry you to be alone?

:04:21.:04:26.

# How do I feel by the end of the day?

:04:27.:04:30.

# Are you sad because you're on your own?

:04:31.:04:31.

You carry on... But first a last brief

:04:32.:04:36.

look at the headlines Hope you can join me then.

:04:37.:04:38.

Bye, bye. hello.

:04:39.:06:25.

Welcome back. Just talking about the size of an arm and a -- armadillo.

:06:26.:06:28.

Up to two metres. There aren't many animals that

:06:29.:06:30.

Sir David Attenborough hasn't met during his life-long career

:06:31.:06:32.

in the natural world. They are rare, nocturnal and live

:06:33.:06:34.

mostly underground in remote areas, making them hard to film or find,

:06:35.:06:40.

even for the great man himself. But now a new documentary captures

:06:41.:06:43.

these amazing creatures inside their burrows

:06:44.:06:45.

for the first time. Hotel Armadillo is

:06:46.:06:49.

narrated by Sir David. Beneath the surface,

:06:50.:06:54.

giant armadillo Tracey is stirring. Soon she'll head off to feed,

:06:55.:07:13.

leaving behind more vacant accommodation available

:07:14.:07:17.

for use by other animals. A single giant armadillo

:07:18.:07:28.

creating 15 new hotels every month must have a major effect

:07:29.:07:31.

on the housing market in the Pantanal and benefit

:07:32.:07:34.

hundreds of other animals. Tracey will be vacating

:07:35.:07:47.

a pristine luxury establishment with only

:07:48.:07:50.

one previous owner. Justin Purefoy is a producer

:07:51.:07:58.

and cameraman on Hotel Armadillo. You can see why it is called Hotel

:07:59.:08:11.

armadillo. These creatures are difficult to find, aren't they?

:08:12.:08:16.

Probably some of the most elusive creatures on earth. Most people have

:08:17.:08:21.

never seen a giant armadillo. There is a giant living in the wilderness

:08:22.:08:26.

but nobody sees it. It is people like the biologist who researches

:08:27.:08:30.

this creature that can introduce you to their lives. They are ecosystem

:08:31.:08:38.

engineers. They build these huge underground burrows to about six

:08:39.:08:42.

metres in length. They modify their environment of it like a beaver.

:08:43.:08:50.

Other creatures live in the habitat they create. How hard was it to

:08:51.:08:54.

capture them on film? Was at long hours waiting? You had an expert

:08:55.:09:05.

there. How long do you have to wait? Well, we installed camera tracks

:09:06.:09:11.

that had motion sensors. We could put them in place at that time and

:09:12.:09:14.

not be there. That was challenging itself because the the remote

:09:15.:09:19.

location had no power. We had to have batteries and cables going

:09:20.:09:24.

through the trees. Had mobile sensor cameras which would pick up their

:09:25.:09:28.

movement at night-time. For the colour images we did film won at

:09:29.:09:32.

night-time. It took us three days before we got images. It was a lot

:09:33.:09:39.

of luck. Sir David Attenborough has tried to find armadillos before but

:09:40.:09:47.

they are so difficult to find? Yes, it is the Animal that got away. We

:09:48.:09:50.

were lucky to have David Attenborough. That is why he was

:09:51.:09:57.

involved, was it? That's right. He was keen to narrate a film about

:09:58.:10:02.

armadillos. It was an animal he had never saw. That's Maxine. They have

:10:03.:10:07.

long 15 inch claws, shovel shaped back feet they use to push the sand

:10:08.:10:17.

back. The little baby, did you learn about parenting techniques and how

:10:18.:10:22.

they deal with their young? Yes. Because they are so elusive, it is

:10:23.:10:26.

very hard to find a baby giant armadillo. The research has only

:10:27.:10:35.

ever started three armadillo babies before. One of them he lost because

:10:36.:10:41.

of a puma attack. We were hoping to find a baby armadillo. And after

:10:42.:10:45.

about six months, we did. I think we have the clip.

:10:46.:10:54.

She carefully builds a ramp. If there was a baby, this is where it

:10:55.:10:59.

would happen. There is the baby. There is the baby! Yeah!

:11:00.:11:27.

This is amazing. It's wonderful. It's sweet, isn't

:11:28.:11:38.

it? We were very lucky to get that. We spent ten hours wandering through

:11:39.:11:43.

the bush trying to find it. I had to put my camera down and help them

:11:44.:11:51.

find the borrower. -- borrow. I had to physically help them do that. I

:11:52.:11:55.

couldn't carry the camera for ten hours. We found it and it was really

:11:56.:12:01.

special. We waited for three days. It's so special, because those

:12:02.:12:07.

images haven't been seen before. It's lovely to just see an animal

:12:08.:12:16.

like that. You say these huge underground hotels, what happens to

:12:17.:12:18.

those afterwords? What are the other animals would be using those? They

:12:19.:12:24.

get used by about 80 different species of animals. They get used

:12:25.:12:30.

for nurseries for certain species of ant eaters. Others use it for a

:12:31.:12:38.

shelter from the hot temperatures. It attracts predators because prey

:12:39.:12:43.

goes there to hide. The giant armadillos only use the burrows for

:12:44.:12:48.

a couple of nights. They are never there for long. They need a network

:12:49.:12:51.

of hotels across the landscape that constantly get used by the species.

:12:52.:13:00.

I expect if you are another species and a giant armadillo shows up, you

:13:01.:13:08.

move out! Yes. They are very sweet. They looked like a teddy bear. The

:13:09.:13:19.

babies lie on their back. Amazing. Narrated by Sir David Attenborough.

:13:20.:13:22.

Hotel Armadillo is on BBC Two, this Friday night at nine o'clock

:13:23.:13:24.

We'll be back tomorrow from six, when we'll be marking a year to go

:13:25.:13:29.

until the Commonwealth Games. Until then, have a lovely day.

:13:30.:13:33.

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