14/08/2017 Breakfast


14/08/2017

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This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

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A big rise in the number of people arrested for being drunk

:00:14.:00:16.

A BBC investigation finds a 50% increase in passengers being held

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for incidents involving alcohol on flights and at airports.

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A vigil is held to remember the woman killed during protests

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Don't let hate live. Don't just let someone walk around freely and

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spread their hate. Tell them that is not OK. That is not OK.

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In sport, Great Britain hit their medal target.

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A silver from the women and a bronze from men in the 400 metre relays

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bring the tally to six in the final moments of the World Athletics

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Good morning. We are talking about family run businesses this week.

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They are on the increase. There are nearly five million

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family-run businesses in the UK contributing nearly half a trillion

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pounds to the British economy. And 50 years after pirate radio

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ships were outlawed, we look back at how they changed

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The Sound of Music radio. And Carol has the weather. Good

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morning. For many central and eastern areas today, dry and bright

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with sunshine. Rain in the west that is slowly going east and north

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through today. I will have more details in 15 minutes. Thank you.

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See you then. Arrests of passengers suspected

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of being drunk at UK airports and on flights have risen

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by 50% in the past year, according to an investigation

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carried out by BBC Panorama. Critics of the airline industry say

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a voluntary code on alcohol sales isn't working, and want

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the government to amend licensing Where in the UK can you buy alcohol

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at 4am seven days a week? The answer is at an

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international airport. And it seems that it's leaving

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passengers and crew with a hangover. An investigation by BBC Panorama has

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revealed that arrests of those suspected of being drunk at UK

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airports and on flights have risen Half of the 4,000 cabin crew

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who took part in a survey carried out by Panorama and Unite,

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the union, said they had either experienced verbal, physical,

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or sexual abuse by drunk passengers People just see us as

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bar maids in the sky. They would touch your breasts,

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or they'd touch your bum or your legs, I mean, I've had hands

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going up my skirt before. Phil Ward, the managing director

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of low-cost airline, Jet2, has already banned alcohol

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on flights before 8am, and wants the industry

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to take tougher measures. Do you think airports

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are doing enough? Umm, I think the retailers

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could do more as well. Two litre steins of beer in bars,

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mixers and miniatures in duty-free shops, which can only be

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there for one reason. But the Airport Operators

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Association insists that their code I don't accept that the airports

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don't sell alcohol responsibly. The sale of alcohol

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per se is not a problem. It's the misuse of it and drinking

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to excess and then behaving badly. Earlier this year, a House of Lords

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committee called for airport licensing to be brought

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into line with pubs and bars. A government decision

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on whether to call time on early-morning drinking

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at airports is now expected And we will have more on that

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throughout the programme for you. The US Vice President, Mike Pence,

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has specifically condemned far-right groups when asked to respond

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to the violence over President Trump has been criticised

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for not identifying any specific group. A woman was killed and 19

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people were injured when a car was driven into a crowd protesting a far

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right rally in Charlottesville. We have no allowance for these

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dangerous fringe groups like the KKK. They have no place in the

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American public life and debate and we condemned them in the strongest

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of full-term. -- possible terms. Our Washington correspondent,

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Laura Bicker, was at a vigil last night to remember Heather Heyer,

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who was killed during the protests. The candles and songs

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are for Heather Heyer, who died standing up

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for what she believed in. After a weekend of deadly violence

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and anger on these streets, there's now a longing to come

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together in quiet grief. Heather was one of the demonstrators

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trying to stop white supremacists marching through

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Charlottesville on Saturday. She was killed when this car plowed

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through a group of protesters. Her close friend now

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appeals for unity. I want everybody to get together

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and unite, and spread love, and spread peace,

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and spread happiness. Don't - don't just let somebody walk

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around freely and spread their hate. One of the organisers

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of the Unite The Right rally tried And as he left,

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he was forced to flee. Armed police had to

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escort him from the city. He's condemned the violence,

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but says he has a right to be heard. I'm willing to die

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for my rights, basically. I feel like my First Amendment

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rights, and the rights of the people But there is no sympathy

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here for those who brought hate

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to the city. Laura Bicker, BBC News,

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Charlottesville. Security forces in Burkina Faso have

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killed three suspected jihadist gunmen after a terrorist

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attack in the capital. The country's Communications

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Minister says a number of hostages remain trapped inside a restaurant

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after gunmen opened fire At least 17 people are believed

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to have been killed in the attack The army and police have sealed off

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part of the city centre. A man has been charged

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with the murder of a grandfather who was attacked as he walked

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his dogs in Norfolk. The body of 83-year-old,

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Peter Wrighton, was found in woodland near the village

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of East Harling last Saturday. Police say he had been

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repeatedly stabbed. A 23-year-old man will appear

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in court later today. Up to 140,000 vulnerable children

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did not receive the help they needed last year because their situation

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was not judged to be serious enough, The charity has found thousands

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of young people referred to social services did not end

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up getting any support The government says its reforms

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will improve the situation. Debby has been working in children's

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services for 16 years, and helps families with anything

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from behavioural problems I've got, across the sites I run,

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I've just under 2,500 under fives, So, as much as we do,

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there's a lot that we can't possibly do, 'cause we can't

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be everywhere at once. The amount we've already taken,

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we're aware we're not picking up in the same

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way, and it will only A Freedom Of Information request

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to local authorities found that last year 184,500 children's needs

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assessments were closed because they fell short

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of the criteria for support. The charity, Action For Children,

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says only around one in four families received early help

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services such as children's centres We know from too many cases that

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if we're not able to help children early, that there are strong

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likelihoods that things will get For example, in serious case

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reviews, 70% of the time, we know that there have been early

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warning signs of the outcomes. But we also know that if we give

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children and families the tools to help themselves much earlier,

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then they're much less likely The local goverment association

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blames government cuts But the Department for Education

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says is taking action to support vulnerable children by reforming

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social care services and better protecting victims of domestic

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violence and abuse. It says councils spent almost ?8

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billion last year on children's social care, but it wants

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to help them do more. Armed officers in the UK's biggest

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police force are to be issued They will be attached to the caps

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and protective helmets of members of the Metropolitan

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Police's firearms units. Scotland Yard has yet to decide

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on how to use body-worn cameras The American Space Agency's Cassini

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Probe has begun the final phase The satellite has begun a series

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of "ultra-close" passes through the planet's

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upper atmosphere. Scientists are hoping it will reveal

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more about the chemical make-up and internal structure

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of the planet. The World Athletics Championships

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ended on a high in London last night, with two more medals

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for Great Britain and Northern The success of the relay teams meant

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British Athletics hit its medal target, but only just,

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as our sports correspondent, Going into Saturday, Britain had

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just one medal. 24 hours later, they had six. The medal target hit at the

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last possible minute. It was the relay that gave the drama. Britain

:10:58.:11:00.

took Olympic runs in the women's four x 400 metres. When Jamaica's

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injury curse struck yet again... A hamstring! Just look what it meant

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to them. Silver for Great Britain in Northern Ireland. The men's four x

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400 relay. The final event of the championships. Rooney! Martyn Rooney

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brought home the rally in bronze, the sixth medal for Britain. The

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relay teams making sure Saturday and Sunday were equally super. And as

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Usain Bolt took to the track to say goodbye one last time, it was a

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chance to reflect on a memorable ten days. It has been spectacular. I

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honestly can't remember in the years I have been watching championship

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athletics that I have seen such competitive races in so many

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compelling stories. And actually, as we are ushering the superstar off

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the scene, the compelling stories have been the emergence of

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extraordinary young talent around the globe. But the biggest winner

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was athletics itself. London consistently delivered the crowd

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that the sport is desperately needed. And as for Britain, well,

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they left it late, but they have shown the future is bright. Natalie

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Pirks, BBC News, at the London Stadium.

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It was an exciting. There is nothing like athletics to get you off the

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couch! Away from that, the Premier League season is back! We have

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missed it. It was a great competitive debut for Romelu Lukaku,

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scoring two goals. They looked good. Yes. ?35 million. That is what he is

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there to do. Away from the athletics,

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Romelu Lukaku made a dream home

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debut for Manchester United. The Belgian striker had an instant

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impact at Old Trafford, scoring twice as United beat

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West Ham 4-0 to go top Jonjo Shelvey was sent off for this,

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whatever you want to call it. A red card. Paving the way for Spurs to

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beat Newcastle. That clearly cost his side.

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The American, Justin Thomas, won golf's final major of the year,

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Look at that. One of the shots of the round.

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Thomas produced a final round 68 to claim his first major title,

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winning by two shots on a thrilling final day that saw five players

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And England's women have continued the defence of their Rugby World Cup

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title with a thumping 56-13 win over Italy,

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Hosts, Ireland, also won, they beat Japan, but Wales can no

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longer qualify for the semi-finals after they lost to Canada.

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It is good to see England are going well at the moment in defence of

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their title. That is nice to see. Thank you. Justin Thomas, 220 on a

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7-iron. For anyone who plays golf, that is ridiculous. I don't suppose

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you don't do that. Well, long levers help, but not that far.

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You are watching Breakfast from BBC News.

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The main stories this morning: A BBC investigation has revealed there has

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been a 50% rise in the number of arrests for drunken misbehaviour

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on flights and in airports in the past year.

:14:42.:14:44.

Demonstrations and vigils have been held across the United States

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following deadly violence that erupted during a far-right rally

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

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Lovely to see you. Good morning. Good morning all. We have mixed

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fortunes in the weather this morning. An east-west split. We have

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rain in the west and drier in the east and that will hold true through

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much of the day. Yesterday in Kent we hit 24 Celsius. It was a

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beautiful day. In order to have the warmest day this August so far we

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had to reach 24.5. We could do that today, we are expecting 25 today and

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tomorrow for some parts of the south-east, 26. So it will get that

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bit warmer but we have a couple of fronts bringing rain across the

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west, pushing north eastwards across Scotland through the course of the

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day, but equally a lot of dry weather to start with, and a lot of

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bright weather. If you are waking up from Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, East

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Anglia, parts of the Midlands and the south-east, you have sunshine

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but out towards the west we have rain. Some of that rain will be

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heavy and it will be for a while yet across Scotland. This is pushing

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north eastwards. Northern Ireland will see the back edge of the rain,

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now starting to clear. It pushes across the Isle of Man in through

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north-west England and north-east England getting off to a bright

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start. That rain affecting parts of Wales in south-west England, and the

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cloud building just ahead of it through the West Midlands, for

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example, through the Pennines, Peak District. As we push towards the

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south-east, Cambridgeshire, East Anglia, Essex and Kent, we are back

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into the sunshine. Through the course of the day the rain will

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continue to move east, and also north eastwards. It will tend to

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foment a bit as it does so. Won't be as heavy through the course of the

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afternoon, so we will see right spells on the Murray Firth. Brighter

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spells with sunshine in Northern Ireland. It could be heavy and

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thundery, and more rain coming across the Channel Islands, through

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southern counties in the wards for example the Midlands and heading

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towards the Wash. It is the south-east that will hang on to the

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brightest and the warmest conditions. Temperatures possibly a

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little bit higher than you can see on the charts. Through the evening

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and overnight another band of rain sweeps in from the south-west. It

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will be moving in the direction of the East, and tomorrow eventually

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that clears away and what we're looking for tomorrow is a day of

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sunshine and showers. Tomorrow some of the showers again could be heavy,

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also thundery. But you know the drill with showers. Many will mist

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out altogether and hang on with decent spells of sunshine until

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Friday. Temperatures in the south-east up to about 26. That is

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not bad. Thank you very much, see you in half an hour.

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Let's take a look at this morning's papers.

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John is here, Steph is out and about so only three of us on the sofa. You

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mentioned that this press conference, don't call me Mo. We

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have been talking about Usain Bolt, and despite Mo bowing out, he gave a

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strong press conference saying the British love to build people up and

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tear them down. They are still questioning his links to Salazar.

:18:15.:18:20.

While he has never been accused of any wrongdoing, he feels the

:18:21.:18:24.

questions keep plaguing him. He says I think it is unfair, I am ending my

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career on a high, and you are trying to drag me down. There are some

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questions. There are questions that, but it is tainting the end of his

:18:35.:18:39.

career, he feels. On the Daily Telegraph they are talking about

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stamp duty must be cut as a matter of urgency as part of a return to

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conservative values, that is according to Rees-Mogg. And Jamie

:18:51.:18:55.

Oliver and his wife are hoping for a sixth child, a half-dozen. May

:18:56.:19:03.

facing backlash of a rushed Brexit plans and drunken airline passengers

:19:04.:19:07.

up by 50%. Give us your views on that by the usual means and as we

:19:08.:19:11.

were saying, quite a lot of pictures of what has been happening in

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America overnight after the death of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville

:19:18.:19:24.

over the weekend. I cringe when I see friends post the holiday paint

:19:25.:19:27.

picture on social media at four a.m.. -- pint picture. And lots of

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discussion about Ant, many saying how brave he is to be talking about

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it. Picking up on Mo Farah, saying he is a clean runner and has

:19:50.:19:54.

defended himself. As he ends his career on the track, these questions

:19:55.:19:59.

are still facing him, links to his coach, Salazar, and the methods he

:20:00.:20:04.

has used. He is saying the British press love to build people up and

:20:05.:20:08.

knock them down. I know that you can never really say what you feel, you

:20:09.:20:12.

have to hold back to a certain extent, John Shearer called it

:20:13.:20:18.

pathetic. I don't know how strong that is, sporting sense. He might

:20:19.:20:24.

want to say a lot more than that. He is a Newcastle man as well. It is a

:20:25.:20:29.

little pathetic, isn't it? Can I mention a couple of stories? This is

:20:30.:20:36.

rather lovely. Sir Mo Farah doing his Mo-Bot on the top of the London

:20:37.:20:42.

eye. That is an extraordinary thing to do. You know capsize in roads,

:20:43.:20:50.

they will have to be renamed because tourists have been upset, concerned

:20:51.:20:56.

about animal cruelty -- cat's eyes. Apparently they will have to become

:20:57.:21:03.

road studs to spare feelings. Because visitors to the United

:21:04.:21:07.

Kingdom... They are concerned. It never says on the road cat's eyes.

:21:08.:21:18.

They call them bot dots in America. Is that what we will end up with

:21:19.:21:26.

here? Thank you very much, so you a little later on. -- see you a little

:21:27.:21:31.

later on. Today and tomorrow, Pakistan

:21:32.:21:32.

and India will mark 70 years of independence from Britain,

:21:33.:21:34.

a moment of freedom amongst one of the largest mass migrations

:21:35.:21:37.

the world has ever seen. After 200 years of British Rule,

:21:38.:21:40.

the 1947 partition split India Hindus and Sikhs fled to India,

:21:41.:21:43.

and Muslims went to Pakistan. Around 12 million people became

:21:44.:21:48.

refugees, and a million people are thought to have

:21:49.:21:50.

died in the partition. In a moment we will speak

:21:51.:21:52.

to Sanjoy Majumder, who joins us in New Delhi, where India will be

:21:53.:21:56.

celebrating their freedom tomorrow. But first let's go

:21:57.:21:59.

to Secunder Kermani, who is in Islamabad,

:22:00.:22:01.

where Pakistan are marking their 70 Good morning to you. How will they

:22:02.:22:10.

be marking this? Well, as you say, in the West and in much of the world

:22:11.:22:15.

today it will be seen as a day which commemorates partition. But here in

:22:16.:22:21.

Pakistan it is really the day of independence that is being

:22:22.:22:25.

celebrated here. The Chief of the Pakistani army at midnight last

:22:26.:22:29.

night cloistered what is said to be the largest flag in the continent of

:22:30.:22:32.

Asia on a flagpole at the border with India. There has been official

:22:33.:22:39.

celebrations in Islamabad, where I am now, where the President has been

:22:40.:22:46.

speaking to the nation. There will be an air display, by the Pakistan

:22:47.:22:50.

Air Force, later today as well. And there has been a changing of the

:22:51.:22:54.

guard at the mausoleum of the country's founder. And this all

:22:55.:23:02.

comes amidst a period of political upheaval in Pakistan. Just a few

:23:03.:23:11.

weeks ago the former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, was ousted over

:23:12.:23:18.

corruption allegations, which he denies, and he has been talking

:23:19.:23:22.

about the fact that in the 70 year history of Pakistan no prime

:23:23.:23:26.

minister has been able to complete a term in office. That is some end

:23:27.:23:30.

that has given people some food for thought on today, which is otherwise

:23:31.:23:35.

a day of celebrations. And of course, 12 million people took part

:23:36.:23:39.

in this mass migration. We know that 1 million people died. What are the

:23:40.:23:48.

ramifications for Pakistan? Well, I have spent much of the past few

:23:49.:23:54.

weeks speaking to people who lived through the partition of India and

:23:55.:23:59.

Pakistan. It is 70 years ago, so there are lots of people in their

:24:00.:24:03.

80s and 90s who lived through the trauma, people who lost their entire

:24:04.:24:07.

families, people who witnessed horrific violence. And a lot of them

:24:08.:24:12.

actually say that they feel slightly forgotten, that people don't have

:24:13.:24:17.

that much interest in talking to them about those experiences. They

:24:18.:24:20.

have been recent attempts in Pakistan to try and capture the oral

:24:21.:24:25.

testimony of these people. But otherwise, when it comes to

:24:26.:24:30.

Independence Day celebrations, it is always... Pakistan is talked about

:24:31.:24:35.

as a country moving forward rather than a country looking to the past.

:24:36.:24:40.

It has had a lasting impact, though, on the relationship between India

:24:41.:24:45.

and Pakistan, which still have a very tense relationship,

:24:46.:24:50.

particularly over the disputed Kashmir region, and that conflict

:24:51.:24:54.

dates back to partition. We saw references to that conflict both by

:24:55.:24:59.

the head of the Pakistani army and either Prime Minister today. And we

:25:00.:25:04.

will be live in New Delhi later in the programme.

:25:05.:25:04.

Steph is looking at the impact the five million family-run

:25:05.:25:07.

businesses in the UK have on the British economy.

:25:08.:25:10.

She is taking a look at just one of them this morning,

:25:11.:25:13.

Good morning. Good morning to you, good morning everybody. I am stood

:25:14.:25:26.

on a huge vat of cider, would you believe? So underneath my feet is

:25:27.:25:30.

probably around 500,000 pints of cider. This of course is western

:25:31.:25:37.

cider mill. A fantastic operation, and I want to show you, these are

:25:38.:25:45.

the oldest of the three vats, they were bought in 1880, so this is a

:25:46.:25:49.

family business that has been going for a long time. Very successful one

:25:50.:25:53.

which exports to more than 40 countries and employs 220 people in

:25:54.:25:58.

Herefordshire. Certainly a successful business, and we are

:25:59.:26:01.

talking about family businesses all this week. As you point out, there

:26:02.:26:07.

are nearly 5 million of them across the UK, and they are employing

:26:08.:26:11.

something like 12.2 million people. So that is about half of the people

:26:12.:26:15.

employed in the private sector. So they are certainly an important part

:26:16.:26:20.

of our economy. If you look at how much money they contribute, as well,

:26:21.:26:25.

to the UK, it is something like ?500 billion. A lot of money. And there

:26:26.:26:29.

are lots of businesses out there, you might not realise a family

:26:30.:26:32.

businesses. They are some of the smaller names, you might not know

:26:33.:26:35.

whether they are family businesses or not. You have plumbers and lots

:26:36.:26:40.

of different small businesses, and you have big names as well. The

:26:41.:26:49.

likes of Warburton is, Clarks, and we will look at the pros and cons of

:26:50.:26:52.

being part of a I'm back with the latest

:26:53.:30:11.

from the BBC London newsroom Plenty more on our website

:30:12.:30:16.

at the usual address. This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker

:30:17.:30:19.

and Louise Minchin. A big rise in the number of people

:30:20.:30:30.

arrested for being drunk After the horrific news from

:30:31.:30:39.

Charlottesville, we will take a closer look at what is fuelling the

:30:40.:30:41.

rise of the far right in America. Also this morning, we'll be joined

:30:42.:30:47.

by the British women's and men's relay team, fresh from their silver

:30:48.:30:50.

and bronze medal performances. After battling illness and becoming

:30:51.:30:57.

a mum, Martine McCutcheon's back She will be here with us a little

:30:58.:31:01.

bit later. But now, a summary of this

:31:02.:31:15.

morning's main news. Arrests of passengers suspected

:31:16.:31:19.

of being drunk at UK airports and on flights have risen

:31:20.:31:22.

by 50% in the past year, according to an investigation

:31:23.:31:24.

carried out by Panorama. Critics of the airline industry say

:31:25.:31:27.

a voluntary code on alcohol sales isn't working, and want

:31:28.:31:30.

the government to amend licensing A spokesman for the Home Office said

:31:31.:31:32.

they will respond in due course. The US Vice President, Mike Pence,

:31:33.:31:36.

has specifically condemned far-right groups when asked to respond

:31:37.:31:39.

to the violence over A woman was killed and 19 people

:31:40.:31:41.

were injured when a car was driven into a crowd protesting

:31:42.:31:46.

against a far-right President Trump has been criticised

:31:47.:31:48.

for not identifying any specific Security forces in Burkina Faso have

:31:49.:31:52.

killed three suspected jihadist gunmen after a terrorist

:31:53.:32:01.

attack in the capital. The country's Communications

:32:02.:32:03.

Minister says a number of hostages remain trapped inside a restaurant

:32:04.:32:07.

after gunmen opened fire At least 17 people are believed

:32:08.:32:10.

to have been killed in the attack The army and police have sealed off

:32:11.:32:14.

part of the city centre. A man has been charged

:32:15.:32:21.

with the murder of a grandfather who was attacked as he walked

:32:22.:32:23.

his dogs in Norfolk. The body of 83-year-old,

:32:24.:32:26.

Peter Wrighton, was found in woodland near the village

:32:27.:32:28.

of East Harling last Saturday. Police say he had been

:32:29.:32:31.

repeatedly stabbed. A 23-year-old man will appear

:32:32.:32:33.

in court later today. Thousands of vulnerable children

:32:34.:32:50.

are reportedly not getting the help According to the charity

:32:51.:32:53.

Action for Children, up to 140,000 young people

:32:54.:32:57.

referred to social services last year did not end up receiving

:32:58.:32:59.

any help because their situation was not

:33:00.:33:02.

judged to be serious enough. The government says its reforms

:33:03.:33:04.

will improve social care. A national breast cancer charity

:33:05.:33:09.

is being investigated after its founder paid herself

:33:10.:33:11.

?31,000 in breach of charity law. Wendy Watson, who launched

:33:12.:33:14.

National Hereditary Breast Cancer Helpline in 1996,

:33:15.:33:15.

has resigned as a trustee. Financial irregularities

:33:16.:33:18.

were uncovered by the Charity Lawyers for Mrs Watson

:33:19.:33:20.

and the charity described I think that we need some moose

:33:21.:33:23.

news. I thought you might say that. A rare white moose has been

:33:24.:33:41.

captured on film in Sweden. The moose was spotted eating

:33:42.:33:44.

at a ditch in the small town of Eda by local council

:33:45.:33:47.

chairman, Hans Nilsson. Hans then brought a camera

:33:48.:33:50.

to the same spot the next day in the hope of seeing the moose

:33:51.:33:55.

again, he was lucky enough to film it for around 20 minutes and managed

:33:56.:33:58.

to catch it taking a dip. The animal has been well-known

:33:59.:34:02.

in the local area since it was born and is one of only 100 white

:34:03.:34:06.

moose in the country. You won't be surprised to hear some

:34:07.:34:17.

moose facts. I will be giving Saddam throughout the programme. -- some

:34:18.:34:28.

throughout. Why do we have to wait? I can't give all of them to you

:34:29.:34:34.

right now. They eat 30 kg a day. I did not know that. Good morning.

:34:35.:34:40.

Good morning. A busy weekend. It has been. The athletics to begin with,

:34:41.:34:49.

the curtain being brought down. We only got one medal going into the

:34:50.:34:52.

final weekend. Incredible performances in the relay is. We saw

:34:53.:34:58.

the 100 metre relay on Saturday. We will be speaking to both 4x4 teams

:34:59.:35:09.

later. They got a silver last night and a bronze. Six medals in the end.

:35:10.:35:16.

GB finish sixth in the medals table, rounding off the Championship

:35:17.:35:19.

The USA dominated the women's race, winning the gold medal easily.

:35:20.:35:22.

But a fine run from Britain's Emily Diamond held off the Polish

:35:23.:35:26.

challenge to take the silver, congratulated by team-mates

:35:27.:35:28.

Zoey Clark, Laviai Nielsen, and Eilidh Doyle.

:35:29.:35:36.

Less was expected from the men's team, Matthew Hudson-Smith,

:35:37.:35:38.

Dwayne Cowan, Rabah Yousif, and Martyn Rooney only reached

:35:39.:35:41.

But Rooney anchored the team to third place as Trinidad Tobago

:35:42.:35:45.

South Africa's Caster Semenya set a new national record to win

:35:46.:35:49.

the women's 800-metre gold medal comfortably.

:35:50.:35:51.

Great Britain's Lynsey Sharp finished at the back of the field.

:35:52.:35:55.

Laura Muir managed an impressive sixth-place finish in

:35:56.:35:57.

The gold medal went to Kenya's Hellen Obiri.

:35:58.:36:00.

I am really happy. It was a tough field out there. To come sixth, my

:36:01.:36:17.

first World Championships in this event, well, my first overall! Yeah,

:36:18.:36:25.

I am really happy. Scoring goals is "oxygen,

:36:26.:36:26.

happiness and confidence" So says Joe Mourinho,

:36:27.:36:28.

after club record signing Romelu Lukaku scored twice

:36:29.:36:31.

for Manchester United in a 4-0 The ?75 million signing,

:36:32.:36:33.

making his competitive debut, was on target in both halves

:36:34.:36:37.

to set his side on their way. Paul Pogba rounded off a convincing

:36:38.:36:41.

victory in the last minute as Jose Mourinho's side look

:36:42.:36:43.

to justify many pundits' predictions that they'll be

:36:44.:36:46.

champions next spring. It was a good performance, with very

:36:47.:36:55.

high competence levels. We came into the second half winning 1-0 and

:36:56.:37:00.

playing to score more goals and playing to win in a more comfortable

:37:01.:37:11.

way. I think it was a very positive performance and a reflection of the

:37:12.:37:14.

good levels of play we have. Newcastle United's return

:37:15.:37:16.

to the Premier League ended Captain, Jonjo Shelvey,

:37:17.:37:18.

was given a straight red card four minutes into the second half

:37:19.:37:22.

for standing on Delli Ali's ankle. The match was goalless then,

:37:23.:37:25.

and the dismissal proved costly as Ali then went on to score

:37:26.:37:28.

the opening goal in a 2-0 And over in France, the world's

:37:29.:37:31.

most expensive player, Neymar, made his debut

:37:32.:37:38.

for Paris St Germain. The ?200 million player scored

:37:39.:37:40.

as well as they beat Guingamp 3-0. So that makes him worth about ?200

:37:41.:37:43.

million per goal at the moment! American golfer, Justin Thomas,

:37:44.:37:47.

won his first major title at the PGA And when you're producing shots

:37:48.:37:51.

like this, I guess you probably know Have a look at that. What an effort

:37:52.:37:56.

that was. This was him sinking

:37:57.:38:01.

a 40-foot cheap shot, this at the 13th gave him a two-shot

:38:02.:38:03.

lead which he held on to win. At one stage on the final day five

:38:04.:38:07.

players had a share of the lead. Hosts, Ireland, came back from 14-0

:38:08.:38:11.

down to beat Japan 24-14 There was also an emphatic win

:38:12.:38:19.

for defending champions England, who ran in ten tries for the second

:38:20.:38:24.

successive game as they beat Italy. Wales, though, can no longer

:38:25.:38:27.

qualify for the semi-finals I suppose he is the man we have been

:38:28.:38:39.

talking about for the last week, Usain Bolt.

:38:40.:38:46.

And he was given an emotional farewell on the final night of these

:38:47.:38:49.

He was presented with a section of the track from London 2012,

:38:50.:38:53.

a Games at which he declared himself a "living legend"

:38:54.:38:56.

by defending his 100 and 200-metre Olympic titles for a second time,

:38:57.:38:59.

before he completed a lap of honour for the last time.

:39:00.:39:02.

I think we all agree he was a living legend.

:39:03.:39:05.

And after cramping up the other night in the relay,

:39:06.:39:07.

It did look painful at the time, didn't it? He looked slightly

:39:08.:39:14.

bemused with the presentation of the slice of track. Everything has to be

:39:15.:39:18.

given. You have to be creative. What am I going to get? Running spikes?

:39:19.:39:23.

Thank you. Charlottesville, a small city

:39:24.:39:24.

in the US State of Virginia, has become the latest battleground

:39:25.:39:27.

in America's racial divide. It started over the weekend

:39:28.:39:29.

when white supremacists held a torch lit rally to protest

:39:30.:39:32.

against a decision to remove the statue of the Confederate civil

:39:33.:39:35.

war general, Robert E Lee. One woman, Heather Heyer,

:39:36.:39:37.

was killed when a car rammed into a crowd of people trying

:39:38.:39:41.

to stop the white nationalist rally. Joining us now is professor

:39:42.:39:45.

Remy Cross, who specialises in protest movements

:39:46.:39:47.

at Webster University in St Louis. To be clear, the protest that

:39:48.:39:59.

happened in Seattle on Sunday afternoon was scheduled well in

:40:00.:40:04.

advance of the incident that occurred in Virginia on Saturday.

:40:05.:40:09.

However, it is very likely that the attendance and attention was

:40:10.:40:12.

heightened here as a result of that tragic incident. The protest went on

:40:13.:40:17.

for several hours. There was no physical violence for the most part.

:40:18.:40:21.

A little bit of pushing and shoving. But because of mental borders around

:40:22.:40:28.

the whole plus protecting the groups from each other, most of it was

:40:29.:40:31.

verbal, but obviously a lot of animosity between those two groups.

:40:32.:40:37.

And, at one point, there was quite a bit of yelling, and you could not

:40:38.:40:41.

hear what people on the stage were saying. Some of the counter

:40:42.:40:44.

protesters were invited to speak their mind. We see these rallies in

:40:45.:40:49.

Seattle, especially during this political climate, we see them all

:40:50.:40:52.

across the United States. This is not the end. People are upset and

:40:53.:40:57.

passionate on both sides of the aisle. What they both breach is

:40:58.:41:00.

safety and keeping things non-violent. And for the most part,

:41:01.:41:04.

that is what happened on Sunday. Joining us now is professor

:41:05.:41:06.

Remy Cross, who specialises in protest movements

:41:07.:41:11.

at Webster University in St Louis. Good morning to you. Thank you very

:41:12.:41:19.

much for joining us. I know you have talked about, looked out, these

:41:20.:41:23.

kinds of movements for some time. What do you make of what happened in

:41:24.:41:29.

Charlottesville? I think it is a tragedy what happened. But at the

:41:30.:41:33.

same time, it fits the wider pattern of how these sorts of groups, and

:41:34.:41:37.

the counter protesters, often, the conflict in these sorts of

:41:38.:41:42.

demonstrations. OK, what do you think is going on right now? Is it

:41:43.:41:46.

reaching a peak that you have not seen before? Umm, well, you know,

:41:47.:41:51.

there is a theory that says these things come in waves. We certainly

:41:52.:41:56.

saw in the early to mid-1990s, a rise of this sort of right-wing

:41:57.:41:59.

violence with the US militia groups that rallied around events like Ruby

:42:00.:42:08.

Ridge and culminated in the Oklahoma City bombing. We have seen a rise in

:42:09.:42:14.

these groups in the past two years. Obviously, one of the contributing

:42:15.:42:17.

factors was the campaign and the language that was used, oftentimes,

:42:18.:42:23.

in the campaign of Donald Trump. By prior to that, the ability of a lot

:42:24.:42:27.

of these groups to organise and find each other on the Internet has made

:42:28.:42:33.

it easy for people that believe in these kinds of ideologies to find

:42:34.:42:36.

fellow travellers. What is it the white supremacists want? I think for

:42:37.:42:43.

them, what they often, when you sit down and talk with them, what they

:42:44.:42:47.

often will tell you if they feel their way of life, writes for other

:42:48.:42:55.

people does not mean a lowering of their own right. -- rights. They

:42:56.:42:58.

think any rights extended to other groups, whether they are racial

:42:59.:43:02.

ethnic minorities, sexual minorities, women, what have you,

:43:03.:43:06.

necessarily result in a reduction of rights for primarily white man,

:43:07.:43:12.

although there are white women involved in these groups as well and

:43:13.:43:20.

other sorts of hangers-on. They see rights for others as a zero-sum game

:43:21.:43:25.

where they lose on their own rights. And they are pushing back. It is a

:43:26.:43:31.

difficult question to answer, but what can be done to bring down this

:43:32.:43:35.

high level of animosity? I think in the short-term, one of the things

:43:36.:43:39.

that happened in Charlottesville was not adequate response on the part of

:43:40.:43:45.

certainly national leaders in condemning this, but also local

:43:46.:43:48.

leaders being prepared for the sorts of skirmishes that might break out.

:43:49.:43:52.

You were talking a few moments ago about Seattle where the police

:43:53.:43:57.

seemed more capable of keeping them separate. In the long-term, it is

:43:58.:44:01.

dialogue are reaching out to people at risk of joining these movements

:44:02.:44:05.

you feel alien aged and feel like they have a raw deal in showing them

:44:06.:44:12.

this is not the way to make up for perceived lacks. -- alienating.

:44:13.:44:23.

A very mixed week of weather last week.

:44:24.:44:26.

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

:44:27.:44:34.

Thank you, good morning. Good morning to you as well. This week is

:44:35.:44:40.

also going to be rather mixed in terms of weather. What we have today

:44:41.:44:45.

is an east-west split. We have rain in the west, it is also in the

:44:46.:44:49.

north, and it will be drier in the east, as it currently is. We have a

:44:50.:44:53.

couple of weather fronts coming our way. This one is pushing eastwards,

:44:54.:44:58.

this one is pushing northwards, and both are bringing rain with them as

:44:59.:45:02.

they do so. They are weakening as they go through the day. However, we

:45:03.:45:05.

have seen some heavy rain in Northern Ireland, more heavy rain to

:45:06.:45:09.

come across Scotland and you can see the weather front of rain extending

:45:10.:45:12.

all the way down towards the English Channel. So this morning, still some

:45:13.:45:16.

rain to come across Scotland. Some of that heavy. Dry in the north, the

:45:17.:45:20.

rain continuing to ease out of Northern Ireland through the morning

:45:21.:45:23.

but it will be across the Isle of Man, in through Cumbria and

:45:24.:45:39.

Lancashire. However, if you are through Northumberland, Yorkshire,

:45:40.:45:41.

Lincolnshire, you are off to a dry start. Then we pick up the rain

:45:42.:45:45.

across Wales. It has moved through west Wales but it continues through

:45:46.:45:48.

the Bristol Channel and in parts of Devon, Cornwall and Somerset. Just

:45:49.:45:52.

ahead of that the cloud is building saw a bright start across the

:45:53.:45:55.

Midlands by the sunny start for East Anglia and ethics in Kent. Through

:45:56.:45:59.

the course of the day this whole system starts to fragment. The rain

:46:00.:46:02.

will break up and we will start to see some brighter breaks around the

:46:03.:46:05.

Murray Firth, parts of Wales, south-west England, but at the same

:46:06.:46:09.

time we will see some showers develop and some sunshine across

:46:10.:46:12.

Northern Ireland. Some of the showers will be heavy and thundery,

:46:13.:46:15.

and then we have another line of rain sweeping up from the English

:46:16.:46:18.

Channel, through the Channel Islands, in across central and

:46:19.:46:21.

southern parts of England in the direction of the Wash. If you are in

:46:22.:46:25.

the far south-east he will hang the to the sunshine the longest, and

:46:26.:46:29.

somewhere in the Kent -- in Kent or East Anglia could see the sunshine

:46:30.:46:31.

the longest. Rain pushing eastwards through the course of the night. I

:46:32.:46:36.

did quite a bit cloud left and some drizzly conditions. It might be a

:46:37.:46:39.

little bit lower than you can see integrated in the charts. A murky

:46:40.:46:42.

start to the day across the south-east. Could hear the odd

:46:43.:46:45.

rumble of thunder first thing. The rain includes eastern counties

:46:46.:46:49.

generally through the course of the morning and tomorrow will be a day

:46:50.:46:53.

of sunshine and showers. Some of the showers could be heavy and thundery.

:46:54.:46:57.

Many of us will mist them and have a fine, dry and sunny day.

:46:58.:47:00.

Temperatures could hit 26 summer in the south-eastern corner through the

:47:01.:47:04.

course of tomorrow but generally we are looking at the range 14 to about

:47:05.:47:09.

22. So mixed weather, and more mixed weather to come as we head through

:47:10.:47:13.

the rest of the week. It looks divided up, doesn't it? Thank you

:47:14.:47:19.

very much. Pockets of loo all over the place. Thank you very much. --

:47:20.:47:22.

pockets of blue. This week, Steph is taking a look

:47:23.:47:24.

at a handful of the five million family-run businesses in the UK,

:47:25.:47:28.

and the impact they have She is at one of them this morning,

:47:29.:47:31.

and it is a cider maker. Good morning to you. There is a lot

:47:32.:47:42.

of side are being shipped out of here this morning. This is a pretty

:47:43.:47:48.

big operation. Exports to more than 40 countries, and you can see all

:47:49.:47:52.

the cakes behind me. They employ about 220 people as well. And we are

:47:53.:47:56.

here because we are talking about family businesses, and how much they

:47:57.:48:00.

contribute to the UK economy. It is about ?1 trillion every year they

:48:01.:48:05.

contribute as a whole. It is about 5 million of them in the UK, and this

:48:06.:48:10.

is one of them. It is Westons Cider Mill, and we have a mother and son.

:48:11.:48:15.

Helen and Gary, good morning to you both. Helen, you are

:48:16.:48:19.

fourth-generation in this business, so give us the history of it. Well,

:48:20.:48:25.

my great-grandfather came here in 1878 and started making cider in

:48:26.:48:30.

1880. He had nine children and my grandfather had five. So I am

:48:31.:48:38.

Norman's eldest daughter, and I have two and two sisters, and I have had

:48:39.:48:46.

two sons, and Guy is our cider maker. When you were growing up, and

:48:47.:48:52.

this was in your family, did you feel the pressure to be part of it?

:48:53.:48:56.

No, we always had work to do. We were always put to good use, picking

:48:57.:49:00.

up cider apples in the autumn, helping the production lines. So we

:49:01.:49:04.

grew up learning about work and cider making, and it was always in

:49:05.:49:09.

our Burns, in our blood. And is there something you always wanted to

:49:10.:49:13.

do, to be part of the business? -- in our bones. My grandfather showed

:49:14.:49:20.

me the way, and made me believe that Westons Cider Mill is the best cider

:49:21.:49:26.

in the world. And you have to think that, being part of the family, but

:49:27.:49:30.

there must be pressures at times working for your mother. Not all the

:49:31.:49:34.

time, but that is family for you! It is no different to working for

:49:35.:49:38.

anybody else. We all work together, and we all love what we do. And

:49:39.:49:43.

thank you for letting us in. I know you will be speaking to us again

:49:44.:49:46.

throughout the morning, and showing us around. There are a couple of

:49:47.:49:50.

other people we need to chat to. Elizabeth is from the Institute for

:49:51.:49:54.

family business. They contribute an awful lot, but they, too the

:49:55.:49:58.

economy? They certainly do, absolutely. And in terms of the

:49:59.:50:03.

pressures of family businesses, are they different to any other

:50:04.:50:06.

businesses? They have challenges, like all other businesses, but there

:50:07.:50:10.

are some unique sets of features that apply to family businesses. We

:50:11.:50:14.

see them as opportunities, as well as the challenges. One of the

:50:15.:50:19.

interesting thing is, having spoken to a lot of family businesses, if

:50:20.:50:23.

they say that they think differently in terms of the longevity of the

:50:24.:50:26.

business. Do you think that is the case, and can you explain a little

:50:27.:50:30.

bit more about that? We look at that and we say that family businesses

:50:31.:50:34.

tend to think in generations rather than quarters. So there is this

:50:35.:50:37.

long-term approach to wanting to stay in business. And I think that

:50:38.:50:41.

affect how you think about how you do things, how you treat people, how

:50:42.:50:45.

you operate. I think that is a real benefit. And before we go, I just

:50:46.:50:50.

want to show you in here, because it is so interesting to see how they

:50:51.:50:54.

make cider. In here we have all of the vats, it is all oak aged cider.

:50:55.:51:00.

Each of those has something like 500,000 pints of cider in it.

:51:01.:51:04.

Certainly they are kept very busy here. As you can see, this is an

:51:05.:51:09.

incredibly big operation, employing 220 people. I will be here

:51:10.:51:13.

throughout the morning talking about the importance of family business.

:51:14.:51:20.

The size of it is so impressive. And we are at a family business each day

:51:21.:51:24.

for the next few days, looking at why they are important and why they

:51:25.:51:26.

work. In the 1960s, pirate radio changed

:51:27.:51:26.

the face of broadcasting. It was revolutionary

:51:27.:51:29.

for playing continuous music, and launched the careers

:51:30.:51:32.

of Tony Blackburn, John Peel But 50 years ago today,

:51:33.:51:34.

pirate radio stations became illegal, and they were

:51:35.:51:37.

forced to close down. Breakfast's Tim Muffett joins us now

:51:38.:51:39.

from a mock pirate ship in Essex. Good morning. Yes, good morning to

:51:40.:51:53.

you from a former blood vessel mooring on the waters in Harwich. If

:51:54.:52:00.

you saw the film the Boat that Rocked, all about pirate radio, it

:52:01.:52:06.

might look familiar. It was used in that film and 50 years ago today a

:52:07.:52:10.

law came into force which sought to you legalise pirate radio. These

:52:11.:52:15.

ships which went out to sea in the 60s and broadcast pop music to try

:52:16.:52:18.

and circumvent the laws which prevented that music from being

:52:19.:52:20.

broadcast. They had a huge impact. I remember going out from Harwich

:52:21.:52:32.

and seeing this little boat floating around, and I thought this is going

:52:33.:52:39.

to alter everything that comes through. Tony Blackburn's prediction

:52:40.:52:45.

was right. In the early 1960s, the BBC played hardly any pop.

:52:46.:52:48.

Commercial radio was banned. By broadcasting from international

:52:49.:52:53.

waters, pirate stations like Caroline, radio London, and swinging

:52:54.:52:58.

radio England, exploited a loophole. We were 400 miles off the coast. We

:52:59.:53:03.

flew under the Panamanian flag. Now, if anyone went on to that boat from

:53:04.:53:07.

this country, it was like declaring war on Panama. This was radio

:53:08.:53:13.

Caroline's London HQ, where Tony Blackburn had his first audition.

:53:14.:53:16.

Did you have any sense of what a Big Deal this was going to be for you

:53:17.:53:21.

and for pop culture? Yes, I did. Yes. I really thought that this was

:53:22.:53:25.

going to be the start of something very big. Good morning, everyone.

:53:26.:53:28.

Tony Blackburn with you. Feeling a bit under the weather. We have about

:53:29.:53:34.

an eight for scale out there. Broadcasting pop music from ships

:53:35.:53:37.

like this, out at sea, pirate stations were very popular. But on

:53:38.:53:42.

land, they won't just winning over millions of fans. They also faced a

:53:43.:53:51.

powerful enemy. The government. The pirates are a menace, and I don't

:53:52.:53:55.

believe at all but the public wouldn't support action to enforce

:53:56.:54:00.

the law. At midnight on 14 August 1967, a Marine offences act became

:54:01.:54:04.

law. It was now illegal for British citizens to work on the chips, or to

:54:05.:54:11.

supply them. Johnnie Walker had recently joined Caroline. Look at

:54:12.:54:15.

that, you look so young! I haven't changed, have I? They were fun

:54:16.:54:21.

times. And I'm sure there were those of a government that really liked

:54:22.:54:25.

the fact that there were pirates on the air and certainly the young

:54:26.:54:28.

people and their families all loved it. It bridged all generations and

:54:29.:54:31.

all social classes. Many pirate stations packed up, but Caroline

:54:32.:54:36.

continued to casting from the sea until 1990. It anchored further into

:54:37.:54:39.

international waters to avoid UK regulations. This chip, the Ross

:54:40.:54:47.

Revenge, was a chip in the 1980s. It recently returned to the water. What

:54:48.:54:51.

we wanted to do is return the ship to a useful broadcasting purpose.

:54:52.:54:56.

While we dine out on our nostalgia, which is a selling point, we also

:54:57.:55:02.

want to now look to the future. This is radio Caroline, the sound of the

:55:03.:55:10.

Who. Having been streamed online since the late 1990s, the station

:55:11.:55:16.

has just been granted a new AM broadcast license, 50 years after

:55:17.:55:22.

the Lawther tried to ban them, Britain's pop pirates are back on

:55:23.:55:23.

the water. That ship is moored about 40 miles

:55:24.:55:36.

south from here. This ship, the LV18, has been commandeered a BBC

:55:37.:55:42.

radio Essex. You were on-board radio Caroline when that law came into

:55:43.:55:46.

force. You are going to be broadcasting today. What was it like

:55:47.:55:51.

being a pirate at sea? Good morning, and thank you for joining us. It was

:55:52.:55:55.

sad and it was happy, because we didn't know what the government was

:55:56.:55:59.

going to do. Most of the stations were shutting down, but us naughty

:56:00.:56:03.

boys were carrying on, risking fines and a jail sentence for playing pop

:56:04.:56:07.

music on the radio. It seems unbelievable now, but we were

:56:08.:56:10.

excited because we knew the public were with us. I have it on good

:56:11.:56:14.

authority that the government at the time used to get more complaints

:56:15.:56:17.

about banning us than it did about the Vietnam War, the economy, or

:56:18.:56:20.

anything else as well, and they still banned us. Now that music is

:56:21.:56:25.

so easy to access, have we lost the magic of broadcasting from the ship,

:56:26.:56:30.

which seems odd in itself? It has lost a lot of its magic, because it

:56:31.:56:35.

is homogenised. They have taken a a lot of the fun out of it. Thanks to

:56:36.:56:40.

the people that set it up, we were told just to get out and entertain.

:56:41.:56:45.

It was a bit like Manchester United, they used to say just go out and

:56:46.:56:49.

entertain the fans, and we had the same period. I know you have some

:56:50.:56:53.

prep to do for your show. There is going to be a historic tie-up

:56:54.:56:58.

between BBC radio Essex and radio Caroline, a coming together of the

:56:59.:57:03.

BBC, official broadcasting, and pirate radio as well. They are all

:57:04.:57:06.

friends now, putting all that behind them. It is a historic day in the

:57:07.:57:10.

world of broadcasting but from beautiful Harwich on board the LV18,

:57:11.:57:13.

I will leave you. And Johnnie Walker Meets the Pirates

:57:14.:57:15.

is on BBC Radio two tonight Time now to get the news,

:57:16.:57:18.

travel and weather where you are. into Thursday, but Thursday a return

:57:19.:00:46.

to sunny spells and showers. I'm back with the latest

:00:47.:00:49.

from the BBC London newsroom Plenty more on our website

:00:50.:00:52.

at the usual address. This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker

:00:53.:00:55.

and Louise Minchin. A big rise in the number of people

:00:56.:01:01.

arrested for being drunk A BBC investigation finds a 50%

:01:02.:01:05.

increase in passengers being held for incidents involving alcohol

:01:06.:01:09.

on flights and at airports. A vigil is held to remember

:01:10.:01:29.

the woman killed during protests Don't just let someone walk around

:01:30.:01:39.

freely and spread their hate. In sport, Great Britain

:01:40.:01:46.

hit their medal target. A silver from the women and a bronze

:01:47.:01:53.

from men in the 400 metre relays bring the tally to six in the final

:01:54.:01:58.

moments of the World Athletics Good morning. It is a business, a

:01:59.:02:20.

family one, going since 1880. I will talk about how family businesses are

:02:21.:02:25.

on the rise and are contributing to our economy.

:02:26.:02:25.

50 years after pirate radio ships were outlawed,

:02:26.:02:27.

we're live on the modern, legal, version to find out how they changed

:02:28.:02:31.

That looks lovely. What about the rest of us? Good morning. An

:02:32.:02:45.

East-West split. It will stay dry for central and eastern parts of

:02:46.:02:48.

England and the opposite in the West. I will have more details in 15

:02:49.:02:51.

minutes. Arrests of passengers suspected

:02:52.:02:57.

of being drunk at UK airports and on flights have risen

:02:58.:03:00.

by 50% in the past year, according to an investigation

:03:01.:03:04.

carried out by BBC Panorama. Critics of the airline industry say

:03:05.:03:06.

a voluntary code on alcohol sales isn't working, and want

:03:07.:03:09.

the government to amend licensing Where in the UK can you buy alcohol

:03:10.:03:12.

at 4am seven days a week? The answer is at an

:03:13.:03:17.

international airport. And it seems that it's leaving

:03:18.:03:19.

passengers and crew with a hangover. An investigation by BBC Panorama has

:03:20.:03:26.

revealed that arrests of those suspected of being drunk at UK

:03:27.:03:29.

airports and on flights have risen Half of the 4,000 cabin crew

:03:30.:03:33.

who took part in a survey carried out by Panorama and Unite,

:03:34.:03:38.

the union, said they had either experienced verbal, physical,

:03:39.:03:41.

or sexual abuse by drunk passengers People just see us as

:03:42.:03:43.

bar maids in the sky. They would touch your breasts,

:03:44.:03:58.

or they'd touch your bum I mean, I've had hands

:03:59.:04:00.

going up my skirt before. Phil Ward, the managing director

:04:01.:04:05.

of low-cost airline, Jet2, has already banned alcohol

:04:06.:04:07.

on flights before 8am, and wants the industry

:04:08.:04:10.

to take tougher measures. Do you think airports

:04:11.:04:12.

are doing enough? Umm, I think the retailers

:04:13.:04:21.

could do more as well. Two litre steins of beer in bars,

:04:22.:04:25.

mixers and miniatures in duty-free shops, which can only be

:04:26.:04:28.

there for one reason. But the Airport Operators

:04:29.:04:34.

Association insists that their code I don't accept that the airports

:04:35.:04:37.

don't sell alcohol responsibly. The sale of alcohol

:04:38.:04:41.

per se is not a problem. It's the misuse of it and drinking

:04:42.:04:44.

to excess and then behaving badly. Earlier this year, a House of Lords

:04:45.:04:48.

committee called for airport licensing to be brought

:04:49.:04:51.

into line with pubs and bars. A government decision

:04:52.:04:54.

on whether to call time on early-morning drinking

:04:55.:04:56.

at airports is now expected I don't accept that the airports

:04:57.:04:58.

don't sell alcohol responsibly. We have had many comments about this

:04:59.:05:22.

this morning. One of them saying the most obnoxious man was on our

:05:23.:05:27.

flights to London from Los Angeles yesterday. He caused issues before

:05:28.:05:32.

they got on the plane, but no issues when he was on it. Another saying

:05:33.:05:37.

that the sad actions of an irresponsible few are ruining it for

:05:38.:05:42.

everyone else. I see no other option than outright bans on consumable

:05:43.:05:49.

alcohol at all airports. Send us your thoughts. We are on in some

:05:50.:05:59.

airports. If you are watching at an airport, good morning to you.

:06:00.:06:00.

The US Vice President, Mike Pence, has specifically condemned far-right

:06:01.:06:03.

groups when asked to respond to the violence over

:06:04.:06:05.

President Trump has been criticised for not identifying

:06:06.:06:09.

More than 30 people have been injured, and one woman,

:06:10.:06:15.

Heather Heyer, was killed when a car drove into a crowd trying

:06:16.:06:18.

We have no tolerance for hate and violence from white supremacists

:06:19.:06:30.

These dangerous fringe groups have no place in the American public life

:06:31.:06:39.

and the American public debate and we condemn them

:06:40.:06:41.

Demonstrations and vigils have taken place across America in response

:06:42.:06:45.

More than 30 people have been injured, and one woman,

:06:46.:06:50.

Heather Heyer, was killed when a car drove into a crowd trying

:06:51.:06:53.

Speaking to the BBC, her friend called for unity.

:06:54.:07:02.

Heather was always - she always spoke with conviction - she liked to

:07:03.:07:08.

make you laugh. She didn't care what she said. She just wanted the best

:07:09.:07:10.

for everyone. Today and tomorrow, Pakistan

:07:11.:07:22.

and India will mark 70 years of independence from Britain,

:07:23.:07:24.

a moment of freedom amongst one of the largest mass migrations

:07:25.:07:27.

the world has ever seen. After 200 years of British Rule,

:07:28.:07:30.

the 1947 partition split India to create East and West Pakistan,

:07:31.:07:33.

a separate country. Hindus and Sikhs fled to India

:07:34.:07:35.

and Muslims went to Pakistan. Around 12 million people became

:07:36.:07:38.

refugees and a million people are thought to have

:07:39.:07:41.

died in the partition. In a moment, we'll speak

:07:42.:07:43.

to Sanjoy Majumder who joins us in New Delhi, where India will be

:07:44.:07:46.

celebrating their freedom tomorrow. But first, let's go to

:07:47.:07:49.

Secunder Kermani who is in Islamabad where Pakistan are marking their 70

:07:50.:07:52.

years of independence today. What exactly will we see there?

:07:53.:08:03.

Well, at midnight last night, the chief of the Pakistan Armed Forces

:08:04.:08:08.

helped raise what is said to be the largest flag in Asia, the highest

:08:09.:08:12.

flag in Asia, at the border with India today. Today there has been an

:08:13.:08:16.

address from the president to the nation at another flag raising

:08:17.:08:22.

ceremonies. There is due to be in a show by the Pakistani air force and

:08:23.:08:27.

a changing of the guard at the mausoleum of the founding father of

:08:28.:08:34.

the country. -- airshow. The Pakistani is celebrate independence,

:08:35.:08:42.

with people coming out in cars and motorcycles with flags. Today is

:08:43.:08:46.

about independence, but for many people, it is also about partition

:08:47.:08:50.

and the awful violence that took place and the legacy that still

:08:51.:08:54.

leaves on, both in the personal lives of those who lived through it,

:08:55.:09:00.

and with the tense relationship they continues between Pakistan and

:09:01.:09:01.

India. Now let's go to our India

:09:02.:09:02.

correspondent, Sanjoy Majumder Good morning to you. I know that

:09:03.:09:11.

they have their commemorations tomorrow. What will they be doing?

:09:12.:09:24.

Well, very similar to back a sign. -- Pakistan. Every year the

:09:25.:09:30.

president raises the flag and gives a speech to the nation. Behind me

:09:31.:09:34.

you can see the parliament building in India were at midnight 70 years

:09:35.:09:39.

ago India celebrated its freedom with its first Prime Minister,

:09:40.:09:45.

marking the moment with a celebrated speech in which he echoed the lines,

:09:46.:09:51.

while the world sleeps, India wakes to life and freedom. There has been

:09:52.:09:58.

a subdued celebration in the lead-up to the date. It is the 70 it yet but

:09:59.:10:03.

there have been no special celebrations. It is just in as

:10:04.:10:10.

another holiday. They have come a long way since 1947. It is now a

:10:11.:10:15.

$7.5 trillion economy. It is doing well. But there is a lot of

:10:16.:10:20.

reflection on whether it has moved away from the ideals that marked its

:10:21.:10:25.

freedom. Thank you, both of you. Thank you.

:10:26.:10:28.

The World Athletics Championships ended on a high in London last

:10:29.:10:31.

night, with two more medals for Great Britain and Northern

:10:32.:10:34.

The success of the relay teams meant British Athletics hit its medal

:10:35.:10:39.

target, but only just, as our sports correspondent,

:10:40.:10:41.

Going into Saturday, Britain had just one medal.

:10:42.:10:56.

The medal target hit at the last possible minute.

:10:57.:11:00.

It was the relay that gave the drama.

:11:01.:11:05.

Britain took Olympic runs in the women's four x 400

:11:06.:11:07.

The USA, though, would take some beating.

:11:08.:11:12.

But when Jamaica's injury curse struck yet again...

:11:13.:11:24.

Silver for Great Britain in Northern Ireland.

:11:25.:11:33.

The final event of the championships.

:11:34.:11:43.

"Rooney" goes up the cry from the crowd.

:11:44.:11:47.

Martyn Rooney brought home the rally in bronze,

:11:48.:11:49.

The relay teams making sure Saturday and Sunday were equally super.

:11:50.:11:53.

And as Usain Bolt took to the track to say goodbye one last time,

:11:54.:11:57.

it was a final chance to reflect on a memorable ten days.

:11:58.:12:00.

I can't honestly remember in the years I have been watching

:12:01.:12:05.

championship athletics that I have seen such competitive races

:12:06.:12:07.

And, actually, as we're ushering the superstar off the scene,

:12:08.:12:11.

the compelling stories have been the emergence of extraordinary young

:12:12.:12:14.

But the biggest winner was athletics itself.

:12:15.:12:19.

London consistently delivered the crowd that the sport

:12:20.:12:21.

And as for Britain, well, they left it late, but they have

:12:22.:12:26.

Natalie Pirks, BBC News, at the London Stadium.

:12:27.:12:33.

And we will continue to talk about that. We have both the men's and

:12:34.:12:48.

women's 4x400 relay teams after eight. The men are first.

:12:49.:12:54.

Thousands of children affected by issues including drugs,

:12:55.:12:56.

alcoholism, and neglect are reportedly not getting the help

:12:57.:12:59.

they need, despite being referred to social services.

:13:00.:13:01.

According to the charity Action for Children,

:13:02.:13:03.

many young people are missing out on support because their situation

:13:04.:13:06.

Joanna Nicolas trains children's social workers and joins us now.

:13:07.:13:12.

Good morning to you. Thank you for coming in to talk to us about this.

:13:13.:13:21.

Starting with the numbers, are they surprising? Concerning? Not a

:13:22.:13:26.

surprise, certainly concerning. There are many families out there

:13:27.:13:31.

who need support and they are not getting the support they should be

:13:32.:13:34.

getting. One of the things that has come out in the report is they have

:13:35.:13:38.

issues but are not considered to be bad enough. What impact is that

:13:39.:13:42.

having? What we should have his much better early support so when a

:13:43.:13:46.

family starts to struggle there is somewhere you can go. What is

:13:47.:13:51.

happening, because of the economic situation, is the early help is just

:13:52.:13:55.

going. There is not somewhere to go for those families. More families

:13:56.:14:00.

are reaching crisis point. Then they get into the social care system,

:14:01.:14:04.

which is not nearly as constructive for those families as just having

:14:05.:14:09.

someone less frightening than social care where they can go and say I

:14:10.:14:13.

need a bit of help. Social care was a big issue in the general election.

:14:14.:14:19.

The government say they are supporting recruitment and training.

:14:20.:14:23.

Is that being felt and seen on the ground? Umm, I think it is important

:14:24.:14:28.

not to knock everything. The focus is on adult social care, not social

:14:29.:14:33.

care for children. We talk about budgets, it is not all about money.

:14:34.:14:36.

But if you decimate services, you are going to struggle. And, because

:14:37.:14:42.

of that, combined with the economic situation, making life much, much

:14:43.:14:48.

harder for families, it is a melting pot of a really, really worrying

:14:49.:14:52.

situation. You mentioned earlier about early intervention. What kind

:14:53.:14:58.

of help... What sort of help can you see making a difference? I know you

:14:59.:15:03.

have done a lot of reporting on children's centres being closed.

:15:04.:15:08.

They are fantastic places. They are a nonthreatening places that

:15:09.:15:11.

families can go for help and support. We are seeing them

:15:12.:15:15.

disappearing to a large degree. It is places like that for families

:15:16.:15:19.

which are just not there any more. And that is the worrying thing, that

:15:20.:15:24.

we are not picking these families up and not helping them early enough.

:15:25.:15:30.

How much of an issue is regional variation? Are their big differences

:15:31.:15:36.

depending on where you live? There are big differences, and it depends

:15:37.:15:40.

on what is going on in that particular area. This week we have

:15:41.:15:44.

had a lot about child sexual exploitation. There is a lot of

:15:45.:15:48.

focus on that. Understandably there is the increase in online abuse, we

:15:49.:15:52.

are seeing it just absolutely exploding, and what we are seeing is

:15:53.:15:56.

that the families, the everyday normal family 's outback, who are

:15:57.:16:01.

struggling, we are not catching those families early enough --

:16:02.:16:06.

families out there. What kind of impact is it having on workers? Is

:16:07.:16:11.

changing the way they have to work? I think it makes it harder and

:16:12.:16:15.

harder for all the professionals, who are working with families. It is

:16:16.:16:20.

we never have enough time to do the work that we want to do. Most people

:16:21.:16:27.

go into social work to help families and we are not seeing enough of that

:16:28.:16:31.

work being done because they are doing much more of the firefighting.

:16:32.:16:34.

Thank you for coming on and discussing those issues.

:16:35.:16:35.

A Department of Education spokesperson told us it was taking

:16:36.:16:38.

action to improve social care and to provide extra

:16:39.:16:40.

You are watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:16:41.:16:44.

The main stories this morning: A BBC investigation has revealed there has

:16:45.:16:48.

been a 50% rise in the number of arrests for drunken misbehaviour

:16:49.:16:51.

on flights and in airports in the past year.

:16:52.:16:55.

Demonstrations and vigils have been held across the United States

:16:56.:16:57.

following deadly violence that erupted during a far-right rally

:16:58.:17:00.

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

:17:01.:17:14.

Many people going on holiday at this time of year. What is happening in

:17:15.:17:22.

the UK with the weather? Well, it is a right old mixture. Good morning,

:17:23.:17:26.

everyone. This morning some of us will be seeing sites like this and

:17:27.:17:30.

some of us will be seeing some rain. We have a bit of an east-west split

:17:31.:17:34.

going on with the weather. Rain in the west and drier and brighter in

:17:35.:17:38.

the east. Parts of East Anglia and Kent could hit 25 Celsius. If that

:17:39.:17:41.

happens it will be the warmest day this August so far. You can see an

:17:42.:17:45.

array of weather fronts across us producing some rain as we go through

:17:46.:17:49.

the course of the night. Heavy rain across Northern Ireland and western

:17:50.:17:52.

Scotland, but this line of rain through Wales, north-west England

:17:53.:17:56.

and south-west England. Move away from that and we're into brighter

:17:57.:17:59.

skies. So still some heavy rain to come across parts of Scotland. Not

:18:00.:18:04.

yet into the north. The rain moving out of Northern Ireland slowly

:18:05.:18:07.

through the morning and moving across the Isle of Man in through

:18:08.:18:11.

Cumbria, Lancashire, Wales, and heading down towards south-west

:18:12.:18:15.

England. Could see some heavy bursts mixed in here as well. Ahead of it

:18:16.:18:19.

you will notice the cloud, so a bright start across the Midlands,

:18:20.:18:22.

for example, through parts of Yorkshire. Then we run into the

:18:23.:18:27.

sunshine as you push further east, through the East Midlands, East

:18:28.:18:30.

Anglia, Essex and Kent. Through the course of the day, as all this rain

:18:31.:18:34.

moves eastwards and north eastwards, you will find it will start to turn

:18:35.:18:38.

that bit lighter. It will fragment and breakup. Immediately behind it

:18:39.:18:42.

there will be some low cloud and drizzle on the coast and hills. It

:18:43.:18:46.

will brighten up around the Murray Firth. Northern Ireland seeing some

:18:47.:18:49.

sunshine with some heavy, thundery showers as well but the driest

:18:50.:18:52.

conditions will be further east. At the same time as all of that

:18:53.:18:56.

happening we have some rain coming up from the Channel Islands, through

:18:57.:18:59.

Hampshire, the Midlands and eventually the direction of the

:19:00.:19:02.

Wash. So right old mixture of weather. More rain pouring in

:19:03.:19:06.

through the evening and overnight eastwards. You might hear the odd

:19:07.:19:10.

rumble of thunder in that. Some of it could be happy as well. It will

:19:11.:19:15.

not be a cold night, are staying in double figures although whether

:19:16.:19:18.

cloud breaks in some sheltered glens it could be quite a cool night.

:19:19.:19:22.

Tomorrow we start off with this line of rain in the south-east. It could

:19:23.:19:27.

be thundery first thing but the whole lot pushes off into the North

:19:28.:19:30.

Sea and tomorrow is a mixture of sunny spells and some showers. Some

:19:31.:19:34.

of the showers could be heavy and thundery once again, but I know

:19:35.:19:38.

means we'll be all see them. And if we don't, temperatures could rise

:19:39.:19:41.

quite nicely. In parts of the south-east, again, East Anglia and

:19:42.:19:44.

the south-east favoured for this, we could hit 26 Celsius. As we move

:19:45.:19:48.

from Tuesday into Wednesday and Thursday, we have a little bridge of

:19:49.:19:52.

high pressure which settle things down for a time. You can already see

:19:53.:19:56.

what is coming our way as we move through Wednesday. This next area of

:19:57.:20:00.

low pressure is going to bring some rain with it, and also strengthening

:20:01.:20:03.

winds. So even as we head towards the end of the week that forecast is

:20:04.:20:07.

still quite topsy-turvy. It certainly looks it, thank you very

:20:08.:20:08.

much. Steph is looking at the impact

:20:09.:20:09.

the five million family-run businesses in the UK have

:20:10.:20:12.

on the British economy. She is taking a look at just one

:20:13.:20:14.

of them this morning, Good morning. Morning, everybody.

:20:15.:20:33.

The smell in here is amazing. This huge that behind me, called Squeaky,

:20:34.:20:41.

you might have seen me stood on top of it, has something like 500,000

:20:42.:20:48.

pints of cider in there. -- vat. They use this as a base to make lots

:20:49.:20:53.

of their ciders but it is a family business which has been going on for

:20:54.:20:58.

an awfully long time. Have a look at these vats. They are the oldest

:20:59.:21:03.

ones, from 1880, bought second-hand in 1880 by Henry Weston, who started

:21:04.:21:08.

the business. They are very old vats indeed. This is one of around 5

:21:09.:21:12.

million family businesses in the UK. Between them, family businesses

:21:13.:21:13.

employ more than 12 million people. That is nearly half of all

:21:14.:21:16.

private-sector employment They all contributed nearly ?500

:21:17.:21:18.

billion to the UK economy in 2015. It all goes to show there are more

:21:19.:21:29.

of them than we all think, from your local plumber or butcher

:21:30.:21:32.

to the big companies like the bread maker Warburtons, the construction

:21:33.:21:36.

equipment manufacturer JCB I will be here throughout the

:21:37.:21:55.

morning, talking to the family about the pros and cons of running a

:21:56.:21:58.

business like this. But fascinating as well to see at all. The thing

:21:59.:22:03.

that has caught my eye this morning, look at the size of that spanner.

:22:04.:22:07.

We'll need to find some big nuts for that. We will see you a little bit

:22:08.:22:12.

later. A BBC investigation has revealed

:22:13.:22:12.

2,000 flight attendants have experienced or witnessed verbal,

:22:13.:22:15.

physical or sexual abuse by drunk passengers on UK flights

:22:16.:22:17.

in the last year alone. Panorama spoke to cabin crew,

:22:18.:22:20.

who said that the worst routes Joining us now is Ally Murphy,

:22:21.:22:23.

a former cabin crew manager. Good morning to you. I mean, you, of

:22:24.:22:39.

all people, I suppose I not surprised by these figures. Just

:22:40.:22:43.

give us a little bit of an idea about the impact of drunk passengers

:22:44.:22:48.

on cabin crew. It can go from as big as you see in the news, where planes

:22:49.:22:53.

get diverted or people are handcuffed, arrested, caused safety

:22:54.:22:57.

issues, or the stuff that you deal with everyday as cabin crew, just

:22:58.:23:01.

people swearing at you, maybe touching you inappropriately, things

:23:02.:23:04.

that you would never have to put up an everyday job but for some reason

:23:05.:23:08.

when you are in the Erat becomes the norm. So let's say someone is on the

:23:09.:23:13.

flight and they have all this we had quite a bit to drink beforehand.

:23:14.:23:16.

What processes do you go through? Can you refuse them drinks, can

:23:17.:23:27.

you... It is illegal to be drunk on board an aircraft so if we spotted

:23:28.:23:30.

someone coming on board already drunk they would be sent straight

:23:31.:23:34.

home. If it happened in the flight, you would stop the supply alcohol,

:23:35.:23:37.

we would take it further if there was anything that you could arrest

:23:38.:23:41.

them for, physical abuse or danger to the aircraft at all. That is what

:23:42.:23:48.

I wanted to ask you. Because you are in a confined space, what about the

:23:49.:23:53.

impact on safety? Does it have an impact on safety, do you think?

:23:54.:23:58.

Absolutely. Even if it is just the direct result of... I had a

:23:59.:24:02.

passenger who had taken sleeping tablets and alcohol and tried to

:24:03.:24:05.

open the door. He wouldn't have succeeded, but it causes so much

:24:06.:24:09.

fear. There are safety issues in that sense. But also, if I am

:24:10.:24:13.

dealing with somebody who is inebriated, then I am not perhaps

:24:14.:24:17.

aware of medical situations going on, other safety or security

:24:18.:24:21.

situation is going on. There is less and less cabin crew on flights these

:24:22.:24:25.

days and if one or two of them is dealing with an unruly passenger

:24:26.:24:28.

because of alcohol, it can away from safety. Panorama say there has been

:24:29.:24:35.

a 50% increase in the last 12 months. Have you noticed that

:24:36.:24:38.

yourself? I actually quit in October. Because of this reason?

:24:39.:24:43.

Among many reasons. Everyday I was thinking what will I have to put up

:24:44.:24:47.

with today? I was avoiding certain routes because I didn't want to even

:24:48.:24:51.

put myself in that situation, and I just thought it wasn't away for me

:24:52.:24:56.

to live. What are the roots? Montego Bay, I would never go to Montego

:24:57.:25:02.

Bay, because it was well known for a abusive, drunken passengers. And Las

:25:03.:25:06.

Vegas, because there was a lot of people out there for a good time.

:25:07.:25:09.

And you are presumably trained in how to deal with S. But it is still

:25:10.:25:16.

a scary situation to be put in -- deal with this. There were times I

:25:17.:25:22.

was surrounded by four guys over 6-foot tall, being quite aggressive

:25:23.:25:26.

because I would stop their alcohol. And I had nowhere to get help, I

:25:27.:25:30.

didn't know what would happen. But it was constantly being in that

:25:31.:25:34.

situation. So when you landed and things have been going on, would you

:25:35.:25:39.

report them? Was that easy do? If there was anything you could say to

:25:40.:25:42.

the police, I want this person arrested because they caused safety

:25:43.:25:46.

issue, but because things happen all the time a lot of things just went

:25:47.:25:50.

over their heads. You didn't want to deal with the paperwork. What is the

:25:51.:25:58.

answer to it? It is airport is not selling alcohol so readily. Duty

:25:59.:26:04.

free, passengers having a realisation what the limits are, and

:26:05.:26:07.

it comes from the airlines themselves giving staff support so

:26:08.:26:12.

they can deal with these situations. Lots of people getting in contact.

:26:13.:26:16.

Joanna says alcoholic beverages help you sleep better on a plane. Just

:26:17.:26:20.

saying, it isn't all bad, just don't overdo it. We read that the Spanish

:26:21.:26:25.

are sick to death of drunken British tourists causing trouble on their

:26:26.:26:29.

way on holiday and most of us are sick of them being drunk at airports

:26:30.:26:32.

and being loud and abusive on flights. And Pam says alcohol and

:26:33.:26:36.

travel just do not mix. One thing, you need your wits about you for

:26:37.:26:43.

security flight announcements, and the fact that alcohol dehydrates you

:26:44.:26:50.

even more so on a plane. And this episode of Panorama is on BBC

:26:51.:26:55.

tonight. Let us know what you think on that, we will read more of your

:26:56.:27:00.

comments a little later on. E-mail us and you can find us on social

:27:01.:27:05.

media. And our Facebook page always has a big topic of discussion each

:27:06.:27:10.

morning. He and if you are watching us at an airport and you have

:27:11.:27:14.

problems going on, or having a quiet flight, or a cup of tea, or a

:27:15.:27:16.

coffee, get in touch. I'm back with the latest

:27:17.:30:37.

from the BBC London newsroom Plenty more on our website

:30:38.:30:40.

at the usual address. This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker

:30:41.:30:44.

and Louise Minchin. Arrests of passengers suspected

:30:45.:30:57.

of being drunk at UK airports and on flights have risen

:30:58.:31:01.

by 50% in the past year, according to an investigation

:31:02.:31:04.

carried out by Panorama. Critics of the airline industry say

:31:05.:31:06.

a voluntary code on alcohol sales isn't working, and want

:31:07.:31:09.

the government to amend licensing A spokesman for the Home Office said

:31:10.:31:12.

they will respond in due course. Keep your comments coming in on that

:31:13.:31:21.

as well. The US Vice President, Mike Pence,

:31:22.:31:26.

has specifically condemned far-right groups when asked to respond

:31:27.:31:29.

to the violence over A woman was killed and 19 people

:31:30.:31:31.

were injured when a car was driven into a crowd protesting

:31:32.:31:36.

against a far-right President Trump has been criticised

:31:37.:31:38.

for not identifying any specific Security forces in Burkina Faso have

:31:39.:31:42.

killed three suspected jihadist gunmen after a terrorist

:31:43.:31:47.

attack in the capital. The country's Communications

:31:48.:31:49.

Minister says a number of hostages remain trapped inside a restaurant

:31:50.:31:51.

after gunmen opened fire At least 17 people are believed

:31:52.:31:54.

to have been killed in the attack The army and police have sealed off

:31:55.:31:58.

part of the city centre. A man has been charged

:31:59.:32:06.

with the murder of a grandfather who was attacked as he walked

:32:07.:32:09.

his dogs in Norfolk. The body of 83-year-old,

:32:10.:32:11.

Peter Wrighton, was found in woodland near the village

:32:12.:32:13.

of East Harling last Saturday. Police say he had been

:32:14.:32:16.

repeatedly stabbed. A 23-year-old man will appear

:32:17.:32:18.

in court later today. Thousands of vulnerable children

:32:19.:32:25.

are reportedly not getting the help According to the charity

:32:26.:32:28.

Action for Children, up to 140,000 young people referred

:32:29.:32:31.

to social services last year did not end up receiving any help

:32:32.:32:35.

because their situation was not The government says its reforms

:32:36.:32:38.

will improve social care. A national breast cancer charity

:32:39.:32:47.

is being investigated after its founder paid herself

:32:48.:32:50.

?31,000 in breach of charity law. Wendy Watson, who launched

:32:51.:32:52.

National Hereditary Breast Cancer Helpline in 1996,

:32:53.:32:54.

has resigned as a trustee. Financial irregularities

:32:55.:32:57.

were uncovered by the Charity Lawyers for Mrs Watson

:32:58.:32:59.

and the charity described Officials in Nepal are struggling

:33:00.:33:01.

to repair the nation's key highways after four days of

:33:02.:33:18.

flooding and landslides. The disaster has damaged

:33:19.:33:20.

several bridges and roads. The distribution of relief

:33:21.:33:22.

material has been delayed Nearly 70 people are thought

:33:23.:33:24.

to have died with several It is time for another slice of

:33:25.:33:28.

moose news on Moose Monday. A rare white moose has been

:33:29.:33:50.

captured on film in Sweden. The moose was spotted eating

:33:51.:33:53.

at a ditch in the small town of Eda by local council

:33:54.:33:56.

chairman, Hans Nilsson. Hans then brought a camera

:33:57.:33:58.

to the same spot the next day in the hope of seeing the moose

:33:59.:34:02.

again, he was lucky enough to film it for around 20 minutes and managed

:34:03.:34:06.

to catch it taking a dip. The animal has been well-known

:34:07.:34:09.

in the local area since it was born and is one of only 100 white

:34:10.:34:13.

moose in the country. Just kidding, it is not Moose

:34:14.:34:25.

Monday. I've got two little moose facts. White moose are not

:34:26.:34:28.

technically albino, they get white fur due to a recessive gene. They

:34:29.:34:36.

don't have the pink eyes. See that under the neck of the moose? It's

:34:37.:34:40.

called the bell, part of the mating ritual. They are judged on the size

:34:41.:34:51.

of it and it gives off an attractive scent. Thank God we only have sound

:34:52.:34:53.

and vision. Coming up on the programme, Carol

:34:54.:34:56.

will have the weather. We will be speaking to both of the

:34:57.:35:09.

4x400 relay teams. The Premier League is back. Lots of new

:35:10.:35:22.

signings. As you can imagine, Jose Mourinho has been ringing the

:35:23.:35:28.

praises of his new striker. It could lead them to the title of this

:35:29.:35:30.

season, could it not? Scoring goals is "oxygen,

:35:31.:35:38.

happiness and confidence" So says Joe Mourinho,

:35:39.:35:40.

after club record signing Romelu Lukaku scored twice

:35:41.:35:43.

for Manchester United in a 4-0 The ?75 million signing,

:35:44.:35:46.

making his competitive debut, was on target in both halves

:35:47.:35:49.

to set his side on their way. Paul Pogba rounded off a convincing

:35:50.:35:53.

victory in the last minute as Jose Mourinho's side look

:35:54.:35:56.

to justify many pundits' predictions that they'll be

:35:57.:35:58.

champions next spring. It was a good performance,

:35:59.:36:00.

with very high competence levels. We came into the second half winning

:36:01.:36:03.

1-0 and playing to score more goals and playing to win in

:36:04.:36:07.

a more comfortable way. I think it was a very positive

:36:08.:36:09.

performance and a reflection Newcastle United's return

:36:10.:36:12.

to the Premier League ended Captain, Jonjo Shelvey,

:36:13.:36:17.

was given a straight red card four minutes into the second half

:36:18.:36:20.

for standing on Delli Ali's ankle. The match was goalless then,

:36:21.:36:23.

and the dismissal proved costly as Ali then went on to score

:36:24.:36:26.

the opening goal in a 2-0 And over in France, the world's

:36:27.:36:30.

most expensive player, Neymar, made his debut

:36:31.:36:33.

for Paris St Germain. The ?200 million player scored

:36:34.:36:35.

as well as they beat Guingamp 3-0. So that makes him worth about ?200

:36:36.:36:38.

million per goal at the moment! I am not sure if that shows value

:36:39.:36:44.

for money just yet. Cristiano Ronaldo used to be

:36:45.:36:51.

the world's most expensive player. The 80 million Real Madrid paid

:36:52.:36:53.

for him seems paltry compared But again, he proved his worth,

:36:54.:36:56.

scoring a goal in his side's win over Barcelona in

:36:57.:37:01.

the Spanish Super cup. That pose cost him though as he was

:37:02.:37:03.

booked for removing his shirt. And a second yellow card later

:37:04.:37:06.

for diving saw him sent off. That might not be the end

:37:07.:37:10.

of the trouble though as he pushed the referee in the back

:37:11.:37:13.

before leaving the pitch. So, further trouble could be coming

:37:14.:37:16.

his way. American golfer, Justin Thomas,

:37:17.:37:18.

won his first major title at the PGA And when you're producing shots

:37:19.:37:21.

like this, I guess you probably know This was him sinking

:37:22.:37:25.

a 40-foot cheap shot, this at the 13th gave him a two-shot

:37:26.:37:29.

lead which he held on to win. At one stage on the final day five

:37:30.:37:33.

players had a share of the lead. For me, the PGA will always have a

:37:34.:37:55.

special place in my heart, and gave me a special drive. Like I said, I

:37:56.:37:59.

want to win everything I do. The other day, this was really cool, for

:38:00.:38:03.

this to be my first, and for my dad to be here and my grandpa to be at

:38:04.:38:08.

home. I was able to talk to him. It was really cool. That trophy dwarfs

:38:09.:38:12.

him! Hosts, Ireland, came back from 14-0

:38:13.:38:12.

down to beat Japan 24-14 There was also an emphatic win

:38:13.:38:15.

for defending champions England, who ran in ten tries for the second

:38:16.:38:20.

successive game as they beat Italy. Wales, though, can no longer

:38:21.:38:23.

qualify for the semi-finals England face the United States on

:38:24.:38:31.

Thursday, a straight shootout between the two. Thank you very

:38:32.:38:37.

much. I was thinking about the fantastic night of athletics last

:38:38.:38:40.

night. Great Britain's 4x400-metre

:38:41.:38:41.

relay teams made sure the World Championships finished

:38:42.:38:43.

on a high last night. It was a fitting end to a tournament

:38:44.:38:47.

which waved goodbye to some major talent but also gave fans a glimpse

:38:48.:38:51.

of a new generation of track We will remind ourselves of some of

:38:52.:38:55.

the highlights. Here we go, then. London's calling.

:38:56.:39:06.

Britain's watching. This is phenomenal. He is a world

:39:07.:39:16.

#Pump it up#! Wins it! Oh, look at that! Laura Muir was so close! #Pump

:39:17.:39:59.

it up#! Who is going to get it? Cunningham!

:40:00.:40:19.

Well, it was really an exciting night.

:40:20.:40:21.

Former British athlete, Iwan Thomas, knows all

:40:22.:40:23.

Good morning to you. We will talk about last night. What was your

:40:24.:40:34.

highlights? About last night, everything was fantastic. Behold

:40:35.:40:39.

championships. There was a worry about the medal count is not being

:40:40.:40:49.

that great, but the 4x4 was great, but my highlight had to be the men's

:40:50.:40:54.

4x1. A great example that you don't need the best in the world if they

:40:55.:41:01.

can come together as a squad and get the baton around safely and you can

:41:02.:41:05.

get on top of the world. I am proud to be British. I think we put on

:41:06.:41:10.

such a great championship. To think it was a world record attendance,

:41:11.:41:15.

hundreds of thousands of people visiting London. It was a great job.

:41:16.:41:25.

The 4x1 was amazing. In terms of the men's 4x4, what was going on with

:41:26.:41:31.

the heat? They changed the lineups. Were the issues in the buildup? Is

:41:32.:41:39.

that normal? Issues aren't normal, but normally you want the strongest

:41:40.:41:43.

athletes to be confident of qualifying, saving their legs and

:41:44.:41:46.

bringing them in for the final. I am not sure what happened behind the

:41:47.:41:52.

scenes, I am not close to the team. But I am glad they brought him in.

:41:53.:41:56.

He is so talented. It is quite difficult. The stagger is different

:41:57.:42:01.

than the normal races. It is difficult to judge. He set them off

:42:02.:42:07.

to a fantastic start. When Martyn had the last leg, I knew he could

:42:08.:42:13.

get it to the end. It was brilliant. Whenever I speak to them, they are

:42:14.:42:20.

saying thank you to the crowds. It was crucial that we had such great

:42:21.:42:24.

home support. I don't know about the politics, but it is all forgotten

:42:25.:42:29.

because we have the medal. We will ask about that later. Talk us

:42:30.:42:36.

through the women's 4x400, which was also fantastic. Brilliant, silver

:42:37.:42:41.

medal. You come to a major championships and everything has to

:42:42.:42:45.

be perfect on the day. For some athletes, the individual event may

:42:46.:42:50.

not have gone well, but this is a chance to finish on a high. I was

:42:51.:42:54.

proud of the girls coming together. A young team. With such a large

:42:55.:42:59.

crowd, it can raise your spirits, or you can crumble under pressure. The

:43:00.:43:03.

girls did not do that. To get a silver medal, it was not expected. I

:43:04.:43:08.

thought a bronze would be great to finish a championship for them. But

:43:09.:43:15.

another medal. You are with them when they finished on the track. You

:43:16.:43:23.

have spent a lot of time with someone we can show you.

:43:24.:43:27.

Another stand-out star of the tournament was the official

:43:28.:43:29.

Tell Ellie how great it has been to work alongside her invention. A

:43:30.:43:39.

delight and a nuisance to be thank you, designing someone truly

:43:40.:43:50.

remarkable. Hero the Hedgehog changed the game. He roughed me up a

:43:51.:43:57.

couple of times, though. Every night he comes out and I never know what

:43:58.:44:01.

he is going to do. They never rehearsed it. He jumped on me and

:44:02.:44:08.

tried to throw me in the war to the other night. But thank you, Hero the

:44:09.:44:13.

Hedgehog has been incredible. Thank you very much indeed.

:44:14.:44:17.

Before we talk to you, we will have a look at Hero the Hedgehog in

:44:18.:44:25.

action. In a minute we can see that. He has been very, very busy. Talk to

:44:26.:44:32.

us about that design. This is Hero the Hedgehog. Tell us. This is from

:44:33.:44:43.

the Paralympics. So you designed both. We will show them soon. Did

:44:44.:44:48.

you want him to be a fun character getting involved in running down the

:44:49.:44:52.

steps and talking to the athletes and having fun as well? Yeah. When

:44:53.:44:57.

you have seen it for yourself, how have you reacted to seeing these

:44:58.:45:06.

things the mascots have got up to? It has been great to see them come

:45:07.:45:10.

to light. Why did you come up with Hero the Hedgehog? They are an

:45:11.:45:12.

endangered species. Did you imagine your hedgehog might

:45:13.:45:24.

be so naughty? No. Let's see the best bits of Hero the Hedgehog.

:45:25.:46:15.

He was very special, what in the? And as well as seeing Hero, what

:46:16.:46:22.

else did you get to see and what else did you enjoy? Well, I got to

:46:23.:46:31.

see Usain Bolt and Mo Farah run. And you were there at the start of this

:46:32.:46:34.

creation, presumably? Yes, we have the phone calls saying

:46:35.:46:46.

she won the competition. How exciting. And then the trip up

:46:47.:47:01.

to be live on Blue Peter in April. And what is it like seeing this

:47:02.:47:06.

drawing which happened at home created as part of life? It has just

:47:07.:47:13.

an amazing experience, the whole thing. And being there at the

:47:14.:47:18.

Stadium on Saturday... All your schoolfriends must think you are so

:47:19.:47:26.

cool. Has it gone down well at school? Yes. Thank you very much

:47:27.:47:31.

indeed, and good luck with your next creation. Will you stay being an

:47:32.:47:37.

artist? Will you keep drawing? Yes. And congratulations on creating

:47:38.:47:42.

something that has brought so much joy. And I want to say thank you to

:47:43.:47:48.

Hero as well. Here is Carol with a look

:47:49.:47:51.

at this morning's weather. It is not too shabby a job. Good

:47:52.:48:02.

morning to you. We had mixed fortunes with the weather today,

:48:03.:48:05.

because in the west we do have some rain, but it is dry in the east and

:48:06.:48:09.

for some eastern parts it is also going to be pretty sunny as we go

:48:10.:48:14.

through the day. The reason it is wet is because we do have these

:48:15.:48:17.

weather fronts moving east and north eastwards, taking the rain with them

:48:18.:48:21.

as they do so, but they will tend to weaken as we head to the course of

:48:22.:48:25.

the afternoon. We have seen some heavy rain from them this morning

:48:26.:48:28.

across Northern Ireland and western Scotland. You can see the big

:48:29.:48:31.

weather front extending all the way down across western parts of England

:48:32.:48:34.

and Wales. Through the morning that will continue to drift eastwards.

:48:35.:48:38.

The cloud will build ahead of it at where we have sunshine from

:48:39.:48:41.

Yorkshire down towards Hampshire and the Isle of Wight we will see the

:48:42.:48:45.

cloud built. A further east you travel, it won't, and it will be

:48:46.:48:48.

quite sunny through the day. Later more rain is going to come in across

:48:49.:48:52.

central and southern parts of England. Into the afternoon, some

:48:53.:48:56.

rain across Scotland. Not as heavy or as much as this morning. It will

:48:57.:49:00.

brighten up around the Murray Firth. Here, we could see temperatures get

:49:01.:49:06.

up around 20 Celsius. The rain breaking across north-east England.

:49:07.:49:09.

A fair bit of cloud, the rain moving out of Northern Ireland only to be

:49:10.:49:12.

replaced by sunshine and showers, some of those will be heavy and

:49:13.:49:16.

thundery. The remnants of the rain across Wales in south-west England.

:49:17.:49:19.

Some brightness and this new band coming up across the Midlands and

:49:20.:49:22.

heading in the direction of the Wash. And here it is as we go

:49:23.:49:26.

through the evening. Then the next ban comes in, moving from the west

:49:27.:49:30.

towards the east. Some of that will be heavy and possibly thundery as we

:49:31.:49:34.

head through the overnight period. Leaving behind a quite a lot of low

:49:35.:49:37.

cloud, some drizzle and also some showers. It is not going to be a

:49:38.:49:41.

cold night. In towns and cities, temperatures easily staying in

:49:42.:49:44.

double figures. We start with this rain in the south-east in the

:49:45.:49:47.

morning. That could be thundery. We will also have across the north-east

:49:48.:50:01.

but the whole lot pushing off into the North Sea, leaving behind a

:50:02.:50:04.

mixture of sunshine and showers. And there will be more sunshine around

:50:05.:50:08.

tomorrow, but some of the showers will be heavy and possibly thundery.

:50:09.:50:11.

I know means we'll be all see them. Temperatures roughly around 19 to

:50:12.:50:15.

21. Somewhere in East Anglia or Kent could hit 26 tomorrow, which is a

:50:16.:50:18.

pretty good temperature for the stage in August. As we head from

:50:19.:50:21.

Tuesday into Wednesday, a little ridge of high pressure things down.

:50:22.:50:24.

One or two showers during Tuesday but on Wednesday we have got this

:50:25.:50:28.

area of low pressure with its fronts coming our way. Tightly packed

:50:29.:50:31.

isobars mean it will be wet and windy. For Wednesday, a lot of dry

:50:32.:50:35.

weather, variable amounts of cloud, sunshine, a few showers and then as

:50:36.:50:38.

we head into Thursday, once again things settle down a touch, with

:50:39.:50:42.

more in the way of sunshine. So the weather really is topsy-turvy as we

:50:43.:50:45.

go through this new working week. Thank you very much, I think. Watch

:50:46.:50:47.

out if it gets topsy-turvy. This week, Steph is taking a look

:50:48.:50:50.

at a handful of the five million family-run businesses in the UK,

:50:51.:50:54.

and the impact they have She is at one of them this morning,

:50:55.:50:56.

and it is a cider maker. Good morning to you, morning

:50:57.:51:12.

everybody. I am at Westons Cider Mill, and these cider apples are not

:51:13.:51:19.

very nice to eat, I am told, but through the whole process they will

:51:20.:51:23.

turn into cider, and as you said, this is a family business which has

:51:24.:51:27.

been going since 1880. They are on the fifth generation, and you can

:51:28.:51:32.

come and meet them inside. We have Mark and Giles, holding things back

:51:33.:51:36.

for us. Come inside and have a look at this process. We have Helen and

:51:37.:51:42.

Guy, mother and son, who run this whole business. Tel is a bit about

:51:43.:51:46.

the business history. It has been going since 1880. That's right, my

:51:47.:51:52.

great-grandfather came here in 1878 and started making cider in 1880. He

:51:53.:51:57.

had nine children and three of his sons joined him in the business. The

:51:58.:52:00.

girls helped as well, but they married and went away and we have

:52:01.:52:04.

continued ourselves here. I am the great and my son Guy is my son, of

:52:05.:52:11.

course. As the boss of the business, was it a natural thing for you to

:52:12.:52:16.

come and be part of it, and to end up running at? It is interesting, I

:52:17.:52:21.

can remember sitting on someone's lap and sticking stamps on things as

:52:22.:52:27.

a child. And I loved working here. And Guy, for you, as the son of

:52:28.:52:32.

Helen, was it inevitable you would join? To be fair, I was an artist at

:52:33.:52:37.

school, I did a foundation in art and I came here looking for work

:52:38.:52:41.

just as temporarily, and mum offered me a job in the lab and I did that

:52:42.:52:46.

for seven years, a quality assurance job, and I never left. I learnt the

:52:47.:52:51.

trade, alert the chemistry side of making, and over a period of 15

:52:52.:52:56.

years I became a cider maker. Do you think there is a different way of

:52:57.:53:00.

running a business when it is family-oriented? I think it is more

:53:01.:53:05.

personal, because it is part of you. You live it and breathe it. Because

:53:06.:53:10.

of that it is more important than you actually can't get away from it.

:53:11.:53:15.

You wake up in the morning and going to bed thinking of it. Do you ever

:53:16.:53:21.

have any time when you are not talking about work as Mac you two

:53:22.:53:25.

must be a nightmare! You do go home and forget about it, but you are

:53:26.:53:30.

still thinking about it really. What about succession planning? In any

:53:31.:53:34.

other business you would advertise for a new chief exec but I guess you

:53:35.:53:38.

guys are looking at your relatives thinking who might be next? I am

:53:39.:53:41.

looking forward to my children taking over, or at least having a go

:53:42.:53:45.

at it. It is important to the family. We all try and work

:53:46.:53:49.

together, and we bring the youth through. And if they don't want to

:53:50.:53:53.

work for you? Well, it is up to them. I hope they will do. Very

:53:54.:53:58.

often they are shareholders anyway, so if they are not working in the

:53:59.:54:02.

business they have business at heart. We have meetings to discuss

:54:03.:54:05.

the business and they are kept on board with what is happening in the

:54:06.:54:09.

business. Thank you very much for letting us in. It is an incredible

:54:10.:54:15.

process seeing the apples put into the vats, and the cider being made

:54:16.:54:20.

and bottled and sent out. And the vats have something like 500,000

:54:21.:54:26.

pints of cider in each of the vats. So far I have seen about 30 vats.

:54:27.:54:30.

More from me later on. Does it smell scrumptious? It smells lovely,

:54:31.:54:36.

actually. It is a bit vinegary, the smell, in terms of the cider being

:54:37.:54:43.

made, but it does smell nice. It smells like a good night out,

:54:44.:54:48.

actually. Thank you very much. It probably smells a bit weird at 7:55

:54:49.:54:52.

a.m.. In the 1960s, pirate radio changed

:54:53.:54:53.

the face of broadcasting. It was revolutionary

:54:54.:54:56.

for playing continuous music, and launched the careers

:54:57.:54:58.

of Tony Blackburn, John Peel But 50 years ago today,

:54:59.:55:00.

pirate radio stations became illegal, and they were

:55:01.:55:03.

forced to close down. Breakfast's Tim Muffett joins us now

:55:04.:55:06.

from a mock pirate ship in Essex. Good morning to you. If you have

:55:07.:55:26.

ever seen the 2009 film The Boat That Rocked, this might look

:55:27.:55:29.

familiar. This was used in that film. It is all about pirate radio,

:55:30.:55:38.

those broadcasters going out to sea, and broadcasting to the land. Today

:55:39.:55:44.

it has been commandeered by BBC Essex who will be broadcasting

:55:45.:55:46.

alongside radio Caroline, which still exists, in a bid of

:55:47.:55:51.

broadcasting history. As we look around this ship we will have a chat

:55:52.:55:58.

to a man who knows what it was like to be at sea in those days. Alan

:55:59.:56:02.

Turner, broadcaster. What was it like being at sea with radio

:56:03.:56:07.

Caroline? Fantastic. For a 24-year-old to be in a ship on the

:56:08.:56:11.

North Sea playing records all day long, fantastic. How important is it

:56:12.:56:19.

that this law was made, because it sought to outlaw pirates. It was an

:56:20.:56:22.

illegal, but the British government didn't like the fact that they were

:56:23.:56:27.

not in control, so the Marine offences Bill came into force 50

:56:28.:56:31.

years ago, and that is what we are marking today. And you are going to

:56:32.:56:36.

be broadcasting with radio Caroline, a bit of history. Yes, radio

:56:37.:56:42.

Caroline, which is anchored just across from us, and the BBC are

:56:43.:56:46.

going to broadcast radio Caroline's programmes. We will let you carry on

:56:47.:56:51.

with your preparation. We will be talking later to Johnnie Walker, the

:56:52.:56:59.

famous DJ and now on radio two. They tried to outlaw it, radio Caroline

:57:00.:57:05.

continued until 1990. More details about that a little later this

:57:06.:57:07.

morning. And Johnnie Walker Meets

:57:08.:57:08.

the Pirates is on BBC Radio two Have a look at theirs. We will hand

:57:09.:57:20.

off to our newsrooms across the UK with a shot from the Estuary. A

:57:21.:00:48.

Plenty more on our website at the usual address.

:00:49.:00:50.

Hello this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:00:51.:01:19.

A big rise in the number of people arrested for being drunk

:01:20.:01:23.

A BBC investigation finds a 50 % increase in passengers being held

:01:24.:01:37.

for incidents involving alcohol on flights and at airports.

:01:38.:01:48.

Good morning, it's Monday 14th August.

:01:49.:01:54.

A vigil is held to remember the woman killed during protests

:01:55.:01:56.

Don't just let someone walk around freely and spread their hate.

:01:57.:02:08.

In sport, Great Britain hit their medal target.

:02:09.:02:15.

A silver from the women and a bronze from men in the 400 metre relays

:02:16.:02:18.

brings the tally to six in the final moments of the World

:02:19.:02:21.

Good morning from Herefordshire, this is a family business that has

:02:22.:02:33.

been going since 1880 and there are 5 million family businesses across

:02:34.:02:36.

the UK and I will be looking at how they contribute to our economy.

:02:37.:02:40.

50 years after pirate radio ships were outlawed -

:02:41.:02:42.

we look back at how they changed the sound of music radio.

:02:43.:02:51.

And 20 years ago Martine McCutcheon was a household name -

:02:52.:02:55.

illness and family took her out of the limelight.

:02:56.:03:00.

Now she's back and will be here to tell us all about it.

:03:01.:03:03.

It is a wet start across Scotland and Northern Ireland and parts of

:03:04.:03:11.

northern England, Wales and South West England, the rain will move

:03:12.:03:17.

east and gradually weakened through the course of the day, but brighter

:03:18.:03:21.

skies in the South East and eastern parts of the country.

:03:22.:03:25.

Arrests of passengers suspected of being drunk at UK airports

:03:26.:03:35.

and on flights have risen by 50% in the past year,

:03:36.:03:37.

according to an investigation carried out by BBC Panorama.

:03:38.:03:39.

Critics of the airline industry say a voluntary code on alcohol

:03:40.:03:42.

sales isn't working, and want the government

:03:43.:03:44.

Where in the UK can you buy alcohol at 4am seven days a week?

:03:45.:03:56.

The answer is at an international airport.

:03:57.:03:59.

And it seems that it's leaving passengers and crew with a hangover.

:04:00.:04:04.

An investigation by BBC Panorama has revealed that arrests of those

:04:05.:04:09.

suspected of being drunk at UK airports and on flights have risen

:04:10.:04:14.

Half of the 4,000 cabin crew who took part in a survey carried

:04:15.:04:22.

out by Panorama and Unite, the union, said they had either

:04:23.:04:30.

experienced or witnessed verbal, physical, or sexual abuse

:04:31.:04:32.

by drunk passengers onboard a UK flight.

:04:33.:04:34.

People just see us as bar maids in the sky.

:04:35.:04:38.

They would touch your breasts, or they'd touch your bum or your legs.

:04:39.:04:41.

I mean, I've had hands going up my skirt before.

:04:42.:04:44.

Phil Ward, the managing director of low-cost airline, Jet2,

:04:45.:04:49.

has already banned alcohol sales on flights before 8am,

:04:50.:04:51.

and wants the industry to take tougher measures.

:04:52.:04:53.

Do you think airports are doing enough?

:04:54.:04:55.

I think the retailers could do more as well.

:04:56.:05:10.

Two litres of beer in bars, mixers and miniatures in duty-free

:05:11.:05:13.

shops, which can only be there for one reason.

:05:14.:05:15.

But the Airport Operators Association insists that their code

:05:16.:05:17.

I don't accept that the airports don't sell alcohol responsibly.

:05:18.:05:21.

The sale of alcohol per se is not a problem.

:05:22.:05:26.

It's the misuse of it and drinking to excess and then behaving badly.

:05:27.:05:30.

Earlier this year, a House of Lords committee called for airport

:05:31.:05:33.

licensing to be brought into line with pubs and bars.

:05:34.:05:35.

A government decision on whether to call time

:05:36.:05:37.

on early-morning drinking at airports is now

:05:38.:05:39.

The US Vice President, Mike Pence, has specificallly

:05:40.:05:56.

condemned far-right groups following violence over

:05:57.:05:57.

President Trump has been criticised for not identifying any specific

:05:58.:06:01.

A woman was killed and 19 people were injured when a car was driven

:06:02.:06:05.

into a crowd protesting against a far-right rally

:06:06.:06:07.

We have no tolerance for hate and violence from white

:06:08.:06:18.

These dangerous fringe groups have no place in American public life

:06:19.:06:25.

and the American public debate and we condemn them

:06:26.:06:28.

Our Washington Correspondent Laura Bicker was at a vigil

:06:29.:06:34.

in Charlottesville last night to remember Heather Heyer,

:06:35.:06:36.

The candles and songs are for Heather Heyer,

:06:37.:06:46.

who died standing up for what she believed in.

:06:47.:06:55.

After a weekend of deadly violence and anger on these streets,

:06:56.:06:58.

there's now a longing to come together in quiet grief.

:06:59.:07:00.

Heather was one of the demonstrators trying to stop white

:07:01.:07:03.

supremacists marching through Charlottesville on Saturday.

:07:04.:07:06.

She was killed when this car plowed through a group of protesters.

:07:07.:07:10.

Her close friend now appeals for unity.

:07:11.:07:13.

I want everybody to get together and unite and spread love,

:07:14.:07:18.

and spread peace, and spread happiness, and don't let hate live.

:07:19.:07:24.

Don't just let somebody walk around freely and spread their hate.

:07:25.:07:27.

One of the organisers of the Unite The Right rally tried

:07:28.:07:32.

And as he left, he was forced to flee.

:07:33.:07:47.

Armed police had to escort him from the city.

:07:48.:07:49.

He's condemned the violence, but says he has a right to be heard.

:07:50.:07:57.

I'm willing to die for my rights, basically.

:07:58.:08:01.

I feel like my First Amendment rights and the rights of the people

:08:02.:08:04.

But there is no sympathy here for those who brought hate to the city.

:08:05.:08:10.

Laura Bicker, BBC News, Charlottesville.

:08:11.:08:18.

Security forces in Burkina Faso have killed two suspected jihadist gunmen

:08:19.:08:20.

after a terrorist attack in the capital.

:08:21.:08:22.

The country's communications minister says a number of hostages

:08:23.:08:24.

remain trapped inside a restaurant after gunmen opened

:08:25.:08:26.

At least 18 people are believed to have been killed in the attack

:08:27.:08:32.

The army and police have sealed off part of the city centre.

:08:33.:08:41.

A man has been charged with the murder of a grandfather

:08:42.:08:44.

who was attacked as he walked his dogs in Norfolk.

:08:45.:08:46.

The body of 83-year-old Peter Wrighton was found

:08:47.:08:48.

in woodland near the village of East Harling last Saturday.

:08:49.:08:51.

Police say he had been repeatedly stabbed.

:08:52.:08:52.

A 23-year-old man will appear in court later today.

:08:53.:08:56.

A rise in crime committed in the countryside has been

:08:57.:09:02.

described as 'deeply worrying' by a rural insurer.

:09:03.:09:06.

Latest figures from NFU Mutual show claims have risen by more

:09:07.:09:08.

than a fifth in the first half of the year.

:09:09.:09:11.

The insurer says farmers are continually increasing

:09:12.:09:12.

security as thieves become more sophisticated.

:09:13.:09:17.

we really are seeing an increase in brazen and unconcerned thieves who

:09:18.:09:26.

will go to a farm in broad daylight even if there are people around and

:09:27.:09:32.

walk into sheds and take things and drive off with them. It is a very

:09:33.:09:36.

worrying time for farmers and there is a lot of anxiety because farmers

:09:37.:09:42.

know they are a distance from police and they can't put everything on the

:09:43.:09:44.

farm together in one place and lock it up like you can with an urban

:09:45.:09:46.

business. Up to 140,000 vulnerable children

:09:47.:09:55.

did not receive the help they needed last year

:09:56.:09:59.

because their situation was not judged to be serious enough,

:10:00.:10:01.

according to Action for Children. The charity has found thousands

:10:02.:10:04.

of young people referred to social services did not end up getting any

:10:05.:10:07.

support before their The government says its reforms

:10:08.:10:09.

will improve the situation. Armed officers in the UK's biggest

:10:10.:10:12.

police force are to be issued They will be attached

:10:13.:10:15.

to the caps and protective helmets of members of

:10:16.:10:18.

the Metropolitan Police's It is arguably one of the most

:10:19.:10:20.

distinctive sounds in the world. However, next Monday

:10:21.:10:29.

at midday Big Ben will chime for the final time

:10:30.:10:43.

for four years to allow repair work to take place

:10:44.:10:45.

on the clock in Elizabeth Tower. The bells will still ring out on

:10:46.:10:48.

Remembrance Sunday and at New Year - but will otherwise fall silent

:10:49.:10:51.

for only the third I'm rather sad about that. I know it

:10:52.:10:58.

has to happen. It is a very distinctive nice.

:10:59.:11:03.

Experts have suggested the sound of the bongs could change

:11:04.:11:06.

because soot has to be removed while the bell's being repaired

:11:07.:11:08.

and this could change the sound frequency.

:11:09.:11:13.

In four years' time we will do a pre-soot bong and one after the

:11:14.:11:26.

claim. -- claim. The World Athletics Championships

:11:27.:11:33.

ended on a high in London last night, with two more medals

:11:34.:11:35.

for Great Britain The success of the relay teams

:11:36.:11:37.

meant British Athletics hit its medal target -

:11:38.:11:40.

but only just, as our Sports In a moment we will speak to the

:11:41.:11:47.

bronze medallists from the women's relay.

:11:48.:11:51.

COMMENTATOR: Those who are here will never forget it.

:11:52.:11:54.

Going into Saturday, Britain had just one medal.

:11:55.:11:58.

The medal target hit at the last possible minute.

:11:59.:12:03.

It was the relay again that provided the drama.

:12:04.:12:05.

Britain took Olympic runs in the women's four x

:12:06.:12:07.

The USA, though, would take some beating.

:12:08.:12:10.

But when Jamaica's injury curse struck yet again...

:12:11.:12:23.

Silver for Great Britain in Northern Ireland.

:12:24.:12:30.

The final event of the championships.

:12:31.:12:39.

COMMENTATOR: "Rooney" goes up the cry from the crowd.

:12:40.:12:41.

Martyn Rooney brought home the rally in bronze,

:12:42.:12:43.

The relay teams making sure Saturday and Sunday were equally super.

:12:44.:12:49.

And as Usain Bolt took to the track to say goodbye for one last time,

:12:50.:12:52.

it was a final chance to reflect on a memorable ten days.

:12:53.:12:55.

I can't honestly remember in the years I have been watching

:12:56.:13:00.

championship athletics that I have seen such competitive races

:13:01.:13:02.

And, actually, as we're ushering the superstar off the scene,

:13:03.:13:11.

the compelling stories have been the emergence of extraordinary young

:13:12.:13:13.

But the biggest winner was athletics itself.

:13:14.:13:21.

London consistently delivered the crowds that the sport

:13:22.:13:23.

And as for Britain, well, they left it late, but they have

:13:24.:13:27.

Natalie Pirks, BBC News, at the London Stadium.

:13:28.:13:35.

In 25 minutes time we will speak to the man who won the bronze. -- men.

:13:36.:13:48.

Let's speak to that silver-winning women's relay team.

:13:49.:13:50.

Zoey Clark, Laviai Nielsen, Eilidh Doyle and Emily Diamond.

:13:51.:13:53.

You have cancelled a flight to take part in the interviews? Yes, I meant

:13:54.:13:59.

to be at the airport, but I'm still here, speaking to you. Thank you for

:14:00.:14:09.

doing that. What an occasion, 100% record in all the relays for medals

:14:10.:14:14.

for Great Britain, a great way to finish the World Championships. I

:14:15.:14:19.

could not quite hear that. That is the London traffic. I said it must

:14:20.:14:25.

have been a great way to cap off the World Championships with a medal in

:14:26.:14:30.

every single relay. Amazing. We saw the four by 100 metre guys the day

:14:31.:14:35.

before and that was an inspiration, this was an amazing way to end the

:14:36.:14:40.

championships and it is very great that everyone could perform when it

:14:41.:14:46.

counted. You have the final leg home, were you concerned at any

:14:47.:14:51.

point? You had the Polish athlete breathing down your neck. You must

:14:52.:14:57.

have been concerned because you were in the silver medal position and you

:14:58.:15:02.

have got to hold onto it. When you get the baton, and the crowd

:15:03.:15:07.

jeering, you don't know what is happening behind you, you have got

:15:08.:15:12.

to run your leg as fast as you can -- cheering. That is what I did, and

:15:13.:15:19.

I tried to not worry about it too much and hope I could hold her wrath

:15:20.:15:21.

which I was able to. -- her off. During the race we saw the Jamaican

:15:22.:15:33.

team struggle. Were you aware of that and did it change your

:15:34.:15:36.

perspective on the race? Going into it they had been one of the

:15:37.:15:43.

favourites for the silver. I did see it happen just before we were about

:15:44.:15:47.

to break. We all knew there was a medal chance for us yesterday so I

:15:48.:15:52.

went and grabbed the button and thought, I need to get us into

:15:53.:15:56.

position to get a medal. I didn't think too much of it. When I saw her

:15:57.:16:06.

pull up I was like, yes! LAUGHTER I appreciate your honesty! As team

:16:07.:16:11.

captain for Great Britain, there has always been talk about this medal

:16:12.:16:16.

total. Going into the weekend it was only one medal and that was Mo

:16:17.:16:20.

Farah's goals early on in the championships. Did the team feel

:16:21.:16:25.

pressure to perform and win the additional medals? We always want to

:16:26.:16:30.

win medals. That's why we come here. I think for us personally we forget

:16:31.:16:34.

about the medal target, we just want to do our best. I think watching the

:16:35.:16:41.

guys and the girls team and Mo on the Saturday night gave us a big

:16:42.:16:46.

boost and made us want to be part of it and win our own medal too. I love

:16:47.:16:52.

the fact you're inspiring the next generation of athletes to go out and

:16:53.:16:59.

do what you've done, in 2012 you were holding the kit for Jessica

:17:00.:17:05.

Ennis-Hill of what was that moment like and what was it like to be back

:17:06.:17:09.

in the stadium winning your own medal? Back in 2012I was such a huge

:17:10.:17:16.

fan of the sport. I always wanted to be up there. Last night to walk and

:17:17.:17:23.

need the stadium and the same paths as when I was 16 drawback so many

:17:24.:17:30.

memories. To walk back in as a medallist was surreal. We should

:17:31.:17:39.

come to you as team captain, Eilidh. What are you able to tell us about

:17:40.:17:46.

celebrations last night? LAUGHTER We all got back really late. I ended up

:17:47.:17:53.

enjoying room service in my dream! I'm sure that some others celebrated

:17:54.:17:57.

a bit harder than I did! Congratulations on the silver medal,

:17:58.:18:02.

it's been brilliant to watch some British success at the World

:18:03.:18:05.

Championships. Don't miss your flight! LAUGHTER Will be talking to

:18:06.:18:16.

the men's four by 400 m relay in half an hour. They took bronze. The

:18:17.:18:27.

gold for the men's team was stunning.

:18:28.:18:30.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:18:31.:18:32.

A BBC investigation has revealed there's been a 50% rise

:18:33.:18:35.

in the number of arrests for drunken misbehaviour on flights

:18:36.:18:38.

Demonstrations and vigils have been held across the United States

:18:39.:18:42.

following deadly violence that erupted during a far right rally

:18:43.:18:44.

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

:18:45.:18:59.

Good morning. We've got a bit of sunshine and we've also got some

:19:00.:19:07.

rain in the forecast. If you're in some eastern parts of England,

:19:08.:19:10.

there's a good chance he will stay dry. Not every part of eastern

:19:11.:19:15.

England but in the West it's a wet start. It's courtesy of this array

:19:16.:19:19.

of weather fronts. They've been producing some heavy rain during the

:19:20.:19:23.

overnight period across Northern Ireland and Scotland. This line is

:19:24.:19:27.

moving out of Wales and Cornwall. The whole lot pushing eastwards.

:19:28.:19:32.

Through the day it will fragment and break-up. Ahead of it a lot of dry

:19:33.:19:36.

weather with some rain already across parts of northern England,

:19:37.:19:41.

then it starts to break up. Behind it are lots of low cloud, drizzle.

:19:42.:19:45.

Eventually we'll see some brightness develop. For some of some sunshine

:19:46.:19:50.

coming out. Especially across Northern Ireland where we've got a

:19:51.:19:54.

mixture of sunshine and bright and showers through the afternoon. Grain

:19:55.:19:58.

is continuing to move across Scotland, breaking up. -- rain is

:19:59.:20:06.

continuing to move. Parts of north-east England may miss the rain

:20:07.:20:10.

but the cloud will build. For Wales and south-west England, our

:20:11.:20:15.

riverfront drifting eastwards. Some brightness as opposed to some

:20:16.:20:18.

sunshine coming through. Really in the far south-east it's likely to

:20:19.:20:23.

hang onto the sunshine. We could have high is up to 25. Some rain

:20:24.:20:31.

moving towards The Wash in the latter parts of the afternoon and

:20:32.:20:33.

then more rain spreading towards the east as we head overnight. Some of

:20:34.:20:39.

that will be thundery. Most places staying in double figures. These

:20:40.:20:43.

temperatures indicating what you can expect. For the north-east similar

:20:44.:20:51.

story with the rain, the whole lot pushing off into the North Sea and

:20:52.:20:55.

then a day of sunshine and showers. If you catch a shower it could be

:20:56.:20:58.

heavy and thundery but many of us will miss them. It will feel

:20:59.:21:05.

pleasant enough for the time of year with 20 being Baha'i. Except for

:21:06.:21:09.

East Anglia, Essex and Kent. It is possible we could hit 26. The ridge

:21:10.:21:18.

of high pressure that is upon us is eventually usurped by this area of

:21:19.:21:25.

low pressure coming in. Also telling you it's going to be rather windy on

:21:26.:21:31.

Wednesday. Rain advancing eastwards. As it clears on Thursday sunshine

:21:32.:21:36.

and showers again. Thank you! An insight into the magic

:21:37.:21:50.

of Breakfast, Louise Hunt standing up during your weather report!

:21:51.:21:55.

LAUGHTER I sat down with a surprised look on my face but now everybody

:21:56.:22:03.

knows what I was doing! LAUGHTER You can't sit down for three and a

:22:04.:22:08.

quarter hours. I can't sit down for 15 minutes let alone three hours! A

:22:09.:22:15.

BBC investigation has revealed that two thirds of flight attendants have

:22:16.:22:20.

witnessed drunken behaviour on flights in the last year alone.

:22:21.:22:31.

Panorama says the worst rates are to, Ibiza.

:22:32.:22:36.

There were times when I was surrounded by four guys all over

:22:37.:22:41.

6-foot tall being quite aggressive because I had stopped their alcohol.

:22:42.:22:46.

I have no way of getting help. Luckily nothing happened but it was

:22:47.:22:50.

a constant being in that situation. Joining us from our London newsroom

:22:51.:22:55.

is Karen Dee, the chief executive of the Airport Operators'

:22:56.:22:58.

Association. Are you surprised by these figures?

:22:59.:23:05.

We identified that that is a problem. One of the things I would

:23:06.:23:09.

say is that these are very small in number. It's still a tiny proportion

:23:10.:23:16.

we had, not tick-macro more than 268 passengers going through our

:23:17.:23:20.

airports in the UK last year. The 400 arrests is a tiny proportion.

:23:21.:23:25.

But of course when these incidents happen as your previous speaker

:23:26.:23:29.

mentioned, they have a big impact and is totally unacceptable. What's

:23:30.:23:34.

interesting about the panorama investigation and our guest here is

:23:35.:23:37.

that it's not necessarily that there are arrests, but that safety for

:23:38.:23:46.

example was being affected by what's going on on board flights. When

:23:47.:23:50.

cabin crew are disrupted the safety of other passengers are put in

:23:51.:23:54.

danger. That's absolutely correct. The crew are primarily for the

:23:55.:24:00.

safety of the aircraft. What the industry has been doing, the

:24:01.:24:04.

airports, the retailers, bars and restaurants, working with the police

:24:05.:24:12.

and the airlines, all of us collaborating to say we want

:24:13.:24:16.

passengers to have a good time but getting drunk and getting on an

:24:17.:24:20.

aircraft and behaving badly is unacceptable. It's not fair on the

:24:21.:24:25.

crew, the airport staff but also on the other passengers. We are working

:24:26.:24:28.

really closely together in collaboration across the industry to

:24:29.:24:33.

make sure that we minimise the number of these incidents that

:24:34.:24:37.

happen and target particular groups where necessary, but also to make

:24:38.:24:40.

sure that when they happen proper enforcement takes place so that

:24:41.:24:43.

passengers realise they won't be able to get away with this. You have

:24:44.:24:49.

a voluntary code, isn't it evidence it's not working? The voluntary code

:24:50.:24:54.

is really good at bringing all of those parties together. Airports are

:24:55.:25:00.

quite complex and there are different at points. One of the

:25:01.:25:05.

great things is that the sharing of information and making sure the

:25:06.:25:07.

teens in individual airports are working together so that we can see

:25:08.:25:14.

where they're rather large groups of people considered high risk that we

:25:15.:25:18.

can pay a closer eye on what's going on, and actually talk to them early

:25:19.:25:22.

and make sure they understand that if they drink too much they won't

:25:23.:25:25.

get on their flight. We will try and stop them so their holiday is at

:25:26.:25:32.

risk. It is an offence to get on board a plane drunk or to be drunk

:25:33.:25:38.

on a plane. The industry is working together to make sure where that

:25:39.:25:42.

happens we are going to make sure the punishment is sitting. The

:25:43.:25:48.

airports are making money on the alcohol being sold. What would your

:25:49.:25:52.

reaction be to having, for example, the hours they can be sold

:25:53.:25:58.

restricted? At the moment, the licensing act, because airports are

:25:59.:26:01.

a controlled environment, the government doesn't apply the

:26:02.:26:04.

licensing act. It's wrong to assume that means there are no rules. Loss

:26:05.:26:09.

of the offences apply in the same way that they do on the High Street.

:26:10.:26:13.

A lot of the retailers in the airports and bars and restaurants

:26:14.:26:19.

are already trained to the same requirements so we are applying the

:26:20.:26:24.

same kind of rules that apply on the High Street. I think I would take us

:26:25.:26:30.

back to making sure that 268 million passengers to travel through and

:26:31.:26:34.

enjoy the bars and restaurants in a sensible way. We've got to make sure

:26:35.:26:38.

it's the people that are breaking the rules and behaving badly, those

:26:39.:26:42.

other people that need to be penalised, not the other passengers

:26:43.:26:49.

who are just there and behave perfectly well. Thank you for your

:26:50.:26:51.

time. And Panorama is on tonight

:26:52.:26:54.

on BBC One at 8:30pm. Thank you for getting in touch about

:26:55.:27:04.

that this morning. Time now to get the news,

:27:05.:27:10.

travel and weather where you are. It does look largely dry

:27:11.:30:30.

but some rain will take us overnight into toaster,

:30:31.:30:39.

but Thursday is a return I will be back with the latest from

:30:40.:30:46.

the BBC London newsroom in half an hour. Of course plenty more on our

:30:47.:30:48.

website. We will see you soon. Goodbye.

:30:49.:30:48.

Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

:30:49.:30:51.

Arrests of passengers suspected of being drunk at UK airports

:30:52.:30:53.

and on flights have risen by 50% in the past year,

:30:54.:30:56.

according to an investigation carried out by Panorama.

:30:57.:30:58.

Critics of the airline industry say a voluntary code on alcohol

:30:59.:31:00.

sales isn't working, and want the Government

:31:01.:31:02.

A spokesman for the Home Office said they will respond in due course.

:31:03.:31:06.

The US Vice President, Mike Pence, has specifically condemned far-right

:31:07.:31:09.

groups when asked to respond to the violence over

:31:10.:31:11.

A woman was killed and 19 other people were injured

:31:12.:31:22.

when a car was driven into a crowd protesting

:31:23.:31:24.

against a far-right rally in Charlottesville.

:31:25.:31:26.

President Trump has been criticised for not identifying any specific

:31:27.:31:28.

A man has been charged with the murder of a grandfather

:31:29.:31:38.

who was attacked as he walked his dogs in Norfolk.

:31:39.:31:40.

The body of 83-year-old Peter Wrighton was found

:31:41.:31:42.

in woodland near the village of East Harling last Saturday.

:31:43.:31:44.

Police say he had been repeatedly stabbed.

:31:45.:31:46.

A 23-year-old man will appear in court later today.

:31:47.:31:52.

Thousands of vulnerable children are reportedly not getting the help

:31:53.:31:55.

According to the charity Action for Children,

:31:56.:32:00.

up to 140,000 young people referred to social services last

:32:01.:32:02.

year did not end up receiving any help because their situation was not

:32:03.:32:05.

The Government says its reforms will improve social care.

:32:06.:32:13.

Officials in Nepal are struggling to repair the nation's key

:32:14.:32:15.

highways after four days of flooding and landslides.

:32:16.:32:17.

The disaster has damaged several bridges and roads.

:32:18.:32:19.

The distribution of relief material has been delayed

:32:20.:32:21.

Nearly 70 people are thought to have died with several

:32:22.:32:26.

A national breast cancer charity is being investigated

:32:27.:32:38.

after its founder paid herself ?31,000 in breach of charity law.

:32:39.:32:41.

Wendy Watson, who launched National Hereditary Breast

:32:42.:32:43.

Cancer Helpline in 1996, has resigned as a trustee.

:32:44.:32:46.

Financial irregularities were uncovered by the Charity Commission.

:32:47.:32:48.

Lawyers for Mrs Watson and the charity described

:32:49.:32:52.

Is this your favourite story of the day, possibly? Of course it is!

:32:53.:33:02.

A rare white moose has been captured on film in Sweden.

:33:03.:33:05.

The moose was spotted eating at a ditch in the small town of Eda

:33:06.:33:08.

by local council chairman Hans Nilsson.

:33:09.:33:09.

Hans then brought a camera to the same spot the next day

:33:10.:33:12.

in the hope of seeing the moose again, he was lucky enough to film

:33:13.:33:16.

it for around 20 minutes and managed to catch it taking a dip.

:33:17.:33:23.

Beautiful. It is well-known the local area, it one of only 100 white

:33:24.:33:44.

mooses found in the country. You can see mooses, can't you? The plural?

:33:45.:33:49.

Yes. And we have less then ten, off-white squirrel! Not be no

:33:50.:33:58.

because it does not have pink eyes. Did you know that mooses can weigh

:33:59.:34:02.

up to 18 kilograms, can grow to six feet in length? Just the paddles can

:34:03.:34:09.

be 80 kilograms. And they can swim at six miles an hour. That is some

:34:10.:34:14.

impressive moose News! We will keep you up-to-date with all the news,

:34:15.:34:22.

including moose nears. -- moose news.

:34:23.:34:23.

Victoria Derbyshire is on at 9 o'clock this morning on BBC2.

:34:24.:34:27.

Good morning Victoria, what are you covering today?

:34:28.:34:29.

Prison sentences were scrapped five years ago yet thousands of prisoners

:34:30.:34:35.

serving them are still serving time. James Ward has been in prison for 11

:34:36.:34:40.

years after being sentenced to just ten months. His family say that they

:34:41.:34:44.

worry about him all the time. Can't sleep at night. You know, you get

:34:45.:34:49.

up, have a cup of tea, it never goes away. Join us after Breakfast on BBC

:34:50.:35:01.

Two, the BBC News Channel and BBC online. That is Joanna Gosling, she

:35:02.:35:03.

will be live on Victoria Derbyshire. After battling illness and becoming

:35:04.:35:07.

a mum, Martine McCutcheon's back She will be here with us later.

:35:08.:35:16.

Elsa... 50 years since the crackdown

:35:17.:35:29.

on pirate radio stations, we'll hear from two original

:35:30.:35:33.

pirates, Tony Blackburn And nervous flyers should look away

:35:34.:35:34.

now, because we'll reveal what it's like being a trainee pilot learning

:35:35.:35:38.

on the job - with a plane That gives me goose bumps. You a

:35:39.:35:51.

concerned? Just the take-off and landing? Everything! -- are you a

:35:52.:35:57.

concerned fire? LAUGHTER

:35:58.:35:58.

All of that later. But first, let's get

:35:59.:35:59.

the sport with John. I thought it was interesting, that

:36:00.:36:07.

interview with the women's relay team earlier on. Interesting that

:36:08.:36:10.

they were saying they didn't feel any pressure really going into it

:36:11.:36:13.

because we know it was a bit of a late start for Team GB, only one

:36:14.:36:17.

major medal before the final weekend but then they produce the goods

:36:18.:36:21.

yesterday. And you were speaking to the men's four by four relay team as

:36:22.:36:28.

well. Yes, and Daley Thompson, don't let that paper over the cracks,

:36:29.:36:34.

because he said the individual sports, still not the medals we were

:36:35.:36:38.

hoping for, so I debate ongoing. But it is a young team they have had out

:36:39.:36:42.

there. Precisely. But good that they hit their medal target.

:36:43.:36:46.

Let's talk you through last night's events.

:36:47.:36:52.

No chance of gold for the women, as USA dominated

:36:53.:36:54.

But a fine run from Britain's Emily Diamond held off the Polish

:36:55.:36:58.

challenge to take the silver - congratulated by team-mates

:36:59.:37:00.

Zoey Clark, Laviai Nielsen, and Eilidh Doyle.

:37:01.:37:02.

Less was expected from the men's team -

:37:03.:37:04.

Matthew Hudson-Smith, Dwayne Cowan, Rabah Yousif

:37:05.:37:05.

and Martyn Rooney only reached the final as fastest losers.

:37:06.:37:08.

But Rooney anchored the team to third place as Trinidad

:37:09.:37:10.

Laura Muir managed an impressive sixth-place finish

:37:11.:37:17.

The gold medal went to Kenya's Hellen Obiri.

:37:18.:37:20.

New Premier league season is underway.

:37:21.:37:27.

Lots of new signings in the spotlight.

:37:28.:37:33.

One of those, Roemelu Lukaku, scored twice for Manchester United

:37:34.:37:35.

The ?75 million signing, making his competitive debut,

:37:36.:37:38.

was on target in both halves to set his side on their way

:37:39.:37:42.

Paul Pogba rounded off the victory in the last minute

:37:43.:37:45.

as Jose Mourinho's side look to justify many pundits'

:37:46.:37:47.

predictions that they'll be champions next spring.

:37:48.:37:50.

Tottenham's 2-0 win over Newcastle, marked by Jonjo Shelvey's

:37:51.:37:52.

decision to stand on the ankle of Dele Alli.

:37:53.:37:56.

That saw him sent off four minutes into the second half.

:37:57.:37:58.

The match was goalless then, and the dismissal proved costly

:37:59.:38:03.

as Alli then went on to score the opening goal in

:38:04.:38:06.

American Golfer Justin Thomas won his first major title at the PGA

:38:07.:38:13.

And when you're producing shots like this I guess you probably

:38:14.:38:17.

This was him sinking a 40 foot chip, at the 13th that gave him a two shot

:38:18.:38:32.

lead which he held on to, to win Golf's final

:38:33.:38:34.

And get his hands on one of the larger trophies

:38:35.:38:38.

For me, the PGA has a special place in my heart, and perhaps a special

:38:39.:38:47.

drive. Like you say, I want to wind every tournament I play and try to

:38:48.:38:50.

wind every major, but at the end of the Davis was really cool, for this

:38:51.:38:54.

to be my first one and have my dad here. I know that grandpa was

:38:55.:38:58.

working at home. I was able to talk to him and that pretty cool.

:38:59.:39:00.

Hosts Ireland came back from 14-nil down to beat Japan 24-14

:39:01.:39:03.

There was also a big win for defending champions England,

:39:04.:39:07.

who ran in ten tries for the second successive game as they beat Italy.

:39:08.:39:10.

Wales, though, can no longer qualify for the semi-finals

:39:11.:39:12.

A good run scoring for England, two winds out of two so it looks to be

:39:13.:39:26.

stretchered out between them and the USA for top spot when they play in

:39:27.:39:32.

the next match on Thursday. -- two winds. Thank you.

:39:33.:39:34.

Let's speak to that bronze-winning men's relay team:

:39:35.:39:36.

Matthew Hudson-Smith, Dwayne Cowan, Rabah Yousif

:39:37.:39:37.

Good morning. Lovely to see you both. Martyn, where's your medal? It

:39:38.:39:53.

is in my bag ready to go. I have an Uber book soon. Lovely to see you

:39:54.:39:56.

both. Glad you could spare the time. We will start with you, Dwayne. A

:39:57.:40:02.

fantastic run from you. Top us through it. It has been a great

:40:03.:40:07.

three weeks for me, getting the call up, getting to the semifinals, and

:40:08.:40:12.

topping that off with a bronze medal. I am so happy right now. Tell

:40:13.:40:18.

us about that moment, for those who don't do this kind of athletics at

:40:19.:40:22.

this level, you are waiting for the bat on. What are those last few

:40:23.:40:28.

seconds like? Basically I was in a daze. I was a bit nervous before the

:40:29.:40:36.

race. And all I can remember is getting to 200, and I don't know

:40:37.:40:38.

what happened, but I just had to bring it home for the team and that

:40:39.:40:42.

the rest of the team in a good position. Well, you certainly did

:40:43.:40:49.

that with your turn of speed. Top us against part of the race. You know

:40:50.:40:55.

you are all doing well at that point. Yes, for me, not my first

:40:56.:41:03.

time in are the guy is pretty much put me in a good position. Pretty

:41:04.:41:07.

hard to lose it from where I was, so to the gap, they put me in a good

:41:08.:41:15.

ten metre lead, the other guys, and I back myself in those positions.

:41:16.:41:20.

Yes, it was just an amazing experience to hear my name being

:41:21.:41:24.

chanted by the cloud. To come away with a bronze medal from home

:41:25.:41:28.

championship is incredible, just to soak up the atmosphere and say I had

:41:29.:41:32.

my family and friends there, it was incredible. Martyn, just tell us,

:41:33.:41:36.

could you see what was going on ahead of you as well? Yes, obviously

:41:37.:41:43.

I had a great view. I was kind of annoyed. It has not been the best

:41:44.:41:47.

season for me this year, but I was working out where I was going to

:41:48.:41:51.

make my move and take over the two guys. And it just wasn't in the legs

:41:52.:41:56.

this year, unfortunately, but it was fantastic run from Trinidad. Great

:41:57.:41:59.

to see someone else wind the gold medal for once, but I just wish it

:42:00.:42:03.

was us. Do you think it could be you guys one day soonish? I think so.

:42:04.:42:13.

Twinkie and into the squad this year and ran incredibly well, showing

:42:14.:42:20.

unbelievable potential. Obviously other people, and the Bolek Nigel

:42:21.:42:27.

Lavigne -- people like Nigel, behind the scenes as well. We have shown we

:42:28.:42:33.

can compete, have won medals at the last two championships, there or

:42:34.:42:36.

thereabouts. We know that Matt Hudson-Smith did not take part in

:42:37.:42:40.

the heat to reach the finals. How does that change team dynamics for

:42:41.:42:48.

you? The change team is just that Matthew is an experienced runner.

:42:49.:42:54.

Jackson is as well, but it is just that the court made our choice and

:42:55.:42:58.

he put in Matt. I think whoever ran would have done a good job, and at

:42:59.:43:04.

the end of the day we just have to make things happen. Well, you

:43:05.:43:09.

certainly did last night. How did you celebrate, Dwayne? I celebrated

:43:10.:43:13.

with some champagne! LAUGHTER

:43:14.:43:23.

Yes Gomis some champagne -- yes, some champagne.

:43:24.:43:24.

LAUGHTER It sounds like there was more but

:43:25.:43:28.

you better not tell me on the telly! What about you, Martyn? Not much for

:43:29.:43:35.

me, to be honest. My wife is expecting to pop, expecting our

:43:36.:43:38.

second child, so I am on call, always ready. Glad you are on call.

:43:39.:43:44.

We better let you go. Martyn and Dwayne, fax for your time. Get hold

:43:45.:43:50.

of that medal, Martyn. Great to speak to them. And the men who won

:43:51.:43:55.

the bronze in the four by four. When you look back, the World

:43:56.:43:58.

Championship, watched by so many people... It has been so exciting,

:43:59.:44:03.

hasn't it? Yes, like they were saying earlier on, they really teen

:44:04.:44:07.

girls, she saw that with Jess Ennis-Hill, so she wanted up part of

:44:08.:44:12.

that, and this generation of young boys and girls will be watching over

:44:13.:44:16.

the last weeks wanting involved. If you're thinking that, do it. Yes,

:44:17.:44:20.

just go and do it. Then come and talk to us because we would love to

:44:21.:44:23.

speak to you. We will be here! LAUGHTER

:44:24.:44:23.

Yes. From playing one of TV's most

:44:24.:44:29.

popular soap characters to a platinum selling album -

:44:30.:44:31.

Martine McCutcheon's career However depression and

:44:32.:44:33.

a debilitating illness Now, after 17 years,

:44:34.:44:36.

Martine has been back in the studio We'll speak to her shortly,

:44:37.:44:40.

but first here's a taster # Say I'm not alone.

:44:41.:45:01.

# It was easy didn't know too much. # It was easy for I didn't

:45:02.:45:05.

understand. # I could be kicking the stars

:45:06.:45:12.

around the constellation # Nothing is as wild as my

:45:13.:45:17.

imagination # Look in my eyes and give me

:45:18.:45:20.

confirmation # Say I'm not alone

:45:21.:45:23.

# Say I'm not alone ICQ bopping along! A bit self

:45:24.:45:46.

indulgent. It's been a long time. Did it feel strange coming back

:45:47.:45:52.

after such a long break? It was such a gradual thing. I became very, very

:45:53.:45:56.

well, it's been well documented to the point I could not work and I

:45:57.:46:02.

really wanted to have my son. It was ruining the chances of me becoming a

:46:03.:46:06.

mother so it was that debilitating and during that time my husband who

:46:07.:46:11.

is a producer and writer said to me, write this stuff down, this is what

:46:12.:46:17.

you did before, the acting was a fortunate accident, music is what I

:46:18.:46:19.

had always done and I missed it on and missed being able to perform and

:46:20.:46:24.

I knew I might not ever perform again at that time. It was my one

:46:25.:46:29.

way of being creative, getting that stuff out and it was sort of like my

:46:30.:46:33.

medicine. I had no idea at that time this was going to be an album, it

:46:34.:46:38.

was a body of work for me, first and foremost. Jack's friend who worked

:46:39.:46:43.

in radio station said, this is amazing, I have to get this out

:46:44.:46:47.

there and then I was nervous, this personal stuff is going to be out

:46:48.:46:52.

there. This is personal, intimate stuff and I think, as you get older,

:46:53.:46:58.

you realise other people go through, those difficult times as well, it's

:46:59.:47:01.

just that yours are public and they can relate to it, those songs, so

:47:02.:47:06.

that's why the music has been reviewed so well. It's weird. The

:47:07.:47:10.

first time I turned it on, I was like gosh, this sounds really

:47:11.:47:16.

country. It is like country rock, I love Stevie nicks, Fleetwood Mac,

:47:17.:47:23.

the Eagles, that kind of thing. And I love Blondie and Chrissie Hynd,

:47:24.:47:27.

all those influences, it can't help but come out and it's been an

:47:28.:47:31.

absolute joy to sing it again and for the response to be so good to

:47:32.:47:36.

the actual music. It's so easy these days to be deleted down with the

:47:37.:47:40.

celebrity thing but the fact the music is loved and well received,

:47:41.:47:44.

it's mind blowing. You know what it's like, when you are in the

:47:45.:47:48.

public IQ or expect to act and think and look in all certain way, do you

:47:49.:47:55.

feel at peace now? So much more, I know who I am, I am 41. I wouldn't

:47:56.:48:02.

want to be 20 again for all the tea in China, I really wouldn't. You

:48:03.:48:07.

just get a confidence about yourself, you know what you are and

:48:08.:48:10.

what you are not and there is something so liberating about being

:48:11.:48:15.

honest about that. Did you enjoy it at that time, back when you were

:48:16.:48:20.

thrown into the spotlight? I loved it, it was the 90s, just the best

:48:21.:48:23.

time to be involved with the industry but of course it is

:48:24.:48:26.

difficult. Growing up in the public eye, I had journalists asking me

:48:27.:48:30.

questions I had no answers to myself, I felt like I had to be

:48:31.:48:38.

sussed and I was 19! It was difficult at times. Everybody's

:48:39.:48:41.

opinions and judgement, you try and forget about that but you cannot

:48:42.:48:47.

grow up with that, it is a weird dynamic, growing up like that. You

:48:48.:48:52.

reprised your role as Natalie in Love Actually, one of the greatest

:48:53.:48:58.

films every word that Mac ever and I think we have the original...

:48:59.:49:08.

Hello! Hello. This is my mum, and my dad, and by Andy and uncle. Very

:49:09.:49:12.

nice to meet you. And this is the... Prime Minister. Yes, we can see

:49:13.:49:25.

that, darling. And unfortunately we are very late, David. Too much

:49:26.:49:36.

information, mum. Well I sort of comic need Natalie. Did you like

:49:37.:49:42.

watching? I have watched it so many times. No! I cringe at myself. I

:49:43.:49:48.

don't mind seeing other people's beds and we had to sit through the

:49:49.:49:53.

premiers in New York and Paris but sitting there watching myself on

:49:54.:49:56.

this huge screen and pulling these ridiculous basis, I was like, what

:49:57.:50:00.

am I doing? I cannot watch anything back that I do. Do you watch

:50:01.:50:08.

yourselves back? I do not like it either. It is not normal. You listen

:50:09.:50:12.

to your own music, is that because you have always felt comparable with

:50:13.:50:20.

that? I think it's something that's more from inside, less on the

:50:21.:50:24.

surface for me. Because it's not so visual and you can kind of creature

:50:25.:50:30.

own pictures as you listen to it and yes, I find, if you write this stuff

:50:31.:50:35.

it's deeply personal and use out. When you are saying somebody else's

:50:36.:50:40.

words and you are up on screen, it's a different dynamic. I feel sorry

:50:41.:50:47.

per ewe, such a good phone! I have seen it! I promise you, I know what

:50:48.:50:53.

happens. Luiz watches it, every night. Every Christmas without fail.

:50:54.:50:57.

Thank you so much, really lovely to see you.

:50:58.:50:57.

Martine's album is called Lost and Found.

:50:58.:51:02.

As you say, deeply personal album, and you freely enjoyed making it. So

:51:03.:51:07.

good to be back. Thank you so much. Here's Carol with a look

:51:08.:51:13.

at this morning's weather. Some lovely pictures in this

:51:14.:51:25.

morning, very wet in Northern Ireland overnight. Cloud around,

:51:26.:51:32.

right and glimmers of sunshine. This morning, mixed fortunes in the West

:51:33.:51:36.

and north and some parts of the eased. Generally speaking Central

:51:37.:51:42.

and East areas starting dry, some of us seeing rain throughout the day.

:51:43.:51:47.

Period comes, moving across Northern Ireland and Scotland, heavy bursts

:51:48.:51:52.

here. -- here it comes. This line of rain journeying eastwards with cloud

:51:53.:51:57.

building a header that. We find it, low cloud, coastal drizzle, drizzle

:51:58.:52:03.

on the hills if you are planning on hillwalking today. In Northern

:52:04.:52:09.

Ireland it will brighten up through this afternoon, sunshine and

:52:10.:52:12.

showers, some of the show is heavy and thundery. The rain advancing

:52:13.:52:17.

north-east across Scotland, breaking up, writing up in the Moray Firth,

:52:18.:52:23.

that does not mean wall-to-wall blue skies, temperatures might reach 20.

:52:24.:52:28.

Northern England seeing some England moving from West to East, breaking

:52:29.:52:33.

up, the same across Wales and the south-west. A new band of rain

:52:34.:52:37.

swinging through the Channel Islands, Central and southern

:52:38.:52:42.

England, East Anglia, Essex and Kent hanging onto the sunshine for

:52:43.:52:46.

longest. Temperatures could hit 25. This evening and overnight, a new

:52:47.:52:52.

band of rain swinging from the south-west, moving east, some of

:52:53.:52:55.

this heavy and possibly thundery. Behind it, lots of cloud, showers,

:52:56.:53:00.

not a cold night, temperatures in double figures in towns and cities.

:53:01.:53:06.

This arc of rain tomorrow, could be thundery in the south-east, moving

:53:07.:53:09.

away, clearing eastern England and north-eastern Scotland, behind it

:53:10.:53:14.

that dizzy cocktail of sunshine and showers. Some showers through the

:53:15.:53:18.

date will be heavy and thundery, many others will miss them

:53:19.:53:22.

altogether, leaving a dry and sunny day, temperatures generally between

:53:23.:53:29.

17-19, in the south-east, temperatures highest, maybe east

:53:30.:53:36.

Anglia hitting 26. From Tuesday into Wednesday, this ridge of high

:53:37.:53:42.

pressure knocking out of the way by any area of low pressure bringing

:53:43.:53:49.

rain and strengthening winds. For Wednesday, that's the scenario,

:53:50.:53:52.

starting try in the east, wet and windy weather from the West,

:53:53.:53:55.

clearing, on Thursday back to sunshine and showers.

:53:56.:54:01.

Carroll, do you like the occasional drop of cider? Yes! She said looking

:54:02.:54:09.

incredibly guilty... We are only asking because we are talking about

:54:10.:54:14.

it next. Don't you worry! It wasn't a deep insight into your drinking

:54:15.:54:15.

habits! There are nearly 5 million

:54:16.:54:22.

family-run businesses in the UK contributing nearly half a trillion

:54:23.:54:24.

pounds to the British economy. This week we're going

:54:25.:54:27.

behind the scenes at three family businesses

:54:28.:54:29.

to see what why they're so successful and what

:54:30.:54:31.

challenges they're facing. And you are inherited church? Can I

:54:32.:54:46.

just clarify Carol Kirkwood and her occasional drink of cider... This is

:54:47.:54:51.

her order, ready to be dispatched. But seriously, we are talking all

:54:52.:54:55.

week about family businesses and the contribution to the economy. This

:54:56.:55:00.

has been running since 1880, turning these cider apples into cider which

:55:01.:55:06.

they shipped to 40 different countries around the world, 220

:55:07.:55:13.

staff working in this business. Like I say, they had been employed for a

:55:14.:55:17.

long time, the fifth generation of family members in terms of who is

:55:18.:55:21.

running the business, Helen is the boss and her son Guy works here as

:55:22.:55:25.

well. Good morning both. Gueye, what's it like working for your mum?

:55:26.:55:30.

I started here 22 years ago, my grandfather was in charge, we were

:55:31.:55:34.

making a million litres of cider a year, we are now making 60 million,

:55:35.:55:40.

my mother has taken from strength to strength. It can be hard work

:55:41.:55:44.

working for her it's a lot of fun. For you, Helen, it is ingrained in

:55:45.:55:49.

your family, how important is it for you to be part of it? Very, very

:55:50.:55:56.

important, I live and breathe it, I wanted here for future generations,

:55:57.:55:59.

it's about managing today or tomorrow and doing the right things,

:56:00.:56:03.

planning that process. How do you make sure the family dynamic runs

:56:04.:56:10.

successfully as a business, not necessarily everyone's in the family

:56:11.:56:13.

will be business minded, how do you make sure it become successful? And

:56:14.:56:21.

remain successful? We have a family constitution, family briefings,

:56:22.:56:25.

family meetings, that way everyone gets on board, they understand what

:56:26.:56:28.

we are doing and how we take the business forward. They can have

:56:29.:56:32.

input. Keeping the dialogue going. Guy, it's important for you to work

:56:33.:56:36.

outside the business before you came into it? I did a 15 year spell here

:56:37.:56:42.

when I started and I went to New Zealand and worked in New Zealand

:56:43.:56:49.

for some years and then in Northern Ireland for the only cider company

:56:50.:56:52.

there, I was a master cider maker, ie designed the first type of the

:56:53.:56:59.

particular drink for New Zealand, and I have won an award over here...

:57:00.:57:05.

Check you out! You came back with secrets. Yes, I came back with new

:57:06.:57:10.

ideas, and I have been with the company ever since. Thank you both

:57:11.:57:14.

for your time, I really appreciate it. I have to tell you, the smell

:57:15.:57:20.

here is incredible, it smells like a good night out although less of the

:57:21.:57:23.

sticky dance floor you may be used to. Giles and Mark, thank you, labs,

:57:24.:57:30.

put a bit more drama into it, and Elizabeth is here from the Institute

:57:31.:57:35.

of family businesses. There are a lot of family businesses around the

:57:36.:57:38.

UK contributing a lot to the economy. Certainly, for .7 million

:57:39.:57:47.

of them across the country, and so important. What I did it again in

:57:48.:57:51.

terms of money? They employ over 12 million people and the cloud --

:57:52.:58:00.

account for a quarter of GDP. Half ?1 trillion from family businesses

:58:01.:58:04.

but there must be challenges? Sure, one thing we often think about when

:58:05.:58:09.

we think about a family business is succession and succession planning

:58:10.:58:13.

and what we always say, it's really important to start the conversation

:58:14.:58:17.

early and to keep having it, it's about banning for the future.

:58:18.:58:22.

Interesting. Thank you. That's it from me, we are looking at family

:58:23.:58:26.

businesses all week, get in touch if you work for a family business, you

:58:27.:58:31.

run one or you want to tell us about any experiences. Get in touch and I

:58:32.:58:35.

will look at all of those and perhaps use some of them on the

:58:36.:58:39.

telly tomorrow. I believe you of the view of an awful lot of cakes. That

:58:40.:58:44.

will make a lot of people happy. That is the most showbiz wake anyone

:58:45.:58:47.

has ever gone through plastic. They opened for her. The parting of the

:58:48.:58:53.

plastic sheets. Steph McGovern strolls around. Thank you Steph, see

:58:54.:58:55.

you tomorrow. In the 1960s pirate radio changed

:58:56.:59:00.

the face of broadcasting - it was revolutionary for playing

:59:01.:59:02.

continuous music - and launched the careers

:59:03.:59:04.

of Johnnie Walker and Tony But 50 years ago today,

:59:05.:59:06.

the Marine Offences Act came into force and pirate radio stations

:59:07.:59:10.

became illegal - they were Breakfast's Tim Muffett joins us now

:59:11.:59:12.

from a mock pirate ship in Essex. Are there any real pirate ships

:59:13.:59:24.

these days? Well, I suppose there are. Now I had got myself into a

:59:25.:59:28.

terrible hole, Tim, help out. This may look from Illya if you saw

:59:29.:59:40.

the 2009 film, The Boat That Rocked, this may look familiar, a former

:59:41.:59:45.

lightship, it is on boards like this that parrot DJs broadcast pop music

:59:46.:59:49.

from the sea to the land in the 60s to circumvent the strict rules which

:59:50.:59:52.

were in place at the time, 50 years ago today, things changed, the

:59:53.:59:56.

Marine offences act came into force, the idea was to stop the pirate. It

:59:57.:00:01.

didn't have the effect it intended. I remember going out from Harwich

:00:02.:00:09.

and seeing this little boat floating around,

:00:10.:00:11.

and I thought, this is going to MUSIC: All Day And All

:00:12.:00:14.

Of The Night by The Kinks Tony Blackburn's

:00:15.:00:28.

prediction was right. In the early '60s, the BBC

:00:29.:00:30.

played hardly any pop. By broadcasting from

:00:31.:00:33.

international waters, pirate stations like Caroline,

:00:34.:00:35.

Radio London, and Swinging Radio We were three and a half

:00:36.:00:37.

miles off the coast. Now, if anyone went on to that

:00:38.:00:44.

boat from this country, This was Radio Caroline's London HQ,

:00:45.:00:49.

where Tony Blackburn Did you have any sense of what a big

:00:50.:00:52.

deal this was going to be I really thought that this

:00:53.:01:01.

was going to be the start Tony Blackburn with you,

:01:02.:01:07.

feeling a bit under We have about an eight-force

:01:08.:01:11.

gale out there. MUSIC: Keep On Running

:01:12.:01:29.

by The Spencer Davis Group Broadcasting pop music from ships

:01:30.:01:31.

like this, out at sea, But on land, they won't just winning

:01:32.:01:33.

over millions of fans. They also faced a powerful

:01:34.:01:37.

enemy - the government. The pirates are a menace,

:01:38.:01:39.

and I don't believe at all that the public wouldn't support

:01:40.:01:42.

action to enforce the law. At midnight on 14 August 1967,

:01:43.:01:44.

the Marine Offences Act became law. It was now illegal for British

:01:45.:01:47.

citizens to work on the ships, Johnnie Walker had

:01:48.:01:50.

recently joined Caroline. Tony, look at that -

:01:51.:01:54.

you look so young! And I'm sure there were those

:01:55.:01:56.

in the government that really liked the fact that there were pirates

:01:57.:02:03.

on the air, and certainly the young people and their

:02:04.:02:06.

families all loved it. It bridged all generations

:02:07.:02:08.

and all social classes. Many pirate stations packed up,

:02:09.:02:10.

but Caroline continued broadcasting It anchored further

:02:11.:02:12.

into international waters This ship, the Ross Revenge,

:02:13.:02:16.

was its studio throughout the 80s. What we wanted to do is return

:02:17.:02:35.

the ship to a useful While we dine out on our nostalgia,

:02:36.:02:39.

which is our selling point, we also want to now look

:02:40.:02:43.

to the future. This is Radio Caroline,

:02:44.:02:45.

the sound of The Who. MUSIC: My Generation

:02:46.:02:54.

by The Who Having been streamed online

:02:55.:02:55.

since the late '90s, the station has just been granted

:02:56.:02:57.

a new AM broadcast license. 50 years after the government tried

:02:58.:03:00.

to ban them, Britain's pop pirates This morning we are about 40 miles

:03:01.:03:15.

from the Ross Revenge, because BBC Essex have commandeered this ship

:03:16.:03:18.

and they are about to go on air to celebrate this, 50 years since

:03:19.:03:22.

pirate radio was outlawed. Johnnie Walker, privileged to see you once

:03:23.:03:25.

more about the ship. You will be broadcasting from here. What is it

:03:26.:03:29.

like to be marking the anniversary? In the way it is a sad day but 50

:03:30.:03:36.

years ago on this day, right now, I would have been admirable station,

:03:37.:03:41.

thousands of people saw us off. On the radio stations were going to

:03:42.:03:43.

close down that afternoon so that was very sad for millions of people

:03:44.:03:47.

who came to rely on those stations for the music they wanted to hear,

:03:48.:03:51.

any time of the day or night, and then myself and just a couple other

:03:52.:03:58.

DJs, we decided to stay at radio Caroline and defy the Government, at

:03:59.:04:03.

midnight. It was scary, truth be told. They reckon about 22 million

:04:04.:04:07.

people were listening all over Europe. Would Radio Caroline

:04:08.:04:11.

actually be brave enough to defy the British Government? So we are kind

:04:12.:04:16.

of celebrating that, Radio Caroline and a few DJs taking a stand. In a

:04:17.:04:21.

way it was designed to inspire commercial radio but the result of

:04:22.:04:25.

pirate radio was radio one, which went on in 1967, the BBC station?

:04:26.:04:31.

Till I guess, and in New Zealand they were inspired by Radio Caroline

:04:32.:04:34.

and they started their own radio station on a ship, and the New

:04:35.:04:38.

Zealand government allowed them to come onshore, give them a licence to

:04:39.:04:41.

broadcast as a commercial radio station, so that is really what we

:04:42.:04:47.

hoped might happen in the UK, but it didn't, unfortunately. Caroline

:04:48.:04:51.

managed to keep going from August right through until about March 1968

:04:52.:04:55.

when the money ran out. The bills were not paid and that was

:04:56.:04:57.

unfortunately the end of the station. But it is back. There is a

:04:58.:05:02.

ship with Radio Caroline you can hear on the Internet, it has never

:05:03.:05:06.

really gone away. What was it like to be a DJ on a ship with millions

:05:07.:05:11.

of people listening? The most fantastic feeling. We would often be

:05:12.:05:17.

sick on the journey, from here, taking an hour and a half, but once

:05:18.:05:20.

you're on the boat, just the energy that broadcasting and knowing all

:05:21.:05:23.

those millions of people were tuned in and loving the music you played,

:05:24.:05:27.

and the freedom the DJs had to pretty much play what they wanted to

:05:28.:05:30.

play and see what they want. Hence we celebrate it 50 years on. What

:05:31.:05:37.

time are you on air today? Half past one. We will be listening. Johnnie,

:05:38.:05:43.

thank you so much. It will be historic, from BBC Essex, have

:05:44.:05:47.

commandeered the ship, and Radio Caroline, about 40 miles down the

:05:48.:05:51.

coast. I will leave you with a lovely shot of the boat we are stood

:05:52.:05:59.

on this morning. STUDIO: It is fantastic. Thank you

:06:00.:06:02.

very much, Tim. Lots of people sharing their energies to -- their

:06:03.:06:07.

memories. Maggie remembers sitting with the rain beating down listening

:06:08.:06:12.

to cap it radio Caroline on a crackling old radio. Ian says he

:06:13.:06:15.

remembers it on his first holidays. Mark used to listen to Luxembourg

:06:16.:06:18.

under the covers. Wonderful memories. Thank you for that. Thank

:06:19.:06:22.

you for getting in touch. We will have a last brief look at the

:06:23.:06:26.

headlines wherever you are this morning, and then in a few

:06:27.:08:00.

headlines wherever you are this back with the latest from the London

:08:01.:08:03.

newsroom at half past one. 20 more on the website and we will see you

:08:04.:08:10.

soon. Have a lovely morning. Goodbye -- plenty more on the website.

:08:11.:08:16.

There are plenty of careers where it's OK to learn on the job.

:08:17.:08:21.

but some of you may not want to know there are hundreds of pilots who do

:08:22.:08:25.

Now a new TV series reveals what it's like for trainee pilots

:08:26.:08:29.

Today Cornelius has his hand on the thrust, and will be taking

:08:30.:08:51.

off and landing the plane with paying passengers for the first

:08:52.:08:54.

time, but his two minders can take over if necessary.

:08:55.:08:56.

But before even hitting the runway...

:08:57.:08:59.

It was just a little bit of an embarrassing moment.

:09:00.:09:15.

They're all sat down anyway, and the cabin's secured

:09:16.:09:18.

for take-off, so no one's standing up walking around.

:09:19.:09:20.

Or else they won't be standing up now!

:09:21.:09:41.

Joining us now is first officer Cornelius Wilson who you saw there.

:09:42.:09:49.

So that was not your first take-off, but your first with a fully packed

:09:50.:09:55.

aeroplane. Yes, quite nerve-racking. How did you feel? It is a daunting

:09:56.:09:59.

prospect that the end of the day you have gone through two years of

:10:00.:10:02.

training, had a whole day out in the aircraft and hours and hours of

:10:03.:10:05.

simulation. A whole day out the aircraft! Yes, but we go through all

:10:06.:10:11.

the training, so you have this rigorous training programme and we

:10:12.:10:14.

go through six take-offs and landings, and they will only let you

:10:15.:10:20.

progress onto paying passengers... And I am sure you guys will remember

:10:21.:10:23.

your first time, everyone has to start on the job at some point. So

:10:24.:10:29.

that is as far as we can go, and then you have to have your first

:10:30.:10:33.

flights on them. Is it true you had your mum and some other members of

:10:34.:10:36.

your family... Delannoy not the very first flight, think that would be

:10:37.:10:40.

too much pressure. But during training we flew out to Athens and I

:10:41.:10:44.

picked up my mum and sister who went out for a couple of days and came

:10:45.:10:47.

back with me, which you will see on TV this evening -- no, not the very

:10:48.:10:56.

first flight. And I didn't realise that families often paying for the

:10:57.:11:00.

training themselves, and your family what's key? Yes, you need some

:11:01.:11:04.

support because the costs are extortionate, so whether you get a

:11:05.:11:07.

loan through the bank or something else. The first ?100,000, something

:11:08.:11:17.

like that? Yes, and that sort of from zero to hero, and that is a lot

:11:18.:11:20.

of money obviously but you are seeing an investment in your career.

:11:21.:11:23.

I think if you can get your Lord through the bank, the bank of mum

:11:24.:11:27.

and dad, however you get it, and can get through flight school, it is

:11:28.:11:31.

completely worth it. For a lifetime of an awesome career. Was it a bit

:11:32.:11:36.

strange having the cameras on there, knowing you are being filmed? Did

:11:37.:11:39.

you get to the stage where you forgot it was there or do you feel

:11:40.:11:42.

under pressure because not only do you have passengers behind you but

:11:43.:11:46.

you got totally quite a few people watching you later on as well? It is

:11:47.:11:50.

a bit of a revolution, the fact they have cameras inside the cockpit, but

:11:51.:11:55.

they are all rigged up so no one is allowed inside the cockpit as per

:11:56.:12:00.

our strict corporate rules, so no one is allowed in when the engine is

:12:01.:12:03.

running, so you forget that they are there. At the end of the day my job

:12:04.:12:06.

on that very first date was to ensure the safe operation of the

:12:07.:12:10.

aircraft, and I have my training captain, the safety guy behind me,

:12:11.:12:13.

you know, so much going on. The cameras were the least of my

:12:14.:12:17.

worries. So many interesting things came out of it. One of them, I think

:12:18.:12:22.

it is called a sterile cockpit. You cannot have a trivial

:12:23.:12:27.

conversation... Yes, no unnecessary conversation until 10,000 feet. Do

:12:28.:12:32.

you and I it seems quite high up, but obviously the safe operation of

:12:33.:12:35.

the aircraft is the most important thing, paramount to the safe

:12:36.:12:38.

operation of digging people aboard and then above 10,000 feet when you

:12:39.:12:42.

turn off the seat belt signs, you can obviously relax a little bit

:12:43.:12:46.

more, and then you are in the crusade of the flight, still

:12:47.:12:52.

climbing but less critical -- the crew side of the flight. And we have

:12:53.:12:56.

heard about these increases involving alcohol in airports and on

:12:57.:13:01.

flights as well. Have you seen that? Has that been some part of the

:13:02.:13:04.

training? You get briefed on how to deal with those certain situations.

:13:05.:13:08.

The cabin crew are obviously at the front lay there. I haven't seen

:13:09.:13:12.

anything at all in my eight months on the jobs of August all the

:13:13.:13:14.

passengers we see flying out of Manchester have been very good

:13:15.:13:18.

willed, even the guys and girls on the stags and the hens. The cabin

:13:19.:13:22.

crew are fantastic in dealing these situations. At the end of the data

:13:23.:13:27.

safety is paramount to all our passengers and crew and if any

:13:28.:13:30.

situation did arise where we had to take -- at the end of the day the

:13:31.:13:38.

safety is paramount. 'S are you flying today? No, but I am on

:13:39.:13:40.

stand-by tomorrow. Thank you. EasyJet: Inside the Cockpit

:13:41.:13:43.

is on ITV tonight at 9pm. We'll be back tomorrow

:13:44.:13:46.

morning from 6 o'clock. Phone went,

:13:47.:14:07.

and it was my sister, Jane,

:14:08.:14:09.

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