23/07/2017 Breakfast


23/07/2017

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 23/07/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Christian Fraser

:00:00.:00:00.

Princes William and Harry speak candidly about their mother -

:00:07.:00:10.

ahead of the 20th anniversary of her death.

:00:11.:00:22.

They open up about Diana's loving and mischievous nature

:00:23.:00:24.

and reveal details of their final conversation.

:00:25.:00:40.

Good morning, it's Sunday the 23rd of July.

:00:41.:00:44.

Also ahead: The rules on giving blood in England and Scotland

:00:45.:00:47.

are to be relaxed - allowing more gay men to donate.

:00:48.:00:51.

The hospital treating baby Charlie Gard has called

:00:52.:00:53.

in the police, after some of its staff received death

:00:54.:00:56.

A fourth Tour de France title for Chris Froome -

:00:57.:00:59.

he goes into the final stage almost guaranteed to win.

:01:00.:01:04.

American Jordan Spieth is the man to catch at the Open Championship.

:01:05.:01:09.

He leads by three shots entering today's final round.

:01:10.:01:15.

And the weather. A very good morning to you it looks like today will be

:01:16.:01:24.

similar to yesterday. Some players see showers and long spells of rain

:01:25.:01:27.

but sunshine on the forecast. Details for you shortly.

:01:28.:01:28.

Princes William and Harry have given a candid insight

:01:29.:01:32.

into their relationship with their mother Princess Diana,

:01:33.:01:35.

and have revealed that they last spoke to her in a brief phone call

:01:36.:01:38.

Speaking in a documentary to mark the 20th anniversary of her death,

:01:39.:01:44.

the princes said they regret the rushed nature of that

:01:45.:01:47.

conversation, but fondly recall their mother's loving nature

:01:48.:01:49.

Here's our royal correspondent, Nicholas Witchell.

:01:50.:01:57.

To the watching world she was the Princess 's image appeared

:01:58.:02:04.

constantly on front pages. It was a glamorous but necessarily limited

:02:05.:02:07.

impression of the real person. Now, nearly 20 years after her death in a

:02:08.:02:12.

car accident in Paris, her sons William and Harry have spoken in an

:02:13.:02:16.

ITV documentary about Diana, the mother who did so much to shape

:02:17.:02:22.

their childhood. We felt, you know, incredibly loved Harry and I. We are

:02:23.:02:26.

grateful that they love still feels their. It was that love that, even

:02:27.:02:34.

if she was on the other side of a room, as a child you could feel it.

:02:35.:02:42.

The person who emerges from William and Harry's description as a woman

:02:43.:02:46.

with a strong sense of fun. When everybody says to me, you know, so

:02:47.:02:51.

she was fun? Give us an example. All I can hear is her laugh in my head.

:02:52.:02:57.

And that sort of crazy Love weather was just pure happiness shown on her

:02:58.:03:08.

face. One of her motto is to me was you can be as naughty as you want,

:03:09.:03:13.

just do not get caught. And they speak about them other's death. The

:03:14.:03:17.

recall the last time they spoke to her and they reflect on the

:03:18.:03:21.

overwhelming public reaction and how they coped with the weak and that in

:03:22.:03:26.

her funeral. As William himself has said, it is a tribute to Diana from

:03:27.:03:30.

her sons in which they recall the woman they hope the world will

:03:31.:03:32.

remember. The rules on blood donation

:03:33.:03:32.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland to allow more gay men

:03:33.:03:35.

and sex workers to take part. Experts say there is clear evidence

:03:36.:03:38.

it is safe for those groups to give blood after abstaining

:03:39.:03:42.

from sex for three months, HIV charities have

:03:43.:03:44.

welcomed the changes. Our Health correspondent

:03:45.:03:47.

Sophie Hutchinson reports. Giving blood is not for everyone.

:03:48.:04:00.

Rules on safety mean those at high risk of infectious diseases such as

:04:01.:04:05.

HIV and hepatitis or B and C are restricted from donating. But the

:04:06.:04:08.

rules are changing. Gay men will no longer have to abstain from sex for

:04:09.:04:14.

12 months. Double reduced to three months before they can give blood.

:04:15.:04:18.

People who have had sex with high-risk partners or in a high-risk

:04:19.:04:22.

plays, will have the deferral period reduced to three months. And for the

:04:23.:04:26.

first time, sex workers will be allowed to donate blood after

:04:27.:04:29.

abstaining from sex for three months. Technologies to pick up the

:04:30.:04:34.

presence of a virus and other infections of the blood have greatly

:04:35.:04:39.

improved. So we can now pick up viruses at a much earlier stage of

:04:40.:04:43.

the infection. Therefore, it is much easier to tell if a blood donor has

:04:44.:04:50.

the virus. The reason for the changes that scientists say new

:04:51.:04:54.

testing techniques have established infectious diseases such as HIV and

:04:55.:04:58.

hepatitis B and C show up in the bloodstream well within three

:04:59.:05:02.

months. The changes have been welcomed by charities including the

:05:03.:05:07.

National aids trust um who say they were based on the latest scientific

:05:08.:05:08.

evidence rather than prejudice. And we'll be speaking to the HIV

:05:09.:05:10.

charity, the Terrence Higgins Trust, Some of the BBC's most high-profile

:05:11.:05:13.

female presenters have written to the corporation's

:05:14.:05:20.

Director General Tony Hall, calling on him to tackle

:05:21.:05:21.

the gender pay gap. BBC Sport's Claire Balding,

:05:22.:05:25.

the Today programme's Mishal Hussain and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour

:05:26.:05:29.

are amongst the 42 signatories. The letter in the Sunday Times urges

:05:30.:05:33.

Lord Hall to "act now" to close the gender pay gap in

:05:34.:05:36.

all areas of the BBC. The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt,

:05:37.:05:42.

has described the abuse to staff at Great Ormond Street hospital,

:05:43.:05:46.

where the terminally ill baby Charlie Gard is being treated,

:05:47.:05:48.

as "totally unacceptable". The hospital says its doctors

:05:49.:05:50.

and nurses had faced a "tide of abuse", and that it's had

:05:51.:05:53.

to call in the police. The High Court is considering

:05:54.:05:58.

whether Charlie's parents should be allowed to take him

:05:59.:06:01.

to the United States It is a case that has touched people

:06:02.:06:17.

around the world. Attracting a growing number of campaigners who

:06:18.:06:20.

disagree with medical experts over the treatment of a critically ill a

:06:21.:06:25.

big boy. 11 -month-old Charlie Gard has a rare form of mitochondrial

:06:26.:06:30.

disease, it is dish on the causes progressive muscle weakness and

:06:31.:06:35.

irreversible brain damage. His parents want to take him to the US

:06:36.:06:40.

for pioneering surgery. The Great Ormond Street Hospital says it is in

:06:41.:06:44.

Charlie's best interests to turn off his life-support and him to die.

:06:45.:06:49.

Last night the hospital said in a statement that their doctors and

:06:50.:06:52.

nurses have been subjected to a shocking and disgraceful tide of

:06:53.:06:57.

hostility. Staff have received abuse, both in the street and

:06:58.:07:01.

online. Thousands of abusive messages, they say, have been sent

:07:02.:07:05.

to doctors and nurses whose wife work is to care for sick children. A

:07:06.:07:10.

short while later, the parents of Charlie Gard also released a

:07:11.:07:15.

statement. We do not condone abusive or threatening behaviour to Great

:07:16.:07:18.

Ormond Street Hospital staff or anybody in connection with our son.

:07:19.:07:24.

We, too, get abuse and have to wind you are nasty and hurtful remarks on

:07:25.:07:28.

a daily basis. People have different opinions and we accept that. But

:07:29.:07:32.

there is a line that should not be crossed. The Health Secretary,

:07:33.:07:37.

Jeremy Hunt, also condemned the abuse, tweeting that the behaviour

:07:38.:07:41.

was totally unacceptable. The High Court hearing into Charlie Gard's

:07:42.:07:47.

future resumes tomorrow with the judge saying he hopes a decision

:07:48.:07:49.

will be reached by Tuesday. a decision will be

:07:50.:07:53.

reached by Tuesday. A prison guard has suffered minor

:07:54.:07:55.

injuries during trouble at Hewell The protest is believed to have been

:07:56.:07:58.

caused by a smoking ban, which is due to come

:07:59.:08:03.

into effect tomorrow, as well as restrictions placed

:08:04.:08:05.

on inmates because of staff The Scottish and Welsh governments

:08:06.:08:11.

have written to the UK government to raise concerns about the treatment

:08:12.:08:15.

of unaccompanied child refugees. They say the scheme to resettle

:08:16.:08:18.

migrants from mainland Europe including those from Acampo was

:08:19.:08:21.

closed down in Calais has been characterised by bad planning and

:08:22.:08:27.

poor information sharing. Democrats have criticised President Trump for

:08:28.:08:31.

saying he has the complete power to issue pardons. As an investigation

:08:32.:08:35.

continues into alleged Russian meddling in the US elections last

:08:36.:08:40.

year. The presidential pardon for family members, AIDS and even

:08:41.:08:44.

himself. Presidents can pardon people bill for they are found

:08:45.:08:47.

Tyldesley or charged with an offence.

:08:48.:08:48.

The process of a person legally changing their gender could be made

:08:49.:08:51.

much easier following plans being considered by the government.

:08:52.:08:54.

The equalities minister Justine Greening is setting out

:08:55.:08:56.

plans that would not require a doctor's diagnosis.

:08:57.:08:58.

She says she wants to streamline the process and make

:08:59.:09:01.

At the moment, if you are a transgender person and you want to

:09:02.:09:14.

go about changing agenda, it is a very concentrated process. It is

:09:15.:09:18.

very medically driven as well so you have to go to a clinic and go

:09:19.:09:21.

through a lot of psychological profiling and, of course, actually

:09:22.:09:26.

that is something that makes it very difficult for people to access.

:09:27.:09:27.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's South Island,

:09:28.:09:31.

after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods unleashed

:09:32.:09:34.

Torrential rain has forced people from their homes,

:09:35.:09:37.

while landslides have left several communities cut off.

:09:38.:09:39.

Britain's Chris Froome is all but certain to win his fourth

:09:40.:09:47.

Following yesterday's time trial in Marseille,

:09:48.:09:51.

the Team Sky rider has a near unassailable lead as he goes

:09:52.:09:54.

into the Tour's final stage through the streets of Paris.

:09:55.:09:57.

Despite riding more than 2000 miles and spending over 80 hours in the

:09:58.:10:12.

saddle, this year's Tour de France winner is decided on the streets of

:10:13.:10:17.

Marseilles. Chris Froome's rivals struggled to keep pace with him over

:10:18.:10:21.

the 14 mile time trial court 's. Won nearly crashed out. And French

:10:22.:10:28.

favourite was nearly caught by the team sky Rider at the finish line.

:10:29.:10:33.

When all was said and done, Chris Froome extended his overall lead to

:10:34.:10:36.

54 seconds. Reasserting his dominance, and the right to wear the

:10:37.:10:42.

famous yellow jersey. Having flown overnight from Marseilles, Chris

:10:43.:10:45.

Froome and the rest of the riders will have to compete nine labs of

:10:46.:10:49.

the Champs-Elysses. All that will be left then is for Chris Froome to

:10:50.:10:53.

stand tall on top of the podium and be crowned the race when once more.

:10:54.:10:59.

With three tour victories already secured, Chris Froome will today add

:11:00.:11:03.

an fourth title to his illustrious CV. At the age of 32, there is time

:11:04.:11:08.

yet for him to add to that total in the future. One race away from

:11:09.:11:16.

greatness, as they say. An extraordinary achievement. 11

:11:17.:11:19.

minutes past six, let's have a look at today's papers. The Mail on

:11:20.:11:23.

Sunday to start with. That story is what we have led with this morning,

:11:24.:11:28.

the documentary showing tomorrow on ITV. William and Harry, there are

:11:29.:11:33.

agony over the last phone call with mum. Lots of photographs inside of

:11:34.:11:38.

moments they shared together. Other newspapers as well picking up that

:11:39.:11:42.

story. And story on the front page of the Sunday Mirror. These are

:11:43.:11:46.

previously unseen photographs of the princes and Diana. This one, which

:11:47.:11:51.

most of the papers are carrying on the front pages or inside of Harry

:11:52.:11:55.

and Princess Diana on holiday. Again, those recalling how short the

:11:56.:12:00.

chat was, their final phone call with Princess Diana. William saying

:12:01.:12:05.

that the call, hours before she died, sticks heavily on his mind.

:12:06.:12:09.

The front page of the Observer, Tory members turn to David Davis, the

:12:10.:12:16.

secretary for Brexit. Here is the preferred choice, they say amongst

:12:17.:12:20.

Tory members to replace Theresa May. The race is wide open and they

:12:21.:12:24.

cannot rule out that someone who was not on the list at the moment may

:12:25.:12:27.

come through Indian. The biggest story of the day, today, is on the

:12:28.:12:32.

front of the Observer. Mel and Sue coming back with the Generation

:12:33.:12:41.

Game. You are singing the theme tune earlier... We will get the century

:12:42.:12:45.

and playing earlier. The Sunday Telegraph on page. Revolt at the BBC

:12:46.:12:49.

for women. This is an open letter that has been written to the BBC's

:12:50.:12:57.

director-general by 42 female presenters, journalists and

:12:58.:12:59.

broadcasters challenging the BBC to act now to close the gender pay cap.

:13:00.:13:06.

The letter is demanding, it said you will sort the gender pay gap by 2020

:13:07.:13:11.

but they have known about the disparity for years. We want to go

:13:12.:13:16.

on the record to call for them to act now. Similar story on the front

:13:17.:13:22.

page of the Sunday Times. Another picture there Harry and Diana on the

:13:23.:13:26.

front of the use of 13 minutes past six. The main stories this

:13:27.:13:30.

morning... Prince William and Prince Harry have given a candid insight

:13:31.:13:34.

into their relationship with their mother in a documentary marking 20

:13:35.:13:35.

years since her death. The rules on blood donation

:13:36.:13:40.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland, to allow more gay men

:13:41.:13:43.

and sex workers to participate. Here's Stav with a look

:13:44.:13:46.

at this morning's weather. A lovely rainbow behind you. It is.

:13:47.:14:03.

There were longer spells of rain yesterday because we had low

:14:04.:14:06.

pressure. Today is similar to yesterday. Sunny spells and longer

:14:07.:14:12.

spells of rain. This is the area of low pressure which is weak but it

:14:13.:14:16.

will be enough to give disturbance to the atmosphere to a louder

:14:17.:14:23.

showers. We have had some mist and fog this morning. A dry start across

:14:24.:14:30.

the Midlands southwards with early sunshine. Further north, showers.

:14:31.:14:35.

Into Northern Ireland, a dry start and at Caulfield two things. --A

:14:36.:14:51.

cool feel two things. It will brighten up across the far north.

:14:52.:15:00.

Because the heavy bursts of rain and a line of showers across the

:15:01.:15:04.

south-east of England, Wales and the Midlands. In the sunshine, we could

:15:05.:15:13.

make 20 or 21. For the last day of the Open, it will be at it more

:15:14.:15:17.

windy than yesterday and there is a chance of showers. For Lord's for

:15:18.:15:24.

the women's World Cup, could be some spells of rain so interruptions are

:15:25.:15:30.

likely. The rain across southern Scotland, northern England, pushes

:15:31.:15:33.

its way southwards. It is quite chilly across the north. In the

:15:34.:15:39.

south, damp and less chilly. We will have hang back of the cloud and some

:15:40.:15:44.

chilly northerly winds down the east coast. Further west, in the

:15:45.:15:51.

sunshine, it will feel warm. 2425. On Tuesday, we are between weather

:15:52.:15:56.

front so it looks good. The odd shower developing here or there but

:15:57.:16:01.

mostly dry. A novel way to solving your problems

:16:02.:16:14.

is popping up in London but would you take advice from an unqualified

:16:15.:16:16.

stranger? I'm not sure. A problem shared is a problem

:16:17.:16:30.

halved, also they say. But would you share your problems with a complete

:16:31.:16:35.

stranger? And would you share them spontaneously in public? That is

:16:36.:16:38.

what one clinical psychologist is helping. She launches a bold

:16:39.:16:42.

experiment in London despite challenging weather conditions the

:16:43.:16:46.

team create pop-up problem-solving booths and then invited members of

:16:47.:16:51.

the public to open up about the issue is weighing on their minds. So

:16:52.:16:56.

what is the big idea to time -- behind this? Problem-solving booths

:16:57.:17:02.

is about people realising we can all help each other all the time. We

:17:03.:17:06.

don't have a culture or permission to ask. I am a trained clinical

:17:07.:17:11.

psychologist and a generally work in a clinic. At the end of the day I

:17:12.:17:15.

used to think, gosh, if only all the people I've met in private --

:17:16.:17:19.

private in a clinic they could talk to it each other because they are

:17:20.:17:23.

suffering similar things. I keep waking up thinking I have to do

:17:24.:17:27.

this, do this, do this, every time it is more things. That is exactly

:17:28.:17:33.

what I go through. While I went there, there was a trickle of

:17:34.:17:36.

participants rather than Adele huge but those who took part seemed to

:17:37.:17:44.

embrace the idea. --A deluge. So many people in London have anxiety

:17:45.:17:51.

or claim to. Keating possibly because of your up bringing, your

:17:52.:18:00.

parents? -- do you think. I thought maybe because I was more tolerant.

:18:01.:18:05.

Trained psychologists are always on hand if serious cases emerge. The

:18:06.:18:09.

results of the scheme are still being assessed. It is about opening

:18:10.:18:17.

up conversations around mental health and well-being just to

:18:18.:18:20.

destigmatise these things and get people talking and maybe do

:18:21.:18:23.

something about it. If successful, the scheme will be rolled out across

:18:24.:18:25.

the country. Interesting idea. Is it an

:18:26.:18:37.

indictment on our society that we don't talk to each other? We don't

:18:38.:18:41.

go to the pub any more, do we. You might not. Plenty of people do. I'm

:18:42.:18:44.

not allowed any more! We'll be back with

:18:45.:18:46.

the headlines at 6:30. Now on Breakfast it's time to join

:18:47.:18:48.

Jane Hill and Mark Kermode for this Hello and welcome to

:18:49.:18:52.

the Film Review on BBC News. To take us through the cinema

:18:53.:19:07.

releases, as ever, Mark Kermode. What have you been

:19:08.:19:16.

watching this week? We have Dunkirk, the new

:19:17.:19:18.

Christopher Nolan film, We have City of Ghosts,

:19:19.:19:22.

a very harrowing documentary And Captain Underpants:

:19:23.:19:26.

The Epic First Movie, The scale and ambition

:19:27.:19:31.

of this is remarkable. It is and also the ambition

:19:32.:19:44.

of the release. It is the story of Dunkirk told

:19:45.:19:47.

by Christopher Nolan who has made things like Dark Knight,

:19:48.:19:50.

Interstellar and Inception, and it is the story

:19:51.:19:52.

of the evacuation told through three intertwining strands that

:19:53.:19:55.

loosely follow land, But although the story itself

:19:56.:19:57.

is fairly straightforward, it is told over three different

:19:58.:20:02.

timescales, one of the stories lasts one week, one of the stories lasts

:20:03.:20:07.

one day, one lasts one hour If you know anything

:20:08.:20:11.

at all about Nolan, you'll know that he loves

:20:12.:20:14.

to play with time. The brilliant thing about this

:20:15.:20:21.

is that he does in a way that is very clear, you understand

:20:22.:20:25.

exactly what's going on even though It's shot on large format film

:20:26.:20:29.

and you're seeing from the images here, they are astonishing images,

:20:30.:20:34.

great big bulky cameras. Plaudits to Hoyte van Hoytema,

:20:35.:20:36.

the cinematographer, carrying around these bulky cameras

:20:37.:20:38.

and doing really extraordinary The film is available in numerous

:20:39.:20:40.

different formats so depending on where you go to see it,

:20:41.:20:44.

you can see it in digital, And the picture will be

:20:45.:20:47.

different and look different. The advice I would give is that make

:20:48.:20:51.

sure you see it in the cinema that you know does the best possible

:20:52.:20:55.

presentation and sound. Sound is very important,

:20:56.:20:59.

it plays a huge part in this. It has an extraordinary

:21:00.:21:03.

score by Hans Zimmer. Christopher Nolan has talked

:21:04.:21:05.

about this being a movie about tension, it is not to do

:21:06.:21:07.

with explicitly what you see, it is about the build-up

:21:08.:21:11.

and the score is like a rising tide and it builds all the way

:21:12.:21:14.

through the film. I think the most impressive thing,

:21:15.:21:17.

you know I am huge fan of Christopher Nolan anyway,

:21:18.:21:20.

the most impressive thing is that for a film on this scale,

:21:21.:21:23.

it is actually, the things you take away from it are the smaller images,

:21:24.:21:27.

an image of a man walking hopelessly into the sea,

:21:28.:21:30.

the image of Kenneth Branagh's face as he looks out over a lost horizon,

:21:31.:21:33.

it is a very, very impressive piece of work and it is great to see

:21:34.:21:37.

someone making a blockbuster movie that imagines that the audience

:21:38.:21:41.

are smart enough to keep up with this slightly

:21:42.:21:43.

complex structure. Christopher Nolan's whole

:21:44.:21:50.

thing has always been, the audience are cleverer

:21:51.:21:52.

than anyone imagines. He makes movies, I mean,

:21:53.:21:55.

why be Michael Bay when you can have I feel like saying,

:21:56.:22:03.

it is what everyone And stories of the terror of Dunkirk

:22:04.:22:08.

and stories of heroism and there are stories as well

:22:09.:22:15.

in your next choice of some very, very brave individuals

:22:16.:22:19.

and I have to be honest, the more I read about this,

:22:20.:22:21.

another one I am not sure I quite have the stomach for,

:22:22.:22:25.

but important work. It is, it's a documentary

:22:26.:22:27.

by Matthew Heineman who made Cartel Land and it is

:22:28.:22:30.

the harrowing account of Isis' brutality as seen

:22:31.:22:32.

through the eyes of a citizens' journalist collective

:22:33.:22:35.

documenting what was happening They formed a collective called

:22:36.:22:37.

Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently and they decided that

:22:38.:22:42.

what they would do was document what was going on, to let the world

:22:43.:22:45.

know and they did that The thing that I think the film does

:22:46.:22:49.

really well is that it pays great tribute to the bravery of these

:22:50.:23:58.

people who are doing this citizen It does contain some

:23:59.:24:02.

truly horrifying images and there are several occasions

:24:03.:24:06.

on which, whilst I was watching, The bravery of it is that the people

:24:07.:24:09.

who were actually doing this, they didn't look away,

:24:10.:24:14.

they saw it as their responsibility to

:24:15.:24:16.

document this stuff. But as you quite rightly say,

:24:17.:24:21.

it is a documentary that takes on very, very difficult

:24:22.:24:24.

subject matter. I think it's really important,

:24:25.:24:26.

but it is absolutely necessary to say that there are things

:24:27.:24:29.

in this documentary, quite rightly, that are very

:24:30.:24:31.

harrowing, but it is a real tribute to their bravery, that they were

:24:32.:24:34.

trying to get the message out all the time, even though their own

:24:35.:24:38.

lives were under threat. And many of them now

:24:39.:24:40.

live in Germany. And even there, of course,

:24:41.:24:43.

there is the sense that they are We approach the summer holidays

:24:44.:24:47.

so we move to entirely different matters and perhaps

:24:48.:24:56.

for a younger age group? Or is there something

:24:57.:24:58.

for adults too here? I am 54 and I love Captain

:24:59.:25:00.

Underpants: The Epic First Movie. This is based on the

:25:01.:25:06.

much-loved books. If you're familiar with the books,

:25:07.:25:08.

and I am, I've read them all, I was a bit worried about the idea

:25:09.:25:12.

that someone would make a movie The story is, two comicbook-creating

:25:13.:25:15.

kids accidentally turn their headmaster into

:25:16.:25:19.

the eponymous Captain Underpants with the help of a Hypno Ring

:25:20.:25:21.

they got from a cereal packet. Why, it's the paperwork

:25:22.:25:24.

to separate you two! I could actually see

:25:25.:25:31.

the end of your friendship! Put the pen down or we

:25:32.:25:37.

will hypnotise you! When I snap my fingers

:25:38.:25:42.

you will obey our every command! You're now the amazing

:25:43.:25:48.

Captain Underpants! You laughed all

:25:49.:25:59.

the way through that. You've seen it a few times

:26:00.:26:14.

and you're still laughing I started laughing at the beginning

:26:15.:26:18.

of this movie and then The more it went on,

:26:19.:26:23.

the funnier it became. I was sitting in a room with critics

:26:24.:26:30.

who I think were enjoying it but critics tend to be

:26:31.:26:34.

quite well-behaved, It's really funny and how great

:26:35.:26:36.

that we have a family movie out that you can take young kids to see

:26:37.:26:41.

and you will enjoy it Captain Underpants is

:26:42.:26:45.

a real stand out delight. That is one day at least that's

:26:46.:26:48.

sorted with my nieces And lovely, when there aren't always

:26:49.:26:51.

the best kids films around to see. It's very hard to find something

:26:52.:26:56.

that you think will work both for the young audience and also

:26:57.:27:01.

for an older audience. I would quite happily go and see

:27:02.:27:03.

this again tomorrow. I laughed all the way through it

:27:04.:27:06.

and you know what a fan Funnier than the Minions and that's

:27:07.:27:09.

really saying something for me. That is all we need

:27:10.:27:15.

to hear, marvellous. Well, I've gone back to Baby Driver,

:27:16.:27:17.

it's still in cinemas and I love it. The fact is, Edgar Wright has

:27:18.:27:22.

managed to cross a car chase movie with a romantic musical and make

:27:23.:27:26.

this film which is funny and sharp and smart and as a piece of cinema,

:27:27.:27:29.

I think it is really worth seeing and I want people to

:27:30.:27:33.

see it in the cinema. Obviously, it'll come out on home

:27:34.:27:36.

video at some point, but at the moment,

:27:37.:27:39.

it is one of those things. I'm going, I'm going,

:27:40.:27:42.

it's on the list. I promise, it's

:27:43.:27:48.

genuinely on the list. Unlike you and your funny horror

:27:49.:27:50.

things that you want me to try OK, all right, fine,

:27:51.:27:55.

but you need to see that 'Cause I didn't do well on homework

:27:56.:28:00.

last week so I must do better. Ah, DVD as well for those

:28:01.:28:07.

who want to stay in. Well, as I said last week,

:28:08.:28:10.

you need to see The Levelling. That's also your homework

:28:11.:28:14.

but the thing that's out is Get Out, which is this great horror thriller

:28:15.:28:17.

from writer-director Jordan Peel, who incidentally is one

:28:18.:28:20.

of the voices in Captain Underpants. What this does is, it's kind

:28:21.:28:22.

of inspired by the books of Ira Levin, you know,

:28:23.:28:28.

the Stepford wives, and tells a story about racism in white

:28:29.:28:30.

middle-class liberal America and it's more of a psychological

:28:31.:28:33.

thriller than a horror movie, although there

:28:34.:28:36.

are moments of horror in it. It is sharp and satirical

:28:37.:28:38.

and really, really well played and what I loved about it was,

:28:39.:28:41.

again, it's one of those films where you couldn't quite see

:28:42.:28:44.

where it was going. It's got great performances,

:28:45.:28:47.

it is very wry and I didn't know much about it when I went

:28:48.:28:50.

in and I was really surprised I know this isn't directly adapted

:28:51.:28:53.

from them but the ghost of Ira Levin hangs over this and it is a really

:28:54.:28:59.

fine piece of work. But, try not to read too

:29:00.:29:02.

much about it before I have made a list

:29:03.:29:05.

of my summer homework. There is a lot of it

:29:06.:29:12.

but I'm going to do it. Start with The Levelling

:29:13.:29:15.

because you will love The Levelling. And a quick reminder before we go,

:29:16.:29:18.

you can find all the film news and reviews from across the BBC

:29:19.:29:26.

online at bbc.co.uk/markkermode - including Mark's top ten

:29:27.:29:29.

films of the year so far. So I have to go on and see

:29:30.:29:31.

whether I've seen your top ten. All our previous programmes are

:29:32.:29:35.

on the iPlayer as well of course. Enjoy your cinema viewing,

:29:36.:29:39.

it is a very good week. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:29:40.:29:41.

with Christian Fraser and Tina Daheley Coming up

:29:42.:29:55.

before seven we'll get But first, a summary of this

:29:56.:29:58.

morning's main news. Princes William and Harry have

:29:59.:30:04.

given a candid insight into their relationship

:30:05.:30:07.

with their mother Princess Diana, and have revealed that they last

:30:08.:30:09.

spoke to her in a brief phone call Speaking in a documentary to mark

:30:10.:30:13.

the 20th anniversary of her death, the princes said they regret

:30:14.:30:18.

the rushed nature of that conversation, but fondly

:30:19.:30:20.

recall their mother's loving nature One of her motto is to me it was you

:30:21.:30:37.

can be as naughty as you want, just don't get caught. She was one of the

:30:38.:30:42.

naughtiest parent. She would come and watch us play football and

:30:43.:30:45.

smuggle Swedes into our socks. Literally, walking back from a

:30:46.:30:49.

football match with five packets of starbursts.

:30:50.:30:51.

The rules on blood donation are to be relaxed in England

:30:52.:30:54.

and Scotland to allow more gay men and sex workers to participate.

:30:55.:30:57.

Experts say there is clear evidence it is safe for those groups to give

:30:58.:31:01.

blood after abstaining from sex for three months,

:31:02.:31:03.

HIV charities have welcomed the changes.

:31:04.:31:07.

Some of the BBC's most high-profile female presenters have written

:31:08.:31:09.

to the corporation's Director General Tony Hall,

:31:10.:31:11.

calling on him to tackle the gender pay gap.

:31:12.:31:14.

BBC Sport's Claire Balding, the Today programme's Mishal Hussain

:31:15.:31:16.

and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour are amongst the 42 signatories.

:31:17.:31:19.

The letter in the Sunday Times urges Lord Hall to "act now" to close

:31:20.:31:23.

the gender pay gap in all areas of the BBC.

:31:24.:31:33.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has described the abuse to staff

:31:34.:31:36.

at Great Ormond Street hospital, where the terminally ill baby

:31:37.:31:39.

Charlie Gard is being treated, as "totally unacceptable".

:31:40.:31:41.

The hospital says its doctors and nurses have faced

:31:42.:31:43.

The High Court is considering whether Charlie's parents should be

:31:44.:31:47.

allowed to take him to the United States

:31:48.:31:49.

A 20-year-old man has died after being apprehended by a police

:31:50.:31:57.

The Met Police said the man was followed on foot after officers

:31:58.:32:02.

tried to stop a car in Kingsland Road, Hackney on Saturday.

:32:03.:32:05.

He was "taken ill" after "trying to swallow an object"

:32:06.:32:08.

and was pronounced dead in hospital a short time later.

:32:09.:32:10.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has been informed.

:32:11.:32:19.

A prison guard has suffered minor injuries during trouble at Hewell

:32:20.:32:21.

The protest is believed to have been caused by a smoking ban,

:32:22.:32:27.

which is due to come into effect tomorrow,

:32:28.:32:29.

as well as restrictions placed on inmates because of staff

:32:30.:32:32.

The Scottish and Welsh governments have written to the UK government

:32:33.:32:39.

to raise concerns about the treatment of unaccompanied child

:32:40.:32:41.

They say a scheme to resettle migrants from mainland Europe,

:32:42.:32:44.

including those from a camp that was closed down in Calais,

:32:45.:32:47.

has been characterised by bad planning and poor

:32:48.:32:49.

Democrats have criticised President Trump for saying he has

:32:50.:32:54.

the complete power to issue pardons, as an investigation continues

:32:55.:32:57.

into alleged Russian meddling in last years US elections.

:32:58.:32:59.

It's thought he could use the presidential pardon for family

:33:00.:33:02.

Presidents can pardon people before they're found guilty or charged

:33:03.:33:06.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:33:07.:33:19.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:33:20.:33:23.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:33:24.:33:27.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:33:28.:33:31.

Mel and Sue are to host the return of the classic EB show the

:33:32.:33:47.

Generation Game. # Love is the name of the game and I want to play the

:33:48.:33:54.

game with you. I promised you the theme tune, didn't I? It has been

:33:55.:34:02.

commissioned for an initial four show run. The new show will combine

:34:03.:34:07.

aspects of the original series and new games. Did you watch that? I

:34:08.:34:14.

vaguely remember it. I think I am too Young... Oh, great. Thank you

:34:15.:34:18.

very much. I remember the generation game. What was the other one? Three,

:34:19.:34:24.

two, one? Look what you could have one? We are going to about cycling

:34:25.:34:36.

now. I will talk about Chris Froome it is amazing. Four men have won it

:34:37.:34:44.

on five occasions. He could win his fourth today and who knows how far

:34:45.:34:48.

he could go. Some people say it has been easy for him that he has not

:34:49.:34:52.

won a single stage this win and his previous win has been under a much

:34:53.:34:57.

longer gap. It should be at big daily for him.

:34:58.:34:59.

Great Britain's Chris Froome is set to win his fourth Tour de

:35:00.:35:02.

He extended his lead to 54 seconds in yesterday's time trial

:35:03.:35:06.

in Marseille, and that won't be challenged in Paris this afternoon.

:35:07.:35:09.

The sprinters will contest the stage win, but Froome will be

:35:10.:35:12.

able to look forward standing on top of the podium on the Champs Elysees

:35:13.:35:16.

I mean, there have been ups and downs over the last three weeks but

:35:17.:35:23.

I think it has been very much a grand tour in the sense. It has

:35:24.:35:29.

really been about the three weeks and doing those three weeks in the

:35:30.:35:34.

most conservative but efficient manner. It was not about one single

:35:35.:35:42.

stage. That is what grand tour racing is.

:35:43.:35:43.

Earlier in the day Britain's Lizzie Diegnan finished second

:35:44.:35:45.

in La Course, the women's race organised by the Tour de France.

:35:46.:35:49.

The race was won by the Netherlands cyclist

:35:50.:35:51.

Annemiek Van Vleuten, who crashed during last year's

:35:52.:35:53.

The American Jordan Spieth will take a three shot lead into the final day

:35:54.:36:02.

of the Open Championship - and the chance to win

:36:03.:36:05.

Victory today would make Spieth only the second player

:36:06.:36:08.

after Jack Nicklaus to win three of golf's four majors before

:36:09.:36:11.

And the players who'll be challenging him won't be British,

:36:12.:36:15.

after disappointing rounds on Day Three.

:36:16.:36:17.

On a day when the opening gave us plenty to smile about, this man may

:36:18.:36:25.

just have been beaming more than any. Jordan Spieth will tee off this

:36:26.:36:30.

afternoon with a three shot lead following a near faultless showing.

:36:31.:36:37.

No bogeys, three birdies, a shower of stability, culminating in a

:36:38.:36:41.

demonstration of why he has already won two majors before he turns 24.

:36:42.:36:45.

It will take an almighty effort to stop him claiming a third. Is the

:36:46.:36:52.

chasers tripped over themselves. Rory McIlroy was my shots behind the

:36:53.:36:56.

American. I don't know what the weather will bring but if I won a

:36:57.:37:00.

chance in this tournament only bad weather and I need to play well. Ian

:37:01.:37:04.

Poulter needs plenty of that as well. Is two under alongside Michael

:37:05.:37:09.

Roy. To wait for a British champion continues. And while many waited for

:37:10.:37:14.

the heavens to open, we witnessed the amazing grace. Branden Grace

:37:15.:37:19.

with the lowest round in men's major history. Enough to raise a grin from

:37:20.:37:24.

most. Come tonight, Jordan Speith may be raising more than that.

:37:25.:37:26.

Almost eight years to the day since he first won an individual

:37:27.:37:29.

world title at the age of just 15, Tom Daley has won a second -

:37:30.:37:33.

in the same event - the ten metre platform

:37:34.:37:36.

at the World Aquatics Championships in Budapest.

:37:37.:37:37.

In a really competitive final Daley led from the first

:37:38.:37:40.

round but was pushed all the way by the Olympic champion

:37:41.:37:43.

But he was awarded two maximum scores to secure the gold medal.

:37:44.:37:53.

It has been such a tough year getting over that competition in Rio

:37:54.:38:02.

where I was out of the final and I was unable to compete and show my

:38:03.:38:07.

best. Tough work after the Olympics with how I was feeling and to come

:38:08.:38:11.

out the other side of it are still superb. I am excited to be able to

:38:12.:38:15.

finally go on a honeymoon now with my husband.

:38:16.:38:16.

And what a day it was for Daley, because earlier, he and his partner

:38:17.:38:19.

Grace Reid won silver in the mixed three metre springboard final.

:38:20.:38:23.

Afterwards, Reid said the pair had been "winging it"

:38:24.:38:25.

because they hadn't been able to practise together all week.

:38:26.:38:28.

It was another golden night for Britain's para-athletes

:38:29.:38:30.

at the World Championships in London.

:38:31.:38:31.

There were three golds and a silver for British athletes.

:38:32.:38:34.

Sophie Hahn took gold in the T38 100 metres.

:38:35.:38:37.

She beat off competition from Kadeena Cox who took

:38:38.:38:39.

Hahn set a new world record for the second time after she did

:38:40.:38:44.

the same in the 200 metres last weekend.

:38:45.:38:47.

Another double world champion is Georgie Hermitage.

:38:48.:38:53.

She added to her gold in the 400 metres with victory

:38:54.:38:56.

Her time of 13.36 seconds is a new World Championship record.

:38:57.:39:04.

After the year I have had I was wanting to win the 400 because that

:39:05.:39:15.

is my event. The one I knew was always going to be difficult. I

:39:16.:39:18.

thought I might have been squeezed out of the medals. To come and do

:39:19.:39:22.

that and under that amount of pressure...

:39:23.:39:22.

And the third gold of the night came for Aled Davies in the shot putt.

:39:23.:39:26.

He threw a massive 17.52 metres to break his own world record

:39:27.:39:30.

and finish three metres clear of the rest.

:39:31.:39:32.

England's women won the bronze medal at the Lacrosse World Cup,

:39:33.:39:40.

beating Australia in the third place play off game in Guildford.

:39:41.:39:44.

The scores were level at nine all at full time so it went

:39:45.:39:47.

to a golden goal decider and it was Megan Whittle who grabbed

:39:48.:39:50.

a dramatic winner for the home side, prompting wild celebrations.

:39:51.:39:53.

The United States won Gold beating Canada in the final.

:39:54.:39:58.

Mark Sampson says his team are ready for the dark arts of Spain when the

:39:59.:40:05.

teams meet at the women's European championship this afternoon. England

:40:06.:40:09.

thrashed Scotland six mil in their opening game of the tournament.

:40:10.:40:11.

Spain won their first group match and beat England at the last

:40:12.:40:14.

Scotland have their own injury worries ahead of their match

:40:15.:40:17.

against Portugal, they're already missing three key players

:40:18.:40:19.

and they'll be without Manchester City forward Jane Ross.

:40:20.:40:22.

After their opening game defeat to England, the Scots need to bounce

:40:23.:40:25.

back if they're to progress further in the tournament.

:40:26.:40:27.

England's women's cricketers will aim to win their fourth

:40:28.:40:30.

World Cup trophy today when they face India

:40:31.:40:32.

It's a sell out with more than 26,000 people expected to attend.

:40:33.:40:36.

England have won six consecutive matches but they lost the opening

:40:37.:40:39.

match of this World Cup campaign to India.

:40:40.:40:48.

It is a very romantic game as well for the public. We know the impact

:40:49.:40:55.

it will have on India and to get women's Cricket going in India will

:40:56.:40:59.

be a special thing. And we lost to them as well. We are in a much

:41:00.:41:04.

better placed as a team, we said we would grow as we went along. We

:41:05.:41:08.

worked hard as we did that and we are in a better place, and we can

:41:09.:41:13.

achieve what India achieved against Australia.

:41:14.:41:15.

As we've been hearing this morning, a scheme to resettle unaccompanied

:41:16.:41:19.

child refugees in the UK has been criticised for bad planning

:41:20.:41:21.

Concerns have been raised by the Scottish and Welsh

:41:22.:41:30.

governments, who say that children are being put in danger.

:41:31.:41:32.

Let's talk to Beth Gardiner-Smith from the charity, Safe Passage.

:41:33.:41:39.

So, earlier in the year we heard about the scheme. Originally there

:41:40.:41:47.

were 3000 people coming under this scheme and then that was reduced to

:41:48.:41:53.

480. Today you are saying not even 480 are coming. Now, sadly not.

:41:54.:41:58.

Parliament passed this law over 15 months ago and, yes, we have still

:41:59.:42:02.

only seen 200 children assisted under the scheme, and, really, I

:42:03.:42:08.

think the message from both the Scottish and Welsh governments today

:42:09.:42:12.

is clear. It says let's get on with the job. There are children at risk

:42:13.:42:16.

across Europe, our field teams in Greece, in France and Italy work

:42:17.:42:20.

with these unaccompanied onion to make young people every day and

:42:21.:42:23.

every day we leave them were waiting. They are missing out on a

:42:24.:42:27.

child will, on an education. Is the letter says there is a lack of

:42:28.:42:30.

information. What kind of information do you need and why is

:42:31.:42:36.

it a problem that you do not have that information? We could help the

:42:37.:42:43.

government identify the children eligible. They are there, they as

:42:44.:42:48.

sleeping and cancel sleeping rough because they do not have access to

:42:49.:42:51.

accommodation centres. They are at risk every day. The information is

:42:52.:42:56.

there, the children, we know where they are, it is just a question of

:42:57.:43:00.

getting on with the job now. The government was my point is that

:43:01.:43:03.

continuing the programme indefinitely would act as a pull

:43:04.:43:08.

factor. Well, um, the independent human trafficking foundation last

:43:09.:43:15.

week had an independent enquiry that looked at this question. They said

:43:16.:43:18.

they found no evidence of a pull factor. Really, the only evidence

:43:19.:43:23.

there is is that there is a push factor. A push factor is violence,

:43:24.:43:28.

war and instability in the countries that these children are fleeing

:43:29.:43:33.

from. Frankly, they are here. They are in Europe. We where they are but

:43:34.:43:39.

they are great risk of being taken by people smugglers and traffickers

:43:40.:43:42.

who will traffic them into modern slavery. And we would not leave a

:43:43.:43:48.

child in that great a risk if they were here in this country. The

:43:49.:43:52.

government's point, I will reach what the Immigration Minister said,

:43:53.:43:56.

he said they are committed to resettling 23,000 people directly

:43:57.:44:01.

from regions of conflict. Year we were granted protection to over 8000

:44:02.:44:04.

children. The point again, which he is making there, if you take the

:44:05.:44:08.

children directly from the camps in the conflict zones, they have less

:44:09.:44:12.

reason to try and risk these very crossings to Europe. We have really

:44:13.:44:16.

supported the government in the work that it has done in terms of taking

:44:17.:44:20.

children and families from the region and helping those in the

:44:21.:44:24.

region. I am proud of what Britain has done, but it is not an either

:44:25.:44:30.

or. We can do both. In the 1930s we took 10,000 Jewish children refugees

:44:31.:44:36.

who are fleeing Nazi persecution into this country. I am incredibly

:44:37.:44:41.

proud of that legacy. I think we can do something like that again. We are

:44:42.:44:46.

not actually saying as many as 10,000 children. This is a tiny

:44:47.:44:50.

number in comparison. We can do it. We can do both. We can help refugees

:44:51.:44:55.

in the region and we can also help the children who are desperate risk

:44:56.:45:00.

in Europe right now. In Italy they 11,000 refugees arrived in just five

:45:01.:45:06.

days. Europe is still dealing with the refugee crisis and Britain can

:45:07.:45:11.

do its bit in Europe as well is in the region. Very grateful for your

:45:12.:45:12.

time. Thank you. You're watching

:45:13.:45:15.

Breakfast from BBC News. Prince William and Prince Harry have

:45:16.:45:21.

given a candid insight into their relationship

:45:22.:45:25.

with their mother, in a documentary The rules on blood donation

:45:26.:45:27.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland, to allow more gay men

:45:28.:45:32.

and sex workers to participate. Here's Stav with a look

:45:33.:45:37.

at this morning's weather. Lots of rainbows this morning. This

:45:38.:45:53.

one is even bigger. There will be showers today and longer spells of

:45:54.:46:01.

rain such as -- like yesterday. A few things going on. There is an

:46:02.:46:05.

area of low pressure complicating things. It will bring wet weather to

:46:06.:46:09.

eastern Scotland through the day and it will sink southwards. In towards

:46:10.:46:15.

Wales, much of England. When we have showers pushing into South Wales,

:46:16.:46:18.

Sarah Sanders Sunny spells around to the Midlands and the southern parts

:46:19.:46:22.

of England. Any mist and fog should clear away. We have had the rain

:46:23.:46:26.

through the Midlands which will fizzle out through the morning.

:46:27.:46:29.

Northern Ireland, a cloudy start but it will rake up and the sunshine

:46:30.:46:34.

will appear. Western Scotland has the sunshine. Central and eastern

:46:35.:46:38.

parts will turn cloudy, misty and wet with an onshore breeze. This is

:46:39.:46:41.

the weather front I was talking about, sinking southwards into

:46:42.:46:44.

north-east England and central southern Scotland would see showers

:46:45.:46:49.

developing. Brightening up behind it and for England and Wales, it is

:46:50.:46:53.

sunshine and showers. Some heavy ones and maybe longer spells into

:46:54.:46:57.

south-west England and south-east. In the sunshine, 20 or 21 but when

:46:58.:47:02.

the rain arrives, the showers will feel cool. The last day at Royal

:47:03.:47:08.

Birkdale, they will be further spells of rain or showers. Some

:47:09.:47:13.

Sunny spells and more breezy than yesterday. For the women's world

:47:14.:47:16.

cricket at Lord's, the clouds will gather through this afternoon with

:47:17.:47:21.

showers around so they could be interruptions unfortunately. As we

:47:22.:47:25.

head into the evening, the band of Raid thinks southwards and generally

:47:26.:47:30.

weakens. -- rain. Into the start of the new working week, we have the

:47:31.:47:34.

hang back of the weather front in central and eastern areas gradually

:47:35.:47:38.

clearing away becoming confined to the south-east. A cool one of

:47:39.:47:41.

northerly winds down the east coast but further west, Sunny spells and

:47:42.:47:45.

feeling quite warm. The dry weather spreads across most of the UK and on

:47:46.:47:50.

Tuesday it looks settled with light winds. Good Sunny spells but make

:47:51.:47:54.

the most of it because behind me, this weather system will make

:47:55.:47:57.

inroads for Wednesday to make for a pretty wet day.

:47:58.:48:01.

We will be back with the headlines at seven and now on Breakfast, it is

:48:02.:48:06.

time for Click. It's fun, but it's not

:48:07.:48:29.

going to change the world... It's not going to

:48:30.:48:53.

change the world... It wouldn't fit in as much as,

:48:54.:48:55.

say, my phone would. Not really what you want to hear

:48:56.:48:59.

when you are talking about VR. Especially since the technology has

:49:00.:49:08.

actually been around But it wouldn't be the first bit

:49:09.:49:10.

of amazing looking tech to simply One of the problems is the media

:49:11.:49:16.

goes mad over it and then everything gets overhyped, not that we would be

:49:17.:49:24.

guilty of that of course... But the truth is, sometimes stuff

:49:25.:49:27.

gets overblown and the people who buy the thing end up getting

:49:28.:49:32.

disappointed by the thing. Well, this week, the BBC,

:49:33.:49:35.

in partnership with Ipsos Mori, has published research

:49:36.:49:38.

into the reality of virtual reality. 16 ordinary people were given

:49:39.:49:40.

Samsung Gear VR headsets for three months, and asked to use them

:49:41.:49:43.

in their free time at home. And for any long-term observers

:49:44.:49:46.

of tech, the results Actually finding your headset

:49:47.:49:49.

in the first place, it might be shoved in a drawer or somewhere,

:49:50.:49:54.

under your bed, dust it off, it might be dirty, it

:49:55.:49:57.

might not be totally clean. Getting your phone and putting

:49:58.:50:03.

it into the headset, if you have a mobile-driven VR

:50:04.:50:14.

headset, and making sure that the phone has high battery

:50:15.:50:17.

because that will often be Finding a piece of content

:50:18.:50:20.

to actually watch, the phone might overheat and the experience

:50:21.:50:29.

will then stop. You might be a family,

:50:30.:50:34.

friends or flatmates pranking you as you are doing it

:50:35.:50:41.

so you will feel self-conscious. Your hair might be messed up,

:50:42.:50:44.

or your make-up, or whatever. And all of those various barriers

:50:45.:50:47.

come to be quite significant behavioural hurdles

:50:48.:50:50.

to get people to do this. These things just aren't

:50:51.:50:53.

ready for prime time yet. They are not easy to use

:50:54.:50:55.

and they are not easy to share. For example, as soon

:50:56.:50:59.

as I take this off my head, it switches off to save power,

:51:00.:51:02.

which means I cannot get something going and then give it

:51:03.:51:05.

to someone else to enjoy. It will switch off and they have

:51:06.:51:08.

to navigate to the content It means I've ended up putting

:51:09.:51:11.

a sticker over the sensor so it doesn't know when it's been taken

:51:12.:51:15.

off, which is stupid! There's really no argument that

:51:16.:51:21.

VR can blow your mind. But after those initial experiences,

:51:22.:51:28.

keeping people interested Once they are exhausting

:51:29.:51:33.

the key experiences, the novelty experiences around

:51:34.:51:36.

the roller-coaster rides, and the horror experiences,

:51:37.:51:38.

those kinds of things, then their enthusiasm

:51:39.:51:40.

ebbs away quite quickly. And one of the reasons why people

:51:41.:51:42.

get bored is that there was not much With VR content, I think

:51:43.:51:46.

there is a bit of a chicken Obviously, to encourage more

:51:47.:51:54.

people to buy VR headsets, it would be good to have more

:51:55.:51:58.

and more VR content. But it costs a lot of money to make

:51:59.:52:11.

and you don't necessarily want to invest in making the content

:52:12.:52:14.

unless you are confident a lot So, it is difficult to put a lot

:52:15.:52:18.

of money into something if you do not know that people

:52:19.:52:22.

will buy the headset but then to convince them to buy the headset,

:52:23.:52:26.

maybe you have to do that? It's a problem that's

:52:27.:52:29.

also beset Blu-ray, 4K, We've moved incredibly far

:52:30.:52:31.

in the last two years in terms of what has been produced,

:52:32.:52:35.

but there was a lot There is consumer uptake

:52:36.:52:38.

of headsets, technology needs to be better for production,

:52:39.:52:42.

tools and things to produce that. All of these things are happening

:52:43.:52:46.

at once and incredibly fast, This might explain why last week

:52:47.:52:48.

Facebook cut the price of their Oculus headset

:52:49.:52:52.

for the second time. It's a lot to shell out

:52:53.:52:54.

for something that might just end up By reducing its prices,

:52:55.:52:58.

Oculus will probably appeal to more people who were already

:52:59.:53:02.

considering buying the headset, but I'm not sure it will convince

:53:03.:53:04.

many people to buy it, It still costs about the same

:53:05.:53:07.

as a games console. And it's not just the price

:53:08.:53:17.

of the headset itself, you need to have a pretty high-end

:53:18.:53:20.

machine to run these things on. And even Sony, the company that

:53:21.:53:23.

provides a high-end PlayStation 4 with its VR headsets,

:53:24.:53:27.

which has sold 1 million of the things, told us not to get

:53:28.:53:29.

too excited about it. I think that, in the last

:53:30.:53:32.

six months to a year, we have seen a little

:53:33.:53:35.

bit of overhyping of We saw this as the start of a very

:53:36.:53:38.

long process of bringing VR You will see a lot more

:53:39.:53:47.

technology innovation. I think content makers,

:53:48.:53:50.

game makers, and others, including folks making

:53:51.:53:52.

television programmes, they are really only just starting

:53:53.:53:53.

to learn what the tools are to make Everybody knows it will take some

:53:54.:53:57.

time before we produce really good and compelling content,

:53:58.:54:05.

but we are inventing a new medium here and that is obviously

:54:06.:54:08.

going to take time. But unless we start somewhere,

:54:09.:54:10.

we will never do it. So we need to wait a few years

:54:11.:54:13.

while you guys get it right, so there is something

:54:14.:54:19.

worth watching? LAUGHTER You can't develop anything

:54:20.:54:21.

unless it is in conjunction with the audience too,

:54:22.:54:24.

so if we have no audience, we'd never be able to create

:54:25.:54:26.

something and make it really This little fellow

:54:27.:54:30.

is called Sea Turtle. Designed to move, like,

:54:31.:54:43.

you guessed it, a sea turtle, his arms are shaped

:54:44.:54:46.

like the fins found in nature. He has been developed by researchers

:54:47.:54:51.

at Arizona University to detect landmines, and sadly

:54:52.:54:55.

for him, detonate them. Unsurprisingly, current

:54:56.:54:56.

de-mining bots on the market cost a pretty penny,

:54:57.:55:00.

but Sea Turtle has been made Powered by a Raspberry Pi Zero

:55:01.:55:02.

computer and constructed from cardboard, this disposable

:55:03.:55:12.

device is ?50 a pop. Not bad for a machine

:55:13.:55:14.

that learns as he goes. and every time a robot makes a good

:55:15.:55:20.

move, then it essentially gives itself some positive reinforcement,

:55:21.:55:26.

in terms of, maybe I should If it gets a negative or it

:55:27.:55:29.

does not do very well in trying a new type of control then

:55:30.:55:33.

it is a negative reinforcement, and so it doesn't try that

:55:34.:55:36.

type of motion again. In reinforcing it, by giving it

:55:37.:55:39.

good or bad feedback, it was able to learn

:55:40.:55:42.

to walk upon its own. Not only could the lightweight robot

:55:43.:55:44.

potentially save lives here on earth, he could also be used

:55:45.:55:47.

to further research in space. One of our goals is to use this

:55:48.:55:51.

in order to manufacture The idea is, rather than iterating

:55:52.:55:55.

over the design of the robot here on earth, where we actually

:55:56.:55:59.

don't have the environment in which it is going to be deployed,

:56:00.:56:02.

we can actually just ship the materials into space

:56:03.:56:06.

and manufacture the robot Currently battery-powered,

:56:07.:56:08.

Sea Turtle gets fairly tired after about three hours on the trot,

:56:09.:56:14.

so researchers aim to add solar cells to his back so

:56:15.:56:20.

he can charge himself. They also plan to manufacture

:56:21.:56:32.

loads and automate them, so swarms of bots working together

:56:33.:56:40.

could quickly cover large areas. This robot is really good

:56:41.:56:52.

at paddling through sand, so not just landmine detection,

:56:53.:56:58.

but applications such as farming, or anywhere where you do not want

:56:59.:57:01.

a very expensive robot interacting with very dirty

:57:02.:57:04.

environments, this robot is very SPEAKING WITH STUTTER:

:57:05.:57:06.

My name is Gareth. I'm studying at Nottingham

:57:07.:57:18.

Trent University. I've had a stutter ever

:57:19.:57:22.

since I was six years old. I don't let it get in the way

:57:23.:57:28.

of things that I do. Although a stutter isn't curable,

:57:29.:57:38.

Gareth's dedicated his masters degree to finding a way

:57:39.:57:41.

to treat it as best he can I'm creating virtual

:57:42.:57:44.

reality exposure therapy. It is aimed to benefit people

:57:45.:57:56.

who stutter and to also Gareth is using a headset called

:57:57.:57:59.

the FOVE which has the ability to track eye movement -

:58:00.:58:03.

something that can be severely affected when somebody

:58:04.:58:06.

is stuttering. The eyes can close, flicker

:58:07.:58:07.

or fixate on a certain space and adjusting one's eye movements

:58:08.:58:10.

is part of established speech By analysing the eye

:58:11.:58:13.

movements of his subjects, Gareth is able to suggest similar

:58:14.:58:16.

exercises and techniques and in the future

:58:17.:58:21.

he hopes his research might be used by speech therapists

:58:22.:58:23.

in official treatments. When the person is in

:58:24.:58:30.

the environment, they will see an animated avatar and they are to

:58:31.:58:33.

talk to the avatar about a certain topic like their favourite holiday,

:58:34.:58:39.

and over that time, I'll be tracking their eye behaviours and seeing

:58:40.:58:44.

what they do when they stutter. I will be advising them

:58:45.:58:50.

what to do and how Gareth has previously used a more

:58:51.:58:54.

basic headset to improve people's confidence by simulating an entire

:58:55.:59:02.

audience for them to speak And although he is only addressing

:59:03.:59:04.

the eye movement and not the speech element directly, he hopes this

:59:05.:59:16.

research will be able to improve the confidence of those who stutter

:59:17.:59:19.

and indeed those who don't. And that is it for the short cut

:59:20.:59:26.

of Click for this week. The full-length version is waiting

:59:27.:59:29.

for you at iPlayer right now. Don't forget to follow us

:59:30.:59:32.

on facebook and Twitter throughout Hello, this is Breakfast,

:59:33.:59:35.

with Christian Fraser Princes William and

:59:36.:00:03.

Harry speak candidly about their mother -

:00:04.:00:05.

ahead of the 20th anniversary probably a little bit too roar up

:00:06.:00:07.

until this point. It is still raw. They open up about Diana's loving

:00:08.:00:18.

and mischievous nature - and reveal details

:00:19.:00:21.

of their final conversation. Good morning, it's

:00:22.:00:34.

Sunday the 23rd of July. The rules on giving blood in England

:00:35.:00:36.

and Scotland are to be relaxed - The hospital treating baby

:00:37.:00:42.

Charlie Gard has called in the police, after some

:00:43.:00:46.

of its staff received death A fourth Tour de France

:00:47.:00:49.

title for Chris Froome - he goes into the final stage

:00:50.:00:55.

almost guaranteed to win. American Jordan Spieth is the man

:00:56.:00:59.

to catch at the Open Championship. He leads by three shots entering

:01:00.:01:04.

today's final round. A very good morning to you. It looks

:01:05.:01:19.

like today will be similar to yesterday. Some basis he showers and

:01:20.:01:23.

long spells of rain but looks like some sunshine in the forecast.

:01:24.:01:26.

Princes William and Harry have given a candid insight

:01:27.:01:31.

into their relationship with their mother Princess Diana,

:01:32.:01:33.

and have revealed that they last spoke to her in a brief phone call

:01:34.:01:37.

Speaking in a documentary to mark the 20th anniversary of her death,

:01:38.:01:41.

the princes said they regret the rushed nature of that

:01:42.:01:44.

conversation, but fondly recall their mother's loving nature

:01:45.:01:46.

Here's our royal correspondent, Nicholas Witchell.

:01:47.:01:50.

To the watching world she was the princess whose image

:01:51.:01:53.

It was a glamorous but necessarily limited

:01:54.:01:57.

Now, nearly 20 years after Princess Diana's death

:01:58.:02:02.

spoken in an ITV documentary about Diana, the mother who did

:02:03.:02:09.

We felt, you know, incredibly loved, Harry and I.

:02:10.:02:16.

We are grateful that the love still feels there.

:02:17.:02:23.

It was that love that, even if she was on the other side

:02:24.:02:26.

of a room, as a son you could feel it.

:02:27.:02:31.

The person who emerges from William and Harry's description as a woman

:02:32.:02:34.

When everybody says to me, you know, "So

:02:35.:02:39.

All I can hear is her laugh in my head.

:02:40.:02:46.

And that sort of crazy love, where there was just pure happiness

:02:47.:02:49.

One of her motto is to me was you can be as naughty

:02:50.:03:01.

And they speak about their mother's death.

:03:02.:03:06.

The recall the last time they spoke to

:03:07.:03:09.

her and they reflect on the overwhelming public reaction

:03:10.:03:19.

and how they coped with the week which culminated in her funeral.

:03:20.:03:22.

As William himself has said, it is a tribute to Diana

:03:23.:03:25.

from her sons in which they recall the woman they hope

:03:26.:03:28.

The rules on blood donation are to be relaxed in England

:03:29.:03:33.

and Scotland to allow more gay men and sex workers to take part.

:03:34.:03:36.

Experts say there is clear evidence it is safe for those groups to give

:03:37.:03:40.

blood after abstaining from sex for three months,

:03:41.:03:42.

HIV charities have welcomed the changes.

:03:43.:03:45.

Our Health correspondent Sophie Hutchinson reports.

:03:46.:03:48.

Rules on safety mean those at high risk of infectious diseases such

:03:49.:03:53.

as HIV and hepatitis B and C are restricted from donating.

:03:54.:03:58.

Gay men will no longer have to abstain from sex for 12 months.

:03:59.:04:04.

That will be reduced to three months before they can give blood.

:04:05.:04:07.

People who have had sex with high-risk partners

:04:08.:04:10.

or in a high-risk place, will have the deferral period

:04:11.:04:13.

And for the first time, sex workers will be

:04:14.:04:18.

allowed to donate blood after abstaining from sex for three

:04:19.:04:21.

Technologies to pick up the presence of a virus and other

:04:22.:04:26.

infections of the blood have greatly improved.

:04:27.:04:28.

So we can now pick up viruses at a much earlier stage

:04:29.:04:32.

Therefore, it is much easier to tell if a blood donor has the virus.

:04:33.:04:41.

The reason for the change is that scientists say new testing

:04:42.:04:44.

techniques have established infectious diseases such as HIV

:04:45.:04:46.

and hepatitis B and C show up in the bloodstream well within three

:04:47.:04:49.

The changes have been welcomed by charities including

:04:50.:04:58.

the National Aids Trust, who say they were based

:04:59.:05:00.

on the latest scientific evidence rather than prejudice.

:05:01.:05:07.

And we'll be speaking to the HIV charity, the Terrence Higgins Trust,

:05:08.:05:10.

Some of the BBC's most high-profile female presenters have written

:05:11.:05:16.

to the corporation's Director General Tony Hall,

:05:17.:05:18.

calling on him to tackle the gender pay gap.

:05:19.:05:20.

BBC Sport's Claire Balding, the Today programme's Mishal Hussain

:05:21.:05:24.

and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour are amongst the 42 signatories.

:05:25.:05:27.

The letter in the Sunday Times urges Lord Hall to "act now" to close

:05:28.:05:31.

the gender pay gap in all areas of the BBC.

:05:32.:05:35.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has described the abuse to staff

:05:36.:05:38.

at Great Ormond Street hospital, where the terminally ill baby

:05:39.:05:41.

Charlie Gard is being treated, as "totally unacceptable".

:05:42.:05:46.

The hospital says its doctors and nurses had faced a "tide

:05:47.:05:49.

of abuse", and that it's had to call in the police.

:05:50.:05:52.

The High Court is considering whether Charlie's parents should be

:05:53.:05:55.

allowed to take him to the United States

:05:56.:05:57.

It is a case that has touched people around the world.

:05:58.:06:04.

Attracting a growing number of campaigners who disagree

:06:05.:06:06.

with medical experts over the treatment of a critically

:06:07.:06:09.

11-month-old Charlie Gard has a rare form of mitochondrial

:06:10.:06:23.

disease, a condition that causes progressive muscle weakness

:06:24.:06:25.

His parents want to take him to the US

:06:26.:06:28.

The Great Ormond Street Hospital says it is in Charlie's best

:06:29.:06:32.

interests to turn off his life-support and allow him to die.

:06:33.:06:35.

Last night the hospital said in a statement that their doctors

:06:36.:06:38.

and nurses have been subjected to a shocking and disgraceful

:06:39.:06:41.

Staff have received abuse, both in the street and online.

:06:42.:06:46.

Thousands of abusive messages, they say, have been sent

:06:47.:06:50.

to doctors and nurses whose wife work is to care for sick children.

:06:51.:06:56.

A short while later, the parents of Charlie Gard also

:06:57.:06:58.

We do not condone abusive or threatening behaviour

:06:59.:07:02.

to Great Ormond Street Hospital staff or

:07:03.:07:04.

We, too, get abuse and have to endure nasty and hurtful remarks

:07:05.:07:12.

People have different opinions and we accept that.

:07:13.:07:17.

But there is a line that should not be

:07:18.:07:20.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, also condemned the abuse,

:07:21.:07:24.

tweeting that the behaviour was totally unacceptable.

:07:25.:07:29.

The High Court hearing into Charlie Gard's

:07:30.:07:33.

future resumes tomorrow with the judge saying he hopes

:07:34.:07:35.

a decision will be reached by Tuesday.

:07:36.:07:42.

A prison guard has suffered minor injuries during trouble at Hewell

:07:43.:07:45.

The protest is believed to have been caused by a smoking ban,

:07:46.:07:50.

which is due to come into effect tomorrow,

:07:51.:07:52.

as well as restrictions placed on inmates because of staff

:07:53.:07:55.

The Scottish and Welsh governments have written to the UK government

:07:56.:07:58.

to raise concerns about the treatment of unaccompanied child

:07:59.:08:01.

They say a scheme to resettle migrants from mainland Europe,

:08:02.:08:05.

including those from a camp that was closed down in Calais,

:08:06.:08:08.

has been characterised by bad planning and poor

:08:09.:08:10.

Democrats have criticised President Trump for saying he has

:08:11.:08:16.

the complete power to issue pardons, as an investigation continues

:08:17.:08:18.

into alleged Russian meddling in last years US elections.

:08:19.:08:22.

It's thought he could use the presidential pardon for family

:08:23.:08:25.

Presidents can pardon people before they're found guilty or charged

:08:26.:08:29.

The process of a person legally changing their gender could be made

:08:30.:08:37.

much easier following plans being considered by the government.

:08:38.:08:39.

The equalities minister Justine Greening is setting out

:08:40.:08:42.

plans that would not require a doctor's diagnosis.

:08:43.:08:44.

She says she wants to streamline the process and make

:08:45.:08:47.

At the moment, if you are a transgender person

:08:48.:08:56.

and you want to go about changing your gender,

:08:57.:09:06.

It is very medically driven as well so you

:09:07.:09:10.

have to go to a clinic and go through a lot of psychological

:09:11.:09:14.

profiling and, of course, actually that is something that

:09:15.:09:16.

makes it very difficult for people to access.

:09:17.:09:18.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's Aouth

:09:19.:09:24.

-- South Island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit

:09:25.:09:27.

by floods unleashed by a huge winter storm.

:09:28.:09:30.

Torrential rain has forced people from their homes,

:09:31.:09:32.

while landslides have left several communities cut off.

:09:33.:09:34.

Britain's Chris Froome is all but certain to win his fourth

:09:35.:09:38.

Following yesterday's time trial in Marseille,

:09:39.:09:42.

the Team Sky rider has a near unassailable lead as he goes

:09:43.:09:46.

into the Tour's final stage through the streets of Paris.

:09:47.:09:51.

Despite riding more than 2000 miles and spending over 80 hours

:09:52.:09:55.

in the saddle, this year's Tour de France

:09:56.:10:00.

winner was decided on the streets of Marseilles.

:10:01.:10:03.

Chris Froome's rivals struggled to keep pace with him over

:10:04.:10:06.

And the French favourite was nearly caught by the Team Sky rider

:10:07.:10:17.

When all was said and done, Chris Froome extended his overall

:10:18.:10:21.

Reasserting his dominance, and the right to wear

:10:22.:10:25.

Having flown overnight from Marseilles, Chris

:10:26.:10:29.

Froome and the rest of the riders will have to compete nine laps

:10:30.:10:32.

All that will be left then is for Chris Froome to stand tall

:10:33.:10:38.

on top of the podium and be crowned the race winner once more.

:10:39.:10:43.

With three tour victories already secured, Chris Froome will today add

:10:44.:10:46.

a fourth title to his illustrious CV.

:10:47.:10:50.

At the age of 32, there is time yet for him to add to that total

:10:51.:10:55.

Good news for old people like me. Use called me an old person. The

:10:56.:11:13.

former host of the great British bake off are to host the return of

:11:14.:11:18.

the classic show, the Generation Game. New it has been commissioned

:11:19.:11:28.

for initial for episode run although a launch date is yet to be sent. It

:11:29.:11:34.

was presented for many years by Bruce Forsyth. The new show will

:11:35.:11:41.

combine aspects of the original show with new games. I love that theme

:11:42.:11:45.

tune. It is a good theme tune. Very catchy. Surely get more on the

:11:46.:11:49.

relaxation of the blood donor rules in England and Scotland. That was in

:11:50.:11:53.

our headlines. It will allow more gay men and sex workers to

:11:54.:11:57.

participate. Alex Villis is from the HIV charity Terrence Higgins trust.

:11:58.:12:00.

She joins us from London. Good morning to you. How significant are

:12:01.:12:09.

these changes? They are significant. The trust has long fought for an

:12:10.:12:12.

evidence -based policy on blood donation. We really welcome these

:12:13.:12:19.

changes. They are clearly a victory for science over stigmatising

:12:20.:12:22.

assumptions. What is the science behind this and what is the evidence

:12:23.:12:27.

that you collected? I sit on the working group that feeds into the

:12:28.:12:33.

government's evidence and what this does is enables more people to go

:12:34.:12:37.

and donate blood while maintaining the safety of the blood supply. That

:12:38.:12:41.

is the most important thing. Could you run us through this affects and

:12:42.:12:46.

what those changes are going? Yeah, it mainly affect gay or bisexual

:12:47.:12:52.

men. We call them and who have sex with men. It also affects current

:12:53.:12:57.

and former sex workers. For current and former sex workers, their

:12:58.:13:00.

deferral period has been reduced from a lifetime ban to just three

:13:01.:13:07.

months of abstention. For men who have sex with men, their deferral

:13:08.:13:10.

period has reduced from 12 months to three months. Is a big reduction.

:13:11.:13:16.

Especially in the case of sex workers, going from permanent fully

:13:17.:13:20.

being banned to three months. Why has this happened? Because it is

:13:21.:13:24.

what the evidence suggests is the right amount of time. We know, from

:13:25.:13:28.

the evidence that we supply government, that 98% of sex workers

:13:29.:13:35.

surveyed by us rated their sexual health as very important and the

:13:36.:13:40.

same percentage so, 98%, new their heyday the status. What we're

:13:41.:13:46.

calling on government do now, so that there is further progress in

:13:47.:13:50.

the future, is to continually review who can and who cannot donate blood,

:13:51.:13:55.

because it always needs to be in line with the latest evidence which

:13:56.:14:00.

is continually changing. And what changes might they be, for example?

:14:01.:14:06.

Well, in three or four years time, it is difficult to say, but we have

:14:07.:14:10.

seen a significant difference, for example, with men who have sex with

:14:11.:14:14.

men from 12 months to three months. What we would like to see going

:14:15.:14:20.

forward is more evidence, more investment, really, from government,

:14:21.:14:24.

in finding the evidence about men who have only oral sex with men. We

:14:25.:14:29.

know from our clinical and epidemiological work that their risk

:14:30.:14:35.

is extremely low. And this, in case people do not know, the reason why

:14:36.:14:39.

gay men were banned initially for 12 months is because statistically gay

:14:40.:14:43.

men have a high risk of acquiring blood-borne disease infection and

:14:44.:14:46.

viruses. That is correct. Before that they had a lifetime ban in the

:14:47.:14:53.

1980s when this first came in. You are right. In 2011 there was a

:14:54.:14:58.

review and based on the evidence at the time, their lifetime ban was

:14:59.:15:02.

lifted and reduced to a 12 month deferral period. We really welcome

:15:03.:15:08.

the three-month deferral period for MS M which is now in place. Of these

:15:09.:15:14.

rules, people have been asking, these rules depend on people

:15:15.:15:17.

admitting the last time they had sex, admitting that they have high

:15:18.:15:22.

risk sex or, perhaps, went to a place that is high risk. Of course,

:15:23.:15:27.

people can lie. It is based on honesty, yes. But we know that the

:15:28.:15:31.

blood supply has been maintained at a very safe level four, you know,

:15:32.:15:37.

over a decade. And so it really does work. There are also tested so, you

:15:38.:15:44.

know, the blood that is donated is tested. It is very safe and we are

:15:45.:15:49.

world leading blood donation here in the UK. Thank you very much for

:15:50.:15:51.

speaking to morning. Here's Stav with a look

:15:52.:16:00.

at this morning's weather. The letter will be similar today to

:16:01.:16:12.

yesterday. Some of the showers Main Beach together to produce longer

:16:13.:16:17.

spells of rain. We could see more organised rain across the North. --

:16:18.:16:24.

some of the showers batch together. Some of the showers pushing into

:16:25.:16:32.

South Wales the moment. Some good sunshine across central southern

:16:33.:16:35.

parts of England with a bit of mist and fog which will clear over the

:16:36.:16:39.

next few hours. In the Midlands and the it has been very wet. Northern

:16:40.:16:46.

Ireland, a bit cloudy that it will thin and break with sunshine

:16:47.:16:49.

appearing and the same, too, for western Scotland. A bit of an

:16:50.:16:56.

onshore breeze up so feeling quite cool all on the east coast. The rain

:16:57.:16:59.

could be heavy and pushing southwards into central southern

:17:00.:17:06.

skull -- Scotland. Brightening up behind it, brightening up for

:17:07.:17:10.

Northern Ireland, England and Wales, scattered showers. Some of these

:17:11.:17:13.

could be heavy into the south-east with a rumble of thunder. In the

:17:14.:17:20.

sunshine 20- 21 degrees. Cooler when the rain arrives. For the last day

:17:21.:17:24.

at Royal Birkdale, more breezy and could be a few showers. For the

:17:25.:17:28.

women's World Cup at it looks like we will have showers rifling through

:17:29.:17:33.

so they will be interruptions to play, I think. The rain since

:17:34.:17:39.

southwards into parts of Wales as we head through the overnight period

:17:40.:17:44.

which will be chilly across northern and western areas. For Wednesday,

:17:45.:17:48.

the system pushes out into the near continent. They will be is Bill hang

:17:49.:17:53.

back of cloud. There will be a cool northerly wind. -- there will be a

:17:54.:18:02.

hang back. Into Tuesday, the weather systems eventually gone from the

:18:03.:18:06.

south-east and we are in between two weather systems so it looks fine,

:18:07.:18:10.

bar the odd shower. Good Sunny spells. Temperatures high-teens to

:18:11.:18:16.

low 20s Celsius. There will be a spell of wet weather on Wednesday

:18:17.:18:20.

and thereafter, sunshine and showers.

:18:21.:18:23.

A novel way to solving your problems is popping up in London,

:18:24.:18:29.

but would you take the advice of an unqualified stranger?

:18:30.:18:32.

It relies on volunteers sharing their problems,

:18:33.:18:34.

as well as listening to other people's, in a temporary setting.

:18:35.:18:37.

A problem shared is a problem halved, also they say.

:18:38.:18:41.

But would you share your problems with a complete

:18:42.:18:44.

And would you share them spontaneously in public?

:18:45.:18:47.

That is what one clinical psychologist is hoping

:18:48.:18:49.

as she launches a bold experiment in London,

:18:50.:18:53.

despite challenging weather conditions.

:18:54.:18:55.

Her team create pop-up problem-solving booths and then

:18:56.:18:59.

invited members of the public to open up about the issues weighing

:19:00.:19:04.

So what is the big idea behind it all?

:19:05.:19:08.

Problem-solving booths are all about people realising

:19:09.:19:10.

we can all help each other all the time.

:19:11.:19:12.

We don't have a culture or permission to ask.

:19:13.:19:21.

I'm a trained clinical psychologist and I generally work in a clinic

:19:22.:19:25.

and at the end of the day I used to think, gosh,

:19:26.:19:28.

if only all the people I've met in private in this clinic today

:19:29.:19:32.

could talk to each other, because actually they're suffering

:19:33.:19:34.

The problem is, I keep waking up thinking I have to do this,

:19:35.:19:39.

Every time there's more things that people are asking me to do.

:19:40.:19:43.

While we were there, there was a trickle of participants

:19:44.:19:47.

rather than a deluge but those who took part seemed to embrace

:19:48.:19:51.

the idea, volunteering to both share their problems and listen

:19:52.:19:53.

So many people in London have anxiety or claim to.

:19:54.:19:58.

Do you think possibly, maybe because of...

:19:59.:20:02.

You know, not so much your upbringing but your parents?

:20:03.:20:06.

Ah, I thought maybe because of...that I would be more tolerant.

:20:07.:20:13.

Trained psychologists are always on hand if serious cases emerge.

:20:14.:20:15.

The results of the scheme are still being assessed.

:20:16.:20:20.

The National Health Service and the Mayor of London's office

:20:21.:20:24.

It's about opening up conversations around mental health and well-being

:20:25.:20:29.

just to destigmatise these things, get people talking and maybe

:20:30.:20:32.

If successful, the scheme will be rolled out across the country.

:20:33.:20:53.

I do think I could do that and sit down with somebody and say so, here

:20:54.:20:59.

are my problems. People don't do it on the tube. People just stand there

:21:00.:21:04.

with a newspaper. You might disagree.

:21:05.:21:10.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:21:11.:21:12.

Time now for a look at the newspapers.

:21:13.:21:18.

The financial journalist Margaret Doyle is here to tell us

:21:19.:21:21.

The Sunday Telegraph has the story we're leading on today -

:21:22.:21:33.

William and Harry's regret over last short chat with Diana.

:21:34.:21:38.

William and Harry on their agony over "last phone call with mum".

:21:39.:21:54.

Her legacy as well and the things she did for HIV which we will be

:21:55.:21:59.

talking about this morning. The Sunday Times has a picture

:22:00.:22:00.

of Harry with his Mum. Alongside that story "transgender

:22:01.:22:03.

reforms for birth certificates" And the Sunday Mirror says "last

:22:04.:22:05.

call with mum haunts us". There is 11 pages on this. Marking

:22:06.:22:37.

the 20th anniversary of Diana's death. What is happening is that

:22:38.:22:42.

William and Harry are re- claiming Diana's legacy. They want to

:22:43.:22:45.

introduce her to at generation who do not know her. If you are under

:22:46.:22:49.

25, you probably have no recollection of her. What a

:22:50.:22:53.

remarkable effect she had. On the public. What was written about her

:22:54.:23:00.

was her as a fashion icon and of course the marital breakdown which

:23:01.:23:03.

of course was all over the press for years in the 1990s and late 1980s.

:23:04.:23:08.

They also want to highlight her charitable legacy and the way in

:23:09.:23:12.

which she changed attitude to things like HIV. It was to do in the 80s.

:23:13.:23:18.

She was one of the first people to shake the hands of somebody

:23:19.:23:23.

suffering from HIV. She campaigned on homelessness, she got the boys to

:23:24.:23:26.

visit homeless shelters and of course famously, right before she

:23:27.:23:30.

died, she was campaigning on landmines which began she got into

:23:31.:23:34.

trouble for because it was seen as a deeply political issue and many

:23:35.:23:38.

politicians felt that she should back off and not deal with this

:23:39.:23:43.

because there was concern that she might affect the trade in landmines

:23:44.:23:47.

and the exporter 's trade. We take the pictures that granted now of her

:23:48.:23:51.

hugging the boys but if you went back further in the history of the

:23:52.:23:54.

Royal family, you wouldn't see pictures like this. No, no. When the

:23:55.:24:03.

Queen came back from her Commonwealth to write after she was

:24:04.:24:06.

crowned, she was pictured shaking the hands of a young Prince Charles

:24:07.:24:10.

so Diana had a different attitude to her children and indeed I think she

:24:11.:24:15.

took the boys on holiday with her, onto to Australia, with her in the

:24:16.:24:22.

80s. The other thing she did was shake people 's hands without

:24:23.:24:25.

wearing gloves and of course if you see the Queen, the Queen will

:24:26.:24:28.

typically wear gloves and senior women into the Royal family will

:24:29.:24:33.

typically wear gloves. That was a break with protocol as well. In the

:24:34.:24:43.

Sunday Times. Another royal story. Is this about Princess Charlotte and

:24:44.:24:50.

Prince George? She admits that like many of us, she laps up all of this

:24:51.:24:57.

coverage and beautiful pictures, Kate looking wonderful as she always

:24:58.:25:01.

does and the children looking cute but she makes the point that William

:25:02.:25:05.

is buckling down to do his duty and perhaps doesn't necessarily want to

:25:06.:25:10.

have life in the spotlight here bringing his very small children on

:25:11.:25:15.

a tour, an official tour, with them. I think he is probably a web of

:25:16.:25:20.

that. Yes, they were in Hamburg the other day and the cameras were

:25:21.:25:24.

wrong, helicopters, et cetera. But he but he knows he was getting

:25:25.:25:29.

spectral treatment. They know as they get older, they will be kept

:25:30.:25:33.

out of the limelight. Clearly, William and Kate are very particular

:25:34.:25:38.

about privacy. He has taken legal action when Kate was just his

:25:39.:25:42.

girlfriend when she was being photographed. He instructed lawyers

:25:43.:25:46.

to take action and to write to the newspapers to say leave her alone,

:25:47.:25:50.

back off. We know William cares about privacy and that's why it's so

:25:51.:25:55.

surprising to me that they didn't take these very small children --

:25:56.:25:59.

that they did take these very small children. If that were up to me, you

:26:00.:26:23.

don't see any fetters of these children until they were 18 and they

:26:24.:26:26.

have the right to choose for themselves whether they want to have

:26:27.:26:30.

life in the public eye and whether they want to be members of the royal

:26:31.:26:34.

family. Why not give them a choice? Who says they want to be Royals.

:26:35.:26:37.

That is the thing, they are loyal ambassadors at the age of four and

:26:38.:26:41.

two. Here is another story about mothers. Here we have another two

:26:42.:26:44.

mothers who want famous. These are ordinary women who became very angry

:26:45.:26:48.

because both of their daughters were killed by this man Robert Trigg but

:26:49.:26:52.

at the time, the depth of women who were in relationships with this man,

:26:53.:26:55.

they were both seem to be accidental. Carolyn Devlin was said

:26:56.:26:58.

to have died of natural causes and his next girlfriend, he supposedly

:26:59.:27:02.

rolled over on to her on a lounge and accidentally killed her. The

:27:03.:27:08.

mothers forced a reluctant police force to reopen these cases. They

:27:09.:27:12.

had to hire their own pathologist, spending a lot of money and

:27:13.:27:15.

eventually got justice but the question is, these mothers were

:27:16.:27:20.

fighting for justice that their daughters. We are out of time but

:27:21.:27:24.

you are coming back next hour because we have another one to talk

:27:25.:27:26.

about. Nice to see you, Margaret. At 9:00 this morning on BBC One it's

:27:27.:27:29.

The Andrew Marr Show, let's find out what he

:27:30.:27:32.

has in store, Andrew. It is a busy all the morning

:27:33.:27:40.

already. My main guest today is Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the Labour

:27:41.:27:44.

Party but I also talking to Liam Fox, the International Trade

:27:45.:27:53.

director and Ethan Hawke. And many more. A really busy and I hope

:27:54.:27:56.

controversial and interesting hour. We'll find out more

:27:57.:28:02.

about the radical plan to save the northern white

:28:03.:28:06.

rhino from extinction, Hello, this is Breakfast,

:28:07.:28:08.

with Christian Fraser But first, a summary of this

:28:09.:29:19.

morning's main news. Princes William and Harry have

:29:20.:29:26.

given a candid insight into their relationship

:29:27.:29:28.

with their mother Princess Diana, and have revealed that they last

:29:29.:29:31.

spoke to her in a brief phone call Speaking in a documentary to mark

:29:32.:29:34.

the 20th anniversary of her death, the princes said they regret

:29:35.:29:39.

the rushed nature of that conversation, but fondly

:29:40.:29:42.

recall their mother's loving nature One of her mottos to me

:29:43.:29:44.

was you can be as naughty She was one of the

:29:45.:29:49.

naughtiest parents. She would come and watch us play

:29:50.:29:54.

football and smuggle sweets Literally, walking back

:29:55.:29:57.

from a football match with five The rules on blood donation

:29:58.:30:04.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland to allow more gay men

:30:05.:30:10.

and sex workers to participate. Experts say there is clear evidence

:30:11.:30:13.

it is safe for those groups to give blood after abstaining

:30:14.:30:17.

from sex for three months, HIV charities have

:30:18.:30:19.

welcomed the changes. Some of the BBC's most high-profile

:30:20.:30:28.

female presenters have written to the corporation's

:30:29.:30:30.

Director General Tony Hall, calling on him to tackle

:30:31.:30:32.

the gender pay gap. BBC Sport's Claire Balding,

:30:33.:30:35.

the Today programme's Mishal Hussain and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour

:30:36.:30:37.

are amongst the 42 signatories. The letter in the Sunday Times urges

:30:38.:30:40.

Lord Hall to "act now" to close the gender pay gap in

:30:41.:30:44.

all areas of the BBC. The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt,

:30:45.:30:47.

has described the abuse to staff at Great Ormond Street hospital,

:30:48.:30:50.

where the terminally ill baby Charlie Gard is being treated,

:30:51.:30:54.

as "totally unacceptable". The hospital says its doctors

:30:55.:30:56.

and nurses have faced The High Court is considering

:30:57.:30:59.

whether Charlie's parents should be allowed to take him

:31:00.:31:03.

to the United States A 20-year-old man has died

:31:04.:31:05.

after being apprehended by a police The Met Police said the man

:31:06.:31:13.

was followed on foot after officers tried to stop a car in

:31:14.:31:19.

Kingsland Road, Hackney on Saturday. He was "taken ill" after "trying

:31:20.:31:22.

to swallow an object" and was pronounced dead

:31:23.:31:25.

in hospital a short time later. The Independent Police Complaints

:31:26.:31:28.

Commission has been informed. A prison guard has suffered minor

:31:29.:31:31.

injuries during trouble at Hewell The protest is believed to have been

:31:32.:31:34.

caused by a smoking ban, which is due to come

:31:35.:31:40.

into effect tomorrow, as well as restrictions placed

:31:41.:31:42.

on inmates because of staff The Scottish and Welsh governments

:31:43.:31:45.

have written to the UK government to raise concerns about

:31:46.:31:50.

the treatment of unaccompanied child They say a scheme to resettle

:31:51.:31:53.

migrants from mainland Europe, including those from a camp

:31:54.:31:56.

that was closed down in Calais, has been characterised

:31:57.:31:59.

by bad planning and poor There are children at risk across

:32:00.:32:21.

Europe. There a field teams in Greece, Italy, France, they work

:32:22.:32:25.

with his unaccompanied people every day and every day we leave them

:32:26.:32:30.

waiting. They are missing out on a childhood and an education.

:32:31.:32:31.

Democrats have criticised President Trump for saying he has

:32:32.:32:33.

the complete power to issue pardons, as an investigation continues

:32:34.:32:36.

into alleged Russian meddling in last years US elections.

:32:37.:32:38.

It's thought he could use the presidential pardon for family

:32:39.:32:41.

Presidents can pardon people before they're found guilty or charged

:32:42.:32:45.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:32:46.:32:51.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:32:52.:32:54.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:32:55.:33:03.

Torrential rain has forced people from their homes while landslides

:33:04.:33:07.

have left several communities cut off. More downpours are expected.

:33:08.:33:11.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:33:12.:33:17.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:33:18.:33:20.

A sperm whale appears to have beached on an embankment

:33:21.:33:24.

in the shadow of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris -

:33:25.:33:27.

Locals and tourists were reported to be shocked and saddened

:33:28.:33:31.

at the sight of the 50 foot beached mammal,

:33:32.:33:33.

found apparently washed up on the banks in the heart

:33:34.:33:36.

But if you look closely, it's actually a life-size whale

:33:37.:33:40.

Its purpose - to raise environmental awareness.

:33:41.:33:42.

How clever is that? I was convinced. It looks like the real thing. It is

:33:43.:33:52.

33 minutes past seven. A big day in Paris. Chris Froome is going to win.

:33:53.:33:59.

is. It is always a lovely moment to see the riders hand-in-hand across

:34:00.:34:02.

the line on the Champs-Elysses. We may well be looking at one of the

:34:03.:34:07.

greatest was cited to France riders ever. Only 32, still a few more

:34:08.:34:12.

years to go. Only four men have won on five occasions, and this could be

:34:13.:34:17.

Chris Froome's fourth. I will be criticised the point is I think we

:34:18.:34:21.

have not really focused on it as much this year. It has not been as

:34:22.:34:24.

high profile. And yet, an extraordinary achievement. It is.

:34:25.:34:27.

One of the hardest hardest events in sport.. Obviously psyching had a bad

:34:28.:34:33.

period, we'll remember the Lance Armstrong period. But now with team

:34:34.:34:37.

sky and the special ethos that they put on clean riders, it is a special

:34:38.:34:42.

moment, I think, for British cycling fans to see him do this. If he

:34:43.:34:47.

continues and wins more it could be really something that transcends

:34:48.:34:48.

cycling. Great Britain's Chris Froome is set

:34:49.:34:49.

to win his fourth Tour de He extended his lead to 54 seconds

:34:50.:34:52.

in yesterday's time trial in Marseille, and that won't be

:34:53.:34:56.

challenged in Paris this afternoon. The sprinters will contest the stage

:34:57.:34:59.

win, but Froome will be able to look forward standing on top

:35:00.:35:02.

of the podium on the Champs Elysees I mean, there have been ups and

:35:03.:35:05.

downs over the last three weeks but I think it has been very much a

:35:06.:35:12.

grand tour in the sense. It has really been about the three weeks

:35:13.:35:16.

and doing those three weeks in the most conservative but efficient

:35:17.:35:20.

manner. It was not about one single stage. That is what grand tour

:35:21.:35:23.

racing is. Earlier in the day Britain's Lizzie

:35:24.:35:34.

Diegnan finished second in La Course, the women's race

:35:35.:35:37.

organised by the Tour de France. The race was won by

:35:38.:35:40.

the Netherlands cyclist Annemiek Van Vleuten,

:35:41.:35:43.

who crashed during last year's The American Jordan Spieth will take

:35:44.:35:45.

a three shot lead into the final day of the Open Championship -

:35:46.:35:59.

and the chance to win Victory today would make Spieth

:36:00.:36:02.

only the second player after Jack Nicklaus to win three

:36:03.:36:07.

of golf's four majors before On a day when the opening gave us

:36:08.:36:10.

plenty to smile about, this man may just have been

:36:11.:36:16.

beaming more than any. Jordan Spieth will tee off this

:36:17.:36:20.

afternoon with a three shot lead No bogeys, five birdies,

:36:21.:36:23.

a shower of stability, culminating in a demonstration

:36:24.:36:31.

of why he has already won two majors It will take an almighty effort

:36:32.:36:34.

to stop him claiming a third. Rory McIlroy was 9 shots

:36:35.:36:40.

behind the American. I don't know what the weather

:36:41.:36:48.

will bring but if I want a chance in this tournament I need bad

:36:49.:36:52.

weather and I need to play well. Ian Poulter needs

:36:53.:36:55.

plenty of that as well. He is two under

:36:56.:36:59.

alongside Michael Roy. The wait for a British

:37:00.:37:06.

champion continues. And while many waited

:37:07.:37:08.

for the heavens to open, Branden Grace with the lowest

:37:09.:37:10.

round in men's major history. Come tonight, Jordan Speith may be

:37:11.:37:14.

raising more than that. Almost eight years to the day

:37:15.:37:21.

since he first won an individual world title at the age of just 15,

:37:22.:37:24.

Tom Daley has won a second - in the same event -

:37:25.:37:28.

the ten metre platform at the World Aquatics

:37:29.:37:30.

Championships in Budapest. In a really competitive final

:37:31.:37:35.

Daley led from the first round but was pushed all the way

:37:36.:37:38.

by the Olympic champion But he was awarded two maximum

:37:39.:37:41.

scores to secure the gold medal. It has been such a tough year

:37:42.:37:47.

getting over that competition in Rio where I was out of the final

:37:48.:37:52.

and I was unable to compete Tough work after the Olympics

:37:53.:37:55.

with how I was feeling and to come out the other side of

:37:56.:38:01.

it are still superb. I am excited to be able to finally

:38:02.:38:03.

go on a honeymoon now And what a day it was for Daley,

:38:04.:38:07.

because earlier, he and his partner Grace Reid won silver in the mixed

:38:08.:38:13.

three metre springboard final. Afterwards, Reid said the pair

:38:14.:38:16.

had been "winging it" because they hadn't been able

:38:17.:38:18.

to practise together all week. It was another golden night

:38:19.:38:22.

for Britain's para-athletes at the World Championships

:38:23.:38:24.

in London. There were three golds and a silver

:38:25.:38:28.

for British athletes. Sophie Hahn took gold

:38:29.:38:30.

in the T38 100 metres. She beat off competition

:38:31.:38:33.

from Kadeena Cox who took Hahn set a new world record

:38:34.:38:35.

for the second time after she did the same in the 200

:38:36.:38:41.

metres last weekend. Another double world champion

:38:42.:38:44.

is Georgie Hermitage. She added to her gold

:38:45.:38:46.

in the 400 metres with victory Her time of 13.36 seconds

:38:47.:38:49.

is a new World Championship record. After the year I have had I was

:38:50.:38:59.

wanting to win the 400 because that is my event. The one I knew was

:39:00.:39:04.

always going to be difficult. I thought I might have been squeezed

:39:05.:39:07.

out of the medals. To come and do that and under that amount of

:39:08.:39:11.

pressure... And the third gold of the night came

:39:12.:39:15.

for Aled Davies in the shot putt. He threw a massive 17.52 metres

:39:16.:39:19.

to break his own world record and finish three metres

:39:20.:39:22.

clear of the rest. England's women won the bronze medal

:39:23.:39:29.

at the Lacrosse World Cup, beating Australia in the third place

:39:30.:39:32.

play off game in Guildford. The scores were level at nine

:39:33.:39:35.

all at full time so it went to a golden goal decider

:39:36.:39:38.

and it was Megan Whittle who grabbed a dramatic winner for the home side,

:39:39.:39:41.

prompting wild celebrations. The United States won Gold beating

:39:42.:39:44.

Canada in the final. Mark Sampson says his team are ready

:39:45.:39:51.

for the dark arts of Spain when the teams meet at the women's European

:39:52.:39:55.

championship this afternoon. England thrashed Scotland six nil

:39:56.:39:58.

in their opening game So the first will be prepared for

:39:59.:40:00.

the discipline of Spain. Spain won their first group match

:40:01.:40:08.

and beat England at the last Scotland have their own injury

:40:09.:40:11.

worries ahead of their match against Portugal, they're already

:40:12.:40:14.

missing three key players and they'll be without

:40:15.:40:16.

Manchester City forward Jane Ross. After their opening game defeat

:40:17.:40:19.

to England, the Scots need to bounce back if they're to progress

:40:20.:40:22.

further in the tournament. England's women's cricketers

:40:23.:40:28.

will aim to win their fourth World Cup trophy today

:40:29.:40:31.

when they face India England have won six consecutive

:40:32.:40:33.

matches but they lost the opening match of this World Cup

:40:34.:40:38.

campaign to India. It's a sell out with more than

:40:39.:40:44.

26,000 people expected to attend. Plenty to look forward to the

:40:45.:40:57.

cricket. Yes, plenty of luck to the captain and her young team.

:40:58.:41:01.

Incredible to think the women were not allowed at Lord's until 1999.

:41:02.:41:07.

And they sell out. It is incredible. Well, women's World Cup game cricket

:41:08.:41:13.

finally facing India today. As we said, the game is a sell-out. Our

:41:14.:41:17.

reporter is there for us. Tom, lots of excitement today. Tell us what

:41:18.:41:22.

the weather will be like first of all because it looks a little grey

:41:23.:41:27.

above you. That I cannot tell you for certain but the weather is

:41:28.:41:30.

holding at the moment. No rain at the moment. There is buzz around the

:41:31.:41:34.

ground. Quiet at the moment but it is early. Will not be in a couple of

:41:35.:41:40.

hours time. India's famous army of fans will be banging their drums.

:41:41.:41:44.

Many England fans here as well. 26 one half thousand people. This will

:41:45.:41:49.

be the most watched game of women's cricket ever. England to play India

:41:50.:41:53.

in the final, of course. England, unbeaten in six. The only game they

:41:54.:41:59.

have lost so far is against India. Bringing in Clare Potter, a former

:42:00.:42:04.

England player and a director of women's cricket for the ECB. How big

:42:05.:42:08.

a moment this is for women's cricket? I think it is a huge

:42:09.:42:13.

moment. The fact that we have sold out for the final. The fact that it

:42:14.:42:17.

is an India England final. If it were England Australia or England

:42:18.:42:22.

India it would be amazing. As the host team it is amazing. Were here.

:42:23.:42:26.

It would be unbelievably disappointing if we were not. As you

:42:27.:42:31.

say, we are honours unbeaten run since losing the opening game to

:42:32.:42:36.

India. We have come full circle in terms of the England and India kind

:42:37.:42:41.

of clash. But I think it is significant daily. The coverage in

:42:42.:42:45.

this tournament has built and built as we have progressed through to

:42:46.:42:48.

today. The viewing figures globally have been absolutely incredible. You

:42:49.:42:53.

know, huge increase on previous World Cup 's. I think the TV

:42:54.:42:57.

audience expected for today is around 100 million around the world.

:42:58.:43:02.

All of us involved in the women's game and the game in general are,

:43:03.:43:07.

you know, quite excited about today. We must enjoy today for what it is

:43:08.:43:12.

but also I think people are already starting to look ahead at what a

:43:13.:43:17.

huge opportunities I think this tournament has proved that we have.

:43:18.:43:20.

Give us a sense about the players, the key players for England in

:43:21.:43:26.

particular. And what you expect is, you know, who will win or lose this

:43:27.:43:32.

game for either side. Are you know, both teams are with star players. To

:43:33.:43:37.

go to a final in a round-robin tournament where you have had to

:43:38.:43:43.

play seven games and a you know, both teams have brilliant

:43:44.:43:45.

semifinals. So lots of key players have stood up to big for England,

:43:46.:43:49.

Tammy Beaumont at the top of the order has had a brilliant

:43:50.:43:52.

tournament. Sarah Taylor is playing well. The wicket-keeper batsman.

:43:53.:43:56.

Heather Knight, our captain, is batting quite well at number four.

:43:57.:44:02.

Natalie at number five has had an incredible tournament and she has

:44:03.:44:06.

scored two centuries so far. Bowling attack... Spearheaded by Anya and

:44:07.:44:12.

Catherine who are very experienced opening partnership. Alex 's bowling

:44:13.:44:18.

quite well, a young left-arm bowler. At a young team with some

:44:19.:44:21.

experience. A few over 30 but many in their early to mid- 20s. For

:44:22.:44:30.

India, again, they have a really well-balanced side with amazing

:44:31.:44:34.

experience. Captain and opening all, they just past 6000 ODI runs this

:44:35.:44:39.

tournament to become the leading run scorer in an international women's

:44:40.:44:46.

cricket. It has ingredients to be a classic and for both teams this is a

:44:47.:44:50.

momentous occasion. Not all of the players on show here today will have

:44:51.:44:53.

played out Lord's. Some England players have never played here

:44:54.:44:57.

before. What does that tell us? It tells us that some of them are very

:44:58.:45:01.

young. It tells us that, you know, we have the opportunity to play at

:45:02.:45:06.

Lord's but we often choose, in the last few years particular, we have

:45:07.:45:10.

taken England games to smaller venues that may hold five or 6000 so

:45:11.:45:15.

we can fill them and create... But now we have a sell-out. Thank you

:45:16.:45:23.

very much enjoy the game. Come on, England. Let's just hope that

:45:24.:45:29.

England can do it and they can defeat India. Of course, they lost

:45:30.:45:32.

to them in the opening game of this tournament. Lady begins at 1030 this

:45:33.:45:38.

morning. Looking forward to a. Thank you very much, Tom. -- play begins

:45:39.:45:40.

at 1030 this morning. You're watching

:45:41.:45:51.

Breakfast from BBC News. Prince William and Prince Harry have

:45:52.:45:55.

given a candid insight into their relationship

:45:56.:45:59.

with their mother, in a documentary The rules on blood donation

:46:00.:46:01.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland, to allow more gay men

:46:02.:46:06.

and sex workers to participate. Here's Stav with a look

:46:07.:46:17.

at this morning's weather. Will stay fine at Lord's today? It

:46:18.:46:26.

looks like there will be some interruptions. We have another day

:46:27.:46:33.

as sunshine and interruptions. There was yucky afternoon, feeling cool.

:46:34.:46:36.

In the sunshine, it shouldn't feel bad. There is a weakening area of

:46:37.:46:42.

low pressure slowly pushing its way into the near continent. There will

:46:43.:46:47.

be wet weather across northern areas. The central southern parts of

:46:48.:46:54.

the country, a fine note. A cool, fresh feel. There is the sunshine to

:46:55.:46:59.

compensate. The rain we had overnight across the Midlands into

:47:00.:47:02.

the north-west of England slowly petering out. The clouds will thin

:47:03.:47:11.

and break, much like western Scotland. There will be increasing

:47:12.:47:16.

amounts of rain to the north-west of Scotland, expanding, becoming

:47:17.:47:20.

widespread, going southwards. Some heavy showers to the south-west of

:47:21.:47:25.

Scotland that behind it, it brightens up. Bright for Northern

:47:26.:47:29.

Ireland. The England and Wales, a scattering of showers. Top

:47:30.:47:36.

temperatures around 20 or 21 degrees. For the open golf, the last

:47:37.:47:42.

day at Royal Birkdale, it could be breezy with a few showers in the

:47:43.:47:47.

forecast. Here is the Lord's forecasts, showers likely for the

:47:48.:47:51.

afternoon. Fairly light winds but some of the showers could be quite

:47:52.:47:58.

heavy. The rain across northern England migrate southwards. Further

:47:59.:48:04.

west, clear, cool and dry. Into Monday, it is central and eastern

:48:05.:48:10.

areas. Quite cool northerly. The weather system that moves away and

:48:11.:48:14.

the ridge of high-pressure moves in. Bright with sunshine and feeling

:48:15.:48:18.

warm, 24 degrees to the south of high ground. The ridge of high

:48:19.:48:24.

pressure pushes into all areas. Good, sunny spells, good to be out

:48:25.:48:28.

and about and feeling warm in the sunshine. Behind me, noticed the

:48:29.:48:34.

weather system moving in. A spell of rain spreading through for the

:48:35.:48:38.

course of Wednesday. And then into Thursday, back into the regime of

:48:39.:48:43.

sunshine and showers. A good start to the working week.

:48:44.:48:49.

A very English summer. Sun, rain. Rain again.

:48:50.:48:52.

We'll be back at eight o'clock for the headlines.

:48:53.:48:54.

But now, it's time for the Travel Show,

:48:55.:48:56.

which this week, comes from Hong Kong.

:48:57.:49:00.

Coming up on this week's Travel Show: Is this

:49:01.:49:09.

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the handover

:49:10.:49:48.

This sees Hong Kong main Couch merge with the mainland. Environmentalists

:49:49.:50:06.

fear that one of Hong Kong's most iconic creatures may not survive

:50:07.:50:12.

that long. The Hong Kong Dolphin is the simple age and -- symbolism of

:50:13.:50:20.

the handover to China. Now their future is under threat. The golf

:50:21.:50:33.

and's colour is a result of Burma regulation, a system that dolphins

:50:34.:50:36.

used to control their body temperature. -- Dolphin. Figures

:50:37.:50:41.

from the conservation department showed a number of pink dolphins has

:50:42.:50:47.

crashed from 188 in 2000 to only 65 in 2015. And although nobody is

:50:48.:50:54.

exactly sure how accurate that figure is, there is no doubt that

:50:55.:51:01.

numbers are falling. I have been coming to Hong Kong for 20 years and

:51:02.:51:05.

I am ashamed to say I had no idea there were dolphins in the waters

:51:06.:51:10.

but of course you won't find them in Victoria Harbour or the tourists

:51:11.:51:17.

are. -- where all the tourists are. To be in with a chance of seeing

:51:18.:51:21.

them, you have to leave Hong Kong Island and head west towards the

:51:22.:51:32.

airport. Land reclamation, population growth and pollution are

:51:33.:51:38.

all being blamed for destroying that Dolphin's habitat. Huge

:51:39.:51:41.

infrastructure projects like this bridge and tunnel might be good for

:51:42.:51:45.

the economy but environmentalists claim they are playing havoc with

:51:46.:51:50.

the dolphins' natural environment. The Hong Kong government has

:51:51.:51:54.

announced it will create a new 2.5 thousand fair Marine Park in the

:51:55.:51:59.

waters to help counter the effects of building and other runway at the

:52:00.:52:06.

airport. People say it the airport is in the wrong place and won't help

:52:07.:52:12.

the situation. What we are proposing is detect what is important to be

:52:13.:52:19.

animals first. -- protect. It is not about quantity, how many kilometres

:52:20.:52:23.

of the habitat is being protected but also where it is protect that

:52:24.:52:29.

and those core areas should be highly prioritised areas to protect

:52:30.:52:36.

in terms of stopping the development, lowering the fishing

:52:37.:52:40.

effort so basically reducing the pressure on the animals. Give them a

:52:41.:52:51.

place to survive. Determined to try and see some pink dolphins, I headed

:52:52.:52:58.

along with the adverse is -- advocacy group who have been helping

:52:59.:53:04.

to promote protection of the dolphins. We have a good idea of

:53:05.:53:11.

where they will be given the rain and wind and tides but they are wild

:53:12.:53:15.

animals so we can't make promises. He will see lots of garbage,

:53:16.:53:19.

concrete, boats and hopefully lots of dolphins but, you know, I have to

:53:20.:53:24.

lower expectations because some days it just doesn't happen. I really

:53:25.:53:30.

hope we see a dolphin. The conditions are in our favour. It is

:53:31.:53:34.

not too windy and where we are now in the waters, it is near the mouth

:53:35.:53:39.

of the river so the sea isn't too salty and this is their usual

:53:40.:53:42.

habitat. This is what dolphins light. For a while there is nothing

:53:43.:53:50.

and then as we head into the western waters of Lantau island, we suddenly

:53:51.:53:56.

get lucky. There is one over there! Oh, I missed it! Got to be quick! A

:53:57.:54:04.

pink one. Is he going to come up again? Yes! OK. Three o'clock, three

:54:05.:54:10.

o'clock. Oh, oh! There is one! People love concrete here. Where is

:54:11.:54:33.

the tipping point where you say that dolphins are no longer, you know,

:54:34.:54:38.

sustainable, if you like. And even if they are, the gene pool will be

:54:39.:54:42.

shrinking with fewer and fewer dolphins so by the time you list

:54:43.:54:46.

something as endangered, it's quite often too late. Is a cosmopolitan

:54:47.:54:55.

city which is quite wealthy, we have all the resource to make the balance

:54:56.:55:00.

between development and conservation, we can do both. We use

:55:01.:55:04.

a dolphin as the master point, a simple,. -- symbol. We need to make

:55:05.:55:10.

sure they are here not just the us but the future generations to come.

:55:11.:55:28.

-- not just for us. Made Chow was voted Asia's Best female chef

:55:29.:55:34.

earlier this year and she is making a reputation behind a new generation

:55:35.:55:39.

of chefs of what is being called neo- Cantonese cuisine. We were

:55:40.:55:44.

lucky enough to go behind the scenes at her lack that the Paradise

:55:45.:55:50.

resident -- restaurant to see her cook one of her most popular dishes.

:55:51.:56:04.

Today we will cook the chicken. At Happy Paradise we do neo- Cantonese

:56:05.:56:08.

food so we will do it with mob Cantonese techniques, taking it more

:56:09.:56:12.

refined. -- more Cantonese techniques stop we have already slow

:56:13.:56:16.

cooked it. We have cooked the breast at 58 degrees. For the fire, 83

:56:17.:56:24.

degrees and for the seat as a little garnish the cause -- the feet as a

:56:25.:56:41.

garnish. It is already cooked so what doing now is reheating it. This

:56:42.:56:52.

broth is shiitake braise. You can really smell a lot of shiitake

:56:53.:57:01.

mushrooms in there. It also has Shah Hsing Wine which is the most

:57:02.:57:04.

commonly used cooking wine for Chinese people. I will stir fried

:57:05.:57:18.

mushrooms. In Cantonese terms, we are adding it is well. -- xiaoxing

:57:19.:57:27.

wine but we are trained to get a bit of colour on it. And we are going to

:57:28.:57:32.

add, this is really nice, this is butter. That will add some floral

:57:33.:57:53.

notes. Just a little bit more of this xiaoxing wine.

:57:54.:58:05.

The chicken should be ready. Take the chicken out. Now, we're just

:58:06.:58:42.

going to lay all the rice on top. Now we are going to garnish with a

:58:43.:58:47.

bit of chrysanthemum. It is not traditional for this dish that it

:58:48.:58:55.

really adds a nice floralness. We got the inspiration from having

:58:56.:59:02.

snakes -- snake soup. It represents a chicken feathers. For the side, we

:59:03.:59:14.

garnish with the soup. This is refined Cantonese food.

:59:15.:59:21.

Superconfident -- super comfort levels. That is all we have got time

:59:22.:59:28.

for in this edition of the programme. Coming up next week, as

:59:29.:59:36.

Pakistan prepares to mark 70 years of independence, we had dared to get

:59:37.:59:46.

a taste of life in the city. -- we head there. I hope you can join us

:59:47.:59:50.

for that if you can and don't forget, if you can follow the rest

:59:51.:59:57.

of our team in real time, you can signup to our media team. It is

:59:58.:00:01.

goodbye from us for now. Hello, this is Breakfast, with

:00:02.:00:35.

Christian Fraser and Tina Daheley. Princes William and Harry speak

:00:36.:00:38.

candidly about their mother ahead of the 20th anniversary

:00:39.:00:41.

of her death. Probably a little bit too raw

:00:42.:00:46.

up until this point. They open up about Diana's loving

:00:47.:00:49.

and mischievous nature - and reveal details of their final

:00:50.:00:53.

conversation. Good morning, it's Sunday,

:00:54.:01:12.

the 23rd of July. The rules on giving blood in England

:01:13.:01:14.

and Scotland are to be relaxed, The hospital treating

:01:15.:01:19.

baby Charlie Gard has called in the police,

:01:20.:01:24.

after some of its staff A fourth Tour de France

:01:25.:01:26.

title for Chris Froome - he goes into the final stage almost

:01:27.:01:32.

guaranteed to win. Good morning, I'll have

:01:33.:01:37.

the rest of the sport. American Jordan Spieth is the man

:01:38.:01:39.

to catch at the Open Championship. He leads by three shots entering

:01:40.:01:42.

today's final round. Is very good morning to you. It

:01:43.:01:54.

looks like today is going to be similar to yesterday. Some showers

:01:55.:01:58.

and longer spells of rain. Some sunshine in the forecast. I will

:01:59.:02:01.

have the details for you very shortly.

:02:02.:02:02.

Princes William and Harry have given a candid insight

:02:03.:02:07.

into their relationship with their mother Princess Diana,

:02:08.:02:09.

and have revealed that they last spoke to her in a brief phone call

:02:10.:02:12.

Speaking in a documentary to mark the 20th anniversary of her death,

:02:13.:02:16.

the princes said they regret the rushed nature of that

:02:17.:02:20.

final conversation, but fondly recall their mother's loving nature

:02:21.:02:22.

Here's our royal correspondent, Nicholas Witchell.

:02:23.:02:26.

To the watching world, she was the Princess whose image

:02:27.:02:28.

It was a glamorous but necessarily limited

:02:29.:02:33.

Now, nearly 20 years after Diana's death

:02:34.:02:38.

in the car accident in Paris, her sons, William and Harry, have spoken

:02:39.:02:43.

in an ITV documentary about Diana, the mother who did so much to shape

:02:44.:02:47.

We felt, you know, incredibly loved, Harry and I, and I

:02:48.:02:52.

am very grateful that that love still feels there.

:02:53.:03:00.

It was that love that, that even if she was on the

:03:01.:03:02.

other side of a room, as a son, you could feel it.

:03:03.:03:07.

The person who emerges from William and Harry's

:03:08.:03:10.

description is a woman with a strong sense of fun.

:03:11.:03:14.

When everybody says to me, you know, so she was fun,

:03:15.:03:17.

give us an example, all I can hear is her laugh

:03:18.:03:21.

of crazy laugh of where there was just pure happiness

:03:22.:03:31.

One of her mottos to me was, you can be as naughty as you want, just

:03:32.:03:38.

And they talk about their mother's death.

:03:39.:03:43.

They recall the last time they spoke to

:03:44.:03:45.

her and they reflect on the overwhelming public reaction

:03:46.:03:48.

and how they coped with the week which

:03:49.:03:50.

As William himself has said, it is a tribute

:03:51.:03:55.

to Diana from her sons, in

:03:56.:03:57.

which they recall the woman they hope the world will remember.

:03:58.:03:59.

The rules on blood donation are to be relaxed in England

:04:00.:04:06.

and Scotland to allow more gay men and sex workers to take part.

:04:07.:04:10.

Experts say there is clear evidence it is safe for those groups to give

:04:11.:04:14.

blood after abstaining from sex for three months, instead of 12.

:04:15.:04:17.

HIV charities have welcomed the changes.

:04:18.:04:19.

Our health correspondent Sophie Hutchinson reports.

:04:20.:04:22.

Rules on safety mean those at high risk of infectious diseases, such

:04:23.:04:30.

as HIV and hepatitis B and C, are restricted from donating.

:04:31.:04:33.

Gay men will no longer have to abstain from sex for 12 months.

:04:34.:04:41.

That will be reduced to three months before they can give blood.

:04:42.:04:44.

People who have had sex with high-risk partners

:04:45.:04:47.

or in a high-risk place, will also have the deferral period

:04:48.:04:50.

And for the first time, sex workers will be

:04:51.:04:53.

allowed to donate blood after abstaining from sex

:04:54.:04:55.

The reason for the change is that scientists say new testing

:04:56.:05:03.

techniques have established infectious diseases such as HIV

:05:04.:05:05.

and hepatitis B and C show up in the bloodstream

:05:06.:05:07.

Technologies to pick up the presence of a virus and other

:05:08.:05:16.

infections in the blood have greatly improved.

:05:17.:05:19.

So we can now pick up viruses at a much earlier stage

:05:20.:05:22.

Therefore, it is much easier to tell if a blood donor has the virus.

:05:23.:05:29.

The changes have been welcomed by charities including

:05:30.:05:31.

the National Aids Trust, who say they were based

:05:32.:05:35.

on the latest scientific evidence rather than prejudice.

:05:36.:05:40.

Some of the BBC's most high-profile female presenters have written

:05:41.:05:44.

to the corporation's Director General Tony Hall, calling

:05:45.:05:46.

BBC Sport's Claire Balding, the Today programme's Mishal Hussain

:05:47.:05:53.

and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour are amongst the 42 signatories.

:05:54.:05:57.

The letter in The Sunday Times urges Lord Hall to "act now" to close

:05:58.:06:00.

the gender pay gap in all areas of the BBC.

:06:01.:06:05.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has described the abuse to staff

:06:06.:06:10.

at Great Ormond Street Hospital, where the terminally ill baby

:06:11.:06:12.

Charlie Gard is being treated, as "totally unacceptable".

:06:13.:06:15.

The hospital says its doctors and nurses had faced a "tide

:06:16.:06:19.

of abuse", and that it's had to call in the police.

:06:20.:06:21.

The High Court is considering whether Charlie's parents should

:06:22.:06:25.

be allowed to take him to the United States

:06:26.:06:28.

It is a case that has touched people around the world.

:06:29.:06:34.

Attracting a growing number of campaigners who disagree

:06:35.:06:36.

with medical experts over the treatment of

:06:37.:06:37.

11-month-old Charlie Gard has a rare form of mitochondrial

:06:38.:06:44.

disease, a condition that causes progressive muscle weakness

:06:45.:06:46.

His parents, Connie Yates and Chris Gard, want

:06:47.:06:52.

to take him to the US for pioneering surgery.

:06:53.:06:55.

But Great Ormond Street Hospital says it is in Charlie's best

:06:56.:06:59.

interests to turn off his life-support and allow him to die.

:07:00.:07:05.

Last night the hospital said in a statement that their doctors

:07:06.:07:08.

and nurses have been subjected to a shocking and disgraceful

:07:09.:07:10.

Staff have received abuse, both in the street and online.

:07:11.:07:17.

Thousands of abusive messages, they say, have been sent

:07:18.:07:21.

to doctors and nurses whose life's work is to care for sick children.

:07:22.:07:24.

A short while later, the parents of Charlie Gard also

:07:25.:07:27.

We do not condone abusive or threatening behaviour

:07:28.:07:34.

to Great Ormond Street Hospital staff or

:07:35.:07:35.

We, too, get abuse and have to endure nasty and hurtful remarks

:07:36.:07:42.

People have different opinions and we accept that.

:07:43.:07:48.

But there is a line that should not be

:07:49.:07:50.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, also condemned the abuse,

:07:51.:07:54.

tweeting that the behaviour was totally unacceptable.

:07:55.:07:59.

The High Court hearing into Charlie Gard's

:08:00.:08:01.

future resumes tomorrow, with the judge saying he hopes

:08:02.:08:05.

a decision will be reached by Tuesday.

:08:06.:08:06.

A prison guard has suffered minor injuries during trouble at Hewell

:08:07.:08:12.

The protest is believed to have been caused by a smoking ban,

:08:13.:08:19.

which is due to come into effect tomorrow, as well as

:08:20.:08:21.

restrictions placed on inmates because of staff shortages.

:08:22.:08:25.

The Scottish and Welsh governments have written to the UK

:08:26.:08:27.

Government to raise concerns about the treatment

:08:28.:08:29.

They say a scheme to resettle migrants from mainland Europe,

:08:30.:08:35.

including those from a camp that was closed down in Calais, has

:08:36.:08:38.

been characterised by bad planning and poor information-sharing.

:08:39.:08:41.

Democrats have criticised President Trump for saying he has

:08:42.:08:47.

the complete power to issue pardons, as an investigation continues

:08:48.:08:52.

into alleged Russian meddling in last year's US elections.

:08:53.:08:54.

It's thought he could use the presidential pardon for family

:08:55.:08:56.

Presidents can pardon people before they're found guilty

:08:57.:09:01.

The process of a person legally changing their gender could be made

:09:02.:09:08.

much easier following plans being considered by the government.

:09:09.:09:11.

The equalities minister Justine Greening is setting out

:09:12.:09:13.

plans that would not require a doctor's diagnosis.

:09:14.:09:16.

She says she wants to streamline the process

:09:17.:09:18.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:09:19.:09:27.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:09:28.:09:29.

Torrential rain has forced people from their homes,

:09:30.:09:35.

while landslides have left several communities cut off.

:09:36.:09:37.

Britain's Chris Froome is all but certain to win his fourth

:09:38.:09:51.

Following yesterday's time trial in Marseille,

:09:52.:09:54.

the Team Sky rider has a near unassailable lead as he goes

:09:55.:09:57.

into the Tour's final stage through the streets of Paris.

:09:58.:09:59.

Despite riding more than 2000 miles and

:10:00.:10:02.

spending over 80 hours in the

:10:03.:10:05.

saddle, this year's Tour de France winner was decided

:10:06.:10:07.

But Chris Froome's rivals struggled to keep pace with him over

:10:08.:10:13.

One nearly crashed out and French favourite Romain Bardet was nearly

:10:14.:10:22.

caught by the Team Sky Rider at the finish line.

:10:23.:10:24.

When all was said and done, Froome extended his

:10:25.:10:27.

overall lead to 54 seconds, reasserting his dominance on the

:10:28.:10:33.

-- and the right to wear the famous yellow jersey.

:10:34.:10:35.

Having flown overnight from Marseille, Chris Froome and the rest

:10:36.:10:38.

of the riders will have to complete nine laps of the Champs-Elysees,

:10:39.:10:42.

all that will be left then is for Chris Froome to stand tall

:10:43.:10:45.

on top of the podium and be crowned race winner once more.

:10:46.:10:48.

With three Tour victories already secured, Chris Froome will

:10:49.:10:53.

today add a fourth title to his illustrious CV.

:10:54.:10:56.

And at the age of 32, there is time yet for him to add

:10:57.:11:00.

Former Great British Bake Off hosts Mel and Sue are to host the return

:11:01.:11:09.

of BBC classic show The Generation Game.

:11:10.:11:20.

# Life is the name of the game # And I want to play the game with

:11:21.:11:25.

you #. It's been commissioned

:11:26.:11:27.

for an initial four-episode run, although a launch date has yet

:11:28.:11:29.

to be set. It was presented for many

:11:30.:11:31.

years by Bruce Forsyth. The new show will combine

:11:32.:11:34.

aspects of the original I know you cannot wait. I am rocking

:11:35.:11:47.

my shoulders to the theme tune. It is 11 minutes past eight.

:11:48.:11:50.

The relaxation of the rules on blood donation in England and Scotland,

:11:51.:11:53.

has been welcomed by HIV charities and gay rights organisations.

:11:54.:11:55.

Gay men will have more opportunities to donate,

:11:56.:11:57.

and for the first time, sex workers will be

:11:58.:11:59.

Let's talk to Ethan Spibey, who set up the campaign group

:12:00.:12:03.

Good morning. You set this campaign group at the very good reason. I

:12:04.:12:15.

wanted to donate blood, my grandad went through a major operation,

:12:16.:12:19.

needed eight pints of blood. I wanted to pay back the donor. I

:12:20.:12:24.

realise I could not do it and I just decided I have to do something about

:12:25.:12:28.

this. I went about building the team, I have got an incredible team,

:12:29.:12:35.

four dies and what a day, an incredible day. You were put in an

:12:36.:12:42.

awkward position. It said if you had done a, B or C in the last 12

:12:43.:12:46.

months, you cannot donate blood. I felt guilt. My parents readily

:12:47.:12:50.

donate blood and I just wanted to do the same. I did not see why I could

:12:51.:12:55.

not do the same to repay the donor. Why couldn't you? Because I am a gay

:12:56.:13:02.

man. If you about sex in the last 12 months, as a gay man I could not. I

:13:03.:13:06.

decided this is ridiculous and I wanted to do something about it.

:13:07.:13:11.

That is why we launched Freedom To Donate. Let me read you some of the

:13:12.:13:19.

responses to the BBC News story. Someone says I trust it,

:13:20.:13:24.

sarcastically, an medical people because they did not kill thousands

:13:25.:13:29.

with blood transfusions before. Two and a half thousand people were left

:13:30.:13:35.

dead after hepatitis C and other things were included in blood

:13:36.:13:38.

transfusions in the 80s. Someone else said signs, evidence -based

:13:39.:13:43.

knowledge, I trust in the signs. What would you say to people you

:13:44.:13:48.

have doubts? We welcome the enquiry by the government. It is necessary

:13:49.:13:53.

and needed and that is integral, it needs to take place. Freedom to

:13:54.:14:01.

donate is based on evidence and the medical experts that have given

:14:02.:14:07.

evidence do that. It is the safety of the blood supply and that is

:14:08.:14:10.

fundamental. This is about the therapy is and how long it takes to

:14:11.:14:15.

safely detect blood. Blood is also tested so it is ensuring anyone at

:14:16.:14:20.

risk will not donate blood, when they do, destructors while. That is

:14:21.:14:24.

fundamental for me. I wanted to pay back the donor who saved my

:14:25.:14:29.

grandad's life, this is about doing something incredible, have to do

:14:30.:14:33.

that in a safe way. Difficult to you, the reason you have done this

:14:34.:14:38.

is because you wanted to help your grandfather that you were not able

:14:39.:14:46.

to do so. That in the b -- that is the position I was bitten. We hope

:14:47.:14:50.

more people than ever will be able to do something. Just because you

:14:51.:14:56.

are a gay man, you might not be having regular sex. And if you are

:14:57.:15:00.

heterosexual, you might be having more dangerous sex than I gay man.

:15:01.:15:05.

It is about risk. Gay men are more likely to carry a blood-borne virus,

:15:06.:15:09.

that is why they are restricted from donating and we agree with that in

:15:10.:15:14.

line with the medical evidence. We think it should move to a risk-based

:15:15.:15:20.

policy because you cannot write a whole group, as you must be

:15:21.:15:24.

completely unsafe from donating blood. It is calculating the risk

:15:25.:15:29.

and this policy today ensures the safety of blood supply remains

:15:30.:15:32.

paramount. Do these changes go far enough? I would like to see an

:15:33.:15:38.

individual risk-based policy in the future. It is an incredible stats

:15:39.:15:44.

and an emotional day for me. It is your campaign. We have a picture of

:15:45.:15:48.

you at Downing Street which we can show. You have taken this on. You

:15:49.:15:53.

have really pressure. They got a little bit out of hand. It is not my

:15:54.:15:57.

day job, this is something I'm really passionate about and I went

:15:58.:16:01.

about building a team, Dan, Joe and Andy. There you are with Theresa

:16:02.:16:08.

May. That is earlier this week at Downing Street. We have been doing

:16:09.:16:12.

this in our spare time. We are extremely passionate. This would not

:16:13.:16:18.

have happened without organisations that we represent. This has become a

:16:19.:16:23.

pet project that got a little bit out of hand. You say out of hand but

:16:24.:16:27.

out of hand in a good way. Of course. I did not think I would be

:16:28.:16:30.

sacked her today after this amount of time. It has been almost three

:16:31.:16:35.

years of really hard work but it is that here and have that

:16:36.:16:39.

announcement, my grandfather passed away last year but I know he will be

:16:40.:16:43.

really proud of what we have done. Thank you for coming in to talk to

:16:44.:16:45.

us. Here's Stav with a look

:16:46.:16:47.

at this morning's weather. Sunshine and showers today. Merging

:16:48.:16:57.

together to produce longer spells of rain, disappointing afternoon, it

:16:58.:17:00.

felt cool when the showers are right. In the sunshine, it should

:17:01.:17:04.

not feel too bad. Low pressure which is bringing up this unsettled week

:17:05.:17:08.

and this weather front bringing some wet weather to the northern half of

:17:09.:17:11.

the country as we had to because of the day. The south, glorious

:17:12.:17:17.

sunshine, Midlands, a little bit of mist and fog, gradually clearing

:17:18.:17:21.

away. That area of cloud and rain across central north Midlands which

:17:22.:17:25.

is affecting this part of the UK during the night. That is going

:17:26.:17:29.

away. You showers going in towards Wales, Northern Ireland, cloudy

:17:30.:17:34.

start the year. Much like western Scotland, the weather front will be

:17:35.:17:38.

teaming into the eastern side of Scotland, bringing more widespread

:17:39.:17:41.

rain, some low cloud, mist and Merck, feeling fresh as well with

:17:42.:17:44.

the onshore easterly breeze. The rain getting heavy as it sinks into

:17:45.:17:51.

central southern Scotland. Lining up to the north later on. Brighten up

:17:52.:17:55.

the Northern Ireland, it will feel quite one. England and Wales,

:17:56.:17:58.

sunshine and showers, the degree across the southern quarter of

:17:59.:18:02.

Britain. The really heavy downpours in places. It looks like there could

:18:03.:18:06.

be some interruptions to the women's cricket at Lord's through the

:18:07.:18:10.

afternoon, top temperature is 19 Celsius. A breezy day I think for

:18:11.:18:17.

the golf. Can't rule out the odd shower but also for John. The brain

:18:18.:18:22.

migrated sways southwards overnight so quite wet through the night, dry

:18:23.:18:28.

and cool further north and west. We start that situation on Monday,

:18:29.:18:32.

Reich. The bright intro across northern and western areas, the

:18:33.:18:38.

weather front will be slowly clearing away so quite damp and

:18:39.:18:41.

cloudy here, feeling cool along the east coast. By Tuesday the weather

:18:42.:18:45.

system should be mostly out of the way and it will be dry. A nice

:18:46.:18:51.

window of dry and bright weather, bar the odd shower. 24, maybe 25

:18:52.:18:57.

Celsius. The next weather system makes inroads for Wednesday. Maybe

:18:58.:19:00.

some pretty heavy rain as that moves through. Back to slightly drier

:19:01.:19:03.

weather on Thursday with some sunshine and showers. Quite a mixed

:19:04.:19:09.

week. Thank you very much.

:19:10.:19:15.

In a little over ten hours' time, Britain's Chris Froome should

:19:16.:19:18.

cross the finish line on the Champs Elysees

:19:19.:19:20.

to secure his fourth Tour de France title.

:19:21.:19:22.

Let's find out what makes him so successful and chat

:19:23.:19:24.

to Michael Hutchinson who writes for Cycling Weekly.

:19:25.:19:29.

What makes them so successful? Good morning. He is meticulous and

:19:30.:19:37.

careful. He read an intelligent tour this year in that he never really

:19:38.:19:40.

took the race by the scruff of the neck. He never looked dominant, he

:19:41.:19:46.

was always there, he was consistent and conservative, efficient. That is

:19:47.:19:49.

how it bridges the whole sport, he digs the whole year, all of his

:19:50.:19:53.

preparation very carefully and meticulously. He did not win a stage

:19:54.:20:00.

this year. No, he did not. That will be a disappointment for him. I ride

:20:01.:20:04.

of winning the tour always wants to take a stage because that is the

:20:05.:20:08.

seal on it and relatively few riders who win the tour do it without

:20:09.:20:12.

taking a stage. In some ways, that is indicative of this year's rates,

:20:13.:20:17.

it was tense the whole way through. In some ways, it felt the rates

:20:18.:20:23.

might go that way. Let's talk about the reaction yesterday from the

:20:24.:20:27.

French crowd. A bit of booing, that is natural I suppose, since the

:20:28.:20:30.

French rider with second. It is something to do with the legacy of

:20:31.:20:36.

Lance Armstrong and the attitude towards Team Sky? I do not think

:20:37.:20:42.

Lance Armstrong has anything to do it. Team Sky have never really been

:20:43.:20:46.

popular in France because of the way they abridge the sport is out of a

:20:47.:20:54.

conical -- methodical approach. They want their bike racing to have

:20:55.:21:02.

panache. They swashbuckler bit, that has not been Team Sky's style and

:21:03.:21:07.

the French do not really like that. There is a French rider in second

:21:08.:21:11.

place and the French have not had a winner in own race since 1985, a

:21:12.:21:15.

little bit of sympathy with them over that, as Chris Broome pointed

:21:16.:21:21.

out, that is what you do. -- Chris Broome. I was making the point that

:21:22.:21:30.

is not been in the headlines day in and day out. Are we becoming

:21:31.:21:33.

complacent about just how good we are at the killing. -- cycling. I

:21:34.:21:46.

think there was also an element of Bradley Wiggins he was such a

:21:47.:21:51.

character and such an obvious sense of humour and with massively popular

:21:52.:21:56.

and I think there's a buzz Aldrin element to Chris Cammack to he never

:21:57.:22:03.

attracted the attention. I would agree that Britain has become a very

:22:04.:22:08.

strong cycling nature and very quickly and I'm not sure the

:22:09.:22:11.

sporting public has adjusted to that. When the Olympics come around

:22:12.:22:15.

we switched on to it. You do not hear a lot of people talking about

:22:16.:22:18.

cycling in the pub, at least not yet. It is very good team, Team Sky,

:22:19.:22:24.

with riders coming through as well and that is the bright spot of this

:22:25.:22:31.

year. Team Sky is very good at producing younger riders coming

:22:32.:22:34.

through. Chris Froome was the two teams go the relatively young rider.

:22:35.:22:41.

He has come through and become a grand tour contender and there are

:22:42.:22:46.

riders who are 21 who are coming through the Team Sky system and

:22:47.:22:51.

destined for very big things. It is something the team seems to be good

:22:52.:22:55.

at. It has to be said they do go and buy talent when they needed.

:22:56.:22:58.

Michael, good to talk to this morning. Enjoy this afternoon. Thank

:22:59.:23:04.

you. Incredible achievement. One more and

:23:05.:23:06.

you are talking about greatness. You're watching Breakfast

:23:07.:23:13.

from BBC News, it's 8.23. Margaret Doyle, financial analyst

:23:14.:23:16.

with Deloittes is here to tell us Let's have a look at the front

:23:17.:23:34.

pages. Starting off with the Sunday Telegraph, the story we are leading

:23:35.:23:37.

on today, William and Harry's regret over the last sure phone call with

:23:38.:23:42.

Princess Diana. Similar story on the front of the

:23:43.:23:49.

mail on Sunday, the last phone call, they often the phone call was just

:23:50.:23:51.

too short. Front page of the Sunday Times, also

:23:52.:23:58.

carrying that previously unseen photographs of Prince Harry, very

:23:59.:24:01.

young Prince Harry with Diana. The last one, Sunday Mirror, similar

:24:02.:24:08.

picture, we were saying earlier actually we take these pictures were

:24:09.:24:11.

granted but lots of pictures of Princess Diana in these clinches

:24:12.:24:15.

with her sons would you properly wouldn't have seen in royal photos

:24:16.:24:20.

in years gone by. That is precisely the point.

:24:21.:24:25.

Much more in documentaries. The way she changed the family

:24:26.:24:31.

enterprise? I've chosen a story by royal author talking about the shift

:24:32.:24:36.

in culture and also questioning whether it is right or not and in

:24:37.:24:41.

fact implying that this debate about what is the appropriate way to be a

:24:42.:24:45.

royal is still very life in the royal household. He talks about

:24:46.:24:50.

going back to the 19th century, a famous author then who said about

:24:51.:24:54.

royal life, he said its mystery is its life, we must not let in

:24:55.:24:58.

daylight upon magic. So in other words, keep your distance, have a

:24:59.:25:02.

bit of mystique. He says that is what Her Majesty the Queen has done.

:25:03.:25:05.

She has never given an interview another well. He is suggesting that

:25:06.:25:09.

the princes may come to regret their candour and our mission and their

:25:10.:25:12.

passion as they speak about their mother. That maybe they should go

:25:13.:25:16.

back to the old fashion way of being royal. It is interesting, 2017, I

:25:17.:25:21.

think people appreciate they are a lot more open and come across as

:25:22.:25:25.

being as much or you can bid on normal being royal. They have been

:25:26.:25:31.

open. They had this heads together campaign about mental health. Robert

:25:32.:25:36.

makes this point that the Queen's private sector has let it be known

:25:37.:25:40.

that Buckingham Palace does not like the way they did that, the way there

:25:41.:25:44.

were so open and so accessible to the press. Apparently it is not the

:25:45.:25:49.

done thing, says the Queen. With your financial analyst hat on and

:25:50.:25:56.

with some vested interest, there is a story about people who are

:25:57.:25:59.

transferring their pensions from their company schemes, where you get

:26:00.:26:05.

a pot of cash. I have just done this, I have to say. Do not tell me

:26:06.:26:10.

it is wrong. The bar doing this because people who are on the

:26:11.:26:13.

fortunate position of having what is called a defined benefit or a final

:26:14.:26:17.

salary pension scheme, many public servants, for example and the BBC,

:26:18.:26:23.

have final salary pensions, they are less common in the private sector.

:26:24.:26:27.

They are very value because interest rates are very low, the way in which

:26:28.:26:34.

they are valued by actuaries means the, if you have a pension of

:26:35.:26:38.

?10,000, they say it is worth ?200,000 and so a lot of companies

:26:39.:26:42.

are saying, or even more, the typical valuation is 20 times. That

:26:43.:26:46.

is what you have to use if you are valuing it for tax purposes. Many

:26:47.:26:53.

people have been offered those multiples, 20, 30, 40, even 50 times

:26:54.:26:57.

what their final salary would be. Let's say it is ?10,000, apparently

:26:58.:27:03.

that could be valued at ?500,000. Someone will come along as a instead

:27:04.:27:07.

of the BBC pay knew this final salary, will exchange that for this

:27:08.:27:10.

lump sum. You say you have done this. There may, -- it was more of

:27:11.:27:18.

this fact that this money away since I was young and I wanted to win it.

:27:19.:27:29.

-- will it. The whole point of a pension if that is an income to you

:27:30.:27:34.

for your lifetime and the whole idea is that you do not outlive your

:27:35.:27:38.

savings. Because of that, the point is to look after you in your own

:27:39.:27:41.

lifetime, it is not something that you can, as you can say, least to

:27:42.:27:46.

your successors. That is one of the things that are striving some

:27:47.:27:49.

people, other people think, I can make a better return on my money all

:27:50.:27:55.

my money can last longer. Or they think they are going to be, they do

:27:56.:27:59.

not think I am going to live that long, I am not going to live until I

:28:00.:28:06.

am 80 or 90. The risk, the reason the regulator is concerned, if you

:28:07.:28:09.

take the pot of cash, they are concerned whether that part of cash

:28:10.:28:12.

will be enough to look after you in your retirement or could you be

:28:13.:28:15.

persuaded by your children to help them with that house deposit or

:28:16.:28:20.

might you get involved, be fooled by a scam or might you just leave it on

:28:21.:28:27.

deposit where and how 4% a year. It is -- if it is in it pension it will

:28:28.:28:35.

earn more perhaps. People with the scheme, it is almost extinct. A lot

:28:36.:28:42.

of people in this division are a lot older than Christian is. Next story.

:28:43.:28:51.

Gender roles and how Justin Greening, who is gay, spearheading a

:28:52.:28:58.

new approach by the government. It should be easier for people who are

:28:59.:29:05.

transgender which to self identified as the gender they believe they are

:29:06.:29:08.

instead of going through a medical process. You have got others who say

:29:09.:29:13.

it could put women's and girls privacy at risk and there's an

:29:14.:29:16.

article about how in prisons that have been concerns about certain

:29:17.:29:21.

prisoners who are men, one who was a rapist, who said I am now women, and

:29:22.:29:27.

moved to a women's prison and engaged in relationships with women.

:29:28.:29:30.

There's a bit of controversy over it but I think the government wants to

:29:31.:29:36.

push forward that agenda of liberalisation and equality and say

:29:37.:29:40.

maybe we need to change how we look at transgender, just how we have

:29:41.:29:43.

changed also the way we look at homosexual relationships. Doing a

:29:44.:29:49.

lot of good work in that area. Thank you very much.

:29:50.:29:54.

we'll find out more about the radical plan

:29:55.:29:57.

to save the northern white rhino from extinction, which is being

:29:58.:30:00.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Christian Fraser

:30:01.:30:38.

Coming up before 9am, we'll get the weather from Stav.

:30:39.:30:43.

But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

:30:44.:30:45.

Princes William and Harry have given a candid insight

:30:46.:30:47.

into their relationship with their mother Princess Diana,

:30:48.:30:49.

and have revealed that they last spoke to her in a brief phone call

:30:50.:30:53.

Speaking in a documentary to mark the 20th anniversary of her death,

:30:54.:30:57.

the princes said they regret the rushed nature of that

:30:58.:30:59.

conversation, but fondly recall their mother's loving nature

:31:00.:31:02.

One of her mottos to me was you can be as naughty as you want,

:31:03.:31:10.

She was one of the naughtiest parents.

:31:11.:31:15.

She would come and watch us play football and smuggle

:31:16.:31:18.

Literally, walking back from a football match with five

:31:19.:31:22.

The rules on blood donation are to be relaxed in England

:31:23.:31:29.

and Scotland to allow more gay men and sex workers to participate.

:31:30.:31:34.

Experts say there is clear evidence it is safe for those groups to give

:31:35.:31:37.

blood after abstaining from sex for three months, instead of 12.

:31:38.:31:41.

HIV charities have welcomed the changes.

:31:42.:31:45.

Some of the BBC's most high-profile female presenters have written

:31:46.:31:47.

to the corporation's Director General Tony Hall, calling

:31:48.:31:49.

BBC Sport's Claire Balding, the Today programme's Mishal Hussain

:31:50.:31:56.

and Jane Garvey from Woman's Hour are amongst the 42 signatories.

:31:57.:32:00.

The letter in The Sunday Times urges Lord Hall to "act now" to close

:32:01.:32:03.

the gender pay gap in all areas of the BBC.

:32:04.:32:08.

The Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, has described the abuse to staff

:32:09.:32:11.

at Great Ormond Street hospital, where the terminally ill baby

:32:12.:32:13.

Charlie Gard is being treated, as "totally unacceptable".

:32:14.:32:18.

The hospital says its doctors and nurses have faced a "tide of abuse".

:32:19.:32:23.

The High Court is considering whether Charlie's parents should

:32:24.:32:25.

be allowed to take him to the United States

:32:26.:32:27.

A 20-year-old black man has died in east London

:32:28.:32:36.

after being apprehended by a police officer.

:32:37.:32:38.

Footage of the incident, in a shop in Hackney,

:32:39.:32:40.

has been widely shared on social media, with some people claiming

:32:41.:32:42.

the man was a victim of police violence.

:32:43.:32:44.

Scotland Yard says the officer intervened to prevent the man

:32:45.:32:47.

A police medic offered first aid at the scene but the man

:32:48.:32:52.

was declared dead in hospital a short time later.

:32:53.:32:54.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission is investigating.

:32:55.:32:59.

A prison guard has suffered minor injuries during trouble at Hewell

:33:00.:33:01.

The protest is believed to have been caused by a smoking ban,

:33:02.:33:07.

which is due to come into effect tomorrow, as well as

:33:08.:33:09.

restrictions placed on inmates because of staff shortages.

:33:10.:33:14.

The Scottish and Welsh governments have written to the UK

:33:15.:33:17.

Government to raise concerns about the treatment

:33:18.:33:18.

They say a scheme to resettle migrants from mainland Europe,

:33:19.:33:23.

including those from a camp that was closed down in Calais, has

:33:24.:33:26.

been characterised by bad planning and poor information-sharing.

:33:27.:33:35.

Democrats have criticised President Trump for saying he has

:33:36.:33:37.

the complete power to issue pardons, as an investigation continues

:33:38.:33:39.

into alleged Russian meddling in last years US elections.

:33:40.:33:42.

It's thought he could use the presidential pardon for family

:33:43.:33:45.

Presidents can pardon people before they're found guilty

:33:46.:33:50.

A state of emergency remains in place on New Zealand's south

:33:51.:33:57.

island, after troops were brought in to help areas hit by floods

:33:58.:34:00.

Torrential rain has forced people from their homes,

:34:01.:34:05.

while landslides have left several communities cut off.

:34:06.:34:08.

A sperm whale appears to have beached on an embankment in

:34:09.:34:14.

the shadow of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris - or maybe not.

:34:15.:34:19.

Locals and tourists were reported to be shocked and saddened

:34:20.:34:21.

at the sight of the 50 foot beached mammal, found apparently washed up

:34:22.:34:24.

on the banks in the heart of the French capital.

:34:25.:34:30.

But, if you look closely, it's actually a life-size

:34:31.:34:32.

It's purpose, to raise environmental awareness.

:34:33.:34:43.

I think it will work! I can imagine looking from the Bridge how

:34:44.:34:51.

realistic that looked. A big day at Lord's today. Sell-out crowd, the

:34:52.:34:56.

women's final of the cricket. They are playing India. Tom Burridge is

:34:57.:35:01.

there for us and has been catching up with everybody. Batting practice

:35:02.:35:04.

is underway and I would imagine excitement is growing. First action

:35:05.:35:10.

of the morning, some of the England players getting their eye in. We've

:35:11.:35:14.

just seen Heather Knight the England captain in the nets smashing a few

:35:15.:35:20.

balls. Massive game for women's cricket. England India, they met in

:35:21.:35:25.

the first game of this tournament. India came out on top then but

:35:26.:35:30.

England have been unbeaten in six. This will be the most watched game

:35:31.:35:35.

of women's cricket ever. Let's bring in someone who knows more than me

:35:36.:35:39.

about the women's game. You are going to be part of the commentary

:35:40.:35:45.

team, you won the World Cup in 2009. How big a moment is this for women's

:35:46.:35:51.

cricket? This is a game changer. 100 million are expected to tune in

:35:52.:35:56.

which is unbelievable. It's the fact we are going to have a packed out

:35:57.:36:02.

Lord's. It was only 1999, England weren't even allowed in as members

:36:03.:36:04.

stop yellow. Is it the case that the women's game

:36:05.:36:18.

is respected as much as the men's? It is. Especially in your home

:36:19.:36:21.

country, to have the host nation get to the final. We are seeing parents,

:36:22.:36:28.

young children being inspired. It's not just the people on the field,

:36:29.:36:33.

it's the wider audience impacted by this today. This is one of the best

:36:34.:36:38.

moments, if England go on and win it will be a game changer. There are

:36:39.:36:43.

differences with the men's game, aren't there? It's difficult to say

:36:44.:36:49.

because cricket is cricket. In the past there hasn't been a power in

:36:50.:36:53.

the women's game but there has in the men. This World Cup has seen a

:36:54.:37:03.

different side. We've seen 100s. We are seeing the England team getting

:37:04.:37:13.

more 100s than they ever had in World Cups. The rate and the amount

:37:14.:37:17.

of sixes have surpassed any other World Cup. India's on the fans will

:37:18.:37:24.

be here, what will the atmosphere be like? I've travelled the world

:37:25.:37:28.

watching cricket and the Indian fans are something else! It's the music,

:37:29.:37:33.

the passion and the energy. In terms of the global audience as much as

:37:34.:37:37.

anyone thought and England Australia final would be tasty, I think

:37:38.:37:41.

globally the fact 100 million are tuning in, there will be a lot from

:37:42.:37:44.

the subcontinent. The way they support cricket is like a religion,

:37:45.:37:50.

it's so passionate. It will GI India because they thrived the other day

:37:51.:37:54.

in Australia when they had all the fans, we are expecting carnage. The

:37:55.:37:59.

prize money has gone up ten fold in three years, said the winning team

:38:00.:38:05.

take around ?1.5 million. What is at stake for both sides, what will this

:38:06.:38:09.

mean for England in particular if we can win today? We could create some

:38:10.:38:15.

household superstars. When you watch the Olympics and the women's hockey

:38:16.:38:20.

team and players becoming household names, I think this is what it could

:38:21.:38:23.

do. When you start getting personalities out there like that it

:38:24.:38:27.

really engages wider audiences. I think that money will do a lot for

:38:28.:38:32.

the players if I'm honest. When we won, we got a bit but it wasn't much

:38:33.:38:36.

at all. These guys will get some serious income and I think it will

:38:37.:38:44.

continue to rise. Enjoy the game. You can catch the game on BBC radio

:38:45.:38:49.

five live throughout the day. Bit more action in the net from some of

:38:50.:38:58.

those players and play begins at 10:30am. The weather is holding up

:38:59.:39:03.

but fingers crossed there won't be too much rain today and fingers

:39:04.:39:10.

crossed England can win! They do have the home advantage, fingers

:39:11.:39:13.

crossed! Sell-out crowd. You will find coverage on radio five live

:39:14.:39:19.

sports extra and also on the BBC sport website.

:39:20.:39:24.

You're spoilt for choice. You can watch the cricket, the Tour de

:39:25.:39:31.

France and then Jordan Spieth up the Open this evening. I'm supposed to

:39:32.:39:39.

be painting this afternoon! Slim chance of that! Tell us about the

:39:40.:39:45.

Tour de France. It's going to be a very good year for British fans of

:39:46.:39:50.

Chris Froome. There will have been a bit of sadness, Mark Cavendish

:39:51.:39:53.

crashed out, Geraint Thomas with a broken collarbone out of the tour.

:39:54.:39:59.

You would have hoped a lot from those two. Mark Cavendish usually

:40:00.:40:03.

throws in a few stage wins. But they will get the yellow jersey and great

:40:04.:40:08.

to see Chris Froome set to win his fourth Tour de France title today.

:40:09.:40:12.

He extended his lead to 54 seconds in yesterday's

:40:13.:40:14.

time trial in Marseille, and that won't be challenged

:40:15.:40:16.

The sprinters will contest the stage win, but Froome will be able to look

:40:17.:40:21.

forward standing on top of the podium on the Champs Elysees

:40:22.:40:24.

There have been ups and downs over the last three weeks,

:40:25.:40:28.

but I think it has been very much a grand tour in the sense

:40:29.:40:32.

that it has been really about the three weeks.

:40:33.:40:37.

During those three weeks, in the most conservative

:40:38.:40:39.

but efficient manner, it wasn't about one single stage.

:40:40.:40:45.

Earlier in the day Britain's Lizzie Deignan finished

:40:46.:40:55.

second in La Course, the women's race organised

:40:56.:40:57.

The race was won by the Netherlands cyclist Annemiek Van Vleuten,

:40:58.:41:04.

who crashed during last year's Rio Olympics road race.

:41:05.:41:07.

The final round of this year's Open Championship tees off

:41:08.:41:09.

at Royal Birkdale in around 20 minutes time.

:41:10.:41:11.

This afternoon, the American Jordan Spieth resumes -

:41:12.:41:13.

he holds three shot lead as he tries to win his third major title.

:41:14.:41:17.

Victory today would make Spieth only the second player

:41:18.:41:19.

after Jack Nicklaus to win three of golf's four majors

:41:20.:41:22.

On a day when the Open gave us plenty to smile about,

:41:23.:41:31.

this man may just have been beaming more than any.

:41:32.:41:33.

Jordan Spieth will tee off this afternoon with a three shot lead

:41:34.:41:36.

No bogeys, five birdies, a shower of stability,

:41:37.:41:43.

culminating in a demonstration of why he has already won two

:41:44.:41:45.

It will take an almighty effort to stop him claiming a third.

:41:46.:41:53.

Rory McIlroy was nine shots behind the American.

:41:54.:42:02.

I don't know what the weather will bring but if I want a chance

:42:03.:42:05.

in this tournament I need bad weather and I need to play well.

:42:06.:42:08.

Ian Poulter needs plenty of that as well.

:42:09.:42:10.

He is two under alongside Michael Roy.

:42:11.:42:19.

The wait for a British champion continues.

:42:20.:42:20.

And while many waited for the heavens to open,

:42:21.:42:23.

Branden Grace with the lowest round in men's major history.

:42:24.:42:26.

Come tonight, Jordan Speith may be raising more than that.

:42:27.:42:33.

Almost eight years to the day since he first won an individual

:42:34.:42:36.

world title at the age of just 15, Tom Daley has won a second -

:42:37.:42:40.

in the same event - the ten metre platform

:42:41.:42:42.

at the World Aquatics Championships in Budapest.

:42:43.:42:46.

In a really competitive final Daley led from the first

:42:47.:42:48.

round but was pushed all the way by the Olympic champion

:42:49.:42:51.

But he was awarded two maximum scores to secure the gold medal.

:42:52.:43:04.

It has been such a tough year getting over that competition in Rio

:43:05.:43:07.

where I was out of the final and I was unable to

:43:08.:43:09.

Tough work after the Olympics with how I was feeling and to come

:43:10.:43:15.

out the other side of it are still superb.

:43:16.:43:19.

I am excited to be able to finally go on a honeymoon

:43:20.:43:22.

And what a day it was for Daley, because earlier, he and his partner

:43:23.:43:26.

Grace Reid won silver in the mixed three metre springboard final.

:43:27.:43:30.

Afterwards, Reid said the pair had been "winging it"

:43:31.:43:33.

because they hadn't been able to practise together all week.

:43:34.:43:39.

It was another golden night for Britain's para-athletes at

:43:40.:43:41.

There were three golds and a silver for British athletes.

:43:42.:43:45.

Sophie Hahn took gold in the T38 100 metres.

:43:46.:43:48.

She beat off competition from Kadeena Cox who took

:43:49.:43:50.

Hahn set a new world record for the second time

:43:51.:43:55.

after she did the same in the 200 metres last weekend.

:43:56.:43:59.

Another double world champion is Georgie Hermitage.

:44:00.:44:01.

She added to her gold in the 400 metres with victory

:44:02.:44:04.

Her time of 13.36 seconds is a new World Championship record.

:44:05.:44:13.

After the year I have had I was wanting to win the 400

:44:14.:44:17.

The one I knew was always going to be difficult.

:44:18.:44:23.

I thought I might have been squeezed out of the medals.

:44:24.:44:26.

To come and do that and under that amount of pressure...

:44:27.:44:33.

And the third gold of the night came for Aled Davies in the shot putt.

:44:34.:44:36.

He threw a massive 17.52 metres to break his own world record

:44:37.:44:39.

and finish three metres clear of the rest.

:44:40.:44:44.

England's women's cricketers will aim to win their fourth

:44:45.:44:50.

England's women won the bronze medal at the Lacrosse World Cup,

:44:51.:44:53.

beating Australia in the third place play-off game in Guildford.

:44:54.:44:55.

The scores were level at nine all at full time -

:44:56.:44:58.

so it went to a golden goal decider, and it was Megan Whittle who grabbed

:44:59.:45:01.

a dramatic winner for the home side, prompting wild celebrations.

:45:02.:45:04.

The United States won gold, beating Canada in the final.

:45:05.:45:07.

England boss Mark Sampson says his team are ready for Spain's

:45:08.:45:09.

"dark arts" when the sides meet at the Women's European

:45:10.:45:12.

England thrashed Scotland 6-0 in their opening game

:45:13.:45:15.

at the tournament but Sampson says they're prepared for

:45:16.:45:17.

Spain won their first group match and beat England at the last

:45:18.:45:23.

Scotland have major injury worries ahead of their match

:45:24.:45:28.

against Portugal, they're already missing three key players

:45:29.:45:31.

and they'll be without Manchester City forward Jane Ross.

:45:32.:45:34.

After that opening defeat to England, the Scots need to bounce

:45:35.:45:37.

back if they're to progress further in the tournament.

:45:38.:45:46.

As you say, a big day of sport ahead! Enjoy it. Thank you. It's

:45:47.:45:55.

8:45am. You're watching

:45:56.:45:57.

Breakfast from BBC News. Prince William and Prince Harry have

:45:58.:45:59.

given a candid insight into their relationship

:46:00.:46:02.

with their mother, in a documentary The rules on blood donation

:46:03.:46:04.

are to be relaxed in England and Scotland, to allow more gay men

:46:05.:46:08.

and sex workers to participate. It's at this point we say goodbye

:46:09.:46:13.

to Tina, she's going to read But now, here's Stav with a last

:46:14.:46:16.

look at this morning's weather. It's looking like it was yesterday,

:46:17.:46:35.

pretty mixed. This is the satellite picture. You can see how much

:46:36.:46:39.

sunshine there is through central Wales and central southern England.

:46:40.:46:42.

This cloud and these showers coming in towards South Wales. I've got a

:46:43.:46:49.

Weather Watcher picture showing a downpour in Bridgend, just

:46:50.:46:52.

confirming those showers moving in. They will be quite sharp through the

:46:53.:46:55.

day but equally some lovely spells of sunshine around like this

:46:56.:46:59.

photograph. Not too far away in Cornwall. The culprit for the mix

:47:00.:47:04.

unsettled weather is this area of low pressure. It is with us

:47:05.:47:07.

yesterday and today. It's moving east and has some wet weather in it

:47:08.:47:13.

to the northern half of the country. In the south there will be sunny

:47:14.:47:17.

spells and showers. Some of these showers will produce longer spells

:47:18.:47:23.

of rain through the afternoon. Showers in south Wales moving into

:47:24.:47:27.

the Midlands. Cloudy skies for much of northern England. For Northern

:47:28.:47:32.

Ireland as well but clouds continue to them, same for western Scotland.

:47:33.:47:36.

But weather front bringing increasingly wet conditions to

:47:37.:47:39.

eastern Scotland with some low cloud and mist and murk. Pretty yucky

:47:40.:47:44.

conditions, pushing through to the north-east of England, central

:47:45.:47:47.

southern Scotland through the day. I did it brightens up. Brightening up

:47:48.:47:53.

the Northern Ireland. England and Wales with plenty of showers and

:47:54.:47:57.

longer spells of rain. It will be warm in the sunshine but quite cool

:47:58.:48:03.

when the rain arrives. The big match, the women's cricket at Lord's

:48:04.:48:08.

could be showers through the afternoon. Expect some interruptions

:48:09.:48:12.

unfortunately. And also for the final day of the Gulf, it will be

:48:13.:48:15.

breezy than it was yesterday and there could be some showers but also

:48:16.:48:22.

some sunshine -- final day of the golf. Turning dry and cooler further

:48:23.:48:27.

North and wet but on Monday we start off dry and bright across northern

:48:28.:48:31.

and western areas. For Central and eastern areas we still have bad

:48:32.:48:35.

weather front bringing outbreaks of rain. A cold northerly wind and the

:48:36.:48:39.

eastern coast. In the sunshine it's going to be quite warm, 24-25

:48:40.:48:47.

degrees in places. On Tuesday we are in between weather systems. Apart

:48:48.:48:50.

from a few showers there should be a lot of dry weather and good sunny

:48:51.:48:54.

spells. Feeling warm way you get the sunshine. Behind me the next weather

:48:55.:48:59.

system moving in bringing a wet day for many on Wednesday.

:49:00.:49:04.

If you're thinking of getting a fake tattoo over the summer break,

:49:05.:49:07.

you might want to hear what our next guests have to say.

:49:08.:49:10.

Dermatologists are warning that temporary "black henna"

:49:11.:49:11.

tattoos can go wrong, and in some cases turn

:49:12.:49:14.

Joining us now is Kirsty and her daughter Teigan,

:49:15.:49:17.

who suffered burns after getting a black henna tattoo

:49:18.:49:19.

in Greece, and consultant dermatologist Tim Clayton.

:49:20.:49:22.

Tell us about that. She had it done, it looked lovely, came home and then

:49:23.:49:30.

a couple of days after she noticed these dots appearing. I thought they

:49:31.:49:35.

were mosquito bites. The next day I realised something was very wrong.

:49:36.:49:39.

Can we see your arm? You had it on the inside of your arm, what

:49:40.:49:45.

happened? Did it start to burn? In the middle of the flowers there were

:49:46.:49:49.

blisters and it was really itchy and burning. Did that carry on? Every

:49:50.:49:56.

day it just got worse. It didn't get better. This is the tattoo. Quite a

:49:57.:50:03.

nice tattoo. But then replaced by blisters. Did you know at the time

:50:04.:50:10.

there was a difference between black henna and natural henna? I didn't, I

:50:11.:50:14.

didn't know there was a difference. Let's bring in Doctor Clayton. Is

:50:15.:50:21.

this common? It's increasingly more common. We are finding children

:50:22.:50:25.

going on holidays and music festivals where Henna tattooeds are

:50:26.:50:31.

being offered. They are advertising this as black henna which is the

:50:32.:50:37.

traditional henna compound which has been added to a chemical called PPD

:50:38.:50:42.

which is highly allergic. When it comes in contact with your skin you

:50:43.:50:48.

can develop an allergic reaction. I think this is natural henna being

:50:49.:50:52.

applied but the technique is the same. Yes, exactly the same. Way you

:50:53.:51:00.

made aware there was anything in this... No. I didn't know there was

:51:01.:51:05.

a difference between the natural and the black. I just thought it was

:51:06.:51:10.

henna. The alarming thing was it didn't just blister, it kept on

:51:11.:51:15.

blistering. It was like it was reacting every day. It wasn't

:51:16.:51:21.

getting better. She had two courses of antibiotics and steroid cream.

:51:22.:51:25.

Then it started to turn a corner and start to get better. You must have

:51:26.:51:31.

been very worried, was it a bit alarming? It was, I was a bit unsure

:51:32.:51:35.

what was happening. She was in so much pain. How long has it taken to

:51:36.:51:43.

get to this point? It was done on the 30th of May. So 2-3 months. What

:51:44.:51:48.

advice would you give to people going on holiday? People have braids

:51:49.:51:55.

and tattoos and all this sort of stuff on holiday. I would avoid

:51:56.:52:00.

black henna code. If you are watching someone having a tattoo

:52:01.:52:06.

being performed, I would probably avoid it. There is a small chance

:52:07.:52:11.

you can develop an allergic reaction to it. More importantly you could

:52:12.:52:15.

sensitise yourself to PPD which is actually in a lot of other products.

:52:16.:52:20.

It's in hair dye for example and even some textile dyes. You can

:52:21.:52:24.

sensitise yourself to a chemical and maybe not have the reaction, then a

:52:25.:52:28.

couple of years down the line you might dye your hair and have a

:52:29.:52:32.

severe reaction. You wouldn't be able to dye your hair against purely

:52:33.:52:36.

you'd have to avoid a permanent dye. Similarly you may go on holiday and

:52:37.:52:45.

have a temporary tattoo which may be OK, the following year you could

:52:46.:52:49.

have a severe reaction. This reaction we are seeing occurs 7-10

:52:50.:52:54.

days after application, during which time your body has become sensitised

:52:55.:53:02.

to PPD. There has been a survey done among dermatologists and 70-80% of

:53:03.:53:06.

them say they are seeing an uptake in these kind of cases. Year-on-year

:53:07.:53:11.

we are seeing more and more. Last year I dealt with a case that the

:53:12.:53:16.

children's Hospital in Manchester. You would echo the same words. Don't

:53:17.:53:21.

have black henna. Thank you for coming to talk to us. I'm glad your

:53:22.:53:23.

arm is a lot better. A British safari park is hoping IVF

:53:24.:53:26.

technology will help save one of the world's most endangered

:53:27.:53:29.

species - the northern white rhino. There are just three left

:53:30.:53:32.

in the world, but at Longleat in Wiltshire, southern white rhinos

:53:33.:53:34.

are being drafted in to help. Great pictures, they definitely need

:53:35.:53:37.

saving. Joining us now is Jon Merrington

:53:38.:54:45.

head of Safari at Longleat, Explain a bit of the technology

:54:46.:54:54.

festival, what is going to go on inside these test tubes? What sperm

:54:55.:54:58.

and eggs are we talking about? To save the northern white rhinos,

:54:59.:55:02.

there's only three left in Africa. There's an elderly male who is no

:55:03.:55:07.

longer capable of reproducing. The two females, reproductively their

:55:08.:55:13.

system shutdown because it's been too long. They need help, they need

:55:14.:55:18.

science to save the species. That's where our Southern white rhino

:55:19.:55:24.

females at Longleat come in. It is part of a collaboration with other

:55:25.:55:28.

collections and fertility expert in Europe. We harvest some eggs from

:55:29.:55:33.

our female. They've gone to a laboratory in Italy where they are

:55:34.:55:36.

much sharing. Once they've matured, if that has gone well they can be

:55:37.:55:42.

mixed with some sperm either from southern white rhinos to start them

:55:43.:55:45.

off and check it is going to work, and then down the line mixing some

:55:46.:55:51.

northern white rhino with those eggs, or even eggs from northern

:55:52.:55:55.

white rhinos and sperm from northern white rhinos. The initial process is

:55:56.:56:00.

to find out if you can do this with rhinos? Yes, this is a

:56:01.:56:04.

ground-breaking procedure. Creating an embryo outside a rhino hasn't

:56:05.:56:08.

been done before. We need to check that can work before we use up the

:56:09.:56:11.

limited bank of northern white rhinos sperm. If it works but you

:56:12.:56:17.

can't get it to work with older eggs from the two remaining female North

:56:18.:56:23.

white rhinos, are you not mixing species? Potentially. We are faced

:56:24.:56:27.

with a difficult situation. There are three of these animals left in

:56:28.:56:32.

the wild. It is impossible to do it from that, saving limited genetic

:56:33.:56:35.

material and preserving the future of that is our only option. They are

:56:36.:56:40.

very closely related to each other, they aren't too distant. But there

:56:41.:56:44.

is a difference? The northern white rhino is a bit bigger, they've got

:56:45.:56:49.

more of a pronounced shoulder hump. There are some small differences.

:56:50.:56:57.

The northern white rhinos comes from further north as the name suggests.

:56:58.:57:01.

It could be argued actually that if humans hadn't persecuted these

:57:02.:57:05.

animals to the point of extinction, if their populations have been

:57:06.:57:09.

allowed to grow and expand, these two subspecies would have crossed

:57:10.:57:12.

paths naturally by now. What we are doing isn't too far removed from

:57:13.:57:15.

what could happen in the wild. The problem is it takes a long time to

:57:16.:57:22.

give birth to a baby rhino. Tell us about that, 18 months? It's 16-18

:57:23.:57:27.

months, a long gestation period. How long does it take before you know if

:57:28.:57:32.

it's working? The moment this week we should hear if the eggs have been

:57:33.:57:37.

matured enough to be fertilised, then it takes three weeks before the

:57:38.:57:40.

cells start dividing into the beginnings of an embryo, the

:57:41.:57:45.

beginnings of a baby rhino. If that a successful and the embryo is

:57:46.:57:51.

cryogenically stored, if we give the surrogates female a series of

:57:52.:57:58.

hormone injections for three months. So there reproductive cycles can

:57:59.:58:02.

become ready to accept the embryo back. In my crude amateur hour I was

:58:03.:58:07.

thinking, if it works, you're up and running because then you can start

:58:08.:58:11.

harvesting from the younger rhinos. Exactly. Because it is such a new

:58:12.:58:16.

procedure, I mean, rhinos are two tonne animals. Even to extract the

:58:17.:58:22.

eggs is 1.5 metres inside the animal. It is such a consecrated

:58:23.:58:26.

procedure. We need to make sure that is going to work before we put all

:58:27.:58:31.

our eggs in one basket and use up the limited amount of sperm from the

:58:32.:58:35.

northern white rhinos. When will you know if it's going to work? By the

:58:36.:58:40.

end of this week we will know if we can fertilise the eggs with some

:58:41.:58:42.

sperm so fingers crossed! Thank you. That's it from us for today,

:58:43.:58:46.

Dan and Lou will be here tomorrow morning from six on BBC One,

:58:47.:58:49.

have a good day, bye-bye.

:58:50.:58:54.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS