18/11/2017

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0:00:08 > 0:00:12Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Jon Kay.

0:00:12 > 0:00:12Examining the wreckage:

0:00:12 > 0:00:15The investigation continues to find out why two aircraft collided over

0:00:15 > 0:00:16Buckinghamshire.

0:00:16 > 0:00:19Police and air accident investigators have joined forces

0:00:19 > 0:00:22to try and get to the bottom of the crash which left

0:00:22 > 0:00:35four people dead.

0:00:37 > 0:00:41Good morning, it's Saturday the 18th of November.

0:00:41 > 0:00:45Also this morning: Pressure on the President of Zimbabwe Robert

0:00:45 > 0:00:49Mugabe, as his own party calls on him to quit and people prepare

0:00:49 > 0:00:52to take to the streets.

0:00:52 > 0:00:5690 MPs say patients in the health service in England are being

0:00:56 > 0:00:58failed by the system as they ask

0:00:58 > 0:01:02the Prime Minister for a cross-party solution.

0:01:02 > 0:01:05One, two...

0:01:05 > 0:01:09Look at that!

0:01:09 > 0:01:13A record total for Children in Need last night, as donations top £50

0:01:13 > 0:01:14million for the first time.

0:01:14 > 0:01:18In sport, the man who took Wales to the semi finals of the Euros

0:01:18 > 0:01:19has stepped down.

0:01:19 > 0:01:22Chris Coleman has gone to manage the Championship's bottom side,

0:01:22 > 0:01:22Sunderland.

0:01:22 > 0:01:24And Philip has the weather.

0:01:24 > 0:01:31Good morning. A bit of everything in the weekend's forecast. The bulk of

0:01:31 > 0:01:35the sunshine in northern parts for Saturday and more cloud in southern

0:01:35 > 0:01:38areas. All the details in a few minutes.

0:01:38 > 0:01:40Good morning.

0:01:40 > 0:01:41First, our main story:

0:01:41 > 0:01:44Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

0:01:44 > 0:01:47a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

0:01:47 > 0:01:48killing four people.

0:01:48 > 0:01:50Teams will continue scouring the area around

0:01:50 > 0:01:52the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury,

0:01:52 > 0:01:53for wreckage.

0:01:53 > 0:02:00Ian Palmer reports.

0:02:00 > 0:02:04Beneath the canopy of autumn colour belies the wreckage of two light

0:02:04 > 0:02:12aircraft. This is the tale of the Cessna plane. Nearby lies its wing

0:02:12 > 0:02:16and a little further away in a clearing are the remains of what is

0:02:16 > 0:02:19believed to be the helicopter. Two people were travelling in each

0:02:19 > 0:02:24aircraft and no one survived.We did a joint response with the fire

0:02:24 > 0:02:27service, ambulance and now the air accident branch who are working with

0:02:27 > 0:02:31us through a joint investigation while we establish the cause of the

0:02:31 > 0:02:36crash.The mid- air collision happened above the Wolston estate in

0:02:36 > 0:02:39Buckinghamshire. Both pilots took off from Whickham airport 20 miles

0:02:39 > 0:02:47away. Visibility at the time was clear and bright. An off duty fire

0:02:47 > 0:02:51officer saw the collision and says there was a loud bang followed by

0:02:51 > 0:02:56falling debris. Yesterday police and air accident investigators worked

0:02:56 > 0:03:01late into the night. Their task, to find out why the crash happened and

0:03:01 > 0:03:08who was involved. With the wreckage spread over a large area, the search

0:03:08 > 0:03:12for clues as to why two aircraft collided in good conditions is

0:03:12 > 0:03:23expected to continue at least until Monday.

0:03:23 > 0:03:2590 MPs, about a third of them Conservatives,

0:03:25 > 0:03:28have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor

0:03:28 > 0:03:32calling for parties to work together on the future of the NHS and social

0:03:32 > 0:03:32care in England.

0:03:32 > 0:03:35The politicians who signed the letter, including nearly 30

0:03:35 > 0:03:37former ministers, say party politics has failed

0:03:37 > 0:03:39to come up with a solution.

0:03:39 > 0:03:41Our health editor Hugh Pym reports.

0:03:41 > 0:03:44The pressure on NHS is growing. There are fears that hospitals will

0:03:44 > 0:03:49continue to struggle to find enough beds to admit new patients, partly

0:03:49 > 0:03:53because of difficulties discharging elderly patients, caused in turn by

0:03:53 > 0:03:57problems with social care. A group of MPs now says a long-term

0:03:57 > 0:04:02sustainable settlement is needed and that only a cross-party NHS and care

0:04:02 > 0:04:06Convention can deliver that. In a letter written to the Prime Minister

0:04:06 > 0:04:07and the Chancellor, the MPs say:

0:04:23 > 0:04:26Senior Conservative Labour and Liberal Democrats backbenchers are

0:04:26 > 0:04:30those who have signed -- among those who signed the letter.I think the

0:04:30 > 0:04:34NHS and social care are huge issues for our generation and we've got to

0:04:34 > 0:04:38get it right and I think it's bigger than just one party.The MPs also

0:04:38 > 0:04:42call for action in next week's budget to address the short-term

0:04:42 > 0:04:45pressures on the system. A government spokesperson said it was

0:04:45 > 0:04:50recognised there was broad agreement across Parliament, but social care

0:04:50 > 0:04:53reform was a priority and there would be consultation ahead of

0:04:53 > 0:04:57policy paper next year.

0:04:57 > 0:04:59The political crisis in Zimbabwe continues,

0:04:59 > 0:05:01with the ruling party, human rights activists and veterans

0:05:01 > 0:05:04all holding rallies today, to try to force Robert Mugabe

0:05:04 > 0:05:07to step down.

0:05:07 > 0:05:18State media have confirmed that eight out of ten regional branches

0:05:18 > 0:05:21of the governing Zanu-PF already passed a vote of no-confidence

0:05:21 > 0:05:22in the President.

0:05:22 > 0:05:24Ben Brown is in Zimbabwe for us.

0:05:24 > 0:05:28Do you get a sense of the building pressure on President Mugabe in the

0:05:28 > 0:05:33streets?Yes, you really do. Very hard when you talk to people in this

0:05:33 > 0:05:36country and find anyone who really wants Robert Mugabe to stay in

0:05:36 > 0:05:40office. He is running out of time and friends very fast indeed. His

0:05:40 > 0:05:48own party Zanu-PF, eight out of ten branches say they have no confidence

0:05:48 > 0:05:52in it. The military had their takeover on Wednesday and they are

0:05:52 > 0:05:58pressurising him to go as well. The war veterans, the people he fought

0:05:58 > 0:06:01alongside, they are organising this big rally today that gets under way

0:06:01 > 0:06:07in a couple of hours. Trying to get him to stand down. But at the moment

0:06:07 > 0:06:15technically he is still president. Thank you for now. We will cross to

0:06:15 > 0:06:18Ben live throughout the programme, especially as the protests build up.

0:06:18 > 0:06:21A 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion of murder

0:06:21 > 0:06:22following the disappearance of teenager Gaia Pope

0:06:22 > 0:06:24has been released while inquiries continue.

0:06:24 > 0:06:27Paul Elsey, confirmed as the suspect to the BBC by his father,

0:06:27 > 0:06:29is from Swanage.

0:06:29 > 0:06:31Murder detectives are focussing their forensic investigations

0:06:31 > 0:06:34on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path where women's

0:06:34 > 0:06:35clothing was found.

0:06:35 > 0:06:36Miss Pope's family confirmed the clothing matched

0:06:36 > 0:06:41what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

0:06:41 > 0:06:45The Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has said he'll set out a plan

0:06:45 > 0:06:48for a leadership change in his party at its conference in Dublin today.

0:06:48 > 0:06:51Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive figures

0:06:51 > 0:06:56in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

0:06:56 > 0:06:59He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

0:06:59 > 0:07:03but he will talk about future plans.

0:07:03 > 0:07:06The new leader of the Scottish Labour Party will be announced

0:07:06 > 0:07:07later this morning.

0:07:07 > 0:07:10The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

0:07:10 > 0:07:13and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

0:07:13 > 0:07:15The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

0:07:15 > 0:07:20in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

0:07:20 > 0:07:23part in the ITV reality show I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of

0:07:23 > 0:07:25Here.

0:07:25 > 0:07:28This year's Children in Need reached a record on-the-night-total of more

0:07:28 > 0:07:31than £50 million.

0:07:31 > 0:07:33Highlights of the programme included an Eastenders musical,

0:07:33 > 0:07:36singing Countryfile presenters, and Blue Peter does Strictly Come

0:07:36 > 0:07:38Dancing.

0:07:38 > 0:07:46Our entertainment correspondent Lizo Mzimba reports.

0:07:46 > 0:07:57One, two... A record-breaking total. The night kicked off with the cast

0:07:57 > 0:08:08of Annie.Kids, there's a place like no other...The West End came to the

0:08:08 > 0:08:17East End too, with a special song and dance performance.

0:08:22 > 0:08:32Blue Peter stars, past and present, took to the Strictly dance floor. Dr

0:08:32 > 0:08:39Who fans got a sneak peek of the final episode.Bigger than it is on

0:08:39 > 0:08:42the inside than the outside.I thought it probably was.Glad it's

0:08:42 > 0:08:50not just me. Someday I'll wish upon a star...1500 children in locations

0:08:50 > 0:09:00across the UK sang live as part of a special children's choir. And there

0:09:00 > 0:09:04was also the chance for viewers who is given so much to see how the

0:09:04 > 0:09:09money is spent.You're in control of it now.We are incredibly proud of

0:09:09 > 0:09:15him.Tonight's massive total means that since it again Children in Need

0:09:15 > 0:09:19has raised approaching £1 billion, all of which has gone to helping

0:09:19 > 0:09:27young people and disadvantaged children all across the UK.

0:09:27 > 0:09:31Every year you think they can't raise more than last year and then

0:09:31 > 0:09:34every year they do. We will speak to the chief executive later about

0:09:34 > 0:09:38where the money goes now and how they do keep raising more everytime.

0:09:38 > 0:09:38Well done.

0:09:38 > 0:09:42You may remember in March last year the British public was gripped

0:09:42 > 0:09:45by a competition to name an Antarctic research vessel,

0:09:45 > 0:09:49the winning entry by some distance being Boaty McBoatface.

0:09:49 > 0:09:52So you can imagine the reaction when Doncaster Council asked Twitter

0:09:52 > 0:09:58users to help name their new gritting vehicles.

0:09:58 > 0:10:03I think they've banned Gritty McGrittyface.

0:10:03 > 0:10:06After hundreds of suggestions and a series of hotly contested

0:10:06 > 0:10:09polls, the winners were announced as: David Plowie.

0:10:09 > 0:10:12The Gritsy Bitsy Teeny Weeny Yellow Anti-Slip Machiney.

0:10:12 > 0:10:13Brilliant!

0:10:13 > 0:10:16The council already have five named vehicles in their fleet including:

0:10:16 > 0:10:18Brad Grit, Gritney Spears, The Subzero Hero, Mr plough

0:10:18 > 0:10:26and Usain Salt.

0:10:26 > 0:10:30That's the best one. Brilliant.

0:10:30 > 0:10:35The puns are over now. If you've got any better ones, let us know, but

0:10:35 > 0:10:38surely we can't get any better than that!

0:10:38 > 0:10:42Let's have a look at the papers and bring you up to date.

0:10:42 > 0:10:48What's making the headlines? The Daily Telegraph's front story is

0:10:48 > 0:10:54about Brexit. They are talking about as negotiations continue and we hear

0:10:54 > 0:10:59about all of these theories about the money that allude and will be

0:10:59 > 0:11:04paid, they claimed the EU might withhold what is still called

0:11:04 > 0:11:09Margaret Thatcher's famous rebate, the money they got back from the EU.

0:11:09 > 0:11:13They might try to hold back the last instalment of the rebate as a

0:11:13 > 0:11:17ransom, to get more out of the UK as we pay that divorce bill.

0:11:17 > 0:11:21The front page of the Guardian, taking a look at the problems of

0:11:21 > 0:11:26divorcing parents. They could be denied contact with their children

0:11:26 > 0:11:30if they try to turn them against their former party. This is under

0:11:30 > 0:11:32what's been called a groundbreaking process at stopping the phenomenon

0:11:32 > 0:11:37known as parental alienation. Why do we have a picture of a dog?

0:11:37 > 0:11:44Do you have a dog? I do. Good news. The health benefits of

0:11:44 > 0:11:48keeping a dog have been revealed. A study of 3.4 million people, so a

0:11:48 > 0:11:53decent database. Findings reveal dogs can cut the risk of heart

0:11:53 > 0:11:59disease in people buy up to 36%. Really? They take them to old

0:11:59 > 0:12:02people's homes and stuff. Very therapeutic.

0:12:02 > 0:12:10The Daily Mail have a headline, Rescued. They are talking about the

0:12:10 > 0:12:14famous explorer who is in the process of being rescued. They say

0:12:14 > 0:12:21he was caught in some sort of battle between warring tribes in malaria

0:12:21 > 0:12:26hit areas. We spoke to Frank Gardner this week,

0:12:26 > 0:12:30who is a friend of his, and this explorer did go out saying, I don't

0:12:30 > 0:12:34want to be contacted. I'm not going to be in contact regularly with

0:12:34 > 0:12:38family and I want to have an adventure. So there is some debate

0:12:38 > 0:12:44over just how much of this is a rescue or if it is just locating

0:12:44 > 0:12:46him. It will be interesting to hear his

0:12:46 > 0:12:51story when it comes out. The Daily Mirror. Punch and jury is

0:12:51 > 0:12:57the headline. It is about a father who has told of his 11 month ordeal

0:12:57 > 0:13:00after being taken to court for tackling someone who tried to break

0:13:00 > 0:13:04into his home. The jury took 30 minutes to clear him of wounding the

0:13:04 > 0:13:08burglar and he said, I just did what any man would do after someone

0:13:08 > 0:13:12invaded his home. The Saturday Times has a picture of

0:13:12 > 0:13:19President Mugabe attending that special inauguration at a Zimbabwean

0:13:19 > 0:13:24university yesterday, where he said a few words, but it was very much on

0:13:24 > 0:13:29prescription. The main story below, it talks about videos of children

0:13:29 > 0:13:35being teased or victimised apparently on you Tube and that some

0:13:35 > 0:13:39leading companies, according to the Times, have cancelled advertising on

0:13:39 > 0:13:44YouTube in the meantime until the policy is sorted out. We will try to

0:13:44 > 0:13:47get some responses from YouTube as the morning goes on.

0:13:47 > 0:13:52Apparently the force is strong with the royals. The Duke of Cambridge

0:13:52 > 0:13:55and Prince Harry will apparently be in the next Star Wars film.

0:13:55 > 0:13:59What? Apparently they visited the set of

0:13:59 > 0:14:04the last Star Wars. They are rumoured to have filmed scene in

0:14:04 > 0:14:12disguise. At the time the star of the new Star Wars was kind of

0:14:12 > 0:14:15keeping quiet and now apparently he has said they will appear in a

0:14:15 > 0:14:18scene, disguised in storm trooper costumes.

0:14:18 > 0:14:22That can't be true! We will never know which of the thousands was

0:14:22 > 0:14:25Harry and William.

0:14:25 > 0:14:27You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

0:14:27 > 0:14:30The main stories this morning: Air crash investigators are trying

0:14:30 > 0:14:32to work out what caused a mid-air collision over Buckinghamshire

0:14:32 > 0:14:35yesterday in which four people died.

0:14:35 > 0:14:38Human rights activists and members of the ruling party will hold

0:14:38 > 0:14:41rallies in Zimbabwe today to try to convince President Robert Mugabe

0:14:41 > 0:14:49to stand down following a military coup.

0:14:57 > 0:15:05Let's check in and get the weather forecast. That is very bright and

0:15:05 > 0:15:12colourful. Are you going to live up to expectations through the weekend?

0:15:16 > 0:15:21John Wayne fans would like a True

0:15:21 > 0:15:23John Wayne fans would like a True Grit in there somewhere. This was

0:15:23 > 0:15:27yesterday. I put this up to remind myself to mention the fact there are

0:15:27 > 0:15:34many showers in the north of Scotland. Many isobars as well. A

0:15:34 > 0:15:38combination of lustre is showers and gale force winds from the

0:15:38 > 0:15:43north-west. Not a warm start in the north-east of Scotland despite

0:15:43 > 0:15:49sunshine in between showers. Brightness for Northern Ireland. A

0:15:49 > 0:15:56slice of northern England and the east with early sunshine. Early

0:15:56 > 0:16:01sunshine, I have to stress, because out west, gathering cloud. It is

0:16:01 > 0:16:06already producing rain in the south-west of England. With time it

0:16:06 > 0:16:11will gradually filter towards the east. Further north, showers merging

0:16:11 > 0:16:18further southward cloud. Bright skies in the north of England. All

0:16:18 > 0:16:23the while, a fresh north-westerly wind. Not feeling overly warm

0:16:23 > 0:16:32despite sunshine. The cloud in the south will produce rain for the

0:16:32 > 0:16:40rugby. Good luck with Scotland against New Zealand. A frosty

0:16:40 > 0:16:45affair. You never know. Through the evening and overnight, we keep the

0:16:45 > 0:16:48frontal system close by to be south-west helping keep temperatures

0:16:48 > 0:16:58up. Elsewhere, expect widespread frost. That is the towns and cities.

0:16:58 > 0:17:02Possibly -4. At least a bright start for central and eastern parts. Out

0:17:02 > 0:17:08west, the cloud continuing to fill in. Eventually we will start seeing

0:17:08 > 0:17:12rain in Northern Ireland and western Scotland and perhaps the final for

0:17:12 > 0:17:22Wales. -- far north of. Fairly chilly despite sunshine. Keep an eye

0:17:22 > 0:17:26on Monday. Another front from the west starting the process on Sunday.

0:17:26 > 0:17:32Perhaps turning wintry, not just on the high ground, for parts of

0:17:32 > 0:17:37Scotland. We will keep a close eye on all that.

0:17:37 > 0:17:40Mark Kermode joins Jane Hill for a look at the latest cinema

0:17:40 > 0:17:51releases.

0:17:55 > 0:17:58Welcome to the Film Review on BBC News.

0:17:58 > 0:18:00And taking us through this week's releases

0:18:00 > 0:18:04is who else but Mark Kermode?

0:18:04 > 0:18:19It is good to see you.We have Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool.

0:18:19 > 0:18:20Justice League. Batman and Wonder

0:18:20 > 0:18:20Stars Don't Die in Liverpool. Justice League. Batman and Wonder

0:18:20 > 0:18:30Woman are back.And a drama set in 1940s Mississippi. It is an

0:18:30 > 0:18:37interesting week. I want to see about the one set in the 70s.Yes.

0:18:37 > 0:18:48Based on the memoir by Peter Turner. Benning is superb as Gloria Graeme.

0:18:48 > 0:18:54A twentysomething actor becomes infatuated with the late 70s. He

0:18:54 > 0:19:04discovers they are sharing digs in this house and he is bewtiched by

0:19:04 > 0:19:16her presence, as we all are. Here is a clip.Hey. You're the next-door

0:19:16 > 0:19:23guy, right?Which makes you the girl next door.Have you seen the movie

0:19:23 > 0:19:30Saturday Night Fever?Yeah, actually, three times.So, you like

0:19:30 > 0:19:40disco dancing?I like drunk dancing. So, if I make you a drink, do you

0:19:40 > 0:19:47want to be my partner for my dance class?If you fetch me a drink, I

0:19:47 > 0:19:55will clean your bathroom.I already love it.You can see there is real

0:19:55 > 0:20:00chemistry between them. The film divides its time between the story

0:20:00 > 0:20:05of the rise and fall of their relationship. And a few years later

0:20:05 > 0:20:09on when she falls ill and calls on him to bring him back to Liverpool,

0:20:09 > 0:20:12she feels she can get better in Liverpool, it was directed with

0:20:12 > 0:20:20warmth and passion. The director made a film called Ganster Number

0:20:20 > 0:20:24One at the turn of the century which was exciting. I love the slipping

0:20:24 > 0:20:31back and forth through time. The performances were wonderful. Benning

0:20:31 > 0:20:36is transfixing. You believe in her as someone with a real film star

0:20:36 > 0:20:41passed. There is a touch of Marilyn Munro, being referred to as the

0:20:41 > 0:20:47other blonde. She was a movie star and had a movie star presence. What

0:20:47 > 0:20:52the film does is it makes them feel like they are genuinely in love with

0:20:52 > 0:20:57each other.Despite a very big age gap.Interestingly enough, what the

0:20:57 > 0:21:04film does is invert the usual age and gender relationship. It does not

0:21:04 > 0:21:10make a big deal out of it. There is a time when she says I want to play

0:21:10 > 0:21:17Juliet and he says do you mean the maid? And there is a joke about

0:21:17 > 0:21:26that. I feel like the performance is brilliant. It is Oscar time. A lot

0:21:26 > 0:21:31of it is to do with the attention to detail. It is really well done. If

0:21:31 > 0:21:35you have a period setting and people get things wrong, it takes you out.

0:21:35 > 0:21:40It is charming and sweet and I was moved by it. It is touching. A love

0:21:40 > 0:21:45story beautifully told. It reminded me of the filmmaking of Terence

0:21:45 > 0:21:51Davies, and I don't say that lightly.Yes. Praise indeed.I think

0:21:51 > 0:21:59you will like it.It has everything. Justice League. I know someone who

0:21:59 > 0:22:06wants to see this. It is big in our house.Super moon is dead and

0:22:06 > 0:22:12everyone is in mourning. Batman needs a new team. Aquaman, The

0:22:12 > 0:22:18Flash, Cyborg. This had a troubled history. Personal tragedy meant the

0:22:18 > 0:22:22director had to step down and Joss Whedon stepped in. Halfway through

0:22:22 > 0:22:26the reducers decided they had to make it less dark and more funny

0:22:26 > 0:22:31because Wonder Woman was doing well and dark ones were not doing well.

0:22:31 > 0:22:36It is a total mess. This makes Batman and Robin look positively

0:22:36 > 0:22:43Shakespearean. I read on the Internet it was to hours and 15

0:22:43 > 0:22:50minutes. I thought that is a mistake. -- two hours. It felt like

0:22:50 > 0:23:00four hours. It felt like a directors cut without beautiful scenery. It

0:23:00 > 0:23:04has too little characters and nothing for them to do. There is no

0:23:04 > 0:23:07reason to care about these indestructible people who can do

0:23:07 > 0:23:15anything. It is a complete hodgepodge. Amazingly, for a film

0:23:15 > 0:23:20with so much stuff in it, it is stunningly dull. It is really,

0:23:20 > 0:23:23really turgid and boring. At no point does the filmmaking lift

0:23:23 > 0:23:29itself. You want to be engaged and absorbed in the fantasy and I spent

0:23:29 > 0:23:34the whole time thinking are we there? It started and then it

0:23:34 > 0:23:38stopped and I left. You have to wait until the end credits. There was one

0:23:38 > 0:23:44character I was thrilled was not in the film and at the end they were.

0:23:44 > 0:23:50That is two hours of your life you will never get back. Would you say

0:23:50 > 0:23:59the same for Mudbound?I liked it. Directed by Hillary Jordan. It

0:23:59 > 0:24:04follows two families whose lives and fortunes intertwine. One is Jason

0:24:04 > 0:24:10Mitchell. He goes off to fight in World War Two. He returns to

0:24:10 > 0:24:14Mississippi after the war to discover that nothing has changed.

0:24:14 > 0:24:25Here is a clip.You used the backdoor.We don't want no trouble

0:24:25 > 0:24:33here. Go on.You know what, you are right. When we were overseas, they

0:24:33 > 0:24:38did not make it used the backdoor. General pattern put us on the

0:24:38 > 0:24:48frontline. Yes, sir. He kicked the hell out of Hitler. You are all safe

0:24:48 > 0:24:54and sound because of that.What I like about this, you can tell from

0:24:54 > 0:24:59the scene, the tension in that scene is really, really well done. The

0:24:59 > 0:25:03film covers events and actions which are really horrible and really

0:25:03 > 0:25:08tough. But it has a genuine poetry to it. We hear the voices of several

0:25:08 > 0:25:12different characters telling their story. The movie is keen to tell the

0:25:12 > 0:25:16story from different angles. She does a great job with the

0:25:16 > 0:25:21cinematography. You can feel the land and the environment and the

0:25:21 > 0:25:30mind of the title. -- mud. Not a foot is put wrong. The film manages

0:25:30 > 0:25:34to bring you into the world and intertwine personal and political

0:25:34 > 0:25:37stories about racial and economic tension, but always making it feel

0:25:37 > 0:25:43like it is a personal story. And it is very difficult to do that

0:25:43 > 0:25:47without... You know, without feeling like you are doing it. With this you

0:25:47 > 0:25:51really are involved in the lives of the characters and you feel the

0:25:51 > 0:25:55personal and political completely intertwined.Yeah, the people who

0:25:55 > 0:25:59say it is remarkable but actually to bleak, is that they are?I don't

0:25:59 > 0:26:12agree. -- too bleak, is that fair? There is genuine poetry. Many people

0:26:12 > 0:26:16will see it at home with the Netflix release. But I think you need to see

0:26:16 > 0:26:19it on the big screen if you can because it has real cinematic scope.

0:26:19 > 0:26:26And I don't think it is too bleak. It has hard and tenderness. It has a

0:26:26 > 0:26:34poetic quality which is key to the films. -- heart.Interesting. See it

0:26:34 > 0:26:44on the big screen.And next is Florida Project. You will love it. A

0:26:44 > 0:26:49great story about a family living on the poverty line in these motels

0:26:49 > 0:26:57beyond the walls of Disneyland. It is like East of Eden. The whole

0:26:57 > 0:27:02world is seen through the view of a six-year-old. The film manages to

0:27:02 > 0:27:07capture that child's prospective. Yes, it is poverty in the 18 hotel

0:27:07 > 0:27:15which is now a motel for those on minimum wage. --A themed. And yet it

0:27:15 > 0:27:21is summer break. These children are running around and it is like

0:27:21 > 0:27:28Wonderland. The film mixes economics with a child's eyes. Some people did

0:27:28 > 0:27:32not get it at all and I am surprised. I think it is one of the

0:27:32 > 0:27:37best films this year and many people feel the same way.Yes. If people

0:27:37 > 0:27:42want to stay at home they can watch this. One of the big hits of the

0:27:42 > 0:27:49summer.The Big Sick. It is a really lovely film. It is inspired by a

0:27:49 > 0:27:53real-life story of him being unable to commit to his girlfriend until a

0:27:53 > 0:28:00mystery illness landed her in a medically-induced coma. It is really

0:28:00 > 0:28:04funny and deals with subjects like commitment and racism and racial

0:28:04 > 0:28:08prejudice and arranged marriages. To do it all through these characters

0:28:08 > 0:28:13as well, who you get to like in love, I mean, it is genuinely laugh

0:28:13 > 0:28:18out loud funny. It is a movie where the comedy is born from the fact you

0:28:18 > 0:28:23recognise the characters and you are not living in a completely

0:28:23 > 0:28:27unbelievable environment. You believe in the situation they are

0:28:27 > 0:28:30in. I laughed all the way through but was also moved by the

0:28:30 > 0:28:36melancholic edge to it. It is all given another layer by the fact

0:28:36 > 0:28:40there is a certain amount of political licence to say it is based

0:28:40 > 0:28:44on a true story. He is telling his own story and doing it really well

0:28:44 > 0:28:51that is an interesting week.I have a domestic battle on my hands now

0:28:51 > 0:28:56with Justice League, though. See you next week to be lovely to see you.

0:28:56 > 0:29:00Apart from that, a reminder that you will find more film reviews on the

0:29:00 > 0:29:11website. All previous programmes are on the bike one that is it for both

0:29:11 > 0:29:18of us this week. Thank you for joining us. Goodbye.-- the iPlayer.

0:30:11 > 0:30:19Hello, this is Breakfast with Jon Kay and Naga Munchetty.

0:30:19 > 0:30:28Here's a summary of this morning's main stories from BBC News:

0:30:28 > 0:30:32Air accident investigators are trying to find out what caused the

0:30:32 > 0:30:35plane and helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday, killing

0:30:35 > 0:30:38four people. Teams are continuing to search the

0:30:38 > 0:30:44area around the National Trust area for wreckage. Both aircraft set off

0:30:44 > 0:30:48from Whickham airport about 20 miles from the scene of the crash.

0:30:48 > 0:30:5090 MPs, about a third of them Conservatives,

0:30:50 > 0:30:54have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor

0:30:54 > 0:30:56to say that patients are being "failed" by the NHS

0:30:56 > 0:31:02and social care in England.

0:31:02 > 0:31:05A government spokesman said it was committed to making the sector

0:31:05 > 0:31:06sustainable.

0:31:06 > 0:31:09The politicians who signed the letter, including nearly 30

0:31:09 > 0:31:11former ministers, are calling for parties to work

0:31:11 > 0:31:13together to find a solution.

0:31:13 > 0:31:18Let's embrace the need to work across party. There is no majority

0:31:18 > 0:31:21in parliament. Let's work across party to come up with a long-term

0:31:21 > 0:31:29settlement so that we don't keep lurching from crisis to crisis.

0:31:29 > 0:31:32Air and sea search is taking place to try to find and Argentina

0:31:32 > 0:31:42submarine that went missing.The boat's last known position was about

0:31:42 > 0:31:47260 miles off the coast of Patagonia.

0:31:47 > 0:31:52History is set to be made in Zimbabwe today, after human rights

0:31:52 > 0:31:56activists, and veterans, tried to persuade Robert Mugabe to stand

0:31:56 > 0:32:01down.

0:32:01 > 0:32:04State media have confirmed that eight out of ten regional branches

0:32:04 > 0:32:07of the governing Zanu-PF already passed a vote of no-confidence

0:32:07 > 0:32:07in the President.

0:32:07 > 0:32:11That's following a military coup of sorts earlier this week.

0:32:11 > 0:32:13A 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion of murder

0:32:13 > 0:32:15following the disappearance of teenager Gaia Pope,

0:32:15 > 0:32:17has been released while inquiries continue.

0:32:17 > 0:32:20Paul Elsey, confirmed as the suspect to the BBC by his father,

0:32:20 > 0:32:21is from Swanage.

0:32:21 > 0:32:25Murder detectives are focussing their forensic investigations

0:32:25 > 0:32:28on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path where women's

0:32:28 > 0:32:29clothing was found.

0:32:29 > 0:32:31Miss Pope's family confirmed the clothing matched

0:32:31 > 0:32:34what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

0:32:34 > 0:32:38The Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has said he will set out a plan

0:32:38 > 0:32:42for a leadership change in his party at its conference in Dublin today.

0:32:42 > 0:32:45Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive figures

0:32:45 > 0:32:47in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

0:32:47 > 0:32:49He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

0:32:49 > 0:32:54but will talk about future plans.

0:32:54 > 0:32:57The new leader of the Scottish Labour Party will be announced

0:32:57 > 0:32:59later this morning.

0:32:59 > 0:33:01The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

0:33:01 > 0:33:05and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

0:33:05 > 0:33:08The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

0:33:08 > 0:33:11in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

0:33:11 > 0:33:14part in the ITV reality show I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of

0:33:14 > 0:33:17Here.

0:33:17 > 0:33:21I wonder how that compares with being a politician. And going into

0:33:21 > 0:33:26the jungle... Public quite similar. The government is considering

0:33:26 > 0:33:31attacks on single use plastic used in takeaway boxes and polystyrene.

0:33:31 > 0:33:36Philip Hammond is expected to use next week's budget to announce a

0:33:36 > 0:33:40consultation on the measure, to cut waste and pollution. An estimated 12

0:33:40 > 0:33:43million tons of plastic enters the ocean every year and residue is

0:33:43 > 0:33:48ripped -- is routinely found in fish, sea birds and marine mammals.

0:33:48 > 0:33:51This year's Children in Need reached a record on-the-night-total of more

0:33:51 > 0:33:55than £50 million.

0:33:55 > 0:33:59SINGING

0:34:00 > 0:34:02Highlights of the programme included an Eastenders musical,

0:34:02 > 0:34:04singing Countryfile presenters, and Blue Peter does Strictly Come

0:34:04 > 0:34:10Dancing.

0:34:10 > 0:34:15Since 1980 the appeal has raised more than £900 million.

0:34:15 > 0:34:23Will it get over the £1 billion next year? An incredible amount of money!

0:34:23 > 0:34:28And an original drawing of the comic book hero Tintin is expect to --

0:34:28 > 0:34:32expected to sell for £1 million later. The artwork was published in

0:34:32 > 0:34:411939. It was the cover of one of the stories. Other options include the

0:34:41 > 0:34:48designs for Tintin boardgames. That's the main news.

0:34:48 > 0:34:53Let's find out what's happening in the sport. A big change in Wales.

0:34:53 > 0:34:58Understandably everybody in the team will be disappointed. Chris Coleman

0:34:58 > 0:35:01is stepping down after the incredible run in the euros last

0:35:01 > 0:35:05year. They failed to qualify for the World Cup in Russia next year during

0:35:05 > 0:35:08this campaign, so he has decided it's time to move on. He's never

0:35:08 > 0:35:13made it a secret that he wants to go back to club management. But

0:35:13 > 0:35:17disappointment for Wales and perhaps a surprise that he has chosen

0:35:17 > 0:35:20Sunderland, who are bottom of the championship.

0:35:20 > 0:35:24Things can only get better, surely. Could they?

0:35:24 > 0:35:29They could of course go back down. He obviously likes the challenge. He

0:35:29 > 0:35:33does, but there were all sorts of rumblings that after what he

0:35:33 > 0:35:36achieved with Wales he could take his pick of some big jobs, maybe in

0:35:36 > 0:35:40the Premier league, maybe he is biding his time and waiting for the

0:35:40 > 0:35:43right time. Who is going to replace him? Odds-on

0:35:43 > 0:35:45favour, Ryan Giggs.

0:35:45 > 0:35:48Ryan Giggs is the odds-on favourite to become the next Wales manager,

0:35:48 > 0:35:49after Chris Coleman stood down.

0:35:49 > 0:35:52His new challenge is to rescue Sunderland, who're bottom

0:35:52 > 0:35:53of the Championship.

0:35:53 > 0:35:57Patrick Gearey looks back at Coleman's time as Wales boss.

0:35:57 > 0:36:00Before Chris Coleman, Wales waited 58 years to get

0:36:00 > 0:36:04to a major tournament.

0:36:04 > 0:36:06He took them straight to the semis.

0:36:06 > 0:36:09Last year's victory over Belgium marked

0:36:09 > 0:36:11the dizzying peak for Welsh football, a time

0:36:11 > 0:36:13when anything seemed possible.

0:36:13 > 0:36:15You can't be afraid of dreams.

0:36:15 > 0:36:19Four years ago I was as far away from this as you can imagine.

0:36:19 > 0:36:25And look what's happened.

0:36:25 > 0:36:29If you work hard and if you aren't afraid of the dream and you aren't

0:36:29 > 0:36:30afraid to fail.

0:36:30 > 0:36:33The low point came when he took over from Gary Speed,

0:36:33 > 0:36:37who took his own life in 2011.

0:36:37 > 0:36:40He had to help the young players Speed had begun to bring

0:36:40 > 0:36:41through recover from that shock.

0:36:41 > 0:36:44He inspired ever improving performances and the manager had

0:36:44 > 0:36:45on his side a global superstar.

0:36:45 > 0:36:51Bale, with a moment of absolute magic!

0:36:51 > 0:36:54He has created such a great atmosphere in the camp.

0:36:54 > 0:36:57He makes us want to win for ourselves and for our country.

0:36:57 > 0:36:59He has really brought that passion back.

0:36:59 > 0:37:07Bale's gold was accompanied by newly forged steel at the back.

0:37:07 > 0:37:09Wales made the Euros, though they lost to England,

0:37:09 > 0:37:11they beat Russia, then Northern Ireland.

0:37:11 > 0:37:14Then unforgettably Belgium.

0:37:14 > 0:37:17Then the climb stopped and they lost to Portugal in the semi-final

0:37:17 > 0:37:20and couldn't quite rediscovered the magic in World Cup qualifying.

0:37:20 > 0:37:24But defeat to the Republic of Ireland in Cardiff meant the end

0:37:24 > 0:37:24of their challenge.

0:37:24 > 0:37:28And effectively the end of Chris Coleman.

0:37:28 > 0:37:36They lost against Panama last weekend.

0:37:36 > 0:37:39I think they all hoped the manager would stay on,

0:37:39 > 0:37:40but it's not to be.

0:37:40 > 0:37:44He will go down as Wales's most successful manager for what he has

0:37:44 > 0:37:47achieved.

0:37:47 > 0:37:50He is hardly taking the easy option in going to Sunderland,

0:37:50 > 0:37:52struggling in the second tier, but it may never

0:37:52 > 0:37:55eclipse the job he did in taking Welsh football from its toughest

0:37:55 > 0:37:57moment to its greatest one.

0:37:57 > 0:38:00There could be some more managerial shifting around.

0:38:00 > 0:38:03Northern Ireland manager Michael O'Neill had also been linked

0:38:03 > 0:38:06to the Sunderland job but he's now been given permission to speak

0:38:06 > 0:38:09to the Scottish FA about their vacant manager's position.

0:38:09 > 0:38:11He was bitterly disappointed when Northern Ireland just missed

0:38:11 > 0:38:13out on qualifying for next year's World Cup.

0:38:13 > 0:38:17He's been in charge for six years, leading them to last year's Euros,

0:38:17 > 0:38:19their first major finals for 30 years.

0:38:19 > 0:38:22The big game in the Premier League today is the London Derby.

0:38:22 > 0:38:24Arsenal against Tottenham is the lunchtime kick-off.

0:38:24 > 0:38:27The table shows Tottenham in third place and Arsenal sixth,

0:38:27 > 0:38:30but that can change very quickly.

0:38:30 > 0:38:38In the last 22, 23 years, only we finished against Arsenal one time

0:38:38 > 0:38:42and that doesn't mean today we are above Arsenal. We must respect them.

0:38:42 > 0:38:54They were great under Arsene Wenger. And I think for us it's a massive

0:38:54 > 0:38:57challenge to stay there.

0:38:57 > 0:39:05The real motivation for me is not to do as well as we have potential in

0:39:05 > 0:39:11our team to get the maximum, the potential we have in the team. The

0:39:11 > 0:39:18target is not to compare to Tottenham.

0:39:18 > 0:39:20A bit of a sobering experience for England.

0:39:20 > 0:39:23With the first Ashes test now just five days away,

0:39:23 > 0:39:25England have completed their preparations with a draw

0:39:25 > 0:39:27against a Cricket Australia XI in Townsville.

0:39:27 > 0:39:30Having resumed overnight on 121 for three, the hosts piled

0:39:30 > 0:39:32on the runs as England really struggled.

0:39:32 > 0:39:35Both Jason Sangha and Matthew Short hit centuries, before Moeen Ali had

0:39:35 > 0:39:41the only success of the tourists' day, getting Sangha caught out.

0:39:41 > 0:39:45The Cricket Australia side still finished the day 364-4.

0:39:45 > 0:39:50A massive score, but not looking particularly good for England.

0:39:50 > 0:39:55"That dream is gone".

0:39:55 > 0:39:58Those are the words of England women's head coach Mark Robinson

0:39:58 > 0:40:01after Australia retained the Ashes by winning the First T20 in Sydney.

0:40:01 > 0:40:05The Aussies' win means they can't be beaten by England under the series'

0:40:05 > 0:40:05point scoring system.

0:40:05 > 0:40:10Hopefully England's men get it together, otherwise it could be an

0:40:10 > 0:40:15embarrassing to down under. -- tour.

0:40:15 > 0:40:18It's been a good week for the England women's rugby team

0:40:18 > 0:40:21this week, it was announced the RFU will pay them match fees

0:40:21 > 0:40:22for the first time.

0:40:22 > 0:40:25And last night they thrashed Canada 79-5 in the opening match

0:40:25 > 0:40:26of their three test series.

0:40:26 > 0:40:29Harlequins wing Jess Breach scoring six of them on her debut.

0:40:29 > 0:40:31The sides play again next Tuesday and Saturday.

0:40:31 > 0:40:34The Autumn Internationals continue, with Scotland hoping to beat

0:40:34 > 0:40:37the All Blacks for the first time and England taking on Australia.

0:40:37 > 0:40:40And in the Aviva Premiership, Gloucester produced a remarkable

0:40:40 > 0:40:42comeback in the final half hour to beat Saracens,

0:40:42 > 0:40:49scoring 20 second-half points to win 23-17 at Kingsholm.

0:40:49 > 0:40:54There were wins for Ospreys and Dragons in the Anglo-Welsh Cup.

0:40:54 > 0:40:58Andy Murray has split with his coach Ivan Lendl for the second time.

0:40:58 > 0:41:01Under his guidance, Murray won three Grand Slam titles,

0:41:01 > 0:41:03two Olympic golds and made it to world number one,

0:41:03 > 0:41:06but he's been plagued with injury all season and he'll continue

0:41:06 > 0:41:09to work on regaining his fitness, leading up to January's Australian

0:41:09 > 0:41:14Open.

0:41:14 > 0:41:16Meanwhile, his brother Jamie is into the doubles semi-finals

0:41:16 > 0:41:18at the ATP Tour Finals in London.

0:41:18 > 0:41:20He and Bruno Soares beat the top-ranked pairing

0:41:20 > 0:41:23of Marcelo Melo and Lukasz Kubot in straight sets last night.

0:41:23 > 0:41:26They'll play the defending champions Henri Kontinen and Murray's former

0:41:26 > 0:41:29partner John Peers today.

0:41:29 > 0:41:32And there was a surprise in the singles, when David Goffin

0:41:32 > 0:41:35beat Dominic Thiem in their final group game.

0:41:35 > 0:41:45Goffin faces Roger Federer in the semis.

0:41:45 > 0:41:47The battle between Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose

0:41:47 > 0:41:50to finish the year as Europe's number one golfer is getting

0:41:50 > 0:41:53exciting and it's advantage Rose, who's two shots off the pace

0:41:53 > 0:41:55at the Dubai Championship.

0:41:55 > 0:41:56He's two clear of Fleetwood.

0:41:56 > 0:41:58They're chasing this man, defending champion Matthew Fitzpatrick,

0:41:58 > 0:42:00who's leading the field going into round three.

0:42:00 > 0:42:06He's ten under-par, one shot ahead of Tyrrell Hatton.

0:42:06 > 0:42:11The good thing is, lots of English names in there as well. British golf

0:42:11 > 0:42:13doing pretty well at the moment. Fabulous.

0:42:13 > 0:42:17All up in the mix to be the top golfer of Europe.

0:42:17 > 0:42:21When are we going to find out? I think at the end of the

0:42:21 > 0:42:25tournament, though another couple of days. Tomorrow. I've lost track of

0:42:25 > 0:42:29where we are in the week. It's Saturday today...

0:42:29 > 0:42:32Thank you.

0:42:32 > 0:42:34Today marks 30 years since the King's Cross fire,

0:42:34 > 0:42:38when 31 people lost their lives in the worst blaze in the history

0:42:38 > 0:42:39of the London Underground.

0:42:39 > 0:42:41It started when a single match which was discarded

0:42:41 > 0:42:45on a wooden escalator.

0:42:45 > 0:42:47As Tom Edwards reports, the tragedy brought about monumental

0:42:47 > 0:42:54changes in fire safety.

0:42:54 > 0:42:58Thousands use this escalator every day and many don't know this is

0:42:58 > 0:43:03where the worst fire in the history of the tube started. Stuart is now

0:43:03 > 0:43:07retired, but nearly 30 years ago he was one of the first firefighters to

0:43:07 > 0:43:12arrive.We were laying out the equipment and it was then that we

0:43:12 > 0:43:19heard all started hearing all the screens. -- screams. I thought there

0:43:19 > 0:43:25must be loads of people down there. Just scream after scream.30 years

0:43:25 > 0:43:30on and this official report still makes terrifying reading. It

0:43:30 > 0:43:34describes how this station full of commuters turned into a furnace. It

0:43:34 > 0:43:40also outlines how the response from the emergency services was hampered,

0:43:40 > 0:43:45due to a breakdown in communication. And there was a lack of knowledge of

0:43:45 > 0:43:50the station layout. Even 30 years on, for the families of those who

0:43:50 > 0:43:57died, the memories are still raw. You cry a lot. For a long time. It's

0:43:57 > 0:44:03a shocking thing and everytime something like that happens, whether

0:44:03 > 0:44:09it's Grenville or a terrorist incident, you think of all the

0:44:09 > 0:44:14people who are getting that news -- Grenfell.And the shock of it. The

0:44:14 > 0:44:21following enquiry led to a huge change to the tube and the fire

0:44:21 > 0:44:27services' safety regimes. Among the many recommendations, wooden

0:44:27 > 0:44:30escalators should be removed, smoking should be banned and heat

0:44:30 > 0:44:34detectors and sprinklers should be installed. And crucially, the

0:44:34 > 0:44:37emergency services should be able to communicate with each other

0:44:37 > 0:44:43underground. Most of the recommendations have since been

0:44:43 > 0:44:48implemented. These types of exercises are now part of training

0:44:48 > 0:44:53and legislation ensures minimum staffing levels on deep line

0:44:53 > 0:44:56stations.There isn't a month goes by in my job where we don't

0:44:56 > 0:45:01reference the King's Cross fire. It had such a phenomenal and beneficial

0:45:01 > 0:45:05effect on the organisation. So out of a desperate tragedy, things have

0:45:05 > 0:45:12actually come.The unions say they will resist anything that they think

0:45:12 > 0:45:16could compromise safety. And these changes only happened after the

0:45:16 > 0:45:23deaths of 31 Londoners.

0:45:23 > 0:45:27A little later we will talk to one of the firefighters who helped to

0:45:27 > 0:45:31tackle those blazers and lost the head command of the unit. We will

0:45:31 > 0:45:37get his story and the head of December -- the ceremony

0:45:37 > 0:45:42commemorating those lives. So many people still living with the

0:45:42 > 0:45:46repercussions of that terrible event. Now to the weather forecast.

0:45:49 > 0:45:55Good morning. Not a bad day in the north of Britain. The chance of some

0:45:55 > 0:46:01sunshine. This is a picture from yesterday.This indicates the

0:46:01 > 0:46:06showers around then. Some still to be had in the north-east of

0:46:06 > 0:46:15Scotland. Many isobars. Especially the north-eastern quarter. At least

0:46:15 > 0:46:19some sunshine to speak of. More cloud towards Dumfries and Galloway

0:46:19 > 0:46:27and a sure. A string of showers to the north of England. Brightness

0:46:27 > 0:46:34early on in the south-east. Towards the west of England and Wales,

0:46:34 > 0:46:39increasing cloud. We are looking to this direction for today's weather.

0:46:39 > 0:46:47It will flow across the southern counties of England and Wales. That

0:46:47 > 0:46:53brings the prospect of rain. Showers slumping further south. The north of

0:46:53 > 0:47:00England will be bright this afternoon. With sunshine, 6- 7- 8-9

0:47:00 > 0:47:06only. The warmest weather towards the south. This is where the rugby

0:47:06 > 0:47:15matches will need to contend with rain. Overnight, keeping sky is

0:47:15 > 0:47:21clear in the greater part of the British Isle. That will make a

0:47:21 > 0:47:28difference to the temperatures. Widespread frosts. The south-west,

0:47:28 > 0:47:36mild air. A fair bit of cloud. Rain from the word go in the final quest

0:47:36 > 0:47:44of Cornwall. The bulk of the rain will be further north. The further

0:47:44 > 0:47:49east you are, the more chilly your day will be. 5-6 is the maximum.

0:47:49 > 0:47:56That is the problem. Because it is that cold, as the mild air comes in

0:47:56 > 0:48:00from the Atlantic, there could be a conversion of the rain to snow to

0:48:00 > 0:48:06fairly low levels. Keeping an eye on that. You get the sense many more of

0:48:06 > 0:48:11us are in for one of those Monday mornings, I am afraid. We will cope

0:48:11 > 0:48:13as long as there is some

0:48:13 > 0:48:14mornings, I am afraid. We will cope as long as there is some sunshine at

0:48:14 > 0:48:21some point. Do you know when your phone calls on the floor and it

0:48:21 > 0:48:28tracks, it should not happen as much as it happens. -- falls. We have

0:48:28 > 0:48:33been looking at the extreme testing that goes into mobile phones to stop

0:48:33 > 0:48:39that happening.

0:48:52 > 0:48:55Just across the water from Hong Kong, on the Chinese

0:48:55 > 0:48:58mainland, lies a city at the heart of the country's technological

0:48:58 > 0:49:06revolution.

0:49:06 > 0:49:07Welcome back to Shenzhen.

0:49:07 > 0:49:09This is where stuff gets made.

0:49:09 > 0:49:18More than 70% of the world's mobile phones are manufactured in China.

0:49:18 > 0:49:21But all that industry is taking its toll on the city.

0:49:21 > 0:49:23As the buildings go up to accommodate the influx

0:49:23 > 0:49:27of businesses, the smog has come down to remind everyone of the price

0:49:27 > 0:49:29you pay for a rapidly expanding industrial economy.

0:49:29 > 0:49:39The middle-class here is also consuming more power,

0:49:39 > 0:49:41as well as demanding something else - good quality home-grown products.

0:49:41 > 0:49:44And Chinese brands are rising to the challenge, with names

0:49:44 > 0:49:47like ZTE, Xiaomi and Huawei even breaking out of China and becoming

0:49:47 > 0:49:48recognised and desired worldwide.

0:49:48 > 0:50:03One such brand is OnePlus.

0:50:03 > 0:50:06Now, despite only being four years old, it's already turned out

0:50:06 > 0:50:10a number of phones that have been compared favourably to the top end

0:50:10 > 0:50:18Samsungs and iPhones and this week it unveiled a brand-new handset,

0:50:18 > 0:50:22the 5T, with all the fanfare that a big phone launch gets these days.

0:50:22 > 0:50:23Are you all excited?

0:50:23 > 0:50:40The secrecy that surrounds these new phones' prelaunch is intense

0:50:40 > 0:50:42and, let's be honest, it's part of the hype.

0:50:42 > 0:50:44Look, it's another black rectangle!

0:50:44 > 0:50:47But as such it's really rare to get a look behind the scenes

0:50:47 > 0:50:51at the design, the manufacture and the launch of a new device.

0:50:51 > 0:50:53But in Shenzhen, two weeks before the unveiling,

0:50:53 > 0:50:55we were given exclusive access to the inner workings

0:50:55 > 0:50:58of the production line on the run-up to D-Day.

0:50:58 > 0:51:00Now I'm qualified to serve you pastries.

0:51:00 > 0:51:02They make loads of different types of phones in this factory,

0:51:02 > 0:51:06so to keep the 5T as secret from all the other workers,

0:51:06 > 0:51:08everything happens behind the blue shroud of secrecy.

0:51:08 > 0:51:09Are you ready?

0:51:09 > 0:51:09Thank you.

0:51:09 > 0:51:10Come in.

0:51:10 > 0:51:11Welcome to production line 27.

0:51:11 > 0:51:15The phone starts life as just a tiny camera there and then it's gradually

0:51:15 > 0:51:17assembled around this U shaped production line,

0:51:17 > 0:51:21which means by the time it gets to the end it's a fully featured

0:51:21 > 0:51:22phone, just about there.

0:51:22 > 0:51:25This is the reason China has come to dominate electronics manufacturing.

0:51:25 > 0:51:27A ready supply of a disciplined, relatively low-cost workforce.

0:51:27 > 0:51:30Each person here has one unique job which requires concentration,

0:51:30 > 0:51:31speed and precision.

0:51:31 > 0:51:34A single speck of dust caught in the camera lens and the finished

0:51:34 > 0:51:42phone will be rejected.

0:51:42 > 0:51:45What I found most surprising about this is it's all people.

0:51:45 > 0:51:48I would have thought with this kind of high precision job,

0:51:48 > 0:51:49these phones would have been built solely by machines,

0:51:49 > 0:52:05but it's pretty much all humans.

0:52:05 > 0:52:08Each line can produce more than 90 phones an hour.

0:52:08 > 0:52:20It's exhausting just watching this.

0:52:20 > 0:52:23Fortunately, the staff get a two-hour lunch break and also,

0:52:23 > 0:52:34suddenly at 3pm...

0:52:34 > 0:52:37BELL RINGS This might look weird, but having seen how intense this job

0:52:37 > 0:52:40is and how much concentration you need, this ten minute eye

0:52:40 > 0:52:46break is invaluable.

0:52:46 > 0:52:50I think if I was doing this job I'd just want ten minutes to get my head

0:52:50 > 0:52:53down and close my eyes and reset my brain too.

0:52:53 > 0:52:53Wow!

0:52:53 > 0:52:57Now, these people are bringing to life a design that has been

0:52:57 > 0:52:58anguished over, squeezed for efficiency and ultimately

0:52:58 > 0:53:06compromised to keep costs down.

0:53:06 > 0:53:08I'm meeting with one of the designers to get

0:53:08 > 0:53:11the inside track on how he's made this black rectangle ever

0:53:11 > 0:53:13so slightly different from all the others.

0:53:13 > 0:53:16For every new phone, you come up with lots of different

0:53:16 > 0:53:25designs, like this.

0:53:25 > 0:53:25200.

0:53:25 > 0:53:26Oh, my word!

0:53:26 > 0:53:28Do you think we've achieved peak design now?

0:53:28 > 0:53:31We are still making some choices, some sacrifices, in favour

0:53:31 > 0:53:35of the beauty of the exterior, still a little bit.

0:53:35 > 0:53:35Such as?

0:53:35 > 0:53:39Well, such as, actually the best place for this would be leaning

0:53:39 > 0:53:40directly on the corner.

0:53:40 > 0:53:43In our design, we have this angle here, so that doesn't allow us

0:53:43 > 0:53:49to put this directly here.

0:53:49 > 0:53:52Back at the factory, Simon would be horrified

0:53:52 > 0:53:53by what happens to his design.

0:53:53 > 0:53:56DRAMATIC SCREAMING This is where an unlucky few phones

0:53:56 > 0:54:10are pulled off the production line to check extreme tolerance.

0:54:10 > 0:54:12Elsewhere, other test phones escape that big plunge,

0:54:12 > 0:54:14but instead are dropped 5,000 times each.

0:54:14 > 0:54:17Others have their charging ports wiggled and buttons

0:54:17 > 0:54:17pressed 10,000 times.

0:54:17 > 0:54:19And then there's the tumble dryer.

0:54:19 > 0:54:22Only when about 70% of the sample phones start surviving this vigorous

0:54:22 > 0:54:24testing will a build be deemed successful.

0:54:24 > 0:54:28For me this is a fascinating look at how a phone is born and now that

0:54:28 > 0:54:31it's being launched this small preproduction line can expand,

0:54:31 > 0:54:34once the company has an indication of how many orders it will get.

0:54:34 > 0:54:48And that's the secret.

0:54:48 > 0:54:50Not to produce more than you can sell.

0:54:50 > 0:54:52So when OnePlus decided to take on the big brands,

0:54:52 > 0:54:56which can all afford to fail, it decided to sell its first phone

0:54:56 > 0:54:57by invitation only.

0:54:57 > 0:54:59What was the thinking behind that?

0:54:59 > 0:55:06'Cause I would have tried to make it as available as possible.

0:55:06 > 0:55:09So being a brand-new company and not making such a complicated product

0:55:09 > 0:55:12as a smartphone and being based here, we didn't really

0:55:12 > 0:55:15have the opportunity to test the product in all the countries

0:55:15 > 0:55:19where we sold it and adding to that we didn't know how many

0:55:19 > 0:55:25phones to make.

0:55:25 > 0:55:28If you end up having too many phones in your warehouse that you can't

0:55:28 > 0:55:29sell, it's over.

0:55:29 > 0:55:31With the launch over, OnePlus will nervously await

0:55:31 > 0:55:34the first reviews and, more importantly, the advance orders.

0:55:34 > 0:55:37And they will decide whether these people will be joined by hundreds

0:55:37 > 0:55:38more or not.

0:55:38 > 0:55:41The UK's anti-bullying week is now coming to an end,

0:55:41 > 0:55:43but behind closed doors, computer screens and even smart

0:55:43 > 0:55:46phones, the bullying that some encounter in the school playground

0:55:46 > 0:56:15still lives on after-hours.

0:56:15 > 0:56:18After I did come out, I then received online anonymous

0:56:18 > 0:56:20messages from an account set up to message me,

0:56:20 > 0:56:23telling me I should kill myself, because obviously they didn't agree

0:56:23 > 0:56:24with my sexuality.

0:56:24 > 0:56:26It destroyed me because not only was the bullying happening

0:56:26 > 0:56:29at school, it had followed me to my home.

0:56:29 > 0:56:32It followed me to my room, my safe space where I feel happy

0:56:32 > 0:56:48and I am myself, I suddenly couldn't be any more.

0:56:48 > 0:56:51Thomas moved schools and went on to become one of Facebook's

0:56:51 > 0:56:53anti-bullying ambassadors, a scheme funded by the social

0:56:53 > 0:56:56network to train up pupils to provide peer-to-peer support

0:56:56 > 0:57:00within secondary schools.

0:57:00 > 0:57:03It's really important to have someone there because it's someone

0:57:03 > 0:57:05they know they can come to as well.

0:57:05 > 0:57:07And with the ambassadors being their generation,

0:57:07 > 0:57:10children are more likely to come to us and know that they're

0:57:10 > 0:57:11there for them.

0:57:11 > 0:57:14Because we are their age, we have similar interests

0:57:14 > 0:57:20so they can come to us much easier.

0:57:20 > 0:57:22But with so many different places to communicate,

0:57:22 > 0:57:26the problem is hard to police, hard to monitor and hard to solve,

0:57:26 > 0:57:29as those at the frontline of dealing with cyber bullying attest.

0:57:29 > 0:57:32Our concern is just how awful the things are that people write.

0:57:32 > 0:57:35It's very sad, but we do regularly see those sorts of comments

0:57:35 > 0:57:37about "everybody hates you, go kill yourself".

0:57:37 > 0:57:40Those sorts of things, which I can't imagine would happen

0:57:40 > 0:57:46in a face-to-face environment.

0:57:46 > 0:57:49As the big and small players try to overcome the issue,

0:57:49 > 0:57:51one British company has big ambitions.

0:57:51 > 0:57:54They want to get their software on every single child's device

0:57:54 > 0:57:56before they use it for the first time.

0:57:56 > 0:57:59SafeToNet don't like to refer to their software as parental

0:57:59 > 0:58:02control because they feel that could put people off.

0:58:02 > 0:58:05Some of the functions, though, could be considered that.

0:58:05 > 0:58:08For example, monitoring the amount of time that your children

0:58:08 > 0:58:10are online and limiting that however you see fit.

0:58:10 > 0:58:14You can block devices and websites, but it also is planning on upping

0:58:14 > 0:58:17the game of what these sorts of products can do by adding a bit

0:58:17 > 0:58:25of artificial intelligence.

0:58:25 > 0:58:29By later this year, it's going to be aiming to track the behavioural

0:58:29 > 0:58:31changes, so they can pre-empt any bullying before it actually happens.

0:58:31 > 0:58:34It aims to understand context, providing triggered alerts

0:58:34 > 0:58:49for parents, rather than letting them actually spy.

0:58:49 > 0:58:52One of the ways that we identify when children are trending sad

0:58:52 > 0:58:54and maybe even depressed is they stop posting selfies

0:58:54 > 0:58:56of themselves because they've lost that self-confidence.

0:58:56 > 0:59:00So our software is designed to be able to pick up those trends

0:59:00 > 0:59:02and recognised, again, there's a change in behavioural patterns.

0:59:02 > 0:59:04So we are identifying cyber bullying, abuse,

0:59:04 > 0:59:12aggression, sextortion, grooming and other predatory risks.

0:59:12 > 0:59:15Great if it works, but of course it's all really

0:59:15 > 0:59:16about human behaviour.

0:59:16 > 0:59:18Culturally we obviously do have an issue that young people

0:59:18 > 0:59:20believe that you can behave this way online.

0:59:20 > 0:59:24We need to send a clear message, you don't, and I think it takes

0:59:24 > 0:59:27all of us to work together, educators, parents and tech

0:59:27 > 0:59:29companies, to make sure children understand that.

0:59:29 > 0:59:32So whilst none of the solutions may be foolproof, maybe these ideas

0:59:32 > 0:59:35together could make cyber bullying a lesser problem in the future

0:59:35 > 0:59:36than it is today.

0:59:36 > 0:59:39That's it for the short cut of Click in China this week.

0:59:39 > 0:59:42The full-length version is on iPlayer right now.

0:59:42 > 0:59:44I promise we will be back in this fascinating country

0:59:44 > 0:59:45very, very soon.

0:59:45 > 0:59:48In the meantime you can check us out on social media.

0:59:48 > 0:59:52Thank you for watching, and we'll see you soon.

1:00:19 > 1:00:22Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Jon Kay.

1:00:22 > 1:00:22Examining the wreckage:

1:00:22 > 1:00:25The investigation continues to find out why two aircraft collided over

1:00:25 > 1:00:28Buckinghamshire.

1:00:28 > 1:00:31Police and air accident investigators have joined forces

1:00:31 > 1:00:34to try and get to the bottom of the crash which left

1:00:34 > 1:00:49four people dead.

1:00:49 > 1:00:52Good morning, it's Saturday the 18th of November.

1:00:52 > 1:00:55Also this morning: Pressure on the President of Zimbabwe Robert

1:00:55 > 1:00:58Mugabe, as his own party calls on him to quit and people prepare

1:00:58 > 1:01:02to take to the streets.

1:01:04 > 1:01:0890 MPs say patients in the health service in England are being

1:01:08 > 1:01:11failed by the system as they ask the Prime Minister for

1:01:11 > 1:01:12a cross-party solution.

1:01:12 > 1:01:16One, two...

1:01:17 > 1:01:21A record total for Children in Need last night, as donations top £50

1:01:21 > 1:01:25million for the first time.

1:01:26 > 1:01:30In sport, the man who took Wales to the semi finals of the Euros

1:01:30 > 1:01:33has stepped down.

1:01:33 > 1:01:35Chris Coleman has gone to manage the Championship's bottom side,

1:01:35 > 1:01:40Sunderland.

1:01:40 > 1:01:49And Mike takes a beating as he meets world champion kickboxer.

1:01:49 > 1:01:50And Philip has the weather.

1:01:50 > 1:01:51Good morning.

1:01:51 > 1:01:53A bit of everything in the weekend's forecast.

1:01:53 > 1:01:55The bulk of the sunshine in northern parts for

1:01:55 > 1:01:57Saturday and more cloud in southern areas.

1:01:57 > 1:01:59All the details in a few minutes.

1:01:59 > 1:02:00OK. See you then.

1:02:00 > 1:02:01First, our main story:

1:02:01 > 1:02:04Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

1:02:04 > 1:02:07a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

1:02:07 > 1:02:07killing four people.

1:02:07 > 1:02:16Teams will continue scouring the area around

1:02:16 > 1:02:18the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury,

1:02:18 > 1:02:19for wreckage.

1:02:19 > 1:02:23Ian Palmer is there.

1:02:23 > 1:02:27What have you been able to assess about what might have happened?

1:02:27 > 1:02:36Well, they obviously suspended the search overnight and are yet to

1:02:36 > 1:02:39resume the investigation this morning. But that is what they will

1:02:39 > 1:02:45obviously try to establish when the light improves this morning. It's

1:02:45 > 1:02:52going to be very difficult because... Partly because the site

1:02:52 > 1:02:57of the wreckage is cast over a large area and also the two light aircraft

1:02:57 > 1:03:02came down in a very heavily wooded area, with lots of deciduous trees.

1:03:02 > 1:03:06So finding the wreckage will not be easy. Certainly Thames Valley Police

1:03:06 > 1:03:11have said they expect to be here combing the area for at least two

1:03:11 > 1:03:18days. Thames Valley Police say they've launched a joint

1:03:18 > 1:03:24investigation between themselves and the Air Accidents Investigation

1:03:24 > 1:03:28Branch and it would be clear to assume that police detectives when

1:03:28 > 1:03:32they resume their work here later this morning, they will carry out

1:03:32 > 1:03:38the detailed search and the investigation branch will carry out

1:03:38 > 1:03:44and provide the technical expertise. But for people died. We don't know

1:03:44 > 1:03:49their age, gender or names yet, but there will be for families who will

1:03:49 > 1:03:54be desperately anxious to find out exactly what happened over the skies

1:03:54 > 1:04:01here in Buckinghamshire, just after midday yesterday.Thank you for that

1:04:01 > 1:04:03upbeat -- update.

1:04:03 > 1:04:05The political crisis in Zimbabwe continues,

1:04:05 > 1:04:08with the ruling party, human rights activists and veterans

1:04:08 > 1:04:10all holding rallies today, to try to force Robert Mugabe

1:04:10 > 1:04:11to step down.

1:04:11 > 1:04:14State media have confirmed that eight out of ten regional branches

1:04:14 > 1:04:17of the governing Zanu-PF already passed a vote of no-confidence

1:04:17 > 1:04:20in the President.

1:04:20 > 1:04:23Ben Brown is in Zimbabwe for us.

1:04:23 > 1:04:30The rallies today will take place. How is that going to look?I think

1:04:30 > 1:04:33there is already people coming out onto the streets of Harare in their

1:04:33 > 1:04:39thousands. Euphoric, we are hearing, exuberant. We believe this is a

1:04:39 > 1:04:44pivotal moment. Coming out onto the streets, two separate rallies. One

1:04:44 > 1:04:48by civilians and one by veterans who fought alongside Robert Mugabe

1:04:48 > 1:04:53against white minority rule. That rally against the Robert Mugabe,

1:04:53 > 1:04:57demanding he stands down, that is endorsed by the military who had

1:04:57 > 1:05:00their takeover here on Wednesday. Time is really running out for

1:05:00 > 1:05:05Robert Mugabe. He's got very few friends left in this country. Very

1:05:05 > 1:05:10hard to find anyone here you talk to who wants him to stay as president.

1:05:10 > 1:05:16His own party are now against him, Zanu-PF, the military are against

1:05:16 > 1:05:20him and so are the war veterans. It looks like he's got to go. It's only

1:05:20 > 1:05:24a matter of time, but we are still waiting. He is still technically

1:05:24 > 1:05:30president of Zimbabwe.Even so, it's interesting, yesterday when we spoke

1:05:30 > 1:05:35to you we have the pictures of the head of the military smiling next to

1:05:35 > 1:05:40Robert Mugabe in his home. There obviously seems to be a desire to

1:05:40 > 1:05:47make this as peaceful transition as possible?Yes, there is very much a

1:05:47 > 1:05:53tradition in this country of respect for your elders, so it's trying to

1:05:53 > 1:05:57treat Robert Mugabe with dignity, even though many people accuse him

1:05:57 > 1:06:01of presiding over political oppression and economic disaster.

1:06:01 > 1:06:05They want to give him a kind of dignified way out of office. They

1:06:05 > 1:06:09want him to resign with dignity. I think he wants security guarantees

1:06:09 > 1:06:14about the safety of him and his family. If he does resign, that will

1:06:14 > 1:06:18pave the way for some kind of transitional government in Zimbabwe,

1:06:18 > 1:06:23including members of the opposition, in a coalition government.Thanks

1:06:23 > 1:06:31very much. We will get more from them throughout the programme.

1:06:31 > 1:06:3390 MPs, about a third of them Conservatives,

1:06:33 > 1:06:35have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor

1:06:35 > 1:06:39calling for parties to work together on the future of the NHS and social

1:06:39 > 1:06:41care in England.

1:06:41 > 1:06:43The politicians who signed the letter, including nearly 30

1:06:43 > 1:06:45former ministers, say party politics has failed

1:06:45 > 1:06:47to come up with a solution.

1:06:47 > 1:06:48Our health editor Hugh Pym reports.

1:06:48 > 1:06:50The pressure on NHS is growing.

1:06:50 > 1:06:53There are fears that hospitals will continue to struggle to find

1:06:53 > 1:06:56enough beds to admit new patients, partly because of difficulties

1:06:56 > 1:06:57discharging elderly patients,

1:06:57 > 1:07:03caused in turn by problems with social care.

1:07:03 > 1:07:06A group of MPs now says that a long-term sustainable settlement

1:07:06 > 1:07:09is needed and that only a cross-party NHS and

1:07:09 > 1:07:12care convention can deliver that.

1:07:12 > 1:07:14In the letter written to the Prime Minister

1:07:14 > 1:07:22and the Chancellor, the MPs say:

1:07:31 > 1:07:33Senior Conservative Labour and Liberal Democrat backbenchers

1:07:33 > 1:07:35are among those who signed the letter.

1:07:35 > 1:07:37I think the NHS and social care are huge issues

1:07:37 > 1:07:41for our generation and we've got to get it right and I think it's

1:07:41 > 1:07:49bigger than just one party.

1:07:49 > 1:07:52The MPs also call for action in next week's budget to address

1:07:52 > 1:07:54the short-term pressures on the system.

1:07:54 > 1:07:57A government spokesperson said it was recognised there was broad

1:07:57 > 1:07:59agreement across Parliament, that social care reform

1:07:59 > 1:08:02was a priority, and there would be consultation ahead of policy

1:08:02 > 1:08:08paper next year.

1:08:08 > 1:08:13Donald Trump has announced the suspension of the importing of

1:08:13 > 1:08:17elephant trophies, just a day after the band was relaxed by his

1:08:17 > 1:08:22administration. They were set to reverse the 2014 Obama era van by

1:08:22 > 1:08:26allowing punters to bring back mementos from big game kills in

1:08:26 > 1:08:30Africa but last night he tweeted the change was now on hold until he

1:08:30 > 1:08:33could review all conservation facts.

1:08:33 > 1:08:37An air and sea search is taking place to try to find an Argentine

1:08:37 > 1:08:42submarine which disappeared in the South Atlantic on Wednesday.

1:08:42 > 1:08:46The San Juan has 44 crew onboard, including the Argentine navy's first

1:08:46 > 1:08:46woman submarine officer.

1:08:46 > 1:08:50The boat's last known position was about 260 miles off the coast

1:08:50 > 1:08:53of Patagonia.

1:08:53 > 1:08:56Here, a 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion

1:08:56 > 1:08:58of murder following the disappearance of teenager

1:08:58 > 1:08:58Gaia Pope,

1:08:58 > 1:09:03has been released while inquiries continue.

1:09:03 > 1:09:06Paul Elsey, confirmed as a suspect to the BBC by his father,

1:09:06 > 1:09:08is from Swanage.

1:09:08 > 1:09:11Murder detectives now focussing their forensic

1:09:11 > 1:09:13investigations on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path

1:09:13 > 1:09:17where women's clothing was found.

1:09:17 > 1:09:19Miss Pope's family have confirmed the clothing matched

1:09:19 > 1:09:24what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

1:09:24 > 1:09:28The Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has said he will set out a plan

1:09:28 > 1:09:31for a leadership change in his party at its conference in Dublin today.

1:09:31 > 1:09:34Mr Adams, one of the most significant and divisive figures

1:09:34 > 1:09:37in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

1:09:37 > 1:09:39He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

1:09:39 > 1:09:42but will talk about future plans.

1:09:42 > 1:09:45The new leader of the Scottish Labour Party will be announced

1:09:45 > 1:09:46later this morning.

1:09:46 > 1:09:49The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

1:09:49 > 1:09:52and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

1:09:52 > 1:09:57The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

1:09:57 > 1:10:00in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

1:10:00 > 1:10:04part in the ITV reality show I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of

1:10:04 > 1:10:08Here.

1:10:08 > 1:10:12We are waiting for confirmation on that. What an extraordinary

1:10:12 > 1:10:16political turnaround! Lots of negotiation, that is what

1:10:16 > 1:10:19you need in the jungle. Just like Parliament!

1:10:19 > 1:10:22This year's Children in Need reached a record on-the-night-total of more

1:10:22 > 1:10:23than £50 million.

1:10:23 > 1:10:25Highlights of the programme included an Eastenders musical,

1:10:25 > 1:10:27singing Countryfile presenters, and Blue Peter does Strictly Come

1:10:27 > 1:10:33Dancing.

1:10:33 > 1:10:47Our entertainment correspondent Lizo Mzimba reports.

1:10:47 > 1:10:55Kids, there's a place that's like no other.

1:10:55 > 1:10:59The West End came to the East End too, with a special song

1:10:59 > 1:11:03and dance performance.

1:11:03 > 1:11:14Blue Peter stars, past and present, took to the Strictly dance floor.

1:11:14 > 1:11:16Look at my Tardis!

1:11:16 > 1:11:19Dr Who fans got a sneak peek of Peter Capaldi's final episode.

1:11:19 > 1:11:26Bigger on the inside than it is on the outside.

1:11:26 > 1:11:27Glad it's not just me.

1:11:27 > 1:11:29# Someday I'll wish upon a star

1:11:29 > 1:11:34# And wake up where the clouds are far...#

1:11:34 > 1:11:371,500 children in locations across the UK sang live as part

1:11:37 > 1:11:41of a special children's choir.

1:11:41 > 1:11:44And there was also the chance for viewers who have given so much

1:11:44 > 1:11:47to see how the money is spent.

1:11:47 > 1:11:49You're in control of it now, right?

1:11:49 > 1:11:51We're incredibly proud of him.

1:11:51 > 1:11:55Tonight's massive total means that since it began Children in Need

1:11:55 > 1:11:58has raised approaching £1 billion, all of which has gone to helping

1:11:58 > 1:12:14young people and disadvantaged children all across the UK.

1:12:14 > 1:12:17People are becoming more and more generous each year. We keep thinking

1:12:17 > 1:12:20we won't top that total, and we keep doing that.

1:12:20 > 1:12:25We are talking to the chief executive later. We thought it would

1:12:25 > 1:12:29be embarrassing if they don't top last year's are but they do every

1:12:29 > 1:12:32year. We will have more sport later and of

1:12:32 > 1:12:35course we will have the weather forecast.

1:12:35 > 1:12:37As we've been hearing this morning, air accident investigators

1:12:37 > 1:12:40are working to establish the cause of a crash between a helicopter

1:12:40 > 1:12:43and a plane which killed four people in Buckinghamshire yesterday.

1:12:43 > 1:12:47The collision took place shortly after midday

1:12:47 > 1:12:49above the Waddesdon Estate, which is National Trust

1:12:49 > 1:12:53land near Aylesbury.

1:12:53 > 1:12:56Tony Cable is a former Air Accident Investigator and he has

1:12:56 > 1:12:59flown helicopters from the same base used by both of the aircraft

1:12:59 > 1:13:00in yesterday's incident.

1:13:00 > 1:13:04He joins us now from our Reading studio.

1:13:04 > 1:13:12Good morning. Thanks for being with us this morning. Obviously it's very

1:13:12 > 1:13:15early days and we shouldn't be speculating, but from what you know

1:13:15 > 1:13:20about this area, what do you think the investigators will be

1:13:20 > 1:13:28considering at this point?Looking at markings on the two aircraft and

1:13:28 > 1:13:32the items that got knocked off. In this type of airspace I imagine they

1:13:32 > 1:13:40were low-level and therefore in what's known uncontrolled airspace.

1:13:40 > 1:13:44So the means of avoiding other aircraft in that sort of situation

1:13:44 > 1:13:55is what's known as see and avoid. So a pilot has to keep a lookout and

1:13:55 > 1:13:59actually see another aircraft and take action to avoid it if

1:13:59 > 1:14:04necessary, rather than being controlled by air traffic.So they

1:14:04 > 1:14:08are literally using iSight, eyeballing one another, rather than

1:14:08 > 1:14:17being told where to go -- eye sight. Yes that's correct. They may be on

1:14:17 > 1:14:23what's called a radar advisory service, so you can request this and

1:14:23 > 1:14:27air traffic will then watch the aircraft on radar and if they see a

1:14:27 > 1:14:33conflict arising they can give advice as to the location of another

1:14:33 > 1:14:38aircraft, but it is not positive control. The pilots also will be

1:14:38 > 1:14:42looking out for all listening out for radio messages from other people

1:14:42 > 1:14:50in the area. And keeping an eye on their positioning and altitude and

1:14:50 > 1:14:56so forth. But basically it's looking around for other aircraft and of

1:14:56 > 1:15:03course all aircraft have blindspots. We understand the weather was

1:15:03 > 1:15:07actually pretty good at the time, it was quite clear and the sun wasn't

1:15:07 > 1:15:12too low. The talk about blindspots. In the kind of aircraft we are

1:15:12 > 1:15:17talking about, the aeroplane and the helicopter, is it common for them to

1:15:17 > 1:15:21have obvious and identifiable blindspots?Very much so. If you've

1:15:21 > 1:15:27got a high wind aircraft like the Cessna 150 that crashed, with the

1:15:27 > 1:15:31wind on top of the cockpit, then your upward vision is very

1:15:31 > 1:15:38restrictive -- wing. Unless you manoeuvre and check the airspace

1:15:38 > 1:15:43above you, similarly if you've got a low wing aircraft or probably a lot

1:15:43 > 1:15:48of helicopters, you can't see downward very much, unless a game

1:15:48 > 1:15:55you manoeuvre around and for example if you are descending Eubank over

1:15:55 > 1:16:01and have a look down below you before you descend.I think a lot of

1:16:01 > 1:16:05people who are not involved in aviation and have never been in a

1:16:05 > 1:16:09helicopter or flown one will be amazed that in this day and age with

1:16:09 > 1:16:15so much technology around us pilots are relying on their eyesight, that

1:16:15 > 1:16:18there is no technology or guidance system that would allow them to be

1:16:18 > 1:16:19safer.

1:16:23 > 1:16:30There are systems around known as AVSB so that aircraft can transmit

1:16:30 > 1:16:37their position to other aircraft, but that is not widespread at the

1:16:37 > 1:16:46moment. It is coming in. It works most of the time, but it has

1:16:46 > 1:16:53limitations. Tragically, every now and then there is a collision.Thank

1:16:53 > 1:16:58you very much for explaining that to us on Breakfast this morning as

1:16:58 > 1:17:07investigations continue in Buckinghamshire. It is going to get

1:17:07 > 1:17:10more cold.It is officially winter, isn't it?Not

1:17:10 > 1:17:18more cold.It is officially winter, isn't it?Not yet. You impetuous

1:17:18 > 1:17:21youth! You have to wait until the first of December.

1:17:25 > 1:17:33Don't mind the astronomical side of it all but we worked in four months.

1:17:33 > 1:17:37It is cool this morning but what are you going to say when we get into

1:17:37 > 1:17:49the depths of winter and have snow! Calm down! Brighten the south-east.

1:17:49 > 1:17:54That will not be the case all day. -- bright in. Here is why. Many

1:17:54 > 1:17:58isobars in Scotland to be pretty bright if you dodge the showers.

1:17:58 > 1:18:08They will keep coming on this westerly wind. Bright enough but

1:18:08 > 1:18:12chilly. Brightness for Northern Ireland. The same in the south-east.

1:18:12 > 1:18:19We saw that earlier on with the weather picture. Cloud here. That is

1:18:19 > 1:18:26not the case in Anglesey. A mass of cloud in the south-west drifting

1:18:26 > 1:18:31further east with time down towards the southern counties ringing the

1:18:31 > 1:18:38prospect of rain. Further north, showers. That will get out of the

1:18:38 > 1:18:43north of England and it will be bright in the afternoon. Northern

1:18:43 > 1:18:48Ireland, a dry afternoon. Scotland, showers in the north-east. And a

1:18:48 > 1:18:54breeze. The rugby. A little bit damp in Cardiff and Twickenham. Scotland,

1:18:54 > 1:19:01clear skies. You have the New Zealanders being more of a concern

1:19:01 > 1:19:07than the weather. Overnight, clear skies. I will get more grief from

1:19:07 > 1:19:13the Breakfast couch because we will have a chilly night. A frosty start

1:19:13 > 1:19:18to Sunday, especially in the south-western quarter. That cloud

1:19:18 > 1:19:23filled in the west of the British Isles, bringing with it the prospect

1:19:23 > 1:19:31of rain for some. -- filling in for. Relatively dry but clouding up. Not

1:19:31 > 1:19:38warm. 5- six degrees as the daytime maximum temperature. Sunday and

1:19:38 > 1:19:44Monday. Mild air from the Atlantic. A price, the prospect of a damp

1:19:44 > 1:19:50start for many. The potential for snowfall across not necessarily the

1:19:50 > 1:20:00highest ground in Scotland.You cold us youth!It is early. We all make

1:20:00 > 1:20:06mistakes. -- you called us. You called us.

1:20:13 > 1:20:18History is set to be made in Zimbabwe today as rallies across the

1:20:18 > 1:20:24capital tried to force Robert McGarvey to stand down following the

1:20:24 > 1:20:41military takeover. -- try. -- Mugabe.

1:20:41 > 1:20:44This is following a military take-over which began this week.

1:20:44 > 1:20:46Tanks were spotted on the on the outskirts

1:20:46 > 1:20:48of the capital city, sparking rumours that something

1:20:48 > 1:20:49was about to happen.

1:20:49 > 1:20:52Troops seized state television to deny a coup and tell the nation

1:20:52 > 1:20:55they were targeting criminals, while placing the president

1:20:55 > 1:20:55under house arrest.

1:20:55 > 1:20:59Mr Mugabe was then pictured smiling as he took part in talks

1:20:59 > 1:21:01with the military leaders now in charge, but sources suggested

1:21:01 > 1:21:03he might be resisting pressure to resign.

1:21:03 > 1:21:06On Friday, the President appeared in public for the first time

1:21:06 > 1:21:09since the military take-over to attend a graduation ceremony,

1:21:09 > 1:21:10handing out degrees.

1:21:10 > 1:21:13Now, this morning, the ruling party, human rights activists and veterans

1:21:13 > 1:21:15will march to try and get the president to step down.

1:21:15 > 1:21:20We will now be speaking to Quincy, who is in Zimbabwe, and can tell us

1:21:20 > 1:21:21about the atmosphere there.

1:21:21 > 1:21:26Thank you for talking to us. Tell us if you can, we will use you to get a

1:21:26 > 1:21:29gauge of the temperature, the mood, how people are feeling in this

1:21:29 > 1:21:32period of potential transition.Good morning. How are you?Very well.

1:21:32 > 1:21:42Talk to us.It still feels like a dream. This is new territory. Just

1:21:42 > 1:21:49the smell of freedom, how close we have come, it is unbelievable. For

1:21:49 > 1:21:59the first time in my life, I have seen different people from different

1:21:59 > 1:22:10parties agreeing on one thing altogether at once.How many people

1:22:10 > 1:22:15do you think, in terms of balance, want to see this change? Who wants

1:22:15 > 1:22:20to see the change and was happy with how things are?Can I tell you

1:22:20 > 1:22:29something?Please.I would say 90% of the country. Many people had no

1:22:29 > 1:22:43choice. AUDIO ISSUES. Everyone I know is longing for change.We are

1:22:43 > 1:22:46going to have to cut this interview short because we are having

1:22:46 > 1:22:50technical problems in terms of the sound. Thank you for talking to us.

1:22:50 > 1:22:55We will get back in touch with you later in the programme if we can.

1:22:55 > 1:23:00Largely seen he is one of what he says are 90% of the people he knows

1:23:00 > 1:23:09wanting a transition of leadership in Zimbabwe. -- saying. We will get

1:23:09 > 1:23:14more information later to get a sense of the protesting and how many

1:23:14 > 1:23:21people are out on the streets and the impact it may have as hours go

1:23:21 > 1:23:21on.

1:23:21 > 1:23:24It's 12,000 square feet, made from more than 30,000 wooden

1:23:24 > 1:23:27blocks, and has been putting a spring into dancers' steps

1:23:27 > 1:23:29for well over a century.

1:23:29 > 1:23:31And tonight, Blackpool's Tower Ballroom will host the eight

1:23:31 > 1:23:33remaining couples on Strictly Come Dancing.

1:23:33 > 1:23:36In a moment we'll speak to three dancers who have trod

1:23:36 > 1:23:37those famous boards.

1:23:37 > 1:23:48But first, we sent Abbie Jones for a peak behind the scenes.

1:23:48 > 1:23:54Seagulls, chip butty, and queues around the streets. It is that time

1:23:54 > 1:24:05of year when Strictly Come Dancing comes to Blackpool. It is exciting!

1:24:05 > 1:24:14I have the hic ups! I cannot stop. Goodness me!I love it here.I am

1:24:14 > 1:24:19just enjoying every minute. And it is really exciting. And it just

1:24:19 > 1:24:23feels fantastic to be a part of this special moment.I have never been in

1:24:23 > 1:24:30this ballroom. I have heard amazing things. I could not believe it. It

1:24:30 > 1:24:37is like the ballroom in Beauty and the Beast. It is wonderful.Every

1:24:37 > 1:24:41minute of practice counts before tonight. But it is the Tower

1:24:41 > 1:24:46Ballroom's dancefloor the celebrities are desperate to get out

1:24:46 > 1:24:53on. A quick step for you.I am loving it. It is so energetic. We

1:24:53 > 1:24:57are bouncing around the amazing floor. I cannot wait for the

1:24:57 > 1:25:10rehearsal.And a sexy salsa.It may be. I don't give it away for free.

1:25:24 > 1:25:29It is amazinga lot of fun. It is incredible.And you are bracing back

1:25:29 > 1:25:38Paul. We have got you something else as well. -- embracing Blackpool.

1:25:38 > 1:25:45What do you reckon?Excitement inside matched only by the fans

1:25:45 > 1:25:55waiting outside in the cold. Fantastic. We travelled from Leeds

1:25:55 > 1:25:59this morning just for Strictly. We love it.It is great. Good luck to

1:25:59 > 1:26:08Gemma.So, there will be a seaside smash and who will be a dancing

1:26:08 > 1:26:27donkey? We will find out tonight. BBC News, Blackpool.

1:26:27 > 1:26:35I have never been there myself. Really!Well, let's find out what

1:26:35 > 1:26:36you missed.

1:26:36 > 1:26:39We're joined now by three people who can tell us why

1:26:39 > 1:26:41the Tower Ballroom is so special.

1:26:41 > 1:26:43Partners Darcey and Isaac are here with their dance teacher,

1:26:43 > 1:26:45Stephen, who is also Darcey's dad.

1:26:45 > 1:26:51Good morning.Good morning. How are you?Very well. How worried you?

1:26:51 > 1:27:03Good, thank you.What is so special about Blackpool?It is a big place

1:27:03 > 1:27:09where lots of professional people have danced. It is a special place.

1:27:09 > 1:27:19Many people have been to dance there.Is their

1:27:19 > 1:27:27a vibe?Yeah, I have danced were professionals have danced. It feels

1:27:27 > 1:27:32like I am dancing on the same stage they have danced on. It is quite

1:27:32 > 1:27:37nerve-racking, but really exciting. And people say the dancefloor,

1:27:37 > 1:27:42because it is sprung and made off wooden blocks, it literally feels

1:27:42 > 1:27:48different, did you find that?Yeah. Yeah.It goes in and out and you can

1:27:48 > 1:27:54bounce on it.So, we should see a lot of bouncing around on the

1:27:54 > 1:28:00television.Yes.What makes Strictly Come Dancing going to Blackpool so

1:28:00 > 1:28:08special?It is the Mecca of ballroom dancing. Everyone wants to go there.

1:28:08 > 1:28:13That is because it has two of the most fabulous ballrooms in the

1:28:13 > 1:28:18entire world. It is just synonymous with ballroom dancing. As you said,

1:28:18 > 1:28:24the dancefloor is one of the best. When you dance on it, it

1:28:24 > 1:28:34literally... You can feel it. It is so bouncy.We have seen celebrities

1:28:34 > 1:28:41dancing there. We will speak to some later. Even growing up in Russia,

1:28:41 > 1:28:49she is aware of Blackpool.It is world-famous. Once a year, the

1:28:49 > 1:28:55ballroom dancing community descends on Blackpool and becomes a beautiful

1:28:55 > 1:29:00place for the entire week because you just see the dancers walking

1:29:00 > 1:29:07around. There are thousands of them. The you guys watch Strictly Come

1:29:07 > 1:29:12Dancing? And do you enjoy it?Yeah. And you think it is getting better?

1:29:12 > 1:29:20This could be a loaded question. Be careful.Not at all! Do you think

1:29:20 > 1:29:25they are getting better each series? Yeah.Can you dance as well as those

1:29:25 > 1:29:32you see?Yeah.How long have you been learning for?Ten years. No,

1:29:32 > 1:29:39nine years.How old are you?Ten. You started when you were tiny?Yes.

1:29:39 > 1:29:46I have danced for seven years. You have danced for so long, but I think

1:29:46 > 1:29:51you are better than they are.Is that you in Blackpool?What are you

1:29:51 > 1:29:59doing?The cha cha.That one hurts the hips.The impact of Strictly

1:29:59 > 1:30:04Come Dancing on dance lessons in classes, what do you think that is?

1:30:04 > 1:30:10Yes. I think the impact on dance classes is we always see the biggest

1:30:10 > 1:30:16intake in January after Strictly Come Dancing has been on.What do

1:30:16 > 1:30:20they want?They want to look like the celebrities. I think they think

1:30:20 > 1:30:25within a matter of weeks they will be dancing like professional

1:30:25 > 1:30:29dancers. They don't understand the amount of work that the

1:30:29 > 1:30:36professionals have to put in to the celebrity to get them to dance.And

1:30:36 > 1:30:43they are learning a routine. They are not learning the techniques. One

1:30:43 > 1:30:48of the toughest things I have found is getting the right face. You have

1:30:48 > 1:30:56to have a face for things for a warts or a different dance. --

1:30:56 > 1:31:06waltz. What is your best tango face? I don't know.

1:31:06 > 1:31:09waltz. What is your best tango face? I don't know.Passage of play, the

1:31:09 > 1:31:19bullfighting face? Very strong. -- paso doble. We will be talking to

1:31:19 > 1:31:23you again later. I feel bad that we've got you up

1:31:23 > 1:31:27this early to come on, but you are always up at this time for dads in

1:31:27 > 1:31:29lessons. You can get some practice in! Thanks

1:31:29 > 1:31:32very much. Headlines coming up.

1:32:00 > 1:32:05Hello, this is Breakfast with Jon Kay and Naga Munchetty.

1:32:05 > 1:32:10Here's a summary of this morning's main stories from BBC News:

1:32:10 > 1:32:12Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

1:32:12 > 1:32:15a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

1:32:15 > 1:32:17killing four people.

1:32:17 > 1:32:22Teams will continue scouring the area around

1:32:22 > 1:32:24the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury,

1:32:24 > 1:32:26for wreckage.

1:32:26 > 1:32:28Both aircraft had set off from Wycombe Air Park,

1:32:28 > 1:32:32around 20 miles from the scene of the crash.

1:32:32 > 1:32:3490 MPs, about a third of them Conservatives,

1:32:34 > 1:32:44have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor

1:32:44 > 1:32:47calling for a crossparty approach on the future of and social

1:32:47 > 1:32:47care in England.

1:32:47 > 1:32:50A government spokesman said it was committed to making

1:32:50 > 1:32:51the sector sustainable.

1:32:51 > 1:32:53The politicians who signed the letter, including nearly 30

1:32:53 > 1:32:56former ministers, say partisan politics has failed to come up

1:32:56 > 1:32:57with a solution.

1:32:57 > 1:32:59Let's embrace the need to work across party.

1:32:59 > 1:33:01There is no majority in parliament.

1:33:01 > 1:33:04Let's work across party to come up with a long-term settlement

1:33:04 > 1:33:06so that we don't keep lurching from crisis to crisis.

1:33:06 > 1:33:10An air and sea search is taking place to try to find an Argentine

1:33:10 > 1:33:13submarine which disappeared in the South Atlantic on Wednesday.

1:33:13 > 1:33:16The San Juan has 44 crew onboard, including the Argentine navy's first

1:33:16 > 1:33:23woman submarine officer.

1:33:23 > 1:33:27The boat's last known position was about 260 miles off the coast

1:33:27 > 1:33:27of Patagonia.

1:33:27 > 1:33:31History is set to be made in Zimbabwe today as the ruling

1:33:31 > 1:33:34party, human rights activists and veterans hold rallies

1:33:34 > 1:33:38to try to force President Mugabe to step down.

1:33:38 > 1:33:42In the last hour people have begun arriving to march in the capital

1:33:42 > 1:33:45city, following a military coup earlier this week.

1:33:45 > 1:33:47State media confirmed that eight out of ten regional branches

1:33:47 > 1:33:50of the governing Zanu-PF have already passed a vote of no

1:33:50 > 1:33:55confidence in the 93-year-old head of state.

1:33:55 > 1:33:57Here, a 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion

1:33:57 > 1:33:59of murder following the disappearance of teenager

1:33:59 > 1:34:00Gaia Pope,

1:34:00 > 1:34:01has been released while inquiries continue.

1:34:01 > 1:34:05Paul Elsey, confirmed as the suspect to the BBC by his father,

1:34:05 > 1:34:10is from Swanage.

1:34:10 > 1:34:12Murder detectives are focussing their forensic investigations

1:34:12 > 1:34:15on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path where women's

1:34:15 > 1:34:19clothing was found.

1:34:19 > 1:34:20Miss Pope's family confirmed the clothing matched

1:34:20 > 1:34:26what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

1:34:26 > 1:34:30The Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has said he will set out a plan

1:34:30 > 1:34:33for a leadership change in his party at its conference in Dublin today.

1:34:33 > 1:34:37Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive figures

1:34:37 > 1:34:41in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

1:34:41 > 1:34:43He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

1:34:43 > 1:34:45but will talk about future plans.

1:34:45 > 1:34:48The new leader of the Scottish Labour Party will be announced

1:34:48 > 1:34:48later this morning.

1:34:48 > 1:34:52The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

1:34:52 > 1:34:57and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

1:34:57 > 1:34:59The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

1:34:59 > 1:35:02in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

1:35:02 > 1:35:05part in the ITV reality show I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of

1:35:05 > 1:35:12Here.

1:35:12 > 1:35:15The government is considering a tax on single use plastic used

1:35:15 > 1:35:16in takeaway boxes and polystyrene.

1:35:16 > 1:35:19Philip Hammond is expected to use next week's budget to announce

1:35:19 > 1:35:22a consultation on the measure to cut waste and pollution.

1:35:22 > 1:35:25An estimated 12 million tons of plastic enters the ocean every

1:35:25 > 1:35:27year and residues are routinely found in fish,

1:35:27 > 1:35:29sea birds and marine mammals.

1:35:29 > 1:35:32This year's Children in Need reached a record on-the-night-total of more

1:35:32 > 1:35:35than £50 million.

1:35:35 > 1:35:44SINGING

1:35:44 > 1:35:47Highlights of the programme included an Eastenders musical,

1:35:47 > 1:35:50singing Countryfile presenters, and Blue Peter does Strictly Come

1:35:50 > 1:35:53Dancing.

1:35:53 > 1:36:06Since 1980 the appeal has raised more than £900 million.

1:36:06 > 1:36:10And an original drawing of the comic book hero Tintin is expect to sell

1:36:10 > 1:36:11for £1 million later today.

1:36:11 > 1:36:13The artwork was published in 1939.

1:36:13 > 1:36:15It was the cover of one of the stories.

1:36:15 > 1:36:18Other options include the designs for Tintin boardgames.

1:36:18 > 1:36:25That's the main news.

1:36:25 > 1:36:29Over to the sport. Good morning. Lots of change going on. Everyone

1:36:29 > 1:36:34seems to be shuffling around, especially switching countries and

1:36:34 > 1:36:41even switching from managing country to going back to an old club. A bit

1:36:41 > 1:36:45of a shameful Wales. Football Association seems to have done all

1:36:45 > 1:36:49they could to persuade him to stay. They say they are deeply

1:36:49 > 1:36:52disappointed to announce that they will stay and go back to club

1:36:52 > 1:36:54management. An interesting decision on the way

1:36:54 > 1:36:58he is going back to it. Back to Sunderland. They are bottom

1:36:58 > 1:37:03of the championship. Obviously if he can do it it will be an amazing

1:37:03 > 1:37:07achievement. But the thinking was his already in a position to go onto

1:37:07 > 1:37:10bigger better things. Maybe a Premier League position.

1:37:10 > 1:37:16Maybe he likes a challenge. He does and he has written -- risen

1:37:16 > 1:37:17to it.

1:37:17 > 1:37:21Ryan Giggs is the odds-on favourite to become the next Wales manager,

1:37:21 > 1:37:22after Chris Coleman stood down.

1:37:22 > 1:37:25His new challenge is to rescue Sunderland, who're bottom

1:37:25 > 1:37:25of the Championship.

1:37:25 > 1:37:28Patrick Gearey looks back at Coleman's time as Wales boss.

1:37:28 > 1:37:31Before Chris Coleman, Wales waited 58 years to get

1:37:31 > 1:37:35to a major tournament.

1:37:35 > 1:37:39He took them straight to the semis.

1:37:39 > 1:37:40Last year's victory over Belgium marked

1:37:40 > 1:37:42the dizzying peak for Welsh football, a time

1:37:42 > 1:37:45when anything seemed possible.

1:37:45 > 1:37:46You can't be afraid of dreams.

1:37:46 > 1:37:50Four years ago I was as far away from this as you can imagine.

1:37:50 > 1:37:55And look what's happened.

1:37:55 > 1:37:59If you work hard and if you aren't afraid of the dream and you aren't

1:37:59 > 1:38:00afraid to fail.

1:38:00 > 1:38:03The low point came when he took over from Gary Speed,

1:38:03 > 1:38:05who took his own life in 2011.

1:38:05 > 1:38:08He had to help the young players Speed had begun to bring

1:38:08 > 1:38:15through recover from that shock.

1:38:15 > 1:38:18The bond he had with the group inspired ever improving performances

1:38:18 > 1:38:20and the manager had on his side a global superstar.

1:38:20 > 1:38:23Gareth Bale, with a moment of absolute magic!

1:38:23 > 1:38:27He created such a great atmosphere in the camp.

1:38:27 > 1:38:33It makes us want to win for him, for ourselves and for our country.

1:38:33 > 1:38:37He has really brought that passion and pride back into Wales.

1:38:37 > 1:38:39Bale's gold was accompanied by newly forged steel at the back.

1:38:39 > 1:38:41Wales made the Euros.

1:38:41 > 1:38:43Though they lost to England, they beat Russia, then Northern

1:38:43 > 1:38:45Ireland and then unforgettably Belgium.

1:38:45 > 1:38:48Then the climb stopped.

1:38:48 > 1:38:51They lost to eventual champions Portugal in the semi-final

1:38:51 > 1:38:54and couldn't quite rediscovered the magic in World Cup qualifying.

1:38:54 > 1:38:57But defeat to the Republic of Ireland in Cardiff meant the end

1:38:57 > 1:38:58of their challenge.

1:38:58 > 1:39:03And effectively the end of Chris Coleman.

1:39:03 > 1:39:05He lasted in the friendly against Panama last weekend.

1:39:05 > 1:39:08I think they all hoped the manager would stay on,

1:39:08 > 1:39:13but it's not to be.

1:39:13 > 1:39:16He will go down as Wales's most successful manager and rightly

1:39:16 > 1:39:18so for what he has achieved.

1:39:18 > 1:39:21He is hardly taking the easy option in going to Sunderland,

1:39:21 > 1:39:23struggling in the second tier, but it may never

1:39:23 > 1:39:27eclipse the job he did in taking Welsh football from its toughest

1:39:27 > 1:39:32moment to its greatest one.

1:39:32 > 1:39:34We were talking about managers switching countries.

1:39:34 > 1:39:36Northern Ireland manager Michael O'Neill had also been linked

1:39:36 > 1:39:39to the Sunderland job but he's now been given permission to speak

1:39:39 > 1:39:42to the Scottish FA about their vacant manager's position.

1:39:42 > 1:39:44He was bitterly disappointed when Northern Ireland just missed

1:39:44 > 1:39:47out on qualifying for next year's World Cup.

1:39:47 > 1:39:50He's been in charge for six years, leading them to last year's Euros,

1:39:50 > 1:39:58their first major finals for 30 years.

1:39:58 > 1:40:01Jose Mourinho has criticised England's medical team for making

1:40:01 > 1:40:04his defender Phil Jones play in their friendly against Germany last

1:40:04 > 1:40:10week. Jones needed six injections to make it to the starting lineup for

1:40:10 > 1:40:13England, but he will miss Manchester united's game against Newcastle

1:40:13 > 1:40:20today.I'm not an angel and players are injected to play crucial

1:40:20 > 1:40:25matches, but a friendly... To get six anaesthetic injections, local,

1:40:25 > 1:40:32to play a friendly? I never heard... I never heard about it. And Phil

1:40:32 > 1:40:38Jones had it and had it before the match and after 15 minutes he was

1:40:38 > 1:40:44out and obviously tomorrow he is out.It does seem a lot to put on

1:40:44 > 1:40:46the line for a friendly.

1:40:46 > 1:40:48A bit of a sobering experience for England.

1:40:48 > 1:40:53With the first Ashes test now just five days away,

1:40:53 > 1:40:59they were lucky to get a draw.

1:40:59 > 1:41:02Jason Sangha and Matthew Short hit centuries, before Moeen Ali had

1:41:02 > 1:41:08the only success of the tourists' day, getting Sangha caught out.

1:41:08 > 1:41:14The Cricket Australia side still finished the day on 364-4.

1:41:14 > 1:41:16So a massive score for them.

1:41:16 > 1:41:17"That dream is gone".

1:41:17 > 1:41:20Those are the words of England women's head coach Mark Robinson,

1:41:20 > 1:41:23because Australia retained the Ashes by winning the First T20 in Sydney.

1:41:23 > 1:41:27The Aussies' win means they can't be beaten by England under the series'

1:41:27 > 1:41:30point scoring system.

1:41:30 > 1:41:33It's been a good week for the England women's rugby team

1:41:33 > 1:41:34this week.

1:41:34 > 1:41:37It was announced the RFU will pay them match fees

1:41:37 > 1:41:38for the first time.

1:41:38 > 1:41:41And last night they thrashed Canada 79-5 in the opening match

1:41:41 > 1:41:42of their three test series.

1:41:42 > 1:41:45Harlequins wing Jess Breach scoring six of them on her debut.

1:41:45 > 1:41:48The sides play again next Tuesday and Saturday.

1:41:48 > 1:41:52The Autumn Internationals continue, with Scotland hoping to beat

1:41:52 > 1:41:55the All Blacks for the first time and England taking on Australia.

1:41:55 > 1:42:00And in the Aviva Premiership, Gloucester produced a remarkable

1:42:00 > 1:42:03comeback in the final half hour to beat Saracens,

1:42:03 > 1:42:06scoring 20 second-half points to win 23-17 at Kingsholm.

1:42:06 > 1:42:11There were wins for Ospreys and Dragons in the Anglo-Welsh Cup.

1:42:11 > 1:42:14Tonga survived a bit of a scare to reach their first

1:42:14 > 1:42:17World Cup semi-final.

1:42:17 > 1:42:19They just scraped past Lebanon, winning 24-22,

1:42:19 > 1:42:22but they were a shadow of the side that beat New Zealand

1:42:22 > 1:42:24in their previous game.

1:42:24 > 1:42:26And Tonga will be England's opponents, if England beat

1:42:26 > 1:42:29Papua New Guinea tomorrow.

1:42:29 > 1:42:34Andy Murray has split with his coach Ivan Lendl for the second time.

1:42:34 > 1:42:36Under his guidance, Murray won three Grand Slam titles,

1:42:36 > 1:42:39two Olympic golds and made it to world number one,

1:42:39 > 1:42:42but he's been plagued with injury all season and he'll continue

1:42:42 > 1:42:45to work on regaining his fitness, leading up to January's Australian

1:42:45 > 1:42:46Open.

1:42:46 > 1:42:48Meanwhile, his brother Jamie is into the doubles semi-finals

1:42:48 > 1:42:50at the ATP Tour Finals in London.

1:42:50 > 1:42:53He and Bruno Soares beat the top-ranked pairing

1:42:53 > 1:42:57of Marcelo Melo and Lukasz Kubot in straight sets last night.

1:42:57 > 1:43:00They'll play the defending champions Henri Kontinen and Murray's former

1:43:00 > 1:43:07partner John Peers today.

1:43:07 > 1:43:10The battle between Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose

1:43:10 > 1:43:13to finish the year as Europe's number one golfer is getting

1:43:13 > 1:43:14exciting.

1:43:14 > 1:43:16It's advantage Rose, who's two shots off the pace

1:43:16 > 1:43:19at the Dubai Championship and two clear of Fleetwood.

1:43:19 > 1:43:21They're chasing this man, defending champion Matthew Fitzpatrick,

1:43:21 > 1:43:23who's leading the field going into round three.

1:43:23 > 1:43:27He's ten under-par, one shot ahead of Tyrrell Hatton.

1:43:27 > 1:43:33It is always the race to Dubai, to see who becomes Europe's leading

1:43:33 > 1:43:38golfer. The race is now into the final sprint.

1:43:38 > 1:43:40Fascinating how there are so many Brits.

1:43:40 > 1:43:47English as well. I don't know what's going on in English golf. Justin

1:43:47 > 1:43:52Rose had a good run and now he is up in the mix in Dubai, Tommy Fleetwood

1:43:52 > 1:43:56doing really well. I think we only European player is Sergio Garcia,

1:43:56 > 1:44:01who is in with a slight chance. At I think it will be an English winner.

1:44:01 > 1:44:06It will be a race to get a seat on the plane out of Dubai!

1:44:06 > 1:44:11Over to keep oxime from the tranquillity of golf. -- kickboxing.

1:44:11 > 1:44:15She only took up kick-boxing as a hobby to keep fit,

1:44:15 > 1:44:19but now she's a British and World champion.

1:44:19 > 1:44:26Tonight Kelly Haynes

1:44:26 > 1:44:28is again in an international contest

1:44:28 > 1:44:32at the O2.

1:44:32 > 1:44:37Mike has been speaking to her about spaghetti.

1:44:43 > 1:44:49A spaghetti Bolognese which packs a punch and not many 10-year-olds have

1:44:49 > 1:44:55their tea served by a world champion kickboxer and it's not just Archie.

1:44:55 > 1:45:01Here you go.Never in my life did I think I would be doing something

1:45:01 > 1:45:08like this. I'm a mum, never in a million years.Not many children

1:45:08 > 1:45:16have a mum like this. It's a little bit scary, because it on what will

1:45:16 > 1:45:20happen, but I don't actually think anyone would want to mess with her

1:45:20 > 1:45:25on the street.Tonight, Archie and some from his school will see her in

1:45:25 > 1:45:29action for the first time at the O2 where she won her UK title last

1:45:29 > 1:45:36year. Apra to has watched many times from the couch before, as has her

1:45:36 > 1:45:41coach -- Archie.It's hard watching your partner but you have to put

1:45:41 > 1:45:44your professional head on and try to disassociate with what's going on in

1:45:44 > 1:45:48the ring and think, that's a fighter in debt.Which is why I was taking

1:45:48 > 1:45:52no chances. In the training gym I became her latest warmup as she

1:45:52 > 1:45:59prepares to face another undefeated fighter from Spain. We kicked me

1:45:59 > 1:46:04when I'm down?Not if you have a glove on the floor. It got to

1:46:04 > 1:46:10respect fighters. I love it that you can hit them...Yeah. And they kept

1:46:10 > 1:46:17coming. In K1 the emphasis is all about keeping the action flowing.We

1:46:17 > 1:46:25are allowed to do head kicks, body kicks, knees, spinning back fist. At

1:46:25 > 1:46:36the end of any fight we always go up and have a big hug.Kelly is now

1:46:36 > 1:46:39inspiring many others to get into the sport by holding fitness classes

1:46:39 > 1:46:43here, learning the skills, art at the same time getting a great

1:46:43 > 1:46:48workout.When I started over a year ago I had no self-esteem, I was

1:46:48 > 1:46:53overweight.I lost a load of weight. I've changed completely. I've got

1:46:53 > 1:46:58confidence again, I shall better within myself.I think some mums

1:46:58 > 1:47:03think that when you've got a child it's almost like they stop following

1:47:03 > 1:47:08their dreams, they think that's it. Anyone can become something if they

1:47:08 > 1:47:19want to be something.I think the winner is Kelly Haynes. Mike Bushell

1:47:19 > 1:47:24from BBC News out for the count.

1:47:27 > 1:47:38That is why he isn't here. And now for the weather. Good morning. A bit

1:47:38 > 1:47:43of a tough line in the north-east of Scotland. The north-east of Wales,

1:47:43 > 1:47:51no issues. The north-east of Scotland, windy. Many showers right

1:47:51 > 1:47:55now and through the day that the showers in the north-west of

1:47:55 > 1:48:02England. Gradually going further south. Bright in East Anglia.

1:48:02 > 1:48:07Further west, this is where we had the rain in Wales and the

1:48:07 > 1:48:12south-west. It becomes a little bit of an issue in the southern counties

1:48:12 > 1:48:21with time. Light and patchy. Some of the missing it. The best of the

1:48:21 > 1:48:24sunshine in the north of England. Brightness in Northern Ireland.

1:48:24 > 1:48:30Doing nothing for the temperatures. Milder air trapped under the cloud.

1:48:30 > 1:48:35That goes into the south-west overnight. That is where we will

1:48:35 > 1:48:40keep the clear skies in the rest of the British Isles. That keeps

1:48:40 > 1:48:44temperatures up over there. Don't be surprised to have a frosty start to

1:48:44 > 1:48:50Sunday. Keeping that way in central and eastern parts of the British

1:48:50 > 1:48:57Isles. The wind in the north-east. Cloud moving in. One of those

1:48:57 > 1:49:00afternoons for western Scotland and the north-west of England and Wales.

1:49:00 > 1:49:12Sunshine at east. 5-6. That is it. A late autumn bit of weather for the

1:49:12 > 1:49:13British Isles.

1:49:13 > 1:49:19late autumn bit of weather for the British Isles. And now for

1:49:19 > 1:49:23Newswatch.

1:49:23 > 1:49:28Hello and welcome to the show. Halfway to Brexit so how is the

1:49:28 > 1:49:32Biased, baffling and boring say viewers.

1:49:32 > 1:49:39We asked how to inform viewers on this most divisive

1:49:39 > 1:49:42First, events in Zimbabwe which first came to the attention

1:49:42 > 1:49:43of newsdesks on Tuesday evening.

1:49:43 > 1:49:47It has been taking a while to work out what exact has happened,

1:49:47 > 1:49:49it was a military coup or not.

1:49:49 > 1:49:52The confusion was not helped by the BBC quoting as a source

1:49:52 > 1:49:55a fake Twitter account in the name of the ruling party,

1:49:55 > 1:50:01Zanu-PF.

1:50:01 > 1:50:03On BBC One television, breaking news alert and the website.

1:50:07 > 1:50:09It is not clear who runs the account which referred

1:50:09 > 1:50:13to an elderly man who had been taken advantage of by his wife

1:50:13 > 1:50:23being detained in a bloodless transition.

1:50:23 > 1:50:24Some people were unimpressed.

1:50:24 > 1:50:27BBC World News later apologised and a spokesperson said...

1:50:42 > 1:50:44On Wednesday Boris Johnson met Richard Ratcliffe whose wife

1:50:44 > 1:50:48is in prison in Iran and that prompted the dimensions on the BBC

1:50:48 > 1:50:51the Foreign Secretary's incorrect statement last week that she had

1:50:51 > 1:50:57been working in the country training journalists.

1:50:57 > 1:50:58She was on holiday.

1:50:58 > 1:51:01On Sunday Andrew Marr followed up on the comment by asking

1:51:01 > 1:51:02Michael Gove about Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.

1:51:02 > 1:51:04What was she doing when she went to Iran?

1:51:04 > 1:51:05I don't know.

1:51:05 > 1:51:09One of the things I want to stress, there is no reason why

1:51:09 > 1:51:12Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe should be in prison in Iran as far as any

1:51:12 > 1:51:22of us know.

1:51:22 > 1:51:25You say you don't know what she was doing, her husband

1:51:25 > 1:51:27is clear she was on holiday.

1:51:27 > 1:51:28That what she was doing.

1:51:28 > 1:51:33I take her husband 's assurance.

1:51:33 > 1:51:35He said she was training journalists andthat has been grabbed

1:51:35 > 1:51:36by the Iranian

1:51:36 > 1:51:39judiciary to put her plight into an even worse position also

1:51:39 > 1:51:47that is surely his fault.

1:51:47 > 1:51:50Whatever we as democrats choose to do or say extremist will choose

1:51:50 > 1:51:52to deploy for their own purposes.

1:51:52 > 1:51:56We play their game.

1:51:56 > 1:52:00We point the finger at democrats to try to do the right thing

1:52:00 > 1:52:03when it is extremist responsible for the use of human rights.

1:52:03 > 1:52:05That exchange, and what Boris Johnson said about it,

1:52:05 > 1:52:08went on for around five minutes and prompted this reaction

1:52:08 > 1:52:22about Andrew Marr.

1:52:39 > 1:52:43This week saw the latest chapter in the saga of the UK

1:52:43 > 1:52:45preparations for leaving the EU with the withdrawal bill

1:52:45 > 1:52:52reaching its committee stake in the House of Commons.

1:52:52 > 1:52:55It is part of a compact legislative process in Westminster mirrored

1:52:55 > 1:52:56by equally lengthy negotiations in Brussels where David Davis

1:53:00 > 1:53:02and Michel Barnier have reached the sixth round of talks.

1:53:02 > 1:53:06BBC News have been following the talks every step of the way.

1:53:06 > 1:53:0812 months after the UK voted to leave the EU,

1:53:08 > 1:53:12the first formal talks to set the terms of departure have taken

1:53:12 > 1:53:20place in Brussels.

1:53:20 > 1:53:22Michel Barnier, the chief negotiator, said he hoped the talks

1:53:22 > 1:53:24would be held in a constructive atmosphere.

1:53:24 > 1:53:31Behind the smart suits, stiff smiles, it was clear

1:53:31 > 1:53:33that both sides were talking at cross purposes.

1:53:33 > 1:53:36Time is a precious commodity.

1:53:36 > 1:53:46And don't the UK and the EU know it.

1:53:46 > 1:53:49We are halfway between the date of our referendum and actually

1:53:49 > 1:53:50leaving the club.

1:53:50 > 1:53:54Expect many more face-offs along the way.

1:53:54 > 1:53:57And if those negotiations are proving tricky, so too

1:53:57 > 1:54:00is the BBC's task in covering Brexit in a way that satisfies the audience

1:54:00 > 1:54:03of its impartiality while keeping it informed in a clear

1:54:03 > 1:54:05and interesting way.

1:54:05 > 1:54:07Not everyone feels that is being achieved.

1:54:07 > 1:54:17Martin from Plymouth said...

1:54:29 > 1:54:40Meanwhile, David begged...

1:54:41 > 1:54:44And another few had this concern...

1:55:00 > 1:55:02The BBC's Europe editor, Katya Adler, spent much of her life

1:55:02 > 1:55:10living and breathing the Brexit process and she joins me now.

1:55:12 > 1:55:15The biggest complaint we get is about perceived bias,

1:55:15 > 1:55:17a sense that BBC reporting is constantly knocking

1:55:17 > 1:55:21British negotiators.

1:55:21 > 1:55:28It is a fair comment that you would expect to make.

1:55:28 > 1:55:31As Europe editor is is my job to put across the European perspective.

1:55:31 > 1:55:35That might come across as anti-UK but it is putting across the other

1:55:35 > 1:55:36point of view.

1:55:36 > 1:55:38As we see these negotiations becoming pretty bad tempered,

1:55:38 > 1:55:42obviously there is very differing points of view.

1:55:42 > 1:55:46Taking all that on board, viewers feel we don't seem to get

1:55:46 > 1:55:48the same scrutiny of EU negotiators and their strategy.

1:55:48 > 1:55:56Since the negotiations started, I don't know if you're familiar

1:55:56 > 1:56:08with the Italian word omerta which means silence.

1:56:08 > 1:56:11We are seeing that inside the EU Commission building,

1:56:11 > 1:56:17especially with

1:56:17 > 1:56:21EU leaders, who have been told to zip it and only let Mr Barnier

1:56:21 > 1:56:22speak about Brexit.

1:56:22 > 1:56:26We just don't have that same access at this stage to talk to the main

1:56:26 > 1:56:29players on the European side as we do on the British side to put

1:56:29 > 1:56:32those difficult questions to them on camera or on the record

1:56:32 > 1:56:34in a radio interview.

1:56:34 > 1:56:37I understand that for our viewers and listeners that is extremely

1:56:37 > 1:56:40frustrating and it feels like when not doing our job

1:56:40 > 1:56:44but believe me, because it is my job, I am doing it and asking those

1:56:44 > 1:56:47questions but the players are not allowing me to do that on the record

1:56:47 > 1:56:50and that is why I have to quote sources and contacts

1:56:50 > 1:56:51and EU diplomats.

1:56:51 > 1:56:54A lot of complaints say there is acres of coverage

1:56:54 > 1:56:55that little fact.

1:56:55 > 1:57:05Why do you spend so much airtime speculating?

1:57:05 > 1:57:09Many in the UK feel we voted for Brexit and it's a done deal

1:57:09 > 1:57:11and we can move on and see some action.

1:57:11 > 1:57:12There isn't much action.

1:57:12 > 1:57:16I feel your pain on that one because we have to deal

1:57:16 > 1:57:17with that as well.

1:57:17 > 1:57:20Brexit remains one of the top stories of importance for us

1:57:20 > 1:57:24in the UK so it is going to remain right up there and we have to keep

1:57:24 > 1:57:27coming back to it as the negotiating rounds proceeds.

1:57:27 > 1:57:30Even though actually, for example the last round,

1:57:30 > 1:57:34pretty much nothing happened in terms of news terms but we had

1:57:34 > 1:57:37to cover it and say that very little had happened.

1:57:37 > 1:57:41That leads you to speculate, and that is where it comes in,

1:57:41 > 1:57:50if there will be a deal in the end or will we be in a no deal scenario.

1:57:50 > 1:57:53How do you feel about viewers thinking that the coverage

1:57:53 > 1:57:53is too complicated?

1:57:53 > 1:57:56I would say that Brexit is a very combative issue.

1:57:56 > 1:57:58What about the financial services industry, agriculture,

1:57:58 > 1:58:04other goods, what happens to the label that says made

1:58:04 > 1:58:07in the UK but between the jar and the labels and the content

1:58:07 > 1:58:10it crosses over between the UK and Europe several times before

1:58:10 > 1:58:11a product is finished?

1:58:11 > 1:58:14These are all fiendishly complicated and that is why,

1:58:14 > 1:58:17as well as the Brexit negotiators, you have lawyers on both sides.

1:58:17 > 1:58:24This is dry and detailed stuff but that is what goes

1:58:24 > 1:58:28into untangling the UK from the EU and in the end will go into making

1:58:28 > 1:58:30a trade agreement between the two sides.

1:58:30 > 1:58:35Repetitive coverage is a big charge.

1:58:35 > 1:58:45We see a lot of men in grey suits walking out of buildings.

1:58:45 > 1:58:50Is making this coverage interesting challenging?

1:58:50 > 1:58:56I get that question on a daily and hourly and weekly level it can

1:58:56 > 1:58:56seem dreary.

1:58:56 > 1:58:59I can tell you that here in Brussels I am surrounded

1:58:59 > 1:59:03by the EU institutions and they are grey and full of people

1:59:03 > 1:59:03in grey suits.

1:59:03 > 1:59:07That can be a bit difficult sometimes, the way we can lift

1:59:07 > 1:59:10it is in a different kind of coverage we have this

1:59:10 > 1:59:13whether it is my blog where I can get some colour into it,

1:59:13 > 1:59:15we have the Brexit podcast as well.

1:59:15 > 1:59:18Tell us about that, what is the thinking behind it?

1:59:18 > 1:59:29It is two fold really.

1:59:29 > 1:59:34On the one hand, if I have to do a Q and A on the news,

1:59:34 > 1:59:37I'm often told, you got 50 seconds in which to get so much nuance

1:59:37 > 1:59:45in and that's pretty much impossible.

1:59:45 > 1:59:48Never mind trying to get fact and a bit of colour.

1:59:48 > 1:59:51You go on Brexitcast you have ages of time to chat.

1:59:51 > 1:59:53We have our hosts and Laura Kuenssberg as well,

1:59:53 > 1:59:57a lot of knowledge in there and a lot of humour and we are able

1:59:57 > 1:59:59to get some humour into it.

1:59:59 > 2:00:02But I admit, Brexit is not something where events happen in a fast

2:00:02 > 2:00:06and furious manner but it is a hugely dramatic moment in EU

2:00:06 > 2:00:06and UK history.

2:00:06 > 2:00:08Thank you for coming on.

2:00:08 > 2:00:11Before we go, no secret that some newspapers like to have a go

2:00:11 > 2:00:15at the BBC and this week the Sun Italy enjoy doing so.

2:00:15 > 2:00:17Published photographs of night shift workers asleep at their desks,

2:00:17 > 2:00:30passed to them a fellow member of staff who complained...

2:00:30 > 2:00:33We won't embarrass our sleeping colleagues but we will mention

2:00:33 > 2:00:35the response of Middle East correspondent Quentin Sommerville,

2:00:35 > 2:00:41perhaps recovering from his exclusive report on Sunday.

2:00:41 > 2:00:42His report on IS fighters.

2:00:46 > 2:00:48Thank you for all of your comments this week.

2:00:48 > 2:00:51If you want to share your opinions or even appear on the programme

2:00:51 > 2:00:53you can call us on this number.

2:00:53 > 2:00:57You can find us on Twitter and have a look at our website

2:00:57 > 2:00:58for previous discussions.

2:00:58 > 2:01:02That is all from us, we will be back to hear your thoughts about BBC News

2:01:02 > 2:01:03coverage again next week.

2:01:03 > 2:01:04Goodbye.

2:01:56 > 2:01:58Hello this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Jon Kay.

2:01:58 > 2:02:00Examining the wreckage - The investigation continues to find

2:02:00 > 2:02:02out why two aircraft collided over Buckinghamshire.

2:02:02 > 2:02:04Police and air accident investigators have joined forces

2:02:04 > 2:02:12after the incident left four people dead.

2:02:12 > 2:02:14Good morning it's Saturday the 18th of November.

2:02:14 > 2:02:22Also this morning:

2:02:22 > 2:02:27People are arriving on the streets of Zimbabwe to take part in massive

2:02:27 > 2:02:29protests against the president, Robert Mugabe.

2:02:29 > 2:02:3290 MPs say patients in the health service in England are being

2:02:32 > 2:02:34"failed" by the system as they ask the Prime Minister for

2:02:34 > 2:02:35a cross-party solution.

2:02:35 > 2:02:38In sport, the man who took Wales to the semi finals

2:02:38 > 2:02:41of the Euros has stepped down - Chris Coleman has gone

2:02:41 > 2:02:42to manage the Championship's bottom side, Sunderland.

2:02:42 > 2:02:47And Philip has the weather.

2:02:49 > 2:02:54A bit of everything in the weekend's forecasts. The bulk of the sunshine

2:02:54 > 2:02:57will be felt across northern parts on Saturday, more cloud across

2:02:57 > 2:03:01southern areas, I will give you all of the details in a few minutes.

2:03:01 > 2:03:04We will see you then, thank you.

2:03:04 > 2:03:05Good morning.

2:03:05 > 2:03:06First, our main story.

2:03:06 > 2:03:08Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

2:03:08 > 2:03:11a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

2:03:11 > 2:03:12killing four people.

2:03:12 > 2:03:14Teams will continue scouring the area for wreckage -

2:03:14 > 2:03:16around the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury.

2:03:16 > 2:03:18Ian Palmer is there for us this morning.

2:03:18 > 2:03:20Ian, what can you tell us about the crash and

2:03:20 > 2:03:24the ongoing investigation?

2:03:24 > 2:03:30It's getting light and I guess investigations and searches resume?

2:03:30 > 2:03:36It will very shortly. Basically the search teams are arriving here on

2:03:36 > 2:03:42the edge of the Waddesdon Manor estate. They are having a briefing,

2:03:42 > 2:03:46a meeting at the moment. It isn't exactly clear when the investigation

2:03:46 > 2:03:53will resume after the suspension of it last night. Of course it will

2:03:53 > 2:03:56start at some point this morning. When it does the families of the

2:03:56 > 2:04:09four dead people will be following developments very closely.

2:04:14 > 2:04:16Beneath the canopy of autumn colour

2:04:16 > 2:04:17lies the wreckage of two light aircraft.

2:04:17 > 2:04:19This is the tale of the Cessna plane.

2:04:19 > 2:04:22Nearby lies its wing and a little further away in a clearing

2:04:22 > 2:04:25are the remains of what is believed to be the helicopter.

2:04:25 > 2:04:28Two people were travelling in each aircraft and no one survived.

2:04:28 > 2:04:30We did a joint response with the fire service,

2:04:30 > 2:04:33ambulance and now the air accident branch who are working with us

2:04:33 > 2:04:34through a joint investigation while we establish

2:04:34 > 2:04:36the cause of the crash.

2:04:36 > 2:04:37The mid-air collision happened above the Waddesdon

2:04:37 > 2:04:38estate, in Buckinghamshire.

2:04:38 > 2:04:41Both pilots took off from Whickham Airport 20 miles away.

2:04:41 > 2:04:46Visibility at the time was clear and bright.

2:04:46 > 2:04:49An off-duty fire officer saw the collision and says

2:04:49 > 2:04:54there was a loud bang followed by falling debris.

2:04:54 > 2:04:56Yesterday, police and air accident investigators worked late

2:04:56 > 2:04:58into the night.

2:04:58 > 2:05:00Their task - to find out why the crash happened

2:05:00 > 2:05:01and who was involved.

2:05:01 > 2:05:04With the wreckage spread over a large area, the search

2:05:04 > 2:05:06for clues as to why two aircraft collided in good conditions

2:05:06 > 2:05:16is expected to continue at least until Monday.

2:05:25 > 2:05:29As he will have seen from those aerial pictures, the wreckage spread

2:05:29 > 2:05:35over a large area. It's also inside very large wooded copse, which will

2:05:35 > 2:05:39make recovering the wreckage from those two aircraft particularly

2:05:39 > 2:05:43difficult. Thames Valley Police say they expect to be here for some

2:05:43 > 2:05:50time, at least a couple of days. Right now we are just waiting to

2:05:50 > 2:05:55hear when, of course, that investigation will resume this

2:05:55 > 2:05:59morning. And hopefully at some point later today we will find out the

2:05:59 > 2:06:10identities of the four dead people. Thank you very much.

2:06:10 > 2:06:16Jubilant scenes on the streets of Zimbabwe where people are protesting

2:06:16 > 2:06:19against the President Robert Mugabe.

2:06:19 > 2:06:21State media have confirmed that eight out of 10 regional

2:06:21 > 2:06:23branches of the governing Zanu PF already passed a vote

2:06:23 > 2:06:24of no-confidence in the President.

2:06:24 > 2:06:28Ben Brown is in Zimbabwe for us.

2:06:28 > 2:06:33These rallies have begun. Largely celebrating, from what we

2:06:33 > 2:06:37understand, but please let us know, the fact that a transition period

2:06:37 > 2:06:42seems inevitable. I think this is a really pivotal day

2:06:42 > 2:06:47in Zimbabwe's history. Thousands of people coming out onto the streets

2:06:47 > 2:06:51in the capital. Two a separate rallies, both demanding Robert

2:06:51 > 2:06:57Mugabe steps down. One organised by the war veterans, the veterans of

2:06:57 > 2:07:01the war of liberation, who fought alongside Robert Mugabe. That is

2:07:01 > 2:07:08backed by Zanu PF, his party, and the army, and a number of civilians

2:07:08 > 2:07:12who want to take to the streets to demand he steps down. He's running

2:07:12 > 2:07:16out of time. He's running out of friends. And if he doesn't resign

2:07:16 > 2:07:21with some dignity of his own free volition it looks like he will be

2:07:21 > 2:07:34pushed out. Zanu PF Have a committee meeting. Provinces of Zanu PF have

2:07:34 > 2:07:38already had a vote of in him. If he doesn't step down and looked like he

2:07:38 > 2:07:43will be made to. The threat of violence is something

2:07:43 > 2:07:50people have been trying to avoid with this so-called coup, write?

2:07:50 > 2:07:55Very little violence. Some gunshots in the takeover, but not much. In

2:07:55 > 2:08:00fact the whole mood in this country, as far as I concede it is quite

2:08:00 > 2:08:04relaxed, it's quite calm. It's stupid and today. People since

2:08:04 > 2:08:07change is coming. How significant the change will be in the long run,

2:08:07 > 2:08:16we will have to see. The most likely next president was a strong man in

2:08:16 > 2:08:21Robert Mugabe's government. He's not exactly a champion of democracy, his

2:08:21 > 2:08:26critics would say. How much change it is unclear, but if there is a

2:08:26 > 2:08:28transitional government it looks like members of the opposition will

2:08:28 > 2:08:31be part of that transitional government.

2:08:31 > 2:08:37Good to talk to you, thanks for keeping us up to date. We will be

2:08:37 > 2:08:39talking to Ben throughout the programme.

2:08:39 > 2:08:41A 49-year-old man arrested on suspicion of the murder

2:08:41 > 2:08:43of missing teenager Gaia Pope has been released.

2:08:43 > 2:08:46Carpenter Paul Elsey was held after clothing similar

2:08:46 > 2:08:48to what 19-year-old Gaia was believed to be wearing the day

2:08:48 > 2:08:50she disappeared was found near a coastal path.

2:08:50 > 2:08:52In a statement posted on Facebook her mother Natasha

2:08:52 > 2:08:54said she was holding onto hope her daughter

2:08:54 > 2:08:55was still alive.

2:08:55 > 2:09:00Gaia went missing from Swanage 11 days ago.

2:09:00 > 2:09:02Our correspondent James Ingham is in Swanage.

2:09:02 > 2:09:07James, how significant are the clothes that were found?

2:09:07 > 2:09:11It seems like the police are very much focusing on her area where the

2:09:11 > 2:09:17clothes were found, but it goes beyond that, as well?

2:09:17 > 2:09:21That's right. The discovery of this clothing is clearly very

2:09:21 > 2:09:26significant. By Pope's family have said it appears to be closing they

2:09:26 > 2:09:34believe she was wearing when she went missing. -- Gaia Pope's family.

2:09:34 > 2:09:39That means searches are taking place in that area and two other rural

2:09:39 > 2:09:43areas around Swanage today. The efforts to find

2:09:43 > 2:09:50The efforts to find

2:09:50 > 2:09:54Gaia have been huge. They have 10,000 members for their Facebook

2:09:54 > 2:09:59groups to find her. They are asking all of these people to come to

2:09:59 > 2:10:03Swanage, at three different points, to come and help find her. There is

2:10:03 > 2:10:07an organiser at each of those points with maps. They will be doing a nine

2:10:07 > 2:10:13search with a couple of feet between each person to try and find her.

2:10:13 > 2:10:16Natasha Pope made an emotional plea yesterday saying I believe in this

2:10:16 > 2:10:21community and I believe miracles can happen. I'm holding on to hope.

2:10:21 > 2:10:25Please come out, everyone of you can make a difference. There are still

2:10:25 > 2:10:31some hope, despite these arrest and subsequent releases, that Gaia can

2:10:31 > 2:10:34still be found. Thanks very much.

2:10:34 > 2:10:36Donald Trump has suspended the import of elephant hunting

2:10:36 > 2:10:39trophies, just a day after a ban was relaxed by his administration.

2:10:39 > 2:10:42The US President was set to reverse a 2014 Obama-era ban,

2:10:42 > 2:10:44by allowing hunters to bring back mementoes from big-game kills

2:10:44 > 2:10:45in Zambia and Zimbabwe.

2:10:45 > 2:10:48But late last night he tweeted the change was on hold

2:10:48 > 2:10:58until he could "review all conservation facts".

2:11:01 > 2:11:0790 MPs have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor to say

2:11:07 > 2:11:16that people are being failed by the NHS in this country.

2:11:16 > 2:11:18The politicians who signed the letter -

2:11:18 > 2:11:21including nearly 30 former ministers - are calling for parties to work

2:11:21 > 2:11:22together to find a solution.

2:11:22 > 2:11:24Our Health Editor Hugh Pym reports.

2:11:24 > 2:11:25The pressure on NHS is growing.

2:11:25 > 2:11:28There are fears that hospitals will continue to struggle to find

2:11:28 > 2:11:30enough beds to admit new patients, partly because of difficulties

2:11:30 > 2:11:32discharging elderly patients, caused in turn by problems

2:11:32 > 2:11:33with social care.

2:11:33 > 2:11:36A group of MPs now says that a long-term sustainable settlement

2:11:36 > 2:11:38is needed and that only a cross-party NHS and

2:11:38 > 2:11:40care convention can deliver that.

2:11:40 > 2:11:44In the letter written to the Prime Minister

2:11:44 > 2:11:45and the Chancellor, the MPs say:

2:11:48 > 2:11:49And:

2:11:57 > 2:11:58Senior Conservative Labour and Liberal Democrat backbenchers

2:11:58 > 2:12:08are among those who signed the letter.

2:12:08 > 2:12:10I think the NHS and social care are huge issues

2:12:10 > 2:12:13for our generation and we've got to get it right and I think it's

2:12:13 > 2:12:14bigger than just one party.

2:12:14 > 2:12:17The MPs also call for action in next week's budget to address

2:12:17 > 2:12:19the short-term pressures on the system.

2:12:19 > 2:12:22A government spokesperson said it was recognised there was broad

2:12:22 > 2:12:23agreement across Parliament, that social care reform

2:12:23 > 2:12:26was a priority, and there would be consultation ahead of policy

2:12:26 > 2:12:36paper next year.

2:12:38 > 2:12:42It is the Budget later this week. There have been a number of stories

2:12:42 > 2:12:46in today's papers and there will be more tomorrow, I'm sure, but what is

2:12:46 > 2:12:51in store. Tom Lees in the London newsroom.

2:12:51 > 2:12:54This is the weekend whether leaks start coming through and we get

2:12:54 > 2:13:01hints about what to expect, or not to expect, good morning. -- Tom is

2:13:01 > 2:13:06in London. We know what will be in the Budget

2:13:06 > 2:13:11is the first moves towards a possible tax on single use plastics.

2:13:11 > 2:13:18If you went out last night, bought a kebab on the way back from the pub,

2:13:18 > 2:13:23the polystyrene tray that came in, or if you are doing your Christmas

2:13:23 > 2:13:25shopping, the bubble wrap it might arise in, the government is

2:13:25 > 2:13:33concerned about this. Especially when it gets into the sea. 1 million

2:13:33 > 2:13:38birds, 100,000 sea mammals and turtles every year get tangled up in

2:13:38 > 2:13:41it or eat it, so the government wants to do something about it. They

2:13:41 > 2:13:45are announcing the start of a process. A call for evidence where

2:13:45 > 2:13:51they will look at how these plastics are made, used, and disposed of.

2:13:51 > 2:13:54They are specifically going to have a look at possibly introducing a tax

2:13:54 > 2:13:59on that in the future. No detail at all at the moment on how that might

2:13:59 > 2:14:04work or what level it is likely to be in. Other announcements, they

2:14:04 > 2:14:08have said they are going to allow housing associations to borrow much

2:14:08 > 2:14:12more money. Philip Hammond has a lot more money to spend than he thought

2:14:12 > 2:14:18he would come the question is, how is he going to spend it?

2:14:18 > 2:14:29We'll find out next week, I'm sure. Thanks very much. Last night

2:14:29 > 2:14:34children in need reached a record on the night total of more than £50

2:14:34 > 2:14:39million. Incredible. # Who will buy this wonderful

2:14:39 > 2:14:42morning? # Such a sky... #.

2:14:42 > 2:14:52Highlights of the programme... Since 1980 the appeal has raised

2:14:52 > 2:14:56more than £900 million. Well done, everybody, fantastic

2:14:56 > 2:15:03stuff.

2:15:03 > 2:15:12We will have the weather in a little while and also the sport.

2:15:12 > 2:15:15More than half a million Rohingya refugees are now thought to have

2:15:15 > 2:15:17fled Myanmar into neighbouring Bangladesh because of what's

2:15:17 > 2:15:19been described by the UN as "textbook ethnic cleansing".

2:15:19 > 2:15:22Later on in the programme we will talk to somebody about this and get

2:15:22 > 2:15:30an idea of what exactly is being done. The Myanmar army investigated

2:15:30 > 2:15:37its own actions and cleared itself of any wrongdoing. But we were -- we

2:15:37 > 2:15:42will be talking more about it later. We have seen the pictures on the TV,

2:15:42 > 2:15:48but what is it like to be there? We will have an explanation shortly.

2:15:48 > 2:15:52I promised Phil would give you a weather update in a few minutes, but

2:15:52 > 2:16:00he is here earlier than expected. Never too late. Never too early.

2:16:00 > 2:16:02Don't say that, it depends what the forecast is.

2:16:02 > 2:16:08CHUCKLES

2:16:12 > 2:16:17A beautiful image, not me, of course, it is this, the scene this

2:16:17 > 2:16:22morning from Northumberland. Glorious. It is a decent start

2:16:22 > 2:16:28across the northern half of Britain. The skies are pretty clear. For that

2:16:28 > 2:16:37we have to thank the fact that we are away from this weather front in

2:16:37 > 2:16:41the north-east and south-west. They are providing this low pressure.

2:16:41 > 2:16:44Wind and the rattle of showers across north-east Scotland.

2:16:44 > 2:16:50Elsewhere, decent sunny skies. The decent bit of brightness over

2:16:50 > 2:16:54Northern Ireland. A stream of showers running away from the North

2:16:54 > 2:16:57Channel and across the North West at the moment. They will fade with

2:16:57 > 2:17:02time. What will not in this area of cloud close to that local weather

2:17:02 > 2:17:08front I was pointing out in the south-western quarter. That's

2:17:08 > 2:17:13already producing some weather. That will gradually eased to the east. It

2:17:13 > 2:17:18is fairly light and patchy. Anywhere from the south of Wales and into

2:17:18 > 2:17:21those Southern counties and the south-west, you've got the greatest

2:17:21 > 2:17:25chance of seeing cloud and rain. Further north, a sprinkling of

2:17:25 > 2:17:30showers, but a lot of dry weather. And despite the sunshine not very

2:17:30 > 2:17:35warm, seven to 9 degrees. Chance of rain in Cardiff and later this

2:17:35 > 2:17:40afternoon at Twickenham. In Scotland, clear skies and a chilly

2:17:40 > 2:17:45evening. Hopefully that will help the Scots to do something against

2:17:45 > 2:17:50New Zealand. Overnight, clear skies, safe for the south-western quarter.

2:17:50 > 2:17:53That'll keep the temperature is up here, but a wide spread frost

2:17:53 > 2:17:59elsewhere. At least it will be a bright start for many central and

2:17:59 > 2:18:06eastern parts of the British Isles. Cloudier over Northern Ireland into

2:18:06 > 2:18:11the early afternoon. We will find rain associated with that cloud

2:18:11 > 2:18:14pushing in to western Scotland, Northern Ireland, and West and

2:18:14 > 2:18:19Wales. Despite the sunshine it won't be a warm day in the east. Late

2:18:19 > 2:18:23autumn, I would have said, rather than winter.

2:18:23 > 2:18:27Thanks very much, you have made your point, it isn't winter.

2:18:27 > 2:18:38CHUCKLES Thank you, we will see you later.

2:18:40 > 2:18:43Dr Rosena Allin-Khan, a doctor and also the Labour MP for Tooting,

2:18:43 > 2:18:49joins us now from Bangladesh.

2:18:49 > 2:18:54Good morning.Good morning.

2:18:54 > 2:18:57Good morning.Good morning.We've seen the pictures on the television

2:18:57 > 2:19:01over the last few weeks. They are haunting enough. Can you give us a

2:19:01 > 2:19:05sense of what it is like to be there. What have you got from this

2:19:05 > 2:19:12already?It's incredibly sad. I'm hearing and seeing people who have

2:19:12 > 2:19:18lived through hell. One hour ago I spoke to an imam who had a village

2:19:18 > 2:19:24of 3000 people. What he described was seeing all of the women raped,

2:19:24 > 2:19:28the men killed, and he spoke of babies being thrown alive onto

2:19:28 > 2:19:32burning fires. It's unlike anything I've ever seen before. I've spent a

2:19:32 > 2:19:36long time been a humanitarian doctor and I've never seen anything like

2:19:36 > 2:19:40this.We are seeing some pictures now of the camps and the way people

2:19:40 > 2:19:47are going to try and get help. How are they coping with the influx of

2:19:47 > 2:19:54people who have escaped?They are really overwhelmed. I spent this

2:19:54 > 2:19:59morning treating patients in a clinic set up by Hope, a local

2:19:59 > 2:20:06charity. There were 3000 Rohingya Muslims here before. Over 600,000

2:20:06 > 2:20:11people have come over the last six months. There are projected to be

2:20:11 > 2:20:16another 200,000 by the end of the year. The scale is astronomical.

2:20:16 > 2:20:18They are struggling. Everybody is doing what they can but they just

2:20:18 > 2:20:25need more.How can they get more? Is this a case of donations and

2:20:25 > 2:20:28appeals, or is there an organisational element to this kind

2:20:28 > 2:20:36of rescue, as well?There needs to be a multifaceted approach. First of

2:20:36 > 2:20:40all, we need to find out exactly what has gone on. People have been

2:20:40 > 2:20:46skirting around what to call this. Is it ethnic cleansing, genocide?

2:20:46 > 2:20:49From what I have heard and seen on this trip it sounds like genocide to

2:20:49 > 2:20:56me. We need, first of all, on a political level, to make sure we go

2:20:56 > 2:21:00into Myanmar, find out what it is and call it what it is. On the

2:21:00 > 2:21:03ground we need to make sure we support the Bangladeshi government

2:21:03 > 2:21:10who have opened their borders and hearts to welcome these refugees.

2:21:10 > 2:21:17But they cannot really afford it. They don't have the money to provide

2:21:17 > 2:21:22basic needs for these people. We need to make sure, yes, donations

2:21:22 > 2:21:26are made, engineers have what they need to provide services people

2:21:26 > 2:21:30require. We need to make sure our governments speak to each other. And

2:21:30 > 2:21:36make sure people put in all they can to help the effort.The army in

2:21:36 > 2:21:41Myanmar has said it is not involved in this at all. It has exonerated

2:21:41 > 2:21:45itself in some sort of internal investigation and enquiry it has

2:21:45 > 2:21:51done. What do you make of that?I say that is out and out. I've met

2:21:51 > 2:21:56people today who have witnessed thousands of people... I met an imam

2:21:56 > 2:22:00from a village, he had about 3000 residents there, and he left with

2:22:00 > 2:22:05the shirt on his back. They were hiding in a forest looking at babies

2:22:05 > 2:22:10and children being thrown alive onto burning fires. Women being dragged

2:22:10 > 2:22:16by their hair, being raped, the men taken away and killed. It is the

2:22:16 > 2:22:18Burmese military if they are trying to say they have nothing to do with

2:22:18 > 2:22:25this, it is a lie.Some of the details you are providing our

2:22:25 > 2:22:28horrific. Some of the story is almost impossible to this morning.

2:22:28 > 2:22:38Very hard.Are we being too slow? Are we failing to respond to this?

2:22:38 > 2:22:44In all honesty, yes, I feel we are. Humanity should have no borders. I

2:22:44 > 2:22:47know all across the world, I have seen it as a doctor, as a

2:22:47 > 2:22:51politician, I know there is great need. There are lots of atrocities

2:22:51 > 2:22:56going on. This one stands out to me because it is entirely avoidable.

2:22:56 > 2:22:59People are being ethnically cleansed purely because of who they are. The

2:22:59 > 2:23:06race in which they belong to. It is futile. There is no need for it. We

2:23:06 > 2:23:11need to step it up. We have to go and speak to the government of

2:23:11 > 2:23:16Myanmar and say, as the world, we cannot accept this. The government

2:23:16 > 2:23:20globally should not be accepting this.You are a politician. If you

2:23:20 > 2:23:24had that meeting with the government. If you are face-to-face

2:23:24 > 2:23:28with Aung San Suu Kyi who has been fated as a hero of democracy over

2:23:28 > 2:23:33many years, what would you say to her?I would love to be on a

2:23:33 > 2:23:36delegation to go and meet with her, sit down to her, talk to her, and I

2:23:36 > 2:23:41would tell her to her face that her in action, her lack of calling this

2:23:41 > 2:23:45outcome is an act of cowardice. She should stand up. She should not

2:23:45 > 2:23:56allow this to happen. -- calling this out, is an act of cowardice.

2:23:56 > 2:24:05Thank you for your descriptions. It was quite hard to hear what she was

2:24:05 > 2:24:09describing, wasn't it? Yes.

2:24:09 > 2:24:10You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

2:24:10 > 2:24:12Time now for a look at the newspapers.

2:24:12 > 2:24:15Writer and broadcaster Tim Walker is here to tell us

2:24:15 > 2:24:17what's caught his eye.

2:24:17 > 2:24:24Good morning. We're still getting over some of those horrific

2:24:24 > 2:24:28descriptions of what is happening in Myanmar. But some positive stories

2:24:28 > 2:24:35to take a look at in the papers. I think this is positive, in the

2:24:35 > 2:24:39advancement of medicine, but it is already being cold Frankenstein

2:24:39 > 2:24:46transplant.It warns its readers not to try this at home. -- being

2:24:46 > 2:24:52called. We are already talking about face transplants. Full face

2:24:52 > 2:24:57transplants. There have been about 17 of these. So why not go for the

2:24:57 > 2:25:02whole thing, and go for a head transplant? This Italian surgeon

2:25:02 > 2:25:07claims his team has already undertaken one. That is connecting

2:25:07 > 2:25:14the spinal cord, and so one, of AA, obviously a dead person, attaching

2:25:14 > 2:25:22it to the head, weatherhead would have been, of the -- where the head

2:25:22 > 2:25:26would have been of the living person.

2:25:26 > 2:25:29You are explaining it a lot more simply than I imagined it is.

2:25:29 > 2:25:35Indeed. You talk about the spinal-cord. If you sever it, you

2:25:35 > 2:25:41paralyse somebody, so it is a very serious thing. They called me

2:25:41 > 2:25:48Frankenstein, he said, but a guy from Oxford University says, I'm

2:25:48 > 2:25:53sorry, decapitating somebody isn't really acceptable if it is a long

2:25:53 > 2:25:57shot and I think I am with him.It is one of these stories you might

2:25:57 > 2:26:01see on the Internet and wonder if it is true. Which takes us on to this

2:26:01 > 2:26:05story, talking all the time about fake news, Donald Trump talking

2:26:05 > 2:26:12about it all the time. And apparently fake news isn't new, it

2:26:12 > 2:26:16isn't something which has come with Donald Trump.Interesting story. Ben

2:26:16 > 2:26:21Bradshaw has been asking questions for a long time about Russian

2:26:21 > 2:26:24involvement in our politics. Theresa May has now accepted that this is a

2:26:24 > 2:26:29serious issue. She is concerned about it. Ben Macintyre says Russia

2:26:29 > 2:26:34has long been in the presence of manufacturing fake news, back to the

2:26:34 > 2:26:37days of Thatcher. In Ronald Reagan and Thatcher's day the Internet

2:26:37 > 2:26:44wasn't such a huge thing in our lives as it is now. There were

2:26:44 > 2:26:48clearly thousands of these Russian box, these automated accounts which

2:26:48 > 2:26:56could publish. If you hear facts over and over again it easy to start

2:26:56 > 2:27:00to believe in it. I have talked to a few people and I start to feel like

2:27:00 > 2:27:04a character in a John Buchan novel. There are certain things you

2:27:04 > 2:27:08shouldn't say. One guy has been asking on twitter about the Lagarde

2:27:08 > 2:27:16Institute. But I think that's like asking about the 39 steps. If we all

2:27:16 > 2:27:22start asking about it, we will be on a train up to Scotland in fear of

2:27:22 > 2:27:23our lives. CHUCKLES

2:27:23 > 2:27:27Somebody needs to bring some order to the Commons.

2:27:27 > 2:27:30It has taken the Palace of Westminster a while to get around

2:27:30 > 2:27:35gender inequality. But we are about to see in the House of Lords the

2:27:35 > 2:27:43first ever Lady Black Rod in the shape of Sarah Clark. It is a

2:27:43 > 2:27:48wide-ranging job. Basically she has to keep the elderly peers amused.

2:27:48 > 2:27:53Some of them are not easy customers. I think her background in English

2:27:53 > 2:27:57lawn tennis club, where she had to deal with people like John McEnroe,

2:27:57 > 2:28:00should mean she should be able to keep them in order.

2:28:00 > 2:28:04What will she be doing, when you say she must keep them amused?

2:28:04 > 2:28:08It is a formal role. When the guys did it they walked around in

2:28:08 > 2:28:12breaches. You see them at the state openings of Parliament. Her job is

2:28:12 > 2:28:17to keep them entertained. She will organise events, social events for

2:28:17 > 2:28:25them, and generally keep them busy. I never knew that was a thing, I

2:28:25 > 2:28:30never -- I never knew they were organising entertainment.That is

2:28:30 > 2:28:37the day job, keeping them entertained.We thought it was just

2:28:37 > 2:28:40one a year, they take her out, not on the door, go back, see you again

2:28:40 > 2:28:46next year. It interesting. After all of the headlines about harassment at

2:28:46 > 2:28:52Westminster and the position of women at Westminster, I guess it is

2:28:52 > 2:28:56a symbolic moment that a key role in Westminster is taken by a woman and

2:28:56 > 2:29:02maybe that is shifting culture. As we know, women keep order, and

2:29:02 > 2:29:06people are more civilised when they are around.That is controversial in

2:29:06 > 2:29:11itself. I'm not sure I agree but I like the sentiment.We will see

2:29:11 > 2:29:12where that goes. CHUCKLES

2:29:12 > 2:29:16You have picked a piece about Christmas dinner. Philip has told us

2:29:16 > 2:29:25that it is not winter.I've already seen trees. It is quite depressing.

2:29:25 > 2:29:32Carol opened the lighting of the Christmas tree last week.My mother

2:29:32 > 2:29:36used to always say, we'll get through it. But it'll be more

2:29:36 > 2:29:40expensive this year. We all know the cost of the weekly food shop is

2:29:40 > 2:29:46going up and up. 5%, the Guardian says, which I think is an

2:29:46 > 2:29:51underestimate. But they are claiming, and I wouldn't like to go

2:29:51 > 2:29:57round to a Guardian journalist for Christmas dinner...Would they

2:29:57 > 2:30:04invite you?They are claiming they can it with just £22.56. You can

2:30:04 > 2:30:13apparently get a really good press Echo for just £12 -- a really good

2:30:13 > 2:30:23bottle of Prosecco for just £12 at Spar.Does that leave much money

2:30:23 > 2:30:27left for everything else.They are claiming that it is for six people.

2:30:27 > 2:30:33I cannot see that is going to be a huge feast. But apparently we spend,

2:30:33 > 2:30:39on average, £821 a year on food. We spend most of the money on food. In

2:30:39 > 2:30:45the final months of the year, the final 12 weeks, we are expected to

2:30:45 > 2:30:50spend £20.7 billion on stuffing our faces.It is a roast dinner, that is

2:30:50 > 2:30:56all it is.Pretentious chicken.You are not holding back.

2:30:56 > 2:31:00CHUCKLES

2:31:00 > 2:31:06The headlines in a moment. This is BBC Breakfast. We'll get through it.

2:32:01 > 2:32:04Hello, this is Breakfast with Jon Kay and Naga Munchetty.

2:32:04 > 2:32:08Coming up before nine, Phil will have the weather for you.

2:32:08 > 2:32:14But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

2:32:14 > 2:32:17Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

2:32:17 > 2:32:19a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

2:32:19 > 2:32:21killing four people.

2:32:21 > 2:32:23Teams will continue scouring the area around

2:32:23 > 2:32:27the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury,

2:32:27 > 2:32:28for wreckage.

2:32:28 > 2:32:30Both aircraft had set off from Wycombe Air Park,

2:32:30 > 2:32:35around 20 miles from the scene of the crash.

2:32:35 > 2:32:3890 MPs, about a third of them Conservative,

2:32:38 > 2:32:41have signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor

2:32:41 > 2:32:44calling for a cross-party approach on the future of the NHS and social

2:32:44 > 2:32:47care in England.

2:32:47 > 2:32:50A Government spokesperson said it was committed to making

2:32:50 > 2:32:52the sector sustainable.

2:32:52 > 2:32:54The politicians who've signed the letter, including nearly

2:32:54 > 2:32:5730 former ministers, say partisan politics has failed

2:32:57 > 2:33:01to come up with a solution.

2:33:01 > 2:33:04An air and sea search is taking place to find

2:33:04 > 2:33:06an Argentine submarine, which disappeared in the south

2:33:06 > 2:33:09Atlantic on Wednesday.

2:33:09 > 2:33:12The San Juan has 44 crew on board - including the Argentine navy's first

2:33:12 > 2:33:14woman submarine officer.

2:33:14 > 2:33:16The boat's last known position was about 260 miles off

2:33:16 > 2:33:24the coast of Patagonia.

2:33:24 > 2:33:32Jubilant scenes on the Zimbabwean capital today. In the last hour,

2:33:32 > 2:33:38crowds of people have started to descent on Harare. State media

2:33:38 > 2:33:41confirmed eight out of ten regional branches of the governing ZANU-PF

2:33:41 > 2:33:50have passed a vote of no confidence in the is 93-year-old head of state.

2:33:50 > 2:33:52A 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion of murder

2:33:52 > 2:33:54following the disappearance of teenager Gaia Pope, has been

2:33:54 > 2:33:56released while inquiries continue.

2:33:56 > 2:33:58Paul Elsey, confirmed as the suspect to the BBC by his father,

2:33:58 > 2:34:00is from Swanage in Dorset.

2:34:00 > 2:34:02Murder detectives are focussing their forensic

2:34:02 > 2:34:04investigations on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path

2:34:04 > 2:34:08where women's clothing was found.

2:34:08 > 2:34:10Miss Pope's family confirmed the clothing matched

2:34:10 > 2:34:16what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

2:34:16 > 2:34:19The Sinn Fein president, Gerry Adams, has said he will set

2:34:19 > 2:34:22out a plan for a leadership change in his party at its conference

2:34:22 > 2:34:23in Dublin today.

2:34:23 > 2:34:26Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive

2:34:26 > 2:34:28figures in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

2:34:28 > 2:34:31He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

2:34:31 > 2:34:35but will talk about future plans.

2:34:35 > 2:34:37The new leader of the Scottish Labour party will be announced

2:34:37 > 2:34:41later this morning.

2:34:41 > 2:34:43The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

2:34:43 > 2:34:47and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

2:34:47 > 2:34:50The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

2:34:50 > 2:34:53in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

2:34:53 > 2:35:03part in the ITV reality show "I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of Here."

2:35:04 > 2:35:10It's just bizarre.

2:35:10 > 2:35:13The Government is considering a tax on single-use plastics that are used

2:35:13 > 2:35:14in packaging and polystyrene takeaway boxes.

2:35:14 > 2:35:17The Chancellor, Philip Hammond, is expected to use next week's

2:35:17 > 2:35:19Budget to announce a consultation on the measure to cut

2:35:19 > 2:35:20waste and pollution.

2:35:20 > 2:35:22An estimated 12 million tonnes of plastic enters

2:35:22 > 2:35:24the oceans each year, and residues are routinely

2:35:24 > 2:35:29found in fish, sea birds and marine mammals.

2:35:29 > 2:35:31Well done everyone.

2:35:31 > 2:35:33This year's Children in Need reached a record on-the-night total

2:35:33 > 2:35:41of more than £50 million.

2:35:41 > 2:35:43Highlights of the programme included an Eastenders musical,

2:35:43 > 2:35:47singing Countryfile presenters, and Blue Peter does

2:35:47 > 2:35:50Strictly Come Dancing.

2:35:50 > 2:35:59Since 1980, the appeal has raised over £900 million.

2:36:01 > 2:36:04An original drawing of the comic book hero Tintin is expected to sell

2:36:04 > 2:36:05for nearly £1 million today.

2:36:05 > 2:36:08The artwork, by the Belgian artist Herge, was published in 1939

2:36:08 > 2:36:10as the cover of a story called "King Ottokar's Sceptre".

2:36:10 > 2:36:13Other pieces up for auction in Paris include Herge's

2:36:13 > 2:36:19designs for board games.

2:36:19 > 2:36:26Those are the main stories. Have you ever played a Tintin board game? No,

2:36:26 > 2:36:30I read the books. I'll lend you some.Oh, thanks. Do you want some

2:36:30 > 2:36:37as well?I'll share, yeah. I used to read it in French.Oh! So

2:36:37 > 2:36:43pretentious.So talented. No it was part of my - I did French as a

2:36:43 > 2:36:47degree, used to read some, you know. You were reading kiddie books when

2:36:47 > 2:36:50you did your degree?Yeah. LAUGHTER

2:36:50 > 2:36:53Don't sound so clever now, do you? Oh, that's cruel. Shall we talk

2:36:53 > 2:36:57about the sport!I love you.

2:36:57 > 2:37:00We are talking about the fact that Chris Coleman has stepped down as

2:37:00 > 2:37:03Wales manager. I mean, maybe not a shock. I think people perhaps knew

2:37:03 > 2:37:14that was going to happen when they failed to qualify for the World Cup

2:37:14 > 2:37:17and a huge disappointment there. He got them to the semifinals of the

2:37:17 > 2:37:22euros.The shock is where he's going now.Some are saying he could have

2:37:22 > 2:37:25managed a Premier League side if he'd waited for the right

2:37:25 > 2:37:28opportunity. But he's opted to go for Sunderland, who are bottom of

2:37:28 > 2:37:35the Championship.It's a challenge. Maybe he likes the challenge. Who is

2:37:35 > 2:37:39favourite to take the role?Tell us? Ryan Giggs.

2:37:39 > 2:37:42Ryan Giggs is the odds-on favourite to become the next Wales manager,

2:37:42 > 2:37:44after Chris Coleman stood down.

2:37:44 > 2:37:46His new challenge is to rescue Sunderland, who are bottom

2:37:46 > 2:37:47of the Championship.

2:37:47 > 2:37:49Coleman led Wales to their greatest success -

2:37:49 > 2:37:51reaching the semi-finals at last year's European Championship.

2:37:51 > 2:37:53After they failed to qualify for next year's World Cup,

2:37:53 > 2:37:55it looked likely that Coleman would move on,

2:37:55 > 2:38:03despite the best efforts of the Wales FA to keep him.

2:38:03 > 2:38:05Northern Ireland manager, Michael O'Neill, had also been linked

2:38:05 > 2:38:08to the Sunderland job, but he's now been given permission to speak

2:38:08 > 2:38:10to the Scottish FA about their vacant manager's position.

2:38:10 > 2:38:13O'Neill was bitterly disappointed when Northern ireland just missed

2:38:13 > 2:38:16out on qualifying for next year's World Cup.

2:38:16 > 2:38:19He's been in charge for six years, leading them to last year's Euros -

2:38:19 > 2:38:23their first major finals for 30 years.

2:38:23 > 2:38:27The Football League returns this weekend after the international

2:38:27 > 2:38:30break, Dan's here to tell us what's coming up on Football Focus.

2:38:30 > 2:38:35What do you make of all this Chris Coleman stuff going to Sunderland?

2:38:35 > 2:38:38It's a big coup for Sunderland. I think lots of teams have been

2:38:38 > 2:38:42interested in him and he's been carefully plotting where he'll go.

2:38:42 > 2:38:45But for Sunderland it's a great move. If he gets the money, he's got

2:38:45 > 2:38:49a good reputation. Hopefully he can turn things round. They've had a

2:38:49 > 2:38:54pretty miserable last - well, few years. But last 12 months have been

2:38:54 > 2:38:56particularly pants from a Sunderland point of view. A good way of

2:38:56 > 2:39:02describing it.That's good analysis. That's why they pay me the average

2:39:02 > 2:39:10bucks! Let me talk about football focus. Willian on Chelsea are

2:39:10 > 2:39:20speaking to us about his friendship with David Luiz. Sam Queck who won a

2:39:20 > 2:39:24hockey Gold Medal is the right word at the Olympics, she's a big

2:39:24 > 2:39:29Liverpool fan. She's been to interview James Milner this week.

2:39:29 > 2:39:32Kenny Dalglish live as well. We're asking people to send in their

2:39:32 > 2:39:40questions. Not many TV interviews at all. The Breakfast one is the only

2:39:40 > 2:39:44one he's doing in person. He's doing our one live from Anfield today.

2:39:44 > 2:39:50Send in your questions for him. The North London derby.Big one today.

2:39:50 > 2:39:54Gilberto on the show live. He scored in the first ever North London derby

2:39:54 > 2:39:58at the Emirates in 2006. He has fond memories of that. We're with

2:39:58 > 2:40:10Shrewsbury today. I know some people call it Shrows-bury. I'm looking

2:40:10 > 2:40:15forward to this. This man is appearing on football focus. It's

2:40:15 > 2:40:25Will Ferrell.So moustache, without a moustache. Here he looks like a

2:40:25 > 2:40:33dishevelled sea captain. Looking for his ship. There it's a strong gaze

2:40:33 > 2:40:38off into the horizon, when he used to have a ship. Here he's lost the

2:40:38 > 2:40:45ship.He is talking about more than Mark Lawrenson's moustache, Premier

2:40:45 > 2:40:49League predictions today.Is he a football fan?A massive fan.What

2:40:49 > 2:40:56team does he support?Chelsea.Ah! That makes sense. I saw his

2:40:56 > 2:41:00prediction for the Chelsea result. Ah, he's a massive fan.He always

2:41:00 > 2:41:03goes to see a Premier League game when he comes to this country. I

2:41:03 > 2:41:12hold my hands up, we had Robert DeNiro on and he predicted 52-0. He

2:41:12 > 2:41:15knows nothing about football. But he is a big football fan. Bit of him

2:41:15 > 2:41:19and all the other stuff as well from midday on BBC One today.Dan thank

2:41:19 > 2:41:28you. We'll be watching, I'm sure. We're moving on to cricket

2:41:28 > 2:41:30A bit of a sobering experience for England with the first

2:41:30 > 2:41:32Ashes Test now just five days away.

2:41:32 > 2:41:34They were lucky to get away with a draw against

2:41:34 > 2:41:35a Cricket Australia 11.

2:41:35 > 2:41:37The hosts piled on the runs.

2:41:37 > 2:41:40Jason Sangha - who's only 18 - hit England all over the place

2:41:40 > 2:41:42to score his century, before Moeen Ali had the only

2:41:42 > 2:41:44success of the tourists' day, getting him caught out.

2:41:44 > 2:41:46The Cricket Australia side still finished day four

2:41:46 > 2:41:49on 364 for four though!

2:41:49 > 2:41:53England looking a bit shaky there. England's women have lost their

2:41:53 > 2:42:01Ashes as well. England have one just one of the

2:42:01 > 2:42:06five matches so far, with two T20s left to play.

2:42:06 > 2:42:08It's been a good week for the England women's rugby team.

2:42:08 > 2:42:11This week, it was announced the RFU will pay them match

2:42:11 > 2:42:13fees for the first time, and last night, they thrashed Canada

2:42:13 > 2:42:1679-5 in the opening match of their three-test series.

2:42:16 > 2:42:18Harlequins wing Jess Breach scoring six of them on her debut.

2:42:18 > 2:42:23The sides play again next Tuesday and Saturday.

2:42:23 > 2:42:28The Autumn internationals continue today:

2:42:28 > 2:42:30Wales play Georgia, Ireland take on Fiji and

2:42:30 > 2:42:32Scotland are hoping to beat New Zealand for the first time.

2:42:32 > 2:42:34England face Australia at Twickenham and Mike Tindall,

2:42:34 > 2:42:37World Cup winner in 2003, knows a thing or two

2:42:37 > 2:42:38about beating the Wallabies.

2:42:38 > 2:42:41He's in our London studio.

2:42:41 > 2:42:44Mike, thank you so much for getting up early to talk to us ahead of the

2:42:44 > 2:42:49game. Talking about how strong, dominant Australia are in the

2:42:49 > 2:42:54cricket. Now here they are facing England in rugby. Are they still the

2:42:54 > 2:42:58world force in world rugby that they used to be?I think they're on a

2:42:58 > 2:43:02little bit of a resurgence at the moment. They could have had two wins

2:43:02 > 2:43:06over the All Blacks in the rugby Championships. They did one with

2:43:06 > 2:43:10that win over them. I think from England's point of view they need a

2:43:10 > 2:43:13good win. The last four times they've played, we've had those

2:43:13 > 2:43:19victories. They need to cement themselves as the real challengers

2:43:19 > 2:43:23for the can I ways when they -- kiwis when they face them next

2:43:23 > 2:43:28Autumn.What do England need to do to improve? Even Eddie Jones said of

2:43:28 > 2:43:32that match last weekend that it was like watching a bad movie - you sit

2:43:32 > 2:43:37through it but didn't enjoy. It what do they need to do so we speak more

2:43:37 > 2:43:41positively about their performance tomorrow?It's a point where they

2:43:41 > 2:43:45need a performance. If they get the performance, they will get the win.

2:43:45 > 2:43:49But they need a performance more than anything. Through the Six

2:43:49 > 2:43:52Nations, they didn't really hit their stride either. So people are

2:43:52 > 2:43:56starting to say if they win ugly again, they're going to start

2:43:56 > 2:44:00questioning a little bit more about Jones and how England are actually

2:44:00 > 2:44:05playing and are they actually as good as what they think. I think he

2:44:05 > 2:44:09knows. Last week was what looked like the first Game Of The Year.

2:44:09 > 2:44:14They were sloppy. Their handling skills, normally great, weren't as

2:44:14 > 2:44:17good as what they've been. Their break-down work wasn't up to

2:44:17 > 2:44:20scratch. There are questions there to be answered. I just want to see

2:44:20 > 2:44:26them back playing that high tempo rugby that saw them smash Australia

2:44:26 > 2:44:323-0 in their own backyard last June. Hopefully, if we can get that, you

2:44:32 > 2:44:36can see a great game today and they normally are high scorers. I still

2:44:36 > 2:44:40think England are favourites to win it. I just hope we'll see a good

2:44:40 > 2:44:44game.Big names returning for England as well. Owen Farrell back

2:44:44 > 2:44:48after he was rested for the last fixture. Also Otogi back on the

2:44:48 > 2:44:52bench as well. Big players for England. How important to see those

2:44:52 > 2:44:59big names back in the squad?Yeah, those two guys have obviously,

2:44:59 > 2:45:02they're up for world Player of the Year. It shows how important, how

2:45:02 > 2:45:09good they are. Owen Farrell coming back in to make that partnership. I

2:45:09 > 2:45:14think Ford and Farrelly understand each other very well. We didn't

2:45:14 > 2:45:20release the back last week. With Jonny May coming in and Watson at

2:45:20 > 2:45:24fullback, we have a lightning fast back three. Eddie Jones will be keen

2:45:24 > 2:45:29to get the ball in those three's hands early. That's why Farrell is

2:45:29 > 2:45:37back in. I'd like to see Henry Slade to get more game time, to see how he

2:45:37 > 2:45:45fits in. Maybe taking off Ford and Farrell play 10 and Slade12. With

2:45:45 > 2:45:48Otogi it's a shock not to have him straight back in the team

2:45:48 > 2:45:53considering how he's grown over the last two years in terms of stature

2:45:53 > 2:45:56of a player and he's seen as one of the most important players for

2:45:56 > 2:46:01England. But Eddie Jones is trying to figure out the pecking order of

2:46:01 > 2:46:06his second row. We're blessed to have four or five very, very strong

2:46:06 > 2:46:12players in that second row. I think Kourtney Laws has been outstanding.

2:46:12 > 2:46:18He's trying to figure it out. Mario will play his role during the game.

2:46:18 > 2:46:22OK, Mike. Thanks very much for bringing us all the latest ahead of

2:46:22 > 2:46:28that. New Zealand are out of the Rugby World Cup. A tight low-scoring

2:46:28 > 2:46:36match. The 2008 winners were beating 4-2 by Fiji. It was a famous night

2:46:36 > 2:46:40for the Fijians. They are into the World Cup semifinals for the third

2:46:40 > 2:46:45time. They play the holders Australia next.

2:46:45 > 2:46:48Tonga survived a bit of a scare to reach their first

2:46:48 > 2:46:49World Cup semi-final.

2:46:49 > 2:46:51They just scraped past Lebanon, winning 24-22 ,

2:46:51 > 2:46:53but they were a shadow of the side that beat New Zealand

2:46:53 > 2:46:54in their previous game.

2:46:54 > 2:46:56Tonga will be England's opponents, if England beat

2:46:56 > 2:46:58Papua New Guinea tomorrow.

2:46:58 > 2:47:01Andy Murray has split with his coach Ivan Lendl for the second time.

2:47:01 > 2:47:03Under his guidance, Murray won three Grand Slam titles,

2:47:03 > 2:47:05two Olympic Golds and made it to world number one,

2:47:05 > 2:47:08but he's been plagued with injury all season, and he'll continue

2:47:08 > 2:47:10to work on regaining his fitness, leading up

2:47:10 > 2:47:12to January's Australian Open.

2:47:12 > 2:47:14The battle between Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose

2:47:14 > 2:47:16to finish the year as Europe's number one golfer is getting

2:47:16 > 2:47:19exciting.

2:47:19 > 2:47:23It's advantage Rose, who's two shots off the pace

2:47:23 > 2:47:25at the Dubai Championship - and two clear of Fleetwood.

2:47:25 > 2:47:31They're chasing this man, defending champion

2:47:31 > 2:47:32Matthew Fitzpatrick, who's leading the field

2:47:32 > 2:47:33going into round three.

2:47:33 > 2:47:37He's ten-under par, one shot ahead of Tyrrell Hatton.

2:47:37 > 2:47:41The Race to Dubai concluding in Dubai. They've got to Dubai, they

2:47:41 > 2:47:45just have to race to the end of the tournament to see who is the best.

2:47:45 > 2:47:50Then get home from Dubai.That's it, Christmas time.It would be a great

2:47:50 > 2:47:59Christmas if you win that race. Thanks very much.

2:47:59 > 2:48:02He famously tackled unhealthy school dinners, and now Jamie Oliver has

2:48:02 > 2:48:03the selfie in his sights.

2:48:03 > 2:48:05The celebrity chef has announced he's banned his 14-year-old

2:48:05 > 2:48:07daughter from taking them, and described selfies as the

2:48:07 > 2:48:13unhealthy "sugar of social media".

2:48:13 > 2:48:15He also warned parents to be more aware of how children

2:48:15 > 2:48:20are presenting themselves online.

2:48:20 > 2:48:24We'll talk about this more in minute, but first let's take

2:48:24 > 2:48:28Emma Kenny joins us. What do you make of this?I have some empathy

2:48:28 > 2:48:31with Jamie Oliver. I don't think he's just reacting from a

2:48:31 > 2:48:33perspective that's personal. He's taking on board a lot of the

2:48:33 > 2:48:37research and evidence that we're seeing, the trends that are

2:48:37 > 2:48:40developing in young people's mental health.There's an irony as well,

2:48:40 > 2:48:45because he hasn't shied away from his family being in the public eye

2:48:45 > 2:48:49and under scrutiny.The difference is though is what we're seeing with

2:48:49 > 2:48:52young people, particularly young girls is this real emphasis on their

2:48:52 > 2:48:56physical form. They're not taking pictures to capture moments,

2:48:56 > 2:49:00memories. They're taking the same image in the same space, in a

2:49:00 > 2:49:05bedroom, heavily edited it with their apps. Then posting online and

2:49:05 > 2:49:08wanting approval. We've seen in research kids are now responding to

2:49:08 > 2:49:13likes as a sense of self-value. We don't want kids to feel that way. We

2:49:13 > 2:49:16want kids to feel good about their bodies, whatever it is. We don't

2:49:16 > 2:49:21want them to feel that pressure.Of course we do. I wonder if there's a

2:49:21 > 2:49:28generational thing here going on, whether for kids today, taking a

2:49:28 > 2:49:34shelfy is just taking a shelfy. We can't get used to it, but it's more

2:49:34 > 2:49:38normal than we think.My niece is taking thousands of selfies. She's

2:49:38 > 2:49:42beautiful. I don't think she needs that many. She gets lots of positive

2:49:42 > 2:49:46points for it. Lots of young people feel that way. The problem I have is

2:49:46 > 2:49:50that well being is at an All Time Low for our young people. Whether we

2:49:50 > 2:49:54like to acknowledge that is in symmetry to suggest with those

2:49:54 > 2:49:58selfies, we do know it is. The truth is that we don't want your people to

2:49:58 > 2:50:01feel the pressure of having to look a certain way all the time, having

2:50:01 > 2:50:05to present as perfect. I think that most young people, as you said,

2:50:05 > 2:50:10probably have a level of selfie taking within a moderate level. But

2:50:10 > 2:50:13for some, it's actually destroying their self-esteem and the research

2:50:13 > 2:50:16is saying that. It's not me saying that. I'm not voicing my opinion.

2:50:16 > 2:50:20I'm saying that as you know, generationally of course we've

2:50:20 > 2:50:25changed. When I was a young girl, we couldn't afford to take pictures.

2:50:25 > 2:50:28They were expensive to develop. Sometimes you get it back with a

2:50:28 > 2:50:31sticker on your head because you hadn't got the focus right. That's

2:50:31 > 2:50:37not the case now. What we see is the Kardashian culture is not positive

2:50:37 > 2:50:42for our pictures.It's not just glamorous pictures of themselves,

2:50:42 > 2:50:46like these with make up on and looking great. Sometimes they're

2:50:46 > 2:50:50taking pictures of anything, in the corner shop and at the bus stop.

2:50:50 > 2:50:54It's part grammar of their lives.If you're taking a picture of something

2:50:54 > 2:50:59and you put yourself in it smiling, that isn't considered, in my

2:50:59 > 2:51:04perspective, a real selfie. I think they are constructed, posed, every

2:51:04 > 2:51:07different outfit and basically also using lots of filters. Young people

2:51:07 > 2:51:12are beautiful. I don't know about you, I cannot tell what is a

2:51:12 > 2:51:14beautiful and less beautiful child because they all look gorgeous to

2:51:14 > 2:51:21me. They don't appreciate how beautiful they are.That's an old

2:51:21 > 2:51:25age problem, as in a long standing problem. We didn't realise when we

2:51:25 > 2:51:28were young we were beautiful. You are at your most beautiful, you

2:51:28 > 2:51:32could argue.Absolutely.The fact is that there is that difference. John

2:51:32 > 2:51:38was saying if took a picture, a selfie, it's I'm here, I'm enjoying

2:51:38 > 2:51:42this.Just mucking around. Psychologically, what is the thing

2:51:42 > 2:51:48that's most at risk, so to speak? The major thing is one, female-wise,

2:51:48 > 2:51:52the objectification of whimper say. We know we want to get away from

2:51:52 > 2:51:55girls being valued for the way they look and not who they are. Secondly,

2:51:55 > 2:51:59we see when the brain acknowledges that you're getting likes the

2:51:59 > 2:52:03validation causes a reaction in our brains that makes us want more ever

2:52:03 > 2:52:07it, like an addiction cycle.You're saying that's more dangerous than

2:52:07 > 2:52:13the taking of the picture.Both together, objectification, possible

2:52:13 > 2:52:18sexualisation and validation.Thanks for being here. What do you think of

2:52:18 > 2:52:20Jamie Oliver's decision to ban his daughter taking shelfies. Get in

2:52:20 > 2:52:24touch in the usual way this morning. We'll try to read out some of the

2:52:24 > 2:52:27comments later. Time to talk to Phil with a look at the weather. If you

2:52:27 > 2:52:31were to take a selfie, what ideal weather would be behind you?Not

2:52:31 > 2:52:37that!Exactly, Jon. Thank you very much. Moving swiftly on. We tell it

2:52:37 > 2:52:37like it

2:52:37 > 2:52:39much. Moving swiftly on. We tell it like it is with the weather.

2:52:39 > 2:52:42Occasionally, we have to do this sort of thing to you, because it is

2:52:42 > 2:52:46that way in South Wales at the moment. You're close to a weather

2:52:46 > 2:52:49front. There's thickening cloud coming into the southern counties of

2:52:49 > 2:52:53England and Wales and bringing with it not only the murk, but also the

2:52:53 > 2:52:57possibility and it is only that, of patchy rain. As we move further

2:52:57 > 2:52:59north, the supply of showers across northern England that tends to fade

2:52:59 > 2:53:07with time. Brighter skies. What won't change is if we skip to

2:53:07 > 2:53:09north-eastern Scotland, windy through the day and a supply of

2:53:09 > 2:53:11showers. Essentially, it's bright here, bright too for Northern

2:53:11 > 2:53:16Ireland. But rather cloudy at times and here, those brightening skies

2:53:16 > 2:53:20getting into northern England too. Even in the south, I have to say,

2:53:20 > 2:53:24that through the afternoon, not a write-off by any means at all. There

2:53:24 > 2:53:27will be brightness even here. I have to throw in the possibility of there

2:53:27 > 2:53:30being a wee bit of rain, which gradually moves into the

2:53:30 > 2:53:32south-western quarter of the British Isles through the course of the

2:53:32 > 2:53:36night. Elsewhere, the skies are pretty clear and as a consequence

2:53:36 > 2:53:40certainly in the countryside, there could be a widespread frost. For

2:53:40 > 2:53:44some quite a hard one as well, there in the borders area. That equates to

2:53:44 > 2:53:48a glorious start to the new day on Sunday. Save for the south-western

2:53:48 > 2:53:52quarter. Through the day, we'll find cloud getting into many of these

2:53:52 > 2:53:56western areas. There you see the extent of the rain. Out east,

2:53:56 > 2:53:59despite the sunshine, never better than five, six or seven. Back to you

2:53:59 > 2:54:08guys.

2:54:08 > 2:54:11More than 100,000 people in low paid jobs who are paid weekly could be

2:54:11 > 2:54:15facing a bleak Christmas this year.

2:54:15 > 2:54:17Those affected are people who claim Universal Credit

2:54:17 > 2:54:20to top up their low pay, but the BBC has established that

2:54:20 > 2:54:23in many cases their benefit will not be paid in December

2:54:23 > 2:54:27and they will have to reclaim Universal Credit in January.

2:54:27 > 2:54:33It's the latest in this ongoing saga of universal credit.

2:54:33 > 2:54:37Paul Lewis from the BBC's Money Box programme has been doing the sums.

2:54:37 > 2:54:41Let's get this dead clear then. So this is because there are more weeks

2:54:41 > 2:54:43in the month than there might

2:54:43 > 2:54:44this is because there are more weeks in the month than there might other

2:54:44 > 2:54:49be, yeah?Yeah, that's right. Universal credit is paid monthly, by

2:54:49 > 2:54:53that a calendar month. If you're paid weekly and nearly half of all

2:54:53 > 2:54:58universal credit claimants are paid weekly when they're in work, then

2:54:58 > 2:55:02you can have four or five pay days in the month. In December there are

2:55:02 > 2:55:06five Fridays, which is a typical pay day. If that's your position, then

2:55:06 > 2:55:10that fifth pay day will stop you getting your benefit. And not only

2:55:10 > 2:55:15does it mean you get no money, but you'll have to reclaim the following

2:55:15 > 2:55:18month. That's a procedure you have to go through. Have you to do it at

2:55:18 > 2:55:21the right time. There could be another delay before you get the

2:55:21 > 2:55:25next payment. It's a pretty bleak prospect for people that the benefit

2:55:25 > 2:55:30they expect to get every month, they won't get this month.This is the

2:55:30 > 2:55:34way the system is meant to work, is that right?I'm afraid to say it is.

2:55:34 > 2:55:41If you go to the gov. UK website and look it up, you'll find the details.

2:55:41 > 2:55:45There it's had no publicity until we worked out some numbers. It's very

2:55:45 > 2:55:50clear there that in the week, so you have five pay days, your benefit

2:55:50 > 2:55:54will be reduced, usually stopped and you'll have to reclaim it. On the

2:55:54 > 2:55:58figures, there are about a quarter of a million universal credit

2:55:58 > 2:56:03claimants who do work. We know that nearly half of them are paid weekly

2:56:03 > 2:56:07from other research, so that makes a figure over 100,000. It won't affect

2:56:07 > 2:56:11every one of them. It will affect almost all of them.MPs were voting

2:56:11 > 2:56:18this week and trying to improve universal credit. Was that part of

2:56:18 > 2:56:21this?No, it got a brief mention in the House of Commons. The issue they

2:56:21 > 2:56:24were looking at is why you had to wait more than six weeks to get your

2:56:24 > 2:56:27first payment. And that is where we expect a bit of movement in the

2:56:27 > 2:56:31Budget. We don't know quite how much or when it will start. But this is a

2:56:31 > 2:56:35completely separate issue and like the long delay, it is built into the

2:56:35 > 2:56:39system and only a change in the underlying rules of universal credit

2:56:39 > 2:56:43can solve this problem.And the Government say what?Well the

2:56:43 > 2:56:48Government says it is paid monthly. It reflects people's actual

2:56:48 > 2:56:52circumstances, after they've received their pay. They don't deny

2:56:52 > 2:56:57it, they just say that's how it works.Paul, thank you very much.

2:56:57 > 2:57:02Paul's investigation in full, more details on Money Box on Radio 4 at

2:57:02 > 2:57:09lunch time today.

2:57:09 > 2:57:15Let's talk about Strictly. They're in Blackpool tonight. Why is

2:57:15 > 2:57:19Blackpool so special? 12,000 square feet dance floor made from 30,000

2:57:19 > 2:57:23wooden blocks. It's been putting a spring into dancing's steps for over

2:57:23 > 2:57:27a Severnery. Tonight -- century. Tonight they hit Blackpool. We are

2:57:27 > 2:57:38talking about it in a moment. First, let's take a look behind-the-scenes.

2:57:38 > 2:57:43Seagulls, chip butty on the prom and queues. It's that time of year when

2:57:43 > 2:57:53Strictly comes to Blackpool. # Let me entertain you... #

2:57:53 > 2:57:57It's the excitement. I've got the hiccups, literally. I can't stop.

2:57:57 > 2:58:02Goodness me. Oh, I need to control the excitement.I love it here. I'm

2:58:02 > 2:58:07just enjoying every minute. It's really exciting and it just feels

2:58:07 > 2:58:12fantastic to be a part of this special moment.I've never been in

2:58:12 > 2:58:15this ballroom. I've heard amazing things. When I first walked in here,

2:58:15 > 2:58:20I couldn't believe. It reminds me of the ballroom in Beauty And The

2:58:20 > 2:58:28Beast. It's wonderful.Every minute of practice counts before tonight.

2:58:28 > 2:58:33But it's the Tower Ballroom's sprung dance floor the celebs are desperate

2:58:33 > 2:58:37to get out on it. Really quick quickstep for you. How's it going?

2:58:37 > 2:58:43I'm loving it. It's so energetic. It's quick.It is! We're bouncing

2:58:43 > 2:58:47round this amazing floor. I can't wait for rehearsal.And a sexy

2:58:47 > 2:58:52salsa.It's a salsa, we don't know how sexy.Give us some hips, Joe.

2:58:52 > 2:59:06No, you have to watch on Saturday. I don't give that away for free.

2:59:11 > 2:59:15It's amazing. It's a lot of fun. I think I've ticked a great big box of

2:59:15 > 2:59:19life there. If I get to do that, I can die happy.You're embracing

2:59:19 > 2:59:24Blackpool. We've got you something else as well. Have a go.I've gone

2:59:24 > 2:59:28all out Blackpool, right? What do you reckon. Not so much Bond as

2:59:28 > 2:59:34Elton John.The excitement inside matched only by the fans waiting

2:59:34 > 2:59:38outside in the cold.Fantastic, we're from Leeds. We've travelled in

2:59:38 > 2:59:42from Leeds this morning just for Strictly.Yeah.Just want to see it,

2:59:42 > 2:59:46yeah. Love Blackpool.It will be great, yeah.Good luck to Gemma.

2:59:46 > 2:59:55We're from Bury. Who'll be a seaside smash and who'll

2:59:55 > 3:00:07be a dancing donkey? We'll find out tonight.

3:00:08 > 3:00:12BBC One tonight, the Blackpool experience. You didn't quite get

3:00:12 > 3:00:18there, did you?Nowhere near there! I was being nice.Yeah don't bother.

3:00:18 > 3:00:47Headlines in a moment. Stay with us.

3:00:49 > 3:00:52Hello this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Jon Kay.

3:00:52 > 3:00:54Thousands of people take to the streets in Zimbabwe

3:00:54 > 3:01:02to protest against the president Robert Mugabe.

3:01:02 > 3:01:07the 93-year-old has been in power for 37 years but is now facing

3:01:07 > 3:01:09growing calls for him to quit.

3:01:21 > 3:01:30Good morning. Also this morning :

3:01:30 > 3:01:33Police and air accident investigators try and find out why

3:01:33 > 3:01:35two aircraft collided, leaving four people dead.

3:01:35 > 3:01:3890 MPs say patients in the health service in England are being

3:01:38 > 3:01:40"failed" by the system as they ask the Prime Minister for

3:01:40 > 3:01:41a cross-party solution.

3:01:41 > 3:01:44In sport, the man who took Wales to the semi finals

3:01:44 > 3:01:47of the Euros has stepped down - Chris Coleman has gone

3:01:47 > 3:01:54to manage the Championship's bottom side, Sunderland.

3:01:54 > 3:01:56Jools Holland has duetted with some of the biggest

3:01:56 > 3:01:59names in the business - now he's back with a new double act.

3:01:59 > 3:02:03He'll be here with Jose Feliciano.

3:02:03 > 3:02:09And Philip has the weather.

3:02:09 > 3:02:14A bit of everything in the weekend's forecasts. The bulk of the sunshine

3:02:14 > 3:02:17will be found over northern parts for Saturday, cloud for more

3:02:17 > 3:02:22southern areas, more details in a couple of minutes.

3:02:22 > 3:02:26See you then.

3:02:26 > 3:02:29Jubilant scenes on the streets of Zimbabwe where people are protesting

3:02:29 > 3:02:35against the President Robert Mugabe.

3:02:35 > 3:02:40State media has confirmed that eight out of ten regional branches of the

3:02:40 > 3:02:46governing Zanu PF already passed a vote of no-confidence against

3:02:46 > 3:02:49president.

3:02:49 > 3:02:52Ben Brown is in Zimbabwe for us.

3:02:52 > 3:02:58This is a highly pivotal day in the country's history, isn't it?

3:02:58 > 3:03:05It really is. Some exuberant scenes in the capital of Harare. Thousands

3:03:05 > 3:03:10of people coming out onto the streets for rallies. Two separate

3:03:10 > 3:03:14rallies. Demanding Robert Mugabe steps down, resigned immediately.

3:03:14 > 3:03:17One is organised by the war veterans, the men who fought

3:03:17 > 3:03:23alongside Robert Mugabe in the War of Independence, in the war of

3:03:23 > 3:03:29liberation against white minority rule. They and the ruling party,

3:03:29 > 3:03:34Zanu PF, have turned against Robert Mugabe. He has few friends left. You

3:03:34 > 3:03:38wouldn't think he had much time left. There is almost nobody you

3:03:38 > 3:03:41come across in Zimbabwe who still want him to be president. It's only

3:03:41 > 3:03:46a matter of time, maybe just hours before he must step down.

3:03:46 > 3:03:51What is stopping those who have almost overthrown him from actually

3:03:51 > 3:03:56completing the task they have started?

3:03:56 > 3:04:01I think the military all along, since their takeover on Wednesday

3:04:01 > 3:04:04which they refused to call a coup d'etat, even though most observers

3:04:04 > 3:04:09looking at it thought it was, they don't want to call it a coup d'etat.

3:04:09 > 3:04:14They don't want to be seen to be forcing him out of office. They want

3:04:14 > 3:04:19him to agree voluntarily to resign, to go off his own volition. He

3:04:19 > 3:04:22perhaps would accept that if he could negotiate safety for himself

3:04:22 > 3:04:27and his family from the Army. We don't know if he would stay in this

3:04:27 > 3:04:32country or if you would go into exile. Those are the options. -- if

3:04:32 > 3:04:36he would go. He would be replaced by a transitional government, including

3:04:36 > 3:04:44members of Zanu PF, but also the opposition, MDC.

3:04:44 > 3:04:47Thanks very much.

3:04:47 > 3:04:49Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

3:04:49 > 3:04:51a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

3:04:51 > 3:04:52killing four people.

3:04:52 > 3:04:55Teams will continue scouring the area for wreckage -

3:04:55 > 3:05:05around the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury.

3:05:06 > 3:05:08Beneath the canopy of autumn colour lies the wreckage

3:05:08 > 3:05:09of two light aircraft.

3:05:09 > 3:05:12This is the tale of the Cessna plane.

3:05:12 > 3:05:15Nearby lies its wing and a little further away in a clearing

3:05:15 > 3:05:18are the remains of what is believed to be the helicopter.

3:05:18 > 3:05:22Two people were travelling in each aircraft and no one survived.

3:05:22 > 3:05:24We did a joint response with the fire service,

3:05:24 > 3:05:27ambulance and now the air accident branch who are working with us

3:05:27 > 3:05:29through a joint investigation while we establish

3:05:29 > 3:05:34the cause of the crash.

3:05:34 > 3:05:36The mid-air collision happened above the Waddesdon

3:05:36 > 3:05:41estate, in Buckinghamshire.

3:05:41 > 3:05:44Both pilots took off from Whickham Airport 20 miles away.

3:05:44 > 3:05:46Visibility at the time was clear and bright.

3:05:46 > 3:05:48An off-duty fire officer saw the collision and says

3:05:48 > 3:05:52there was a loud bang followed by falling debris.

3:05:52 > 3:05:54Yesterday, police and air accident investigators worked late

3:05:54 > 3:06:01into the night.

3:06:01 > 3:06:04Their task - to find out why the crash happened

3:06:04 > 3:06:06and who was involved.

3:06:06 > 3:06:08With the wreckage spread over a large area, the search

3:06:08 > 3:06:11for clues as to why two aircraft collided in good conditions

3:06:11 > 3:06:21is expected to continue at least until Monday.

3:06:26 > 3:06:29A 49-year-old man who was arrested on suspicion of the murder

3:06:29 > 3:06:36of missing teenager Gaia Pope has been released.

3:06:36 > 3:06:38Paul Elsey was held after clothing similar

3:06:38 > 3:06:40to what 19-year-old Gaia was believed to be wearing the day

3:06:40 > 3:06:47she disappeared was found near a coastal path.

3:06:47 > 3:06:52We can get the latest from our reporter. It is good to see you. We

3:06:52 > 3:06:57heard from the father of Gaia Pope yesterday saying hope beyond hope,

3:06:57 > 3:07:00but their family cannot rest until they know more about this and police

3:07:00 > 3:07:08continue with their investigation. Absolutely. Gaia Pope's friends and

3:07:08 > 3:07:13families remain hopeful. They think she can still be found alive. The

3:07:13 > 3:07:16police are investigating all avenues open to them. The discovery of

3:07:16 > 3:07:19clothes which appeared to match those Gaia Pope was wearing when she

3:07:19 > 3:07:24was last seen is a huge blow. The police also believe she may have

3:07:24 > 3:07:27come to harm. That's why they've arrested over the past week three

3:07:27 > 3:07:31different people on suspicion of murder. They've all now been

3:07:31 > 3:07:35released. With nobody in custody now there remained not much hope for the

3:07:35 > 3:07:41family apart from getting out there and continuing to search. On a

3:07:41 > 3:07:47Facebook page which is called Find Gaia Chaston thousand members,

3:07:47 > 3:07:57they've made an appeal for people to come in search for her. -- now has

3:07:57 > 3:08:0410,000 members. They will scour the ruble areas around here. They add to

3:08:04 > 3:08:06the professional emergency services who are continuing their search over

3:08:06 > 3:08:12what they say is 100 square miles of difficult to rain. Grassland, close

3:08:12 > 3:08:17to cliffs, police warning people not to get too close, not to put

3:08:17 > 3:08:21themselves into danger. Natasha Pope says I believe miracles can happen

3:08:21 > 3:08:31and I am holding on to hope. The moment, thanks very much.

3:08:31 > 3:08:34Later next week the Budget takes place. There have been lots of

3:08:34 > 3:08:39stories about what might be in store. There is speculation.

3:08:39 > 3:08:43And counter speculation, claims and counterclaims. Let's try and put

3:08:43 > 3:08:46things together with Tom Barton who was in our London newsroom this

3:08:46 > 3:08:50morning. You have been looking through all of these bits of

3:08:50 > 3:08:53information, maybe misinformation, what do you reckon?

3:08:53 > 3:08:58A couple of things we know that will be in the Budget on Wednesday,

3:08:58 > 3:09:01including an announcement that the Chancellor is going to make that the

3:09:01 > 3:09:04government is going to start thinking about how to introduce a

3:09:04 > 3:09:09tax on what are called single use plastics. If you bought a kebab last

3:09:09 > 3:09:15night, the plastic tray that might have come in, or if you've got

3:09:15 > 3:09:18Christmas shopping that you ordered online, that might have come with

3:09:18 > 3:09:25bubble wrap. It is looking at ways to introduce avoiding using that.

3:09:25 > 3:09:29Hundreds of thousands of sea mammals and turtles and sea birds get

3:09:29 > 3:09:32affected by the single use plastic when it gets washed up on our

3:09:32 > 3:09:37shores. The government want to see how it is made, how it is used,

3:09:37 > 3:09:41Howard is disposed of. And they are also looking at how a tax can be

3:09:41 > 3:09:45introduced in order to lower this use of this type of plastic. -- how

3:09:45 > 3:09:51it is disposed of. Not sure what level this will be at. In other

3:09:51 > 3:09:55areas we have been told the government is going to lift the

3:09:55 > 3:09:59restrictions on housing associations borrowing money, which could lead to

3:09:59 > 3:10:02more social and affordable housing being built. Suggestions this

3:10:02 > 3:10:08morning they are considering doing something similar for councils and

3:10:08 > 3:10:13council housing. We know the Chancellor has £26 billion more than

3:10:13 > 3:10:18he expected. The big question now is how he is going to spend it. We will

3:10:18 > 3:10:24hear about that on Wednesday. Thanks very much. As the lobbying

3:10:24 > 3:10:26and pressure continues, health is one of the areas being talked about

3:10:26 > 3:10:37as maybe getting some of the money Tom was mentioning. 90 MPs have

3:10:37 > 3:10:42signed a letter to the Prime Minister and Chancellor saying that

3:10:42 > 3:10:44patients are being failed by the NHS.

3:10:44 > 3:10:4830 former ministers are calling for the parties to work together. Our

3:10:48 > 3:10:59health editor reports:

3:10:59 > 3:11:01The pressure on NHS is growing.

3:11:01 > 3:11:03There are fears that hospitals will continue to struggle to find

3:11:03 > 3:11:06enough beds to admit new patients, partly because of difficulties

3:11:06 > 3:11:08discharging elderly patients, caused in turn by problems

3:11:08 > 3:11:09with social care.

3:11:09 > 3:11:11A group of MPs now says that a long-term sustainable settlement

3:11:11 > 3:11:13is needed and that only a cross-party NHS and

3:11:13 > 3:11:15care convention can deliver that.

3:11:15 > 3:11:16In the letter written to the Prime Minister

3:11:16 > 3:11:18and the Chancellor, the MPs say:

3:11:29 > 3:11:31Senior Conservative Labour and Liberal Democrat backbenchers

3:11:31 > 3:11:33are among those who signed the letter.

3:11:33 > 3:11:35I think the NHS and social care are huge issues

3:11:35 > 3:11:39for our generation and we've got to get it right and I think it's

3:11:39 > 3:11:45bigger than just one party.

3:11:45 > 3:11:48The MPs also call for action in next week's budget to address

3:11:48 > 3:11:54the short-term pressures on the system.

3:11:54 > 3:11:56A government spokesperson said it was recognised there was broad

3:11:56 > 3:11:58agreement across Parliament, that social care reform

3:11:58 > 3:12:01was a priority, and there would be consultation ahead of a policy

3:12:01 > 3:12:11paper next year.

3:12:11 > 3:12:15Yesterday we told you Donald Trump was relaxing the suspension of the

3:12:15 > 3:12:19import of elephant hunting trophies into the US. Now we are hearing he

3:12:19 > 3:12:26has reversed that decision. He wanted to suspend the band because

3:12:26 > 3:12:30Barack Obama had brought those laws in. He was going to allow hunters to

3:12:30 > 3:12:35bring back mementos from big game kills. That prompted an outcry from

3:12:35 > 3:12:41animal activists. They are saying the number of African elephants had

3:12:41 > 3:12:44plummeted in recent years. He tweeted last night that the change

3:12:44 > 3:12:56was on hold until he could review all conservation fax.

3:13:06 > 3:13:08The Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has said

3:13:08 > 3:13:11he will set out a plan for a leadership change in his party

3:13:11 > 3:13:13at its conference in Dublin today.

3:13:13 > 3:13:15Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive

3:13:15 > 3:13:18figures in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

3:13:18 > 3:13:19He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

3:13:19 > 3:13:21but will talk about future plans.

3:13:21 > 3:13:23The new leader of the Scottish Labour party will be

3:13:23 > 3:13:24announced later this morning.

3:13:24 > 3:13:27The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

3:13:27 > 3:13:29and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

3:13:29 > 3:13:31The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

3:13:31 > 3:13:34in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

3:13:34 > 3:13:37part in the ITV reality show "I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of

3:13:37 > 3:13:38Here."

3:13:38 > 3:13:40When people asked her what she would do after leaving the post, that

3:13:40 > 3:13:42wasn't anything anybody thought about.

3:13:42 > 3:13:46Not at all. Phil will have the weather surely. And we will get a

3:13:46 > 3:13:48sports update a little after that.

3:13:48 > 3:13:50Today marks 30 years since the King's Cross fire,

3:13:50 > 3:13:53when 31 people lost their lives in the worst blaze in the history

3:13:53 > 3:13:55of the London Underground.

3:13:55 > 3:13:57It started when a single match which was discarded

3:13:57 > 3:14:07on a wooden escalator.

3:14:07 > 3:14:12Roger Kendall was one of the first responders. He joins us now. Thank

3:14:12 > 3:14:17you for taking the time to talk to us today. How is today going to mark

3:14:17 > 3:14:2230 years on from the fire at King's Cross.We have a wreath laying

3:14:22 > 3:14:28ceremony this o'clock at King's Cross. We then have a church

3:14:28 > 3:14:31service. Then a lot of us will be going back to Houston Fire Station

3:14:31 > 3:14:36to talk to our old friends and meet up with our colleagues. --

3:14:39 > 3:14:47-- Euston fire station.What happened to you. What did your day

3:14:47 > 3:14:55involved is that fire happened?I was at Soho fire station. It was a

3:14:55 > 3:15:0215 hour shift. I was testing hydrants around to -- around

3:15:02 > 3:15:06Trafalgar Square when I was messaged to say there was a fire at King's

3:15:06 > 3:15:11Cross. Fires on escalators in those years were not uncommon. It was just

3:15:11 > 3:15:15another call. I attended King's Cross with my colleagues on the fire

3:15:15 > 3:15:22engine. As we arrived, my colleague, who actually lost his life that day,

3:15:22 > 3:15:27said he was going down to investigate it. We stood outside.

3:15:27 > 3:15:31Nothing was showing outside. It was just a normal November evening with

3:15:31 > 3:15:38people coming and going. People still entering the subway and coming

3:15:38 > 3:15:42out. Moments later there was a huge rush of black smoke and then we

3:15:42 > 3:15:47realised we had a serious incident in progress.The details of this, 30

3:15:47 > 3:15:54years ago, but the details remain raw in your mind. Even the people

3:15:54 > 3:15:58who were not there, it was the intensity of the fire and the

3:15:58 > 3:16:02unpreparedness to something so great in such a confined space which

3:16:02 > 3:16:05shocked so many people.I think that's right. It was also a real

3:16:05 > 3:16:11human tragedy. It affected indiscriminately Londoners just

3:16:11 > 3:16:15going about their daily business. That was the largest impact it had

3:16:15 > 3:16:20on the firefighters dealing with the incident on that particular evening.

3:16:20 > 3:16:25Even in recent events it shows the dedication that firefighters give to

3:16:25 > 3:16:30the public in London and certainly across Britain.You mentioned Colin

3:16:30 > 3:16:36Townsley, your governor, head of your unit, he died that night and

3:16:36 > 3:16:40that in itself shook your team. You actually had to step into his shoes

3:16:40 > 3:16:43almost and lead the team to another fire after the King's Cross fire,

3:16:43 > 3:16:53tell us about that.I was told Colin had passed on, which was absolutely

3:16:53 > 3:16:58awful because he was such a huge character and such a good leader of

3:16:58 > 3:17:00firefighters. The second-in-command was in hospital with heat

3:17:00 > 3:17:06exhaustion. I took command of Soho. It was a difficult night but I

3:17:06 > 3:17:09decided to deal with the guys and just get them back on the horse, so

3:17:09 > 3:17:15to speak. At about 1:30am, after talking everybody into getting the

3:17:15 > 3:17:19fire engines ready, we were ready to attend our next incident which was

3:17:19 > 3:17:26in Oxford Street. It was a fire alarm, but putting cruise through

3:17:26 > 3:17:33the window was a difficult time because things were so raw.The

3:17:33 > 3:17:37public is grateful for what the Fire Service does. We are mindful of the

3:17:37 > 3:17:41most recent fire, the images of the Grenfell Tower in London, and what

3:17:41 > 3:17:47firefighters were doing to battle to save people's lives. It's amazing

3:17:47 > 3:17:50how the public responds to a community which is so badly damaged

3:17:50 > 3:17:56and hurt by something so ferocious. This was the same after Colin's

3:17:56 > 3:18:00death, as well.It certainly was. Colin's death, it really was like a

3:18:00 > 3:18:11Street funeral. People were lining the streets. People bursting into

3:18:11 > 3:18:20applause. It was moving. It shows that firefighters... Firefighters

3:18:20 > 3:18:29across the world are so grateful for the people. We really appreciate it

3:18:29 > 3:18:35when people come out and do that. We are still delivering service to

3:18:35 > 3:18:41people in the hour of their need.A very emotional day. You have the

3:18:41 > 3:18:43memorial event later, the wreath-laying service at King's

3:18:43 > 3:18:48Cross at 11 o'clock, then a private church service. Thank you very much

3:18:48 > 3:18:54for talking to us ahead of your day. Thank you.Phil has the weather for

3:18:54 > 3:18:56us this morning.

3:18:56 > 3:18:56Thank you.Phil has the weather for us this morning.

3:18:59 > 3:19:04Thank you. A decent enough start for northern and eastern parts of the

3:19:04 > 3:19:08British Isles. We have had a plethora of lovely pictures from our

3:19:08 > 3:19:11weather watchers capturing that aspect of the weather. That is not

3:19:11 > 3:19:16the whole story, however. It is murky across parts of the West. You

3:19:16 > 3:19:24are closed -- closer to this weather front. Eastern parts, just far away

3:19:24 > 3:19:29from that big area of low pressure over Scandinavia which is generating

3:19:29 > 3:19:33lots of wind. Across the north-east of Scotland it is reaching there.

3:19:33 > 3:19:37The northern part of Britain lots of dry and fine weather to be had.

3:19:37 > 3:19:41Through the afternoon that's the way it will probably stay. Having said

3:19:41 > 3:19:45that, throughout the day, there will be these showers rattling down on

3:19:45 > 3:19:50the strong Northwestern went across the north-east of Scotland. A dry

3:19:50 > 3:19:55enough afternoon for the rest of us. The showers around the north-eastern

3:19:55 > 3:19:58shores of Northern Ireland, they disappear, a dry day here, and they

3:19:58 > 3:20:04slumped over the North of England, as well. Further south, generally

3:20:04 > 3:20:06speaking, the further south and west you are the more likely it will be

3:20:06 > 3:20:13you will see rain. But some people will escape them. It is mild in the

3:20:13 > 3:20:19south-western corner in the day and overnight. Skies were clear. A

3:20:19 > 3:20:21widespread frost in the countryside. But we'd be the

3:20:23 > 3:20:25-- that we'd be the case for western

3:20:30 > 3:20:39out east, dry, bright, and crisp first thing. You will keep the

3:20:39 > 3:20:43sunshine but it does not do much for the temperatures. In the West,

3:20:43 > 3:20:50temperatures around seven and 11 degrees despite losing the sunshine.

3:20:50 > 3:20:53To the start of Monday, significant snowfall across not just the highest

3:20:53 > 3:20:57ground in Scotland, some of it could get down to lower levels. We will

3:20:57 > 3:21:01keep you up-to-date as we go through the weekend. Thanks very much.

3:21:01 > 3:21:02Thanks very much.

3:21:02 > 3:21:07the weekend. Thanks very much. Thanks very much.

3:21:07 > 3:21:10It is now time to have a look at the Saturday papers.

3:21:12 > 3:21:18Tim Walker is here. We will talk to you in a moment.

3:21:18 > 3:21:18Tim Walker is here. We will talk to you in a moment. Let's look through

3:21:18 > 3:21:27the front pages. The front page of the Telegraph... EU threat to

3:21:27 > 3:21:34withhold such a's rebate. This story is taking a look at Europe

3:21:34 > 3:21:38threatening to keep that Britain's final rebate of 5 billion euros as

3:21:38 > 3:21:47part of negotiations over the Brexit bill. The Guardian's front page,

3:21:47 > 3:21:56looking at the development of parents losing their children as

3:21:56 > 3:22:03part of the divorce process. The Daily Mail is taking a look at a

3:22:03 > 3:22:08rescue... Not sure if it is a risky, but it is about this man his family

3:22:08 > 3:22:11did not know where he was even though he had gone out on an

3:22:11 > 3:22:15adventure, saying he would keep out of touch and try to explore his

3:22:15 > 3:22:18surroundings. But he is on his way back.

3:22:18 > 3:22:18Olivia

3:22:23 > 3:22:29the front page of The Times this morning, a picture of Robert Mugabe

3:22:29 > 3:22:32attending a graduation ceremony yesterday as his future remains

3:22:32 > 3:22:38uncertain. Their story is about advertising on you Tube as a result

3:22:38 > 3:22:44of some videos which the Times claims shows images of children

3:22:44 > 3:22:47being teased and mocked. Some advertising suspended because of

3:22:47 > 3:22:48that.

3:22:48 > 3:22:48advertising suspended because of that.

3:22:49 > 3:22:54A few goes before the Budget. We have been hearing that the

3:22:54 > 3:22:59Chancellor is going to look at taxes on disposable plastic. Takeaway

3:22:59 > 3:23:05containers, etc. It shows that governments are taking the issue of

3:23:05 > 3:23:09waste of climate change, looking after our planet very seriously.It

3:23:09 > 3:23:14wasn't so long ago we were known as the dirty man of Europe because of

3:23:14 > 3:23:17our poor environmental credentials in this country. Now we are getting

3:23:17 > 3:23:24better. That's a welcome initiative. Over the past two weeks, in Germany,

3:23:24 > 3:23:30a rather wonderful annual event has been taking place, which is in its

3:23:30 > 3:23:3423rd year, it is where politicians, experts, campaigners, everybody who

3:23:34 > 3:23:39cares gets together and essentially their aim is to try to leave the

3:23:39 > 3:23:45planet in a slightly better position than it was when we took it over.

3:23:45 > 3:23:50The Guardian celebrates Britain's achievement in being the country's

3:23:50 > 3:23:56leading the way with decarbonising. That is crucial if we are to get

3:23:56 > 3:24:00temperatures down and tackle climate change. The problem is, Brexit poses

3:24:00 > 3:24:07an enormous challenge in terms of climate.According to this article.

3:24:07 > 3:24:12So many of our laws have come from Europe. There is going to be buyers

3:24:12 > 3:24:16and time task to address where the law meet Brexit. --

3:24:20 > 3:24:28a lot of the people who go on about borders, people like Trump, the

3:24:28 > 3:24:30former Chancellor of the Exchequer, often tend to be sceptic of climate

3:24:30 > 3:24:37change. It can only be done on a global basis.Michael Gove saying at

3:24:37 > 3:24:40the weekend Andrew Marr that Brexit is an opportunity for Britain to be

3:24:40 > 3:24:46better than Europe, to go further. Then again, we are trying to do

3:24:46 > 3:24:50deals, put business first. It's a conjugated situation. I wouldn't

3:24:50 > 3:24:55envy anybody trying to sort any of that out legally.If you want to

3:24:55 > 3:25:00live longer, it isn't about your diet, exercise, get a dog, says the

3:25:00 > 3:25:03Guardian.As long as we keep the planet going, it'll be possible to

3:25:03 > 3:25:11live a longer time if we get a dog. Look at the Queen, who is in pretty

3:25:11 > 3:25:16good shape, only just recently reduced her workload at 91, and she

3:25:16 > 3:25:24is a well-known corgi owner. It is not any old dog that will do it, it

3:25:24 > 3:25:29is little dogs, apparently, corgis, beagles...Not handbag dogs.

3:25:29 > 3:25:35Exactly. I used to have a Labrador, and apparently they don't do

3:25:35 > 3:25:41anything for your life expectancy. 40% of people are less likely to die

3:25:41 > 3:25:45prematurely if they have a dog and 10% less likely to develop heart

3:25:45 > 3:25:51disease.They did survey quite a few people, something like 3.4 million

3:25:51 > 3:25:55people.Absolutely, and a distinguished academic paper, so we

3:25:55 > 3:25:59should take it seriously.Do not get rid of your large dog because of

3:25:59 > 3:26:07that.I have a little dog.Love all of the dogs, they are amazing.

3:26:07 > 3:26:10Allegedly George Osborne one said I never know what it is like to turn

3:26:10 > 3:26:17right when I get onto an aeroplane. If somebody else is paying, it left,

3:26:17 > 3:26:21if it is me, it is right, unfortunately. Maybe the rich are

3:26:21 > 3:26:24getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. When everybody is

3:26:24 > 3:26:31clammed up in economy, Emirates is to introduce a fleet cold castles in

3:26:31 > 3:26:36the air. It doesn't go into detail. But they have virtual Windows. So

3:26:36 > 3:26:41even if you are on the inside, you can pretend you are looking out at

3:26:41 > 3:26:46the amazing views. But you are not. There is a dumb waiter. Lots of

3:26:46 > 3:26:50things a part of it. It doesn't say how much it will cost. I imagine

3:26:50 > 3:26:55given that a first-class Emirates flight from Heathrow to Melbourne

3:26:55 > 3:27:03gusts over £7,000, I shouldn't think you would get a lot of change. --

3:27:03 > 3:27:09costs over £7,000.You've got to have over £6,500 of luxury to make

3:27:09 > 3:27:15that happen.If there is turbulence, everybody feels it, you all

3:27:15 > 3:27:20breathing the same air, does anybody sleep any better? I would still like

3:27:20 > 3:27:25the extra space and if anybody wants to give me a free trip, that's fine.

3:27:25 > 3:27:31In the Nehra,

3:27:34 > 3:27:45-- in the Mirror, apparently people eating at home are eating more like

3:27:45 > 3:27:50the 1970s. I don't like it.

3:27:50 > 3:28:02But it is back.Sales are now at 30%. -- up 30%. They talk about

3:28:02 > 3:28:07other dishes which should come back. Prawn cocktail, they reckon.It

3:28:07 > 3:28:16never went away.Black Forest gateaux, Spam, all of those things

3:28:16 > 3:28:21we ate back then would be extremely calorific and not very good for you.

3:28:21 > 3:28:25We are more cautious about what we eat. We are more aware of the

3:28:25 > 3:28:29calories.You still have to treat yourself.Black Forest gateaux,

3:28:29 > 3:28:37though.Fabulous.Really, I find it boring.Sherry trifle.

3:28:37 > 3:28:56I don't like that. We have got Saturday Kitchen coming up.I love

3:28:56 > 3:29:05Angel Delight. I love all of that. I love fondue.Black Forest gateaux?

3:29:05 > 3:29:09Yes, I am into that. I like all of that stuff.You might be looking for

3:29:09 > 3:29:11a new job next week. CHUCKLES

3:29:11 > 3:29:17Thanks very much. Our special guest today is pixie..

3:29:20 > 3:29:29-- our special guest today is Pixie Lott.What is your food heaven?

3:29:29 > 3:29:34Chicken and mango and sweetcorn. Hell, I have gone for squid and

3:29:34 > 3:29:38black pudding. I have never tried black pudding, but just the idea

3:29:38 > 3:29:44freaks me out.Maybe you will be getting at. We have Emily, what is

3:29:44 > 3:29:51on the menu?A vegetarian dish, risotto with sprouting broccoli and

3:29:51 > 3:29:59ceps.Red mullet, jacket potato with mayonnaise and pickled crab.Ollie

3:29:59 > 3:30:06is in charge of the wine. And you guys at home are in charge of what

3:30:06 > 3:30:12Pixie eats. We will let you get back to your

3:30:12 > 3:30:19spam and Angel Delight. And my CV!

3:30:19 > 3:30:21If he carries on with those deserts!

3:30:46 > 3:30:49Hello, this is Breakfast with Jon Kay and Naga Munchetty.

3:30:49 > 3:30:52Coming up before ten, Phil will have the weather for you.

3:30:52 > 3:30:58But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

3:30:58 > 3:31:01There are jubilant scenes on the streets of the Zimbabwean

3:31:01 > 3:31:04capital, Harare, where tens of thousands of people

3:31:04 > 3:31:14are demanding the resignation of President Robert Mugabe.

3:31:15 > 3:31:17In the last few hours, crowds of people have started

3:31:17 > 3:31:18to decend on Harare.

3:31:18 > 3:31:20It follows a military coup earlier this week.

3:31:20 > 3:31:23State media has confirmed that eight out of 10 regional branches

3:31:23 > 3:31:25of the governing Zanu-PF have already passed a vote

3:31:25 > 3:31:27of no confidence in the 93-year-old head of state.

3:31:27 > 3:31:32Air Accident Investigators are trying to work out what caused

3:31:32 > 3:31:34a plane and a helicopter to collide over Buckinghamshire yesterday,

3:31:34 > 3:31:36killing four people.

3:31:36 > 3:31:40Teams will continue scouring the area around

3:31:40 > 3:31:42the National Trust's Waddesdon estate, near Aylesbury,

3:31:42 > 3:31:45Both aircraft had set off from Wycombe Air Park,

3:31:45 > 3:31:48around 20 miles from the scene of the crash.

3:31:48 > 3:31:51A 49-year-old man, who was arrested on suspicion of murder

3:31:51 > 3:31:54following the disappearance of teenager Gaia Pope, has been

3:31:54 > 3:31:59released while inquiries continue.

3:31:59 > 3:32:01Paul Elsey, confirmed as the suspect to the BBC by his father,

3:32:01 > 3:32:03is from Swanage in Dorset.

3:32:03 > 3:32:06Murder detectives are focussing their forensic

3:32:06 > 3:32:09investigations on homes, cars and an area near a coastal path

3:32:09 > 3:32:10where women's clothing was found.

3:32:10 > 3:32:13Miss Pope's family confirmed the clothing matched

3:32:13 > 3:32:20what she was believed to be wearing on the day she went missing.

3:32:20 > 3:32:23The Sinn Fein president, Gerry Adams, has said he will set

3:32:23 > 3:32:26out a plan for a leadership change in his party at its conference

3:32:26 > 3:32:30in Dublin today.

3:32:30 > 3:32:32Mr Adams, who is one of the most significant and divisive

3:32:32 > 3:32:35figures in Irish politics, has led Sinn Fein since 1983.

3:32:35 > 3:32:37He's indicated he won't stand down immediately,

3:32:37 > 3:32:38but will talk about future plans.

3:32:38 > 3:32:41The new leader of the Scottish Labour party will be announced

3:32:41 > 3:32:42later this morning.

3:32:42 > 3:32:44The contest is between the former deputy leader Anas Sarwar

3:32:44 > 3:32:46and Richard Leonard, who became an MSP last year.

3:32:46 > 3:32:49The winner will replace Kezia Dugdale, who stepped down

3:32:49 > 3:32:51in August and is reportedly flying to Australia this weekend to take

3:32:51 > 3:32:54part in the ITV reality show "I'm A Celebrity....Get Me Out Of Here."

3:32:54 > 3:32:57The Government is considering a tax on single-use plastics that are used

3:32:57 > 3:33:06in packaging and polystyrene takeaway boxes.

3:33:06 > 3:33:09The Chancellor, Philip Hammond, is expected to use next week's

3:33:09 > 3:33:11Budget to announce a consultation on the measure to cut

3:33:11 > 3:33:12waste and pollution.

3:33:12 > 3:33:15An estimated 12 million tonnes of plastic enters

3:33:15 > 3:33:18the oceans each year, and residues are routinely

3:33:18 > 3:33:21found in fish, sea birds and marine mammals.

3:33:21 > 3:33:24An original drawing of the comic book hero Tintin is expected to sell

3:33:24 > 3:33:29for nearly £1 million today.

3:33:29 > 3:33:32The artwork, by the Belgian artist Herge, was published in 1939

3:33:32 > 3:33:35as the cover of a story called "King Ottokar's Sceptre".

3:33:35 > 3:33:42Other pieces up for auction in Paris include Herge's

3:33:42 > 3:33:44designs for board games.

3:33:44 > 3:33:49If you want to know all the stories, Kat is your story.Only in French.

3:33:49 > 3:33:56Between us we have had covered.We are a top team.I didn't just read

3:33:56 > 3:34:02Tintin you know!A degree in Tintin. We are talking about Chris Coleman

3:34:02 > 3:34:07this morning. Not really a surprise that he stepped down from his Wales

3:34:07 > 3:34:10role after they failed to qualify for the World Cup. A huge

3:34:10 > 3:34:13disappointment I think. Lots of people really sad to see him go,

3:34:13 > 3:34:15particularly the players, particularly the Welsh FA. They seem

3:34:15 > 3:34:19to have done all they could to hang onto him. A surprise that he's gone

3:34:19 > 3:34:23to Sunderland. A huge coup for Sunderland.A big challenge for him.

3:34:23 > 3:34:27Yeah and as Dan was saying, what he needs now is a big injection of

3:34:27 > 3:34:30money and big spending in the January transfer window, hopefully

3:34:30 > 3:34:33he can keep them up in the Championship. Off to Sunderland and

3:34:33 > 3:34:37no more Chris Coleman at Wales.Who is stepping into his boots?There's

3:34:37 > 3:34:41a couple of front runners, Ryan Giggs is the bookies' favourite.

3:34:41 > 3:34:50Morning everyone.

3:34:50 > 3:34:53Ryan Giggs is the odds-on favourite to become the next Wales manager,

3:34:53 > 3:34:54after Chris Coleman stood down.

3:34:54 > 3:34:56His new challenge is to rescue Sunderland, who are bottom

3:34:56 > 3:34:58of the Championship.

3:34:58 > 3:35:00Patrick Gearey looks back at Coleman's time as Wales boss.

3:35:00 > 3:35:02Before Chris Coleman, Wales waited 58 years to get

3:35:02 > 3:35:03to a major tournament.

3:35:03 > 3:35:05He took them straight to the semis.

3:35:05 > 3:35:07Last year's victory over Belgium marked the dizzying

3:35:07 > 3:35:09peak for Welsh football, a time when anything

3:35:09 > 3:35:10seemed possible.

3:35:10 > 3:35:12Don't be afraid to have dreams. Because four years ago, I was as far

3:35:12 > 3:35:15away from this as you can imagine. And look what's happened. If you

3:35:15 > 3:35:18work hard enough, and you're not afraid to dream, and you're not

3:35:18 > 3:35:22afraid to fail (

3:35:22 > 3:35:24The low point came when he took over from Gary Speed,

3:35:24 > 3:35:26who took his own life in 2011.

3:35:26 > 3:35:29He had to help the young players Speed had begun to bring

3:35:29 > 3:35:30through recover from that shock.

3:35:30 > 3:35:33The bond he had with the group inspired ever improving performances

3:35:33 > 3:35:38and the manager had on his side a global superstar.

3:35:38 > 3:35:43COMMENTATOR:Gareth Bale with a moment of absolute magic!

3:35:43 > 3:35:46He created such a great atmosphere in the camp.

3:35:46 > 3:35:49It makes us want to win for him, for ourselves and for our country.

3:35:49 > 3:35:51He has really brought that passion and pride back into Wales.

3:35:51 > 3:35:54Bale's gold was accompanied by newly forged steel at the back.

3:35:54 > 3:35:57Wales made the Euros.

3:35:57 > 3:36:00Though they lost to England, they beat Russia, then Northern

3:36:00 > 3:36:03Ireland and then unforgettably Belgium.

3:36:03 > 3:36:05Then the climb stopped.

3:36:05 > 3:36:08They lost to eventual champions Portugal in the semi-final

3:36:08 > 3:36:11and couldn't quite rediscovered the magic in World Cup qualifying.

3:36:11 > 3:36:13But defeat to the Republic of Ireland in Cardiff meant

3:36:13 > 3:36:14the end of their challenge.

3:36:14 > 3:36:18And effectively the end of Coleman's.

3:36:18 > 3:36:22He last led Wales in a friendly against Panama last weekend.I think

3:36:22 > 3:36:26we were all hoping as Welsh fans, the players included that the

3:36:26 > 3:36:31manager would stay on, but it's not to be. He's going to go down as

3:36:31 > 3:36:35Wales' most successful manager and rightly so for what he's achieved.

3:36:35 > 3:36:38Coleman is hardly taking the easy option in going to Sunderland,

3:36:38 > 3:36:41struggling in the second tier. But it may never eclipse the job he did

3:36:41 > 3:36:50in taking Welsh football from its toughest moment to its greatest one.

3:36:50 > 3:36:52Northern Ireland manager, Michael O'Neill, had also been linked

3:36:52 > 3:36:55to the Sunderland job, but he's now been given permission to speak

3:36:55 > 3:36:57to the Scottish FA about their vacant manager's position.

3:36:57 > 3:37:00O'Neill was bitterly disappointed when Northern ireland just missed

3:37:00 > 3:37:03out on qualifying for next year's World Cup.

3:37:03 > 3:37:06He's been in charge for six years, leading them to last year's Euros -

3:37:06 > 3:37:09their first major finals for 30 years.

3:37:09 > 3:37:12Jose Mourinho has criticised England's medical team

3:37:12 > 3:37:16for making his defender, Phil Jones, play in their friendly

3:37:16 > 3:37:17with Germany last week.

3:37:17 > 3:37:21Jones needed six injections to make the starting line-up for England,

3:37:21 > 3:37:26but he'll miss Manchester United's game against Newcastle today.

3:37:26 > 3:37:32I'm not an angel. I had players to be injected to play official matches

3:37:32 > 3:37:39and crucial matches. But the friendly, to get six anaesthetic

3:37:39 > 3:37:46injections, local, to play a friendly - I never heard about it.

3:37:46 > 3:37:51And Phil Jones had it and had it before the match and after 15

3:37:51 > 3:37:55minutes he was out and obviously tomorrow he's out.Does seem an

3:37:55 > 3:37:59awful lot for a friendly.

3:37:59 > 3:38:02A bit of a sobering experience for England with the first

3:38:02 > 3:38:04Ashes Test now just five days away.

3:38:04 > 3:38:06They were lucky to get away with a draw against

3:38:06 > 3:38:07a Cricket Australia 11.

3:38:07 > 3:38:09The hosts piled on the runs.

3:38:09 > 3:38:12Jason Sangha - who's only 18 - hit England all over the place

3:38:12 > 3:38:15to score his century, before Moeen Ali had the only

3:38:15 > 3:38:18success of the tourists' day, getting him caught out.

3:38:18 > 3:38:21The Cricket Australia side still finished day four

3:38:21 > 3:38:27on 364 for four though!

3:38:27 > 3:38:30England have just five days to get themselves together for the first

3:38:30 > 3:38:37Ashes test.

3:38:37 > 3:38:39England have one just one of the

3:38:39 > 3:38:40five matches so far, with two T20s

3:38:40 > 3:38:45left to play.

3:38:45 > 3:38:50It's been a good week for the England women's rugby team.

3:38:50 > 3:38:52This week, it was announced the RFU will pay them match

3:38:52 > 3:38:55fees for the first time, and last night, they thrashed Canada

3:38:55 > 3:38:5979-5 in the opening match of their three-test series.

3:38:59 > 3:39:05Harlequins wing Jess Breach scoring six of them on her debut.

3:39:05 > 3:39:10The sides play again next Tuesday and Saturday.

3:39:10 > 3:39:12The autumn internationals continue, with Scotland hoping to beat

3:39:12 > 3:39:18the All Blacks for the first time and England taking on Australia.

3:39:18 > 3:39:20And in the Aviva Premiership, Gloucester

3:39:20 > 3:39:23produced a remarkable comeback in the final half hour to beat

3:39:23 > 3:39:25Saracens, scoring 20 second-half points to win 23-17.

3:39:25 > 3:39:32There were also wins for Osprey and Dragons in the Anglo-Welsh Cup.

3:39:32 > 3:39:35New Zealand are out of the Rugby League World Cup -

3:39:35 > 3:39:41in a really tight, low-scoring match, the 2008 winners

3:39:41 > 3:39:42were beaten 4-2 by Fiji.

3:39:42 > 3:39:45That kick proving the difference on what was a famous

3:39:45 > 3:39:46night for the Fijians.

3:39:46 > 3:39:49They are in into the World Cup semi-finals for the third time

3:39:49 > 3:39:52and will play the holders Australia next.

3:39:52 > 3:39:55Tonga survived a bit of a scare to reach their first

3:39:55 > 3:39:56World Cup semi-final.

3:39:56 > 3:39:58They just scraped past Lebanon, winning 24-22 ,

3:39:58 > 3:40:01but they were a shadow of the side that beat New Zealand

3:40:01 > 3:40:02in their previous game.

3:40:02 > 3:40:04Tonga will be England's opponents, if England beat

3:40:04 > 3:40:06Papua New Guinea tomorrow.

3:40:06 > 3:40:09Andy Murray has split with his coach Ivan Lendl for the second time.

3:40:09 > 3:40:11Under his guidance, Murray won three Grand Slam titles,

3:40:11 > 3:40:15two Olympic Golds and made it to world number one,

3:40:15 > 3:40:18but he's been plagued with injury all season, and he'll continue

3:40:18 > 3:40:20to work on regaining his fitness, leading up

3:40:20 > 3:40:25to January's Australian Open.

3:40:25 > 3:40:28The battle between Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose

3:40:28 > 3:40:30to finish the year as Europe's number one golfer is getting

3:40:30 > 3:40:33exciting.

3:40:33 > 3:40:35It's advantage Rose, who's two shots off the pace

3:40:35 > 3:40:38at the Dubai Championship - and two clear of Fleetwood.

3:40:38 > 3:40:39They're chasing this man, defending champion

3:40:39 > 3:40:41Matthew Fitzpatrick, who's leading the field

3:40:41 > 3:40:45going into round three.

3:40:45 > 3:40:53He's ten-under par, one shot ahead of Tyrrell Hatton.

3:40:53 > 3:40:58It's whether you are team Fleetwood or Rose.Team England!There you go,

3:40:58 > 3:41:07a winner however.Anyone will do. Exactly. Thank you. (

3:41:07 > 3:41:10She only took up kick-boxing as a hobby to keep fit,

3:41:10 > 3:41:16but now she's a British and World champion.

3:41:16 > 3:41:18Tonight Kelly Haynes' fans will get to see her in action again,

3:41:18 > 3:41:20in an international contest at the O2.

3:41:20 > 3:41:27Mike's been chatting to her about sparring and spaghetti..

3:41:37 > 3:41:43MUSIC

3:41:43 > 3:41:45A spaghetti bolognese which packs a punch and not many

3:41:45 > 3:41:4810-year-oldshave their tea served

3:41:48 > 3:41:51by a world champion kickboxer, and it's not just Archie.

3:41:51 > 3:41:54Here you go.

3:41:54 > 3:41:56Never in my life did I think I would be doing

3:41:56 > 3:41:58something like this.

3:41:58 > 3:42:00I was a properly manager.

3:42:00 > 3:42:04I'm a mum, never in a million years.

3:42:04 > 3:42:10Not many children have a mum like this.

3:42:10 > 3:42:13It's a little bit scary, 'cause it on what will happen,

3:42:13 > 3:42:15but I don't actually think anyone would want to mess

3:42:15 > 3:42:16with her on the street.

3:42:16 > 3:42:20Tonight, Archie and some from his school will see her in action

3:42:20 > 3:42:23for the first time at the O2, where she won her UK

3:42:23 > 3:42:24title last year.

3:42:24 > 3:42:27Archie has watched many times from the couch before,

3:42:27 > 3:42:31as has her coach.

3:42:31 > 3:42:34It's hard watching your partner, but you have to put your

3:42:34 > 3:42:43professional head on and try to disassociate with what's

3:42:43 > 3:42:46going on in the ring and think, "that's a fighter in there".

3:42:46 > 3:42:48Which is why I was taking no chances.

3:42:48 > 3:42:50In the training gym I became her latest warmup as she prepares

3:42:50 > 3:42:52to face another undefeated fighter from Spain.

3:42:52 > 3:42:54Would you kick me when I'm down?

3:42:54 > 3:42:56Not if you have a glove on the floor.

3:42:56 > 3:42:57And now you have.

3:42:57 > 3:43:04-- now you haven't. I love the respect for fighters.

3:43:04 > 3:43:06I love it that you can hit them...

3:43:06 > 3:43:07Yeah.

3:43:07 > 3:43:09And they kept coming.

3:43:09 > 3:43:13In K1, the emphasis is all about keeping the action flowing.

3:43:13 > 3:43:15We're allowed to do head kicks, body kicks,

3:43:15 > 3:43:22knees, spinning back fist.

3:43:22 > 3:43:27But at the end of any fight we always go up and have a big hug.

3:43:27 > 3:43:31Kelly is now inspiring many others to get into the sport by holding

3:43:31 > 3:43:36fitness classes here, learning the skills,

3:43:36 > 3:43:39and at the same time getting a great workout.

3:43:39 > 3:43:43When I started over a year ago I had no self-esteem,

3:43:43 > 3:43:45I was overweight.

3:43:45 > 3:43:46I lost a load of weight.

3:43:46 > 3:43:50I've changed completely.

3:43:50 > 3:43:54I've got confidence again, I feel better within myself.

3:43:54 > 3:43:59I think some mums think that when you've got a child it's almost

3:43:59 > 3:44:02like they stop following their dreams, they think that's it.

3:44:02 > 3:44:08Anyone can become something if they want to be something.

3:44:08 > 3:44:12I think the winner is Kelly Haynes.

3:44:12 > 3:44:20Mike Bushell, from BBC News, out for the count.

3:44:20 > 3:44:23He knows his place.That's why he's not here today.He described those

3:44:23 > 3:44:30shorts as a big nappy.Right!He did.Poor Mike. You could almost

3:44:30 > 3:44:34feel the bruises on that.He did say, he still hurts. He was really

3:44:34 > 3:44:39bruised.Poor Mike. Get well soon.

3:44:39 > 3:44:42Last night BBC Children in Need set a new record -

3:44:42 > 3:44:44raising over £50 million to help children and young

3:44:44 > 3:44:49people across the UK.

3:44:49 > 3:44:54Since 1980 the appeal has raised over £900 million. In doing so, it's

3:44:54 > 3:44:58featured some of the biggest names in music and show business. What is

3:44:58 > 3:45:02the secret to its staggering success? We are going to talk to the

3:45:02 > 3:45:05chair of the Children In Need in a mirn I. If you were out -- in a

3:45:05 > 3:45:09minute. If you were out last night, here are some of the highlights.

3:45:09 > 3:45:21# Somewhere over the rainbow # Skies are blue.

3:45:21 > 3:45:25# Tomorrow, tomorrow # I love ya tomorrow

3:45:25 > 3:45:34# You're only a day away.You stack the aces. You load the dice.Look at

3:45:34 > 3:45:40my TARDIS.This is impossible.Have I been burgled.But it's, it's

3:45:40 > 3:45:44hideous. Bigger on the inside than it is on the outside.I thought it

3:45:44 > 3:45:52probably was. Glad it's not just me. MUSIC

3:45:52 > 3:46:08Theme to Blue Peter.For God's sake get me to the church on time.

3:46:14 > 3:46:20The Chair of Children in Need, Stevie Spring, joins us now.

3:46:20 > 3:46:23Congratulations, £50 million. That's amazing.Staggering. Absolutely

3:46:23 > 3:46:31staggering. I just still can't quite believe how much people at home, all

3:46:31 > 3:46:35over the country, put their hands in their pockets and made us up to this

3:46:35 > 3:46:40staggering total. It's the highest ever on the night total. Last year

3:46:40 > 3:46:49we did, I think 26. -- 46. 6. We gave away 60 million last year.

3:46:49 > 3:46:53Fingers crossed that this year will smash through that 60 million

3:46:53 > 3:46:57barrier. Yeah, it was a big and emotional night.I was a bit worried

3:46:57 > 3:47:01about interviewing you this morning, because when I went to bed, I was

3:47:01 > 3:47:04thinking if they don't raise more than last year, it's not a record.

3:47:04 > 3:47:08It always seems to be a record. Then it's going to be an anticlimax. Do

3:47:08 > 3:47:11you feel that pressure? Is that part of your job to beat the previous

3:47:11 > 3:47:17year?Actually it's not just about the total. Obviously the higher the

3:47:17 > 3:47:23total the more children and young people we can help. Last year we

3:47:23 > 3:47:29helped nearly 500,000 children suffering with all sorts of issues

3:47:29 > 3:47:35from illness and disability and bereavement and abject poverty. Of

3:47:35 > 3:47:40course, we want to raise as much as we possibly can, but actually, it's

3:47:40 > 3:47:46as much about telling the stories as well of what we do. So, you know,

3:47:46 > 3:47:50yes, the fundraisers that do mad things all over the country and the

3:47:50 > 3:47:54people at home who give money and the stars who come out, they're all

3:47:54 > 3:48:00very important. But it's just as important that the amazing families

3:48:00 > 3:48:07allow us to tell their stories and you know, children like Vanessa, who

3:48:07 > 3:48:10was a big pull last night and her mummy and daddy were in the

3:48:10 > 3:48:18audience. They were just staggering, staggering. It's story telling as

3:48:18 > 3:48:23much as raising money, but actually, yes, of course, it is. The more

3:48:23 > 3:48:28money we raise, the more good work our projects can do.Of all those

3:48:28 > 3:48:31weird and wonderful ways of raising money, what was your favourite last

3:48:31 > 3:48:35night? What was your favourite bit of the programme?My favourite bits

3:48:35 > 3:48:40are always the bits of the programme where we manage to allow the people

3:48:40 > 3:48:48that we help to join in. So things like Poldark, where we took four of

3:48:48 > 3:48:53the project workers along and basically allowed them to fall in

3:48:53 > 3:48:57love with Aidan! Rickshaw is always a highlight. We've done that for

3:48:57 > 3:49:01seven years. Matt baker is a complete and utter star and to have

3:49:01 > 3:49:06raised £5 million, which took the total, I think, about 22 million,

3:49:06 > 3:49:11rickshaw has raised. Those six young people were extraordinary,

3:49:11 > 3:49:16extraordinary. 500 miles over whatever it was, nine days and tears

3:49:16 > 3:49:21every night on the One Show.Stevie, congratulations from all of us. As a

3:49:21 > 3:49:24team you must all be exhausted. I know the work doesn't stop now. It

3:49:24 > 3:49:31continues, doesn't it?It's a 24-hour, 365 day a year job. We plan

3:49:31 > 3:49:37the show, we plan the appeal, but obviously six times a year, we're

3:49:37 > 3:49:43giving away money to projects, we're visiting some of the 2,600 projects

3:49:43 > 3:49:45we fund. We get to meet amazing people. Thanks to everybody who

3:49:45 > 3:49:49helped last night. It was great. Well said. Thank you very much

3:49:49 > 3:49:52The chair of Children In Need, well done to her. Well done to everybody.

3:49:52 > 3:49:58Makes you smile. I wonder if Phil is going to do the same thing for us?

3:49:58 > 3:50:08Yes! Of course. If you look the right direction, that is. I'm afraid

3:50:08 > 3:50:09Yes! Of course. If you look the right direction, that is. I'm it is

3:50:09 > 3:50:15that time of year, at its best, glorious. At its worst, stay in bed

3:50:15 > 3:50:18territory. In the south-western quarter you have thicker cloud. That

3:50:18 > 3:50:19creeps further

3:50:19 > 3:50:20quarter you have thicker cloud. That creeps further east with time.

3:50:20 > 3:50:24You'll see that it is not wall-to-wall water here across the

3:50:24 > 3:50:27counties of England and Wales. Further north, through the

3:50:27 > 3:50:30afternoon, a brighter sky here, right from the word go for many.

3:50:30 > 3:50:34Although there's a lot of wind to be had throughout the day throughout

3:50:34 > 3:50:37the north-eastern quarter of Scotland. Central belt with dry

3:50:37 > 3:50:41weather, with sunshine. Less in the way of wind. Northern Ireland, bits

3:50:41 > 3:50:45of brightness there. Maybe a passing shower round about the coast. Not

3:50:45 > 3:50:48much more than that. Showers this morning across the north-west of

3:50:48 > 3:50:52England. They come further south with times I think. Here again,

3:50:52 > 3:50:54brighter skies following on behind perhaps. The best of the

3:50:54 > 3:50:57temperatures throughout the day, 10 or 12 across the south-west. If

3:50:57 > 3:51:00you've got an eye on the rugby:

3:51:09 > 3:51:13Crisper at Murrayfield for the visit of the New Zealanders. Overnight we

3:51:13 > 3:51:15drag the cloud into the south-western quarter. That helps to

3:51:15 > 3:51:20keep the temperatures up. Elsewhere, especially in the countryside, not

3:51:20 > 3:51:24exclusively so, it will be pretty nippy night. At least that equates

3:51:24 > 3:51:27to a glorious start to the new day. A lot of sunshine. It's real get out

3:51:27 > 3:51:31and get on with it sort of weather. Until in the west, there's no

3:51:31 > 3:51:34disguising the fact there will be more cloud and eventually rain

3:51:34 > 3:51:38through Northern Ireland, western Scotland, maybe the North West of

3:51:38 > 3:51:42England too, as the cloud begins to thicken up. The temperature profile,

3:51:42 > 3:51:46as you see, despite the sunshine out east five, six or seven only. That's

3:51:46 > 3:51:49it for the weather. Back to you guys.

3:51:49 > 3:51:52Thanks very much Phil. You gave us a bit a smile. Thank you.

3:51:52 > 3:51:55Thanks very much Phil. You gave us a bit a smile. Thank you.

3:51:55 > 3:51:58Jools Holland has performed with some of the biggest stars

3:51:58 > 3:52:01in the world and New Year's Eve simply wouldn't be the same

3:52:01 > 3:52:02without his Hootenanny.

3:52:02 > 3:52:05As his show "Later" celebrates its 25th year on our screens,

3:52:05 > 3:52:08he says teaming up with his pal Jose Feliciano has been one

3:52:08 > 3:52:09of his career highlights.

3:52:09 > 3:52:11We'll speak to Jools and Jose in a minute,

3:52:11 > 3:52:14but first let's see them performing together.

3:52:28 > 3:52:36# Let's find each other tonight # Everything will be all right

3:52:36 > 3:52:41# Don't hesitate now # Let's find each other tonight

3:52:50 > 3:52:54# This old life has flown by # I can't change it

3:52:54 > 3:53:00# And I won't try # I have not always been as you see

3:53:00 > 3:53:06me now # Oh, woman, oh, woman, don't treat

3:53:06 > 3:53:08me so mean # You're the meanest old woman that

3:53:08 > 3:53:11I ever seen # I guess if you say so

3:53:11 > 3:53:16# I'll have to pack my things and go # That's right.

3:53:16 > 3:53:20# Hit the road Jack # And don't you come back, no more,

3:53:20 > 3:53:23no more, no more, no more. # Hit the road Jack and don't you

3:53:23 > 3:53:27come back no more... #

3:53:27 > 3:53:28Jools and Jose, welcome.

3:53:28 > 3:53:32good morning.Good morning. Very lovely to be here. We're playing

3:53:32 > 3:53:36here tonight, Manchester, which we're looking forward to.Yeah, I'm

3:53:36 > 3:53:39looking forward to it, because I haven't played in Manchester in a

3:53:39 > 3:53:44long time.When was the last time you played here?Oh, my goodness...

3:53:44 > 3:53:50Many, many years ago. I'll tell you what, I haven't played here since

3:53:50 > 3:53:56the time of blinkers, remember blinkers?The nightclub.Yes, with

3:53:56 > 3:54:01George Best.George Best, those old days, the high seat of Manchester.

3:54:01 > 3:54:08Welcome back.Thank you.It's great to have you both here.This man was

3:54:08 > 3:54:11an inspiration to you before you got together and worked together.I used

3:54:11 > 3:54:14to wake up in the morning, well, I didn't wake up in the morning.Isn't

3:54:14 > 3:54:16that when most people wake up? LAUGHTER

3:54:16 > 3:54:20I'd be first to go to school. You'd be on the radio. I wouldn't want to

3:54:20 > 3:54:24get out of bed. You'd be on the radio, I'd think this is great. I'd

3:54:24 > 3:54:29spring out of bed because of the music. I loved - he had this voice,

3:54:29 > 3:54:33the guitar. Whenever he did a song he made it his own, turned it into

3:54:33 > 3:54:40his own thing. Then, when he came on later, about a year ago, I realised

3:54:40 > 3:54:43what a fantastic man he was. I hope you don't mind me saying this about

3:54:43 > 3:54:48you? I thought let's try and make a record together. I'm so pleased it's

3:54:48 > 3:54:52worked out. Here we are, we've made the record and we're very pleased.

3:54:52 > 3:54:56Tonight we're on tour and we're in Manchester tonight. It's great.Did

3:54:56 > 3:55:02you feel the same way about Jools? He adored you?I adore him now. I

3:55:02 > 3:55:11didn't know him at the time. When I heard him play the piano last year,

3:55:11 > 3:55:17when I appeared on his show, I thought to myself - what a

3:55:17 > 3:55:22marvellous musician. He thinks the way I do in music. He has no qualms

3:55:22 > 3:55:27about getting into different types of music. And so that's why it

3:55:27 > 3:55:31worked, because we got along as brothers and for me, this is the

3:55:31 > 3:55:34opportunity of a lifetime.Tell us about the dynamic between you two

3:55:34 > 3:55:38then, when you were putting the music together - who did what? Who

3:55:38 > 3:55:44contributed what?Well, Jose has written some amazing songs. Also I

3:55:44 > 3:55:47was really pleased that Jose was pleased to do some of the songs I

3:55:47 > 3:55:54had written and there were a few covers. One of the songs Jose wrote

3:55:54 > 3:56:01is Feliz Navidad. The way my band plays it, it's ska styly. We skad

3:56:01 > 3:56:05that song forever! It's great having a strange mash up. It really has

3:56:05 > 3:56:12worked. We've done Jose's songs, as you see me now, that song there, I

3:56:12 > 3:56:16wrote that song. I imagined Frank Sinatra doing it, but I'm happier

3:56:16 > 3:56:21with Jose doing it.Did you approve of what he wanted to do with your

3:56:21 > 3:56:26songs?Yes, yes.There was a bit of hesitation there.Well, no, not

3:56:26 > 3:56:29hesitation. I just have to think straight, you know, it's early

3:56:29 > 3:56:37morning. No, I enjoyed what was done. And I'm happy. I'm glad we

3:56:37 > 3:56:43have an album out. It's wonderful. We've got to talk about Hootenanny,

3:56:43 > 3:56:47which we're coming up to that.I know, it's Christmas then new year.

3:56:47 > 3:56:52Bought my presents?No, I haven't. I don't rush into doing that. I like

3:56:52 > 3:56:56to do it on Christmas eve actually. I like to get my Christmas shopping

3:56:56 > 3:57:00Christmas eve.That's brave or foolish.In the lunch I do it.Once

3:57:00 > 3:57:07the sales have started..Exactly, that's right. A case of cognac is

3:57:07 > 3:57:11all right for the kiddies. Hootenanny coming up.Yes, and Jose

3:57:11 > 3:57:16is going to be on. It we've done a song called Happy New Year actually.

3:57:16 > 3:57:20So I've asked Jose to be on it. I don't know who else I'm allowed to

3:57:20 > 3:57:23reveal. I can reveal that Ed Sheeran will be on it. When he came on the

3:57:23 > 3:57:28show we asked him and he's going to come on, which will be great. Ruby

3:57:28 > 3:57:32Turner will be on. I hope - there's a lot of people I hope will come on.

3:57:32 > 3:57:39We'll wait and see. We're hoping for Van Morrison.Are you surprised by

3:57:39 > 3:57:41how successful that programme has been?I can't believe we're sitting

3:57:41 > 3:57:45here after all these years and it's still on and people still put up

3:57:45 > 3:57:49with it.You don't feel like a failure at new year because you're

3:57:49 > 3:57:55watching Hootenanny. There's usually an old film, but it's a good time.I

3:57:55 > 3:58:00think the thing is, New Year's Eve Chas changed. People used to go to

3:58:00 > 3:58:03the put and get drunk. People don't drink and drive, which is a good

3:58:03 > 3:58:09thing. They tend to stay home with their families. You can have the

3:58:09 > 3:58:12Hootenanny on, but it's like a thing that you can look at and pay

3:58:12 > 3:58:15attention to or it's the perfect soundtrack to your evening.I

3:58:15 > 3:58:18remember seeing it on iPlayer about two weeks after, people were still

3:58:18 > 3:58:23watching it. Well avenue year, people watching in a middle of a

3:58:23 > 3:58:28Wednesday afternoon.Celebrating up to mid-summer night's eve.Usually

3:58:28 > 3:58:33for me I don't drink too much on new years because I'm the designated

3:58:33 > 3:58:37driver for my friends. I can't drink a lot.I'm sure that's going to go

3:58:37 > 3:58:41marvellously. I love the dynamic between you two. Thanks so much for

3:58:41 > 3:58:46coming in and talking to us. The album Jools and Jose's record is

3:58:46 > 3:58:52called As You See Me Now. That's it for today. Breakfast is back

3:58:52 > 3:58:59tomorrow. Until then, have a lovely day. Bye-bye.