0:00:06 > 0:00:08Hello, this is Breakfast, with Roger Johnson and Rachel
0:00:08 > 0:00:08Burden.
0:00:08 > 0:00:11Plans to give MPs a vote on fox hunting are abandoned
0:00:11 > 0:00:13by the Prime Minister.
0:00:13 > 0:00:14The Conservatives promised an option
0:00:14 > 0:00:31on ending the ban on hunting during last years' election.
0:00:35 > 0:00:35Good morning.
0:00:35 > 0:00:36It's Sunday, 7th January.
0:00:36 > 0:00:40Also this morning, some of the UK's biggest retailers agree to stop
0:00:40 > 0:00:41selling acids and corrosive substances to under-18s,
0:00:41 > 0:00:51in a bid to cut the number of life-changing attacks.
0:00:51 > 0:00:54Plans are announced to plant a new Northern Forest stretching
0:00:54 > 0:00:55from Liverpool to Hull.
0:00:55 > 0:00:58And coming up in sport, we'll have the latest from the final
0:00:58 > 0:01:00Ashes Test - you probably won't like it.
0:01:00 > 0:01:03And Mark Hughes is sacked as manager of Stoke,
0:01:03 > 0:01:08just hours after the club's FA Cup third-round exit at the hands
0:01:08 > 0:01:11of League Two Coventry City.
0:01:11 > 0:01:13Hollywood stars prepare to use tonight's Golden Globe awards
0:01:13 > 0:01:16to highlight the campaign against sexism and harassment.
0:01:16 > 0:01:19And Stav has the weather.
0:01:20 > 0:01:30Good morning. A very cold, that lovely and sunny Sunday. -- but. It
0:01:30 > 0:01:33stays cold into the beginning of next week, then we will see some
0:01:33 > 0:01:36changes. Stay with me for the full forecast later.
0:01:36 > 0:01:37Good morning.
0:01:37 > 0:01:38First, our main story.
0:01:38 > 0:01:42Theresa May will abandon plans for MPs to get a vote on fox hunting
0:01:42 > 0:01:46before 2022 when the next general election is due to be held.
0:01:46 > 0:01:49In an interview on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, she confirmed
0:01:49 > 0:01:51she would be going back on the pledge she made
0:01:51 > 0:01:52in last year's manifesto.
0:01:52 > 0:01:58Our political correspondent Eleanor Garnier reports.
0:01:58 > 0:02:03It has been illegal to set a pack of hounds on a fox for more than a
0:02:03 > 0:02:07decade in England and Wales. Instead, hunts have had to follow
0:02:07 > 0:02:12specially laid trails of sand. Many conservatives in the campaigners
0:02:12 > 0:02:16would like the Hunting Act is to be scrapped to allow horses and hounds
0:02:16 > 0:02:20to go back to the way things were. But having lost the Tories their
0:02:20 > 0:02:24parliamentary majority in last year's general election, Theresa
0:02:24 > 0:02:29May's plans to give MPs a vote on the issue were pushed back to 2019.
0:02:29 > 0:02:33Now, in an attempt to prove her party's fortunes and show showers
0:02:33 > 0:02:38this to the electorate, the Prime Minister has gone one step further.
0:02:38 > 0:02:42One of the clear messages we got on a number of areas was when people
0:02:42 > 0:02:46are concerned about what we were proposing. Just as we have looked at
0:02:46 > 0:02:51issues on school funding and tuition fees and housing, we are taking
0:02:51 > 0:02:54forward approaches in relation to that. On this issue of foxhunting,
0:02:54 > 0:02:58what I can say is that there will not be a vote during this
0:02:58 > 0:03:03parliament.For now, then, there is little chance the law on foxhunting
0:03:03 > 0:03:04will be changing any time soon.
0:03:04 > 0:03:07And you can see the whole interview with the Prime Minister
0:03:07 > 0:03:12on the Andrew Marr Show this morning at 9 o'clock on BBC One.
0:03:12 > 0:03:15There will also be big changes ahead in the Prime Minister's cabinet
0:03:15 > 0:03:17from tomorrow morning as Theresa May begins her reshuffle.
0:03:17 > 0:03:21There's speculation in the papers this morning as to who will be
0:03:21 > 0:03:21moved or sacked.
0:03:21 > 0:03:24Our political correspondent Susana Mendonca is in our London
0:03:24 > 0:03:25newsroom this morning.
0:03:25 > 0:03:28What could we expect to happen over the coming days?
0:03:33 > 0:03:36Suggestions in the Sunday Telegraph that Justine Greening is fighting
0:03:36 > 0:03:41for her job.Also on the front page of the Sunday Times, they don't have
0:03:41 > 0:03:46quite as much on it, it is inside the paper this morning. On the front
0:03:46 > 0:03:50page they talk again, a bit of speculation, Jeremy Hunt and Chris
0:03:50 > 0:03:55Grayling linked to replacing Damien Green, among the possibilities being
0:03:55 > 0:04:01discussed.Susanna is in the London newsroom. Can you tell us more about
0:04:01 > 0:04:06that reshuffle speculation?Well, it is exactly that speculation, and
0:04:06 > 0:04:10Downing Street have said that it is purely speculation at this stage.
0:04:10 > 0:04:15What we can expect is that tomorrow will have some of the Cabinet
0:04:15 > 0:04:18positions reshuffled and then on Tuesday some of the more junior
0:04:18 > 0:04:23positions. You mentioned Justine Greening. Her name has been in the
0:04:23 > 0:04:26mix as being moved elsewhere. Some of the rumour mill suggests that she
0:04:26 > 0:04:30might the moved into the role currently held by Andrea Leadsom.
0:04:30 > 0:04:34All of this, of course, is happening partly because Theresa May had a
0:04:34 > 0:04:38torrid time over the last couple of months where we saw two ministers
0:04:38 > 0:04:42actually standing down. Another minister, Damian Green, was forced
0:04:42 > 0:04:46to resign over issues around his conduct. So she is in a position
0:04:46 > 0:04:49where she does need to have something of a reshuffle. The
0:04:49 > 0:04:53understand there is lots of pressure on her to bring up new names, people
0:04:53 > 0:04:57who are perhaps rising stars of the party. -- we understand. The danger
0:04:57 > 0:05:01for Theresa May, as always with reshuffles, is that you end up
0:05:01 > 0:05:04creating enemies, especially if you put somebody on the back and she
0:05:04 > 0:05:09doesn't want to be them, or you put them on a roll that they don't want,
0:05:09 > 0:05:13that could be difficult for her. She only has a working majority of 12.
0:05:13 > 0:05:16We saw her lose a vote before Christmas because she had rebels
0:05:16 > 0:05:19within her own party. She cannot afford any more rebels. It is a
0:05:19 > 0:05:22difficult one for her to tread. Susannah Carr must rank you.
0:05:22 > 0:05:25Some of the UK's largest retailers have voluntarily agreed to stop
0:05:25 > 0:05:27selling acids and corrosive substances to customers under
0:05:27 > 0:05:2818 years old.
0:05:28 > 0:05:31Ministers hope the measure will help stop the rise in attacks
0:05:31 > 0:05:33until new laws are considered by Parliament.
0:05:33 > 0:05:43Here's our home affairs correspondent, Dominic Casciani.
0:05:43 > 0:05:47The human cost of an acid attack. Where is it hurting, mate, your
0:05:47 > 0:05:53eyes?Police officers pour water over the victim last July. Thieves
0:05:53 > 0:05:57wanted the London delivery driver's mopeds. His helmet saved him from
0:05:57 > 0:06:02serious injury. Police recorded more than 500 attacks involving corrosive
0:06:02 > 0:06:05substances in England and Wales in the year to last April. Officials
0:06:05 > 0:06:11think the true figure could be twice as high. Ministers have launched an
0:06:11 > 0:06:16acid action plan to cut attacks. Today the first part of that plan,
0:06:16 > 0:06:21and voluntary ban by DIY chains, including B&Q, on selling harmful
0:06:21 > 0:06:27chemicals to under 18s. Waitrose and the Co-op are also involved.
0:06:27 > 0:06:30Agreeing to challenge underage customers, just like they would if
0:06:30 > 0:06:34they were buying alcohol.Acid attacks are most horrific crimes,
0:06:34 > 0:06:40and what we want to do is make sure that we restrict access, supported
0:06:40 > 0:06:44victims, police these attacks really affect to believe.It isn't just
0:06:44 > 0:06:48major retailers who are signing up to secure their shelves. The
0:06:48 > 0:06:52association representing hardware shop is urging them to play their
0:06:52 > 0:06:55part as well. This one in London says the move is long overdue.
0:06:55 > 0:07:00Definitely a good idea. We have always checked IDE for acid. Same
0:07:00 > 0:07:04thing, if you go to a supermarket and you go to buy alcohol, you are
0:07:04 > 0:07:09asked Friday. It should either same thing here. -- you are asked for ID.
0:07:09 > 0:07:14This measure may be a stopgap. Ministers want a full ban on sales
0:07:14 > 0:07:18to under 18s, and have asked Parliament to create a new crime for
0:07:18 > 0:07:20carrying acid without a good reason.
0:07:20 > 0:07:22A growing number of men are being targetted by stalkers,
0:07:22 > 0:07:25according to new research by Five Live Investigates.
0:07:25 > 0:07:27Crime figures suggest around 450,000 men in England
0:07:27 > 0:07:30and Wales experience stalking over the course of a year.
0:07:30 > 0:07:32But, according to data from 41 police forces,
0:07:32 > 0:07:34only 1,800 stalking offences against men have been recorded
0:07:34 > 0:07:43by officers over the past three years.
0:07:43 > 0:07:45Germany's Christian Democrats, led by the Chancellor,
0:07:45 > 0:07:48Angela Merkel, will begin five days of exploratory talks today
0:07:48 > 0:07:50on forming a coalition government with the Social Democrats.
0:07:50 > 0:07:54Mrs Merkel has been trying to build a new coalition since September
0:07:54 > 0:07:57after her party lost more than 60 seats in the parliamentary
0:07:57 > 0:08:02elections.
0:08:02 > 0:08:05President Macron of France is due to lay wreaths at the offices
0:08:05 > 0:08:08in Paris of the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, to remember
0:08:08 > 0:08:11the victims of an Islamist attack there three years ago today.
0:08:11 > 0:08:1212 people, including several cartoonists,
0:08:12 > 0:08:14died when two gunmen burst into an editorial meeting.
0:08:14 > 0:08:16A policeman was shot dead outside.
0:08:16 > 0:08:19The president will also visit a Jewish supermarket in the city
0:08:19 > 0:08:35where four hostages were killed by another Islamist two days later.
0:08:35 > 0:08:37Nasa's longest serving astronaut, John Young, has died
0:08:37 > 0:08:38at the age of 87.
0:08:38 > 0:08:42He was one of just 12 men who have walked on the moon,
0:08:42 > 0:08:44and he flew the first space shuttle mission.
0:08:44 > 0:08:46Former commander of the International Space Station,
0:08:46 > 0:08:50Chris Hadfield, has described him as an inspiration.
0:08:50 > 0:08:56John was a fascinating, devoted and passionate and really fearless man.
0:08:56 > 0:09:00Just a role model to so many astronauts, including the six people
0:09:00 > 0:09:04who are up on the space station right now. A life really well lived
0:09:04 > 0:09:05and a good friend of mine.
0:09:05 > 0:09:08Plans to create a new 'Northern Forest' stretching from Liverpool
0:09:08 > 0:09:10to Hull have been announced by the government.
0:09:10 > 0:09:11It's providing £5.7 million
0:09:11 > 0:09:13to increase tree cover along
0:09:13 > 0:09:14a belt spanning Manchester, Leeds and Bradford.
0:09:14 > 0:09:16The Woodland Trust is running the project,
0:09:16 > 0:09:19which will cost £500 million pounds over 25 years.
0:09:19 > 0:09:22Most of that money will need to be raised by the charity itself.
0:09:22 > 0:09:34Our correspondent Roger Harrabin has more.
0:09:34 > 0:09:39The bare hills of the north. One of the most denuded parts of a country
0:09:39 > 0:09:44which itself has less woodland than almost anywhere in Europe. The land
0:09:44 > 0:09:49stripped of centuries for timber and farming, scarred by industry,
0:09:49 > 0:09:53overgrazed by sheep farming. At snowballs near Manchester, things
0:09:53 > 0:10:01will be different. -- Smithils. Planting has begun for what will be
0:10:01 > 0:10:05known as the Northern Forest.We think the Northern Forest will be a
0:10:05 > 0:10:08pathfinder for extending Forest and woodland right across country. We
0:10:08 > 0:10:12think trees and Woods can add value in many different landscapes. We
0:10:12 > 0:10:16just want to do it here first and do it big.It isn't really a forest.
0:10:16 > 0:10:19The project will create new woods near towns and plant river valleys
0:10:19 > 0:10:24liable to flooding. But money is tight, and many of these hills will
0:10:24 > 0:10:28look just as bleak and 35 years. What's more, the Woodland Trust
0:10:28 > 0:10:32expects some of their cash to come from environmental funds linked to
0:10:32 > 0:10:43the HS two rail line. --. HS2.The supreme irony is that the government
0:10:43 > 0:10:47is giving with one hand and taking it with the other, and I'm referring
0:10:47 > 0:10:53to the root of HS2, -- the root of HS2. Why can't the government did
0:10:53 > 0:10:57with both hands and stop threatening Asian forest?Year is what some
0:10:57 > 0:11:01ambitious planting can do. This is the national forest in the Midlands.
0:11:01 > 0:11:05Begun in the 1990s, now to lighting local people.
0:11:08 > 0:11:16What a good idea.Yes, now, if you are doing Dry January, this is a few
0:11:16 > 0:11:20months down the line so it will be all right. Pub opening hours could
0:11:20 > 0:11:23be extended for the wedding of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry.The
0:11:23 > 0:11:27wedding falls on the same day as the English and Scottish FA Cup finals,
0:11:27 > 0:11:31Saturday May the 19th. Licensing hours were previously extended for
0:11:31 > 0:11:35the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in 2011. And for the
0:11:35 > 0:11:39Queen's 90th birthday in pretty 16. We all like a good excuse for a
0:11:39 > 0:11:41party.
0:11:41 > 0:11:44If you think it's chilly where you are this morning,
0:11:44 > 0:11:47spare a thought for people in parts of the US and Canada
0:11:47 > 0:11:49who are currently experiencing temperatures as low
0:11:49 > 0:11:50as minus 29 degrees Celsius.
0:11:50 > 0:11:53It's really affected the way people live there.
0:11:53 > 0:12:05Let's speak to Peter Franklin, a cab driver in New York.
0:12:05 > 0:12:08Peter, good morning. Thank you to talking to us on the BBC.Good
0:12:08 > 0:12:16morning.Just how cold is it there? Send me a sweater, I'm freezing! It
0:12:16 > 0:12:20is the middle of the 90, I'm unbelievably cold. When you walk
0:12:20 > 0:12:24outside in New York City right now your eyes are cheering up. It is the
0:12:24 > 0:12:27worst cold that I can really remember. New York is a very
0:12:27 > 0:12:31residual kind of place where people work with this kind of problem and
0:12:31 > 0:12:36all that, but baby, it's cold outside!Could be a song in there,
0:12:36 > 0:12:40Peter. You obviously have the heating on where you are, you look
0:12:40 > 0:12:43reasonably warm. Just in terms of the way people are going about their
0:12:43 > 0:12:47everyday lives, how was it affect him things?Well, people who are
0:12:47 > 0:12:52working on a salary, in other words they are getting paid by the week or
0:12:52 > 0:12:55the month or the year, they don't have to worry about it. If they
0:12:55 > 0:12:59can't get to work they can sit home and count their money. People who
0:12:59 > 0:13:03are really getting hurt in New York City are the hourly workers, such as
0:13:03 > 0:13:07a cab driver, for instance. It is if you don't work, you don't make any
0:13:07 > 0:13:11money. So the weather is a serious thing. Ian cold is a serious thing.
0:13:11 > 0:13:15But what is really the serious thing about the whole thing is the
0:13:15 > 0:13:18economic hurt. We have a lot of situations where restaurants are not
0:13:18 > 0:13:22even bothering to open up. Other restaurants are giving what they are
0:13:22 > 0:13:26calling toll discounts, in other words, hey, if you come to our
0:13:26 > 0:13:31restaurant tonight we will charge of 15% less. So it all comes down to
0:13:31 > 0:13:35money. After all, the most important thing in New York City, the most
0:13:35 > 0:13:40important colour in New York City is green.There is a lot of talk in
0:13:40 > 0:13:44this country about energy prices, how much it costs to heat your home.
0:13:44 > 0:13:48I mean, is that a concern for New Yorkers? Jim Blair right now you
0:13:48 > 0:13:52need to crank up the central heating wherever you live?No question about
0:13:52 > 0:13:56it. Remember, most people in New York are living in apartments, which
0:13:56 > 0:14:00means you are at the mercy of a landlord. And there are some
0:14:00 > 0:14:04landlords who not in a hurry to fix their furnaces in a week like this,
0:14:04 > 0:14:07because every day that goes by the furnaces not working, they are
0:14:07 > 0:14:11saving fuel money. Now, that's not all the landlords, but there are a
0:14:11 > 0:14:14lot stop at last count there were something like 15,000 or 30,000
0:14:14 > 0:14:18people without any heat. I think that was a low estimation. On the
0:14:18 > 0:14:22other hand, if you live in a house you are really getting hurt because
0:14:22 > 0:14:26then you are paying for the fuel by the gallon.And for you, what does
0:14:26 > 0:14:30today hold? Will you be getting out to work today?I'm broke!Really!
0:14:30 > 0:14:38Yeah. No, I mean, the fact of the matter is, people think when it is
0:14:38 > 0:14:42cold or rainy that is great for driving a cab. The opposite is true.
0:14:42 > 0:14:46When it is cold and rainy and especially when it is as cold as it
0:14:46 > 0:14:49is, people don't feel like going out. They stay at home. Yesterday I
0:14:49 > 0:14:53didn't drive and I'm not going to drive today because it is not worth
0:14:53 > 0:14:57the effort. So I'm getting a bit of a vacation. I'm losing money on it,
0:14:57 > 0:15:01but I tell you, Mother Nature is the boss. But shows what's going on.I
0:15:01 > 0:15:05think the forecaster Seiyu should be warming up slightly, or be less
0:15:05 > 0:15:12cold, anyway. -- forecast is say it should be. Thank you to taking the
0:15:12 > 0:15:16time to talk to us. That was Peter, a cab driver in New York City.
0:15:16 > 0:15:20Mother Nature is the boss, and that the truth? Do you know what, it was
0:15:20 > 0:15:24cold enough outside yesterday watching the kids Playford Hall. I
0:15:24 > 0:15:27shouldn't complain, given those temperatures in New York.
0:15:34 > 0:15:38If you were out in the north-east with temperatures like
0:15:38 > 0:15:39If you were out in the north-east with temperatures like that, you
0:15:39 > 0:15:44could get frostbite in a couple of minutes. It is hazardous. We have
0:15:44 > 0:15:51cold, are nothing like that. A frosty start for most of the UK.
0:15:51 > 0:16:01Gorgeous winter sunshine. A blue hue over much of the board. I will show
0:16:01 > 0:16:05you the south-east in a second. The final beast, windy. Less cold.
0:16:05 > 0:16:16Outbreaks of rain on and off. -- far north-east. England and Wales, cold.
0:16:16 > 0:16:22In the south-east, a breeze. Cloud. A few showers. Not as cold as
0:16:22 > 0:16:26further north. Holding onto the breeze further south. The southern
0:16:26 > 0:16:32half of England and Wales, a spike from the wind will make it cold.
0:16:32 > 0:16:38Further north, not above freezing in parts of Scotland after the cold
0:16:38 > 0:16:46start. Dry and sunny in most places. Another cold one. Central and
0:16:46 > 0:16:55northern areas, widespread frost. In the south, freezing. A repeat
0:16:55 > 0:17:01performance on Monday. Windy in the south. Cloud around. Creeping north
0:17:01 > 0:17:05through the day. England and Wales, by the end of the afternoon, cold
0:17:05 > 0:17:10and grey. Further north and west, sunny and a very cold day once
0:17:10 > 0:17:15again. We start to see some changes taking place. High pressure holding
0:17:15 > 0:17:18on through Tuesday. This weather front will make inroads during
0:17:18 > 0:17:22Wednesday bringing outbreaks of rain and slightly less cold air to our
0:17:22 > 0:17:28shores. Tuesday, breezy. Cloud across the board. Feeling cool to be
0:17:28 > 0:17:36the odd shower. The odd bit of snow. Across the west, a change. A messy
0:17:36 > 0:17:41picture. At of rain at times. Something more miles in the south.
0:17:41 > 0:17:478- 10 degrees. Chilly in the north underneath the cloud and ring. Back
0:17:47 > 0:17:58to you. -- rain.
0:17:58 > 0:18:00underneath the cloud and ring. Back to you. -- rain.
0:18:00 > 0:18:04We'll be back with the headlines at 6:30. Now it's time for The Film
0:18:04 > 0:18:08Review, with Jane Hill and Jason Solomons.
0:18:08 > 0:18:11Hello, and a very warm welcome to The Film Review on BBC News.
0:18:11 > 0:18:15To take us through this week's cinema releases I'm joined by Jason
0:18:15 > 0:18:16Solomons.
0:18:16 > 0:18:25What have you been watching this week?
0:18:25 > 0:18:28This week, we find out what happened when Christopher Plummer replaced
0:18:28 > 0:18:31Kevin Spacey in Ridley Scott's All The Money In The World,
0:18:31 > 0:18:35a kidnap drama set mainly in 1970s Italy but also on a huge
0:18:35 > 0:18:36estate in England.
0:18:36 > 0:18:38And saddle up for the return of the Wild West.
0:18:38 > 0:18:41But is it the Western revived or revised in Hostiles?
0:18:41 > 0:18:44Christian Bale and Rosamund Pike, take to the wide open spaces
0:18:44 > 0:18:46for the violence of the Wild West.
0:18:46 > 0:18:49And Ben Stiller checks in for a midlife crisis
0:18:49 > 0:18:51in Brad's Status, a comedy about middle age and loss
0:18:51 > 0:19:04and reflecting on your existence while you take your son to colleges.
0:19:04 > 0:19:07But let's start with All The Money In The World.
0:19:07 > 0:19:10I'm reeling from the fact that Christopher Plummer is 88,
0:19:10 > 0:19:24because he looks astonishing.
0:19:24 > 0:19:27That is what you can do with all the money in the world,
0:19:27 > 0:19:28a lot of CGI!
0:19:28 > 0:19:32John Paul Getty, who Kevin Spacey was playing, and the film has been
0:19:32 > 0:19:34'deSpaceyed' and replaced very famously by Christopher Plummer,
0:19:34 > 0:19:38the very feat of that is what marks this film out as a footnote
0:19:38 > 0:19:39in film history.
0:19:39 > 0:19:41Extraordinary from Ridley Scott to reshape his film around
0:19:41 > 0:19:43a new performance in Christopher Plummer.
0:19:43 > 0:19:45We watch the film now, especially in this climate,
0:19:45 > 0:19:49trying to see the join, to see if there was a ready break
0:19:49 > 0:19:51glow of CGI inserts from Christopher Plummer.
0:19:51 > 0:19:54Can we spot the ghost of Kevin Spacey - you can't at all.
0:19:54 > 0:19:57The film is seamlessly done, and the reshoots are beautifully
0:19:57 > 0:20:01done and I think Christopher Plummer is fabulous in the role of John Paul
0:20:01 > 0:20:08Getty.
0:20:08 > 0:20:11I think they would have been a different...
0:20:11 > 0:20:13Ridley Scott talked about how Christopher Plummer has a twinkle
0:20:13 > 0:20:16in his eye, whereas Kevin Spacey has a more cold look,
0:20:16 > 0:20:20more evil look, and I think that gives the film a lot more heart.
0:20:20 > 0:20:23We kind of pity John Paul Getty for being the richest man,
0:20:23 > 0:20:27but he is not just the richest man but the richest man there has ever
0:20:27 > 0:20:29been in the world.
0:20:29 > 0:20:30And his grandson is kidnapped.
0:20:30 > 0:20:31Yes, that's the essence.
0:20:31 > 0:20:35It was a huge media case back in the 1970s, it gripped the world,
0:20:35 > 0:20:38as John Paul Getty refused to pay the ransom, $17 million,
0:20:38 > 0:20:41which back in 1973 was quite a lot of money!
0:20:41 > 0:20:45The point was that it became this kind of case and he refused to budge
0:20:45 > 0:20:48and I think we are supposed to see John Paul Getty as a curmudgeonly
0:20:48 > 0:20:51Scrooge type, but Christopher Plummer gives it a real edge.
0:20:51 > 0:20:54There is a fabulous speech about him not trusting people,
0:20:54 > 0:20:56only objects, of which he amasses a huge amount.
0:20:56 > 0:20:58They don't give him grief.
0:20:58 > 0:21:01But the rest of the film is going on, Michelle Williams,
0:21:01 > 0:21:03Golden Globe nominated, and we will find out the results
0:21:03 > 0:21:05from LA on Monday morning.
0:21:05 > 0:21:08The film has been nominated for, I guess, the feat of Scott
0:21:08 > 0:21:09getting it together.
0:21:09 > 0:21:11Christopher Plummer is nominated for that performance
0:21:11 > 0:21:13and Michelle Williams is nominated for the performance of Gayle,
0:21:13 > 0:21:21the mum, and here she is wandering into the media storm in Italy.
0:21:21 > 0:21:25HUBBUB OF VOICES.
0:21:25 > 0:21:28My son, Paul, must be very frightened right now.
0:21:28 > 0:21:29I know I'm frightened for him.
0:21:29 > 0:21:33So, to the people who took him, I don't care why you did this,
0:21:33 > 0:21:43but I ask as a mother that you think of your own children or the child
0:21:43 > 0:21:45that you once were and set my boy free.
0:21:45 > 0:21:49Thank you.
0:21:49 > 0:21:50Her son's disappeared.
0:21:50 > 0:21:57A mother should cry for her son.
0:21:57 > 0:21:57Enough.
0:21:57 > 0:21:58Let the lady through.
0:21:58 > 0:21:59Let's go!
0:21:59 > 0:22:00HUBBUB OF VOICES.
0:22:00 > 0:22:01Miss Getty, I'm Corvo.
0:22:01 > 0:22:02I'm the lead investigator.
0:22:02 > 0:22:03Would you please follow us.
0:22:03 > 0:22:03Grazie.
0:22:03 > 0:22:04HUBBUB OF VOICES.
0:22:04 > 0:22:05Tell us more.
0:22:05 > 0:22:07You said you had the money.
0:22:07 > 0:22:08HUBBUB OF VOICES.
0:22:08 > 0:22:09What about your son?
0:22:09 > 0:22:09Miss Getty!
0:22:09 > 0:22:13I'm a big fan of Michelle Williams, and she has spoken quite nicely
0:22:13 > 0:22:16about how she felt Ridley Scott was trying to really show this
0:22:16 > 0:22:19horrendous story of the kidnap of a child through the mother 's eyes.
0:22:19 > 0:22:21Does that work, does it come through?
0:22:21 > 0:22:23It is there.
0:22:23 > 0:22:26She reminded me of Katherine Hepburn with that accent.
0:22:26 > 0:22:29The problem is I didn't know who I should be watching.
0:22:29 > 0:22:30Obviously the story between Kevin Spacey
0:22:30 > 0:22:33and Christopher Plummer deflected a lot, and I was watching PLummer
0:22:33 > 0:22:36and it's quite a hammy role, as John Paul Getty.
0:22:36 > 0:22:48She's doing something else.
0:22:48 > 0:22:51And then you've got the son, played by Charlie Plummer,
0:22:51 > 0:22:54no relation, kidnapped and held hostage in Calabria by the Italian
0:22:54 > 0:22:54Mafia.
0:22:54 > 0:22:57So you never quite know what the centre of the story is.
0:22:57 > 0:23:00For me, it became about Plummer, and it kind of eclipses
0:23:00 > 0:23:04Michelle Williams, who is very good in the role, and the film looks good
0:23:04 > 0:23:06in a classic Ridley Scott smooth way.
0:23:06 > 0:23:09It just didn't get to the heart of the matter.
0:23:09 > 0:23:13Your heart went out to what it must be like to being the richest man
0:23:13 > 0:23:14in the world.
0:23:14 > 0:23:15It's something I've been contemplating!
0:23:15 > 0:23:16That's curious!
0:23:16 > 0:23:16And rather enjoying.
0:23:16 > 0:23:17Curious!
0:23:23 > 0:23:26Is the next film going to be quite brutal?
0:23:26 > 0:23:29I have heard lots about it but not seen it, Hostiles.
0:23:29 > 0:23:32There is always room for one or two Westerns per year now.
0:23:32 > 0:23:35It used to be what Hollywood and America was made on.
0:23:35 > 0:23:39But now Hostiles, I think we can tell there is irony in the title.
0:23:39 > 0:23:42It's what American armies called, what American cowboys and soldiers
0:23:42 > 0:23:45used to call the Native Americans, the Injuns they were known as.
0:23:45 > 0:23:47We're not allowed to call them that now.
0:23:47 > 0:23:50When you have a film that revises that, what do you do
0:23:50 > 0:23:52about the brutality of the old West?
0:23:52 > 0:24:17The way of the gun.
0:24:17 > 0:24:20This film opens with Rosamund Pike and her entire family wiped out
0:24:20 > 0:24:22by Comanche Indians, so you are already thinking,
0:24:22 > 0:24:26I don't see where the balance is with a new look at the West,
0:24:26 > 0:24:29where we expect white America to be slightly kind of apologetic
0:24:29 > 0:24:31for the way Native Americans were treated.
0:24:31 > 0:24:34This film doesn't do that, which is rather brave of it.
0:24:34 > 0:24:37Christian Bale is the Army man who has to escort a posse
0:24:37 > 0:24:40of Cheyenne Indians back to their natural homeland,
0:24:40 > 0:24:42and they come under attack from Comanche Indians.
0:24:42 > 0:24:43It is about warring factions.
0:24:43 > 0:24:45Nobody comes out of it particularly well.
0:24:45 > 0:24:47It is fairly brutal and bleak landscape.
0:24:47 > 0:24:49But I think that is what it was like.
0:24:49 > 0:24:52So that realism that is coming into the Western, that revisionism
0:24:52 > 0:24:56of what the hero is, Pat Garritt, and going back to Billy The Kid
0:24:56 > 0:24:58or Dances with Wolves with Kevin Costner.
0:24:58 > 0:25:01But it doesn't quite tell it from the point of view
0:25:01 > 0:25:02of the Indian.
0:25:02 > 0:25:03Quite a tough watch?
0:25:03 > 0:25:03It is.
0:25:03 > 0:25:06And you don't get the payoff that you usually get
0:25:06 > 0:25:07with the hero emerging.
0:25:07 > 0:25:11A bit more uplift in our third choice today, I say with some hope?
0:25:11 > 0:25:14It's a comedy, but a maudlin one, about Ben Stiller experiencing
0:25:14 > 0:25:15a midlife crisis.
0:25:15 > 0:25:18I thought this was very funny, directed by Mike Whyte,
0:25:18 > 0:25:21who people might know as the director of School Of Rock
0:25:21 > 0:25:21for Jack Black.
0:25:21 > 0:25:24This is about Ben Stiller who has to take his son,
0:25:24 > 0:25:30Troy, on a tour of colleges.
0:25:30 > 0:25:34Americans do this, flying off to see which colleges they want to get
0:25:34 > 0:25:36into, one of which is Harvard.
0:25:36 > 0:25:38Ben Stiller was never able to get into it,
0:25:38 > 0:25:41as Brad but his son Troy harbours great ambitions of getting into it.
0:25:41 > 0:25:45But it sparks in Brad, a reminiscence about all of his
0:25:45 > 0:25:49college chums and how much better than him they have all done at life.
0:25:49 > 0:25:50A-ha.
0:25:50 > 0:25:53I couldn't help but wonder, when was the last time Craig Fisher
0:25:53 > 0:25:54flew in economy?
0:25:54 > 0:25:58Probably not in decades.
0:25:58 > 0:26:01Mr Fisher, can i offer you a warm towel?
0:26:01 > 0:26:02Yes, thank you.
0:26:02 > 0:26:04I know Jason Hadfield has his own private plane.
0:26:04 > 0:26:06Never has to fly commercial at all.
0:26:06 > 0:26:08Nick Pascale probably flies private, too.
0:26:08 > 0:26:11Must be nice to always have the seas part for you.
0:26:11 > 0:26:19Nothing out of reach.
0:26:19 > 0:26:25Everything an option.
0:26:25 > 0:26:39It must be like a drug, always feeling important and special.
0:26:39 > 0:26:58Better than, all the adventures, the exotic destinations.
0:26:58 > 0:26:58Oh, great.
0:26:58 > 0:27:01So does everyone leave the cinema feeling completely inadequate?
0:27:01 > 0:27:02A first world problem.
0:27:02 > 0:27:02They are.
0:27:02 > 0:27:05He envies everyone, his son's youth, his son's friends,
0:27:05 > 0:27:07They are all perky and bright.
0:27:07 > 0:27:19But then he confesses to them and they say,
0:27:19 > 0:27:21to pull yourself together, mate.
0:27:21 > 0:27:22You are all right.
0:27:22 > 0:27:24You live in Sacramento, that's about the only thing
0:27:24 > 0:27:25you have done well.
0:27:25 > 0:27:29It's about assessing those things, and I thought it was painfully smart
0:27:29 > 0:27:31and painfully funny, well done and very well performed
0:27:31 > 0:27:35by Ben Stiller, Who I think we think of as a cometic performer,
0:27:35 > 0:27:36doing his Blue Steel lot.
0:27:36 > 0:27:39We do, yes.
0:27:39 > 0:27:39Best out?
0:27:39 > 0:27:40Let's talk about something lovely.
0:27:40 > 0:27:41Why not.
0:27:41 > 0:27:42The best out.
0:27:42 > 0:27:45You ask me this, I still have to say Paddington 2.
0:27:45 > 0:27:49It is not just the best out, it is one of the best films of last
0:27:49 > 0:27:51year and stretching into this year.
0:27:51 > 0:27:52It is doing great box office.
0:27:52 > 0:27:54It's still there, charming everyone.
0:27:54 > 0:28:05And I think he is just adorable in all his little outfits,
0:28:05 > 0:28:06lost in the big city of London.
0:28:06 > 0:28:21I mean, I've seen it twice.
0:28:21 > 0:28:22I would happily go again.
0:28:22 > 0:28:25If I was the richest man in the world, I'd go and see
0:28:25 > 0:28:26Paddington 2 everyday.
0:28:26 > 0:28:28In your own private jet.
0:28:28 > 0:28:30Surely you would have one of those, Jason Solomons?
0:28:30 > 0:28:32For anybody who wants to stay in?
0:28:32 > 0:28:34I would get the DVD of Limehouse Gollum,
0:28:34 > 0:28:35it is out now.
0:28:35 > 0:28:38This is a sort of East End set Victorian melodrama style.
0:28:38 > 0:28:41Starring the great Bill Nighy - and a wonderful performance
0:28:41 > 0:28:43from Olivia Cooke, a young British actor.
0:28:43 > 0:28:44Danny Mays is in there.
0:28:44 > 0:28:46It is about murders going on.
0:28:46 > 0:28:48A sort of Jack the Ripper style thriller set in the East End
0:28:49 > 0:28:49with all of the London fog and people out and about like Oliver
0:28:50 > 0:28:51creatures going out and going oom pah-pah, but there is a grisly
0:28:51 > 0:28:52murder at the bottom of it, and it captures that Gothic horror
0:28:52 > 0:28:54of London very, very well.
0:28:54 > 0:28:57And as you have hinted award season is nearly upon us,
0:28:57 > 0:29:00so we'll be talking plenty in the coming weeks.
0:29:00 > 0:29:02Thank you very much for now, Jason Solomons.
0:29:02 > 0:29:05That is a taster of what is on offer this week.
0:29:05 > 0:29:08A quick reminder before we go, all our film news and reviews
0:29:08 > 0:29:09from across the BBC are online.
0:29:10 > 0:29:12And all previous programmes are on the iPlayer.
0:29:12 > 0:29:13Enjoy your cinema going.
0:29:13 > 0:29:14Goodbye.
0:29:20 > 0:29:22Hello, this is Breakfast with Roger Johnson and Rachel
0:29:22 > 0:29:23Burden.
0:29:23 > 0:29:24Good morning.
0:29:24 > 0:29:28Here's a summary of today's main stories from BBC News.
0:29:28 > 0:29:31Theresa May will abandon plans set out in her election manifesto
0:29:31 > 0:29:34for MPs to get a vote on overturning the fox hunting ban.
0:29:34 > 0:29:38In an interview on the BBC's Andrew Marr show she confirmed
0:29:38 > 0:29:41she would go back on her pledge, meaning MPs cannot vote on the issue
0:29:41 > 0:29:44until 2022 - when the next general election will be held.
0:29:44 > 0:29:59The fox hunting ban was introduced by the Labour government in 2004.
0:29:59 > 0:30:03One of the clear messages we got was a number of areas in which people
0:30:03 > 0:30:07were concerned about what we were proposing. So just as we have looked
0:30:07 > 0:30:13at issues on school funding, tuition fees, housing, we are taking forward
0:30:13 > 0:30:17approaches in relation to that. On this issue of foxhunting, what I can
0:30:17 > 0:30:22say is that they will not be a vote during this parliament. -- there
0:30:22 > 0:30:25will.
0:30:25 > 0:30:28The Prime Minister will carry out a cabinet reshuffle tomorrow. It is
0:30:28 > 0:30:33not yet known what changes she will make, but it is reported up to six
0:30:33 > 0:30:37ministers could either lose their jobs or be moved. A Downing Street
0:30:37 > 0:30:40source has described such stories as pure speculation and guesswork.
0:30:40 > 0:30:43Some of the UK's largest retailers have voluntarily agreed to stop
0:30:43 > 0:30:45selling acids and corrosive substances to customers under
0:30:45 > 0:30:4618 years old.
0:30:46 > 0:30:48Thousands of independent hardware shops are also expected
0:30:48 > 0:30:49to follow suit.
0:30:49 > 0:30:52Ministers hope the measure will help stop the rise in attacks
0:30:52 > 0:30:59until new laws are considered by Parliament.
0:30:59 > 0:31:04A growing number of men are being targeted vice stalkers, according to
0:31:04 > 0:31:12new research by Five Live Investigates. Crime figures suggest
0:31:12 > 0:31:15that thousands of men of England and Wales experience talking over the
0:31:15 > 0:31:20course of every year. According to data from over 40 police forces,
0:31:20 > 0:31:271800 stalking offences have been reported by men to officers in the
0:31:27 > 0:31:28past three years.
0:31:28 > 0:31:32Plans to create a new northern forest on a belt spanning
0:31:32 > 0:31:35Manchester, Leeds and Bradford have been announced by the government.
0:31:35 > 0:31:39New forests will be planted near towns and river valleys liable to
0:31:39 > 0:31:43flooding. Bob and trust is running the project and will raise most of
0:31:43 > 0:31:46the £500 million it is expect to cross over the next five years.
0:31:46 > 0:31:49The East Coast of North America is shivering in a record-breaking
0:31:49 > 0:31:49freeze.
0:31:49 > 0:31:52It comes after a massive snow storm that reached as far
0:31:52 > 0:31:53south as Florida.
0:31:53 > 0:31:56Temperatures there are forecast to fall below minus 29 degrees
0:31:56 > 0:31:56Celsius.
0:31:56 > 0:31:59In parts of the US temperatures are forecast to fall below
0:31:59 > 0:32:00minus 29 degrees Celsius.
0:32:00 > 0:32:17The extreme weather has so far been linked to 19 deaths.
0:32:17 > 0:32:21Now, time to sport, but if you are a cricket fan you might not want to
0:32:21 > 0:32:25hear it. I am wondering how soon this fifth and final test match will
0:32:25 > 0:32:28be over.It could very well be today. Let's not be too pessimistic.
0:32:28 > 0:32:32We might actually run out of time to be that pessimistic. You will notice
0:32:32 > 0:32:36Australia celebrating behind you. If you are an England cricket fan you
0:32:36 > 0:32:40wake up every morning and check your phone to see what the scorers.You
0:32:40 > 0:32:44don't need to check!Right, you consider how bad it might be, and
0:32:44 > 0:32:48then in your wildest imaginations, what might actually happen. It is
0:32:48 > 0:32:54usually the latter that happens, and not how bad it might be.A familiar
0:32:54 > 0:32:57story for England, I'm afraid. I think we have been saying that since
0:32:57 > 0:33:01November. They are looking forward looks like an inevitable defeat in
0:33:01 > 0:33:06the final Ashes test in Sydney, and a 4-0 series loss as well. Trailing
0:33:06 > 0:33:09by 303 runs ahead of their second innings, they had only lost four
0:33:09 > 0:33:14wickets. David Millar the most recent to fall. Lbw to Nathan Lyon.
0:33:14 > 0:33:20Captain Joe Root is still there. He is battling, though. Literally. He
0:33:20 > 0:33:24needed painkillers after being hit on the glove. Earlier Australia
0:33:24 > 0:33:29scored 639- seven, with both much brother scoring a century. England
0:33:29 > 0:33:33will not have taken 20 wickets in any of the five Ashes test in the
0:33:33 > 0:33:39series. England currently 80- four, so still trailing by 223.
0:33:39 > 0:33:41They're in the bottom three of the Premier League,
0:33:41 > 0:33:45and now on the end of the biggest shock of the FA Cup third
0:33:45 > 0:33:46round weekend so far.
0:33:46 > 0:33:49So Mark Hughes has been sacked as Stoke City manager.
0:33:49 > 0:33:52They were beaten 2-1 at League Two side Coventry on a day
0:33:52 > 0:33:54where Manchester City safely went through.
0:33:54 > 0:33:56But Chelsea were taken to a replay by Norwich City.
0:33:56 > 0:33:58Joe Lynskey rounds up the action.
0:33:58 > 0:34:02It has been a dark two decades for Coventry City. Financial turmoil and
0:34:02 > 0:34:07three relegations. But this was the day the clouds parted for the sky
0:34:07 > 0:34:16blues.It is in! The shock is back on!A 2-1 win for the fourth tier
0:34:16 > 0:34:21side, but Coventry's joy Braut Marcuse' downfall. For Stoke City's
0:34:21 > 0:34:26manager, this result meant the inevitable.In a Premier League side
0:34:26 > 0:34:30goes out to a lower league side in the third round, it is news. It is
0:34:30 > 0:34:34not the news we wanted to create prior to the game today, but it has
0:34:34 > 0:34:37happened.In football, moving on can leave a bitter taste, but injured
0:34:37 > 0:34:41Jamie Vardy got a warm welcome back to Fleetwood. Lester brought in from
0:34:41 > 0:34:46here for £1 million, and now he is an international for England. But
0:34:46 > 0:34:50the mill- nil draw never matched his star quality. I contrast, style is
0:34:50 > 0:34:55what defines Manchester City's season. They are going to glory on
0:34:55 > 0:34:58all fronts. Even when they fell behind to Burnley, the comeback was
0:34:58 > 0:35:11always coming.Eau Claire! -- Aguero!. Two in two minutes.A
0:35:11 > 0:35:144-star turnaround for Pep Guardiola's side, the Giants nobly
0:35:14 > 0:35:18wants to take on. There was merely an upset at Bournemouth. Five years
0:35:18 > 0:35:23ago Wigan won the cup, now they are in the third tier. They led 2-0
0:35:23 > 0:35:25against their Premier League opponents before things looked away.
0:35:25 > 0:35:30Warner fought back to force a replay. But extra games at this time
0:35:30 > 0:35:35of year can feel like a headache. The linesman at Villa did recover,
0:35:35 > 0:35:40and so did this underdog. From one goal down, Peterborough fought back
0:35:40 > 0:35:45to win 3-1. This was a January day for the blues in the cup, and proved
0:35:45 > 0:35:49the magic still matters.
0:35:49 > 0:35:52For a full list of yesterday's results head to the BBC
0:35:52 > 0:35:53Sport website.
0:35:53 > 0:35:56The FA Cup third round continues today with eight teams in action.
0:35:56 > 0:35:59The first tie of the day sees Championship side Leeds United
0:35:59 > 0:36:01travel to League Two Newport County.
0:36:01 > 0:36:05It's the first time the two sides have met in the FA Cup since 1949,
0:36:05 > 0:36:07when Newport won 3-1 at Elland Road.
0:36:07 > 0:36:09Elsewhere, there are three Premier League teams in action.
0:36:09 > 0:36:13West Ham are away at Shrewbury Town, where David Moyes will be hoping
0:36:13 > 0:36:16to avoid a repeat of his 2003 defeat as Everton manager.
0:36:16 > 0:36:18Tottenham host AFC Wimbledon and holders Arsenal are away
0:36:18 > 0:36:19to Nottingham Forest.
0:36:19 > 0:36:22Philippe Coutinho will become one of the most expensive footballers
0:36:22 > 0:36:25in history after Barcelona agreed to pay up to £142 million.
0:36:25 > 0:36:26for the Liverpool forward.
0:36:26 > 0:36:29The Brazilian has spent four and a half years at Anfield
0:36:29 > 0:36:32and Liverpool have eventually decided to do the deal after turning
0:36:32 > 0:36:35down three bids for him from Barcelona in the summer.
0:36:35 > 0:36:37The initial payment will be £105 million, a British record.
0:36:37 > 0:36:39With the rest in add-ons.
0:36:39 > 0:36:41He's agreed a 5.5-year deal at the Camp Nou.
0:36:41 > 0:36:44Northampton ended their run of seven consecutive Premiership defeats
0:36:44 > 0:36:46with a 22-19 win over Gloucester at Franklin's Gardens yesterday.
0:36:46 > 0:36:48The visitors led for much of the match.
0:36:48 > 0:36:51But a final-minute penalty try gave Saints their first
0:36:51 > 0:36:52win since September.
0:36:52 > 0:36:55Gloucester earnt a losing bonus point, with tries for James Hanson
0:36:55 > 0:36:58and John Afoa in addition to their own penalty try.
0:36:58 > 0:37:00Elsewhere, Leicester came from behind to beat London Irish,
0:37:00 > 0:37:06and Sale narrowly got past Harlequins.
0:37:06 > 0:37:09Ospreys won the Welsh derby in the Pro14, beating Cardiff Blues
0:37:09 > 0:37:10by a single point.
0:37:10 > 0:37:13It turned on this piece of quick thinking from Wales' fly half
0:37:13 > 0:37:20Dan Biggar, who set up what proved to be the winning score for Ospreys,
0:37:20 > 0:37:24finished off by Justin Tipuric.
0:37:24 > 0:37:27The Blues attempted to mount a late comeback, but but the home side held
0:37:27 > 0:37:29on to win 29-28 in Swansea.
0:37:29 > 0:37:32Cardiff are still without a win there in 12 years.
0:37:32 > 0:37:39Ulster slumped to a 38-7 defeat against Leinster in Dublin,
0:37:39 > 0:37:42Jordan Larmour and Fergus McFadden scored two tries apiece.
0:37:42 > 0:37:44And Jonny Sexton also touched down with this try.
0:37:44 > 0:37:47The victory leaves Leinster within two points of leaders
0:37:47 > 0:37:49Scarlets in Conference B of the Pro 14.
0:37:49 > 0:37:51Elsewhere Glasgow Warriors maintained their spot at the top
0:37:51 > 0:37:52of Conference A.
0:37:52 > 0:37:56They beat Zebre.
0:37:56 > 0:37:5816-year-old James Bowen has become the youngest jockey to win
0:37:58 > 0:38:00the Welsh Grand National.
0:38:00 > 0:38:03Fittingly he was on the 16-1 shot Raz de Maree.
0:38:03 > 0:38:06Taking the lead two fences from home and powering to victory.
0:38:06 > 0:38:09The jockey might be young, but at 13, the horse is the oldest
0:38:09 > 0:38:13to win the race in modern times.
0:38:13 > 0:38:17Just three years between the two, which is rather astounding.This is
0:38:17 > 0:38:21so stupid, but I was hope in it might show pictures of the game
0:38:21 > 0:38:25yesterday, I was there and I like to see myself on TV! That would be
0:38:25 > 0:38:30really exciting.Do you know for a fact that the cameras picked you
0:38:30 > 0:38:36out?No, I was just hoping. My goodness.Cavill. There is a little
0:38:36 > 0:38:40thing underneath that shows you as well.Hopefully England will still
0:38:40 > 0:38:43be playing cricket next time we see you.No guarantee of that, that's
0:38:43 > 0:38:45for sure.
0:38:48 > 0:38:51The red carpet is being rolled out, the champagne is on ice
0:38:51 > 0:38:54and the statuettes are about to be handed over, but the start
0:38:54 > 0:38:58of the 2018 Hollywood awards season is expected to get off to an unusual
0:38:58 > 0:39:00start at the Golden Globes tonight.
0:39:00 > 0:39:02Famous faces have vowed to wear all-black in solidarity
0:39:02 > 0:39:05against sexism and harrassment, prompted by a series of recent abuse
0:39:05 > 0:39:06allegations in the industry.
0:39:06 > 0:39:10We'll speak to one of the founding members of the 'Time's Up' campaign
0:39:10 > 0:39:12in a moment, but first here's our North America
0:39:12 > 0:39:20Correspondent James Cook who's in LA.
0:39:20 > 0:39:26In Hollywood, they are getting ready to put their best foot forward. At
0:39:26 > 0:39:29this year's award season, there may be more protest than parties. The
0:39:29 > 0:39:33dirty secrets of the movie business have been exposed in recent months
0:39:33 > 0:39:37and now scores of stars say they will wear black to the Golden Globes
0:39:37 > 0:39:43to promote a campaign called Time's Up.I never thought it would happen
0:39:43 > 0:39:47in my lifetime. Truly I didn't. I think tomorrow, people will be in
0:39:47 > 0:39:51black, that I don't think it will be funereal, I think it will be a
0:39:51 > 0:39:55celebration of all of us saying, it is time to deal with this. It is
0:39:55 > 0:39:59time to deal with this and not put up at it any more.We are all
0:39:59 > 0:40:02wearing black to stand in solidarity, not just the women and
0:40:02 > 0:40:05what is happening in Hollywood in this industry, but to represent and
0:40:05 > 0:40:09stand for all women across all industries and to support them. And
0:40:09 > 0:40:12also to support equality in all its forms.I've suffered it all and
0:40:12 > 0:40:16worse. By the time I got to the music is the site just wasn't having
0:40:16 > 0:40:21it. -- music business. I didn't have to deal with that. That I feel with
0:40:21 > 0:40:24those women, because they have secrets and I know about secrets,
0:40:24 > 0:40:28carrying secrets. And now their secrets are exposed and they are
0:40:28 > 0:40:32being set free, so I'm happy to them.The cleansing has already
0:40:32 > 0:40:37begun. Kevin Spacey, facing multiple allegations of sexual assault, was
0:40:37 > 0:40:40cut out of this film just weeks before its release. Christopher
0:40:40 > 0:40:47Plummer took over the role of oil tycoon J Paul Getty. Co-star
0:40:47 > 0:40:51Michelle Williams told me she reshot her scenes for free.These films,
0:40:51 > 0:40:55because they are larger than life, they glorify people. I couldn't bear
0:40:55 > 0:40:59the thought of being in a movie that glorified somebody who had her
0:40:59 > 0:41:05people. In these ways. -- who had hurt people. I didn't want anything
0:41:05 > 0:41:08to do with it. I wouldn't have gone to promote it, I wouldn't have
0:41:08 > 0:41:12talked about it, because I would have felt like it was not the right
0:41:12 > 0:41:16thing to do for those people who have been hurt, they don't need to
0:41:16 > 0:41:19be re- traumatised by seeing this movie come out and seeing big
0:41:19 > 0:41:23posters and flashy appetisers. It is not appropriate. So I didn't want
0:41:23 > 0:41:31any part of it.Other films tipped for awards include Via Shape of
0:41:31 > 0:41:34Water, a sci-fi fantasy starring Brits Sally Hawkins, leading to
0:41:34 > 0:41:39field with seven nominations.Why did you put up these billboards?
0:41:39 > 0:41:43Humour and heartbreak earned Three Billboards outside Ed Ling, Neziri
0:41:43 > 0:41:49six nods. The tender love story called me by your name is also in
0:41:49 > 0:41:54the running. So too is Via Posts, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep
0:41:54 > 0:41:58showcasing the power of the press. It is very much a story for the
0:41:58 > 0:42:03times. While Hollywood is gathering to pat itself on the back as usual,
0:42:03 > 0:42:08everything has changed this year. Just a few months ago the
0:42:08 > 0:42:10entertainment industry was thrown into turmoil and everybody here is
0:42:10 > 0:42:14only just beginning to work out what that means for the future.
0:42:14 > 0:42:17Actor Amber Tambyln from the Time's Up campaign joins us
0:42:17 > 0:42:21now from New York.
0:42:21 > 0:42:25Many thanks for your time this morning. How effective do you think
0:42:25 > 0:42:31it will be FAQ 100 actors turn up on the red carpet wearing black Austin
0:42:31 > 0:42:38marque -- a few hundred actors.That is a misconception. It is more than
0:42:38 > 0:42:42a few hundred actresses. There will be many, many people wearing black
0:42:42 > 0:42:47from across industry lines he will appear on the carpet today. This is
0:42:47 > 0:42:56a huge movement. It is nationwide. It is across industries. Many people
0:42:56 > 0:43:00co-ordinated, wearing something that is supposed to symbolise a large
0:43:00 > 0:43:04cultural shift and change in our country. So it is just going to be
0:43:04 > 0:43:08people on the red carpet, we have asked people to actually join us in
0:43:08 > 0:43:12wearing black and standing with -- standing in solidarity with women on
0:43:12 > 0:43:16the carpet and expressing to them why they feel this is a reset, that
0:43:16 > 0:43:21lack symbolises, we are starting over and taking control of our own
0:43:21 > 0:43:26power. -- Black symbolises.I hear what you are saying, but I suppose
0:43:26 > 0:43:30what I mean really is, what does a well-paid Hollywood actress like
0:43:30 > 0:43:33Reese Witherspoon or Meryl Streep really know about the day-to-day
0:43:33 > 0:43:36harassment that somebody working in catering or the agricultural
0:43:36 > 0:43:43industry might face?So, sexual harassment, sexual assault, the
0:43:43 > 0:43:49misappropriation of power, the power dynamic that is so problematic in
0:43:49 > 0:43:59our country and so off, you know, it sees no colour, it sees no age, it
0:43:59 > 0:44:04sees no social discrepancy. It is a cross for everybody, every woman.
0:44:04 > 0:44:07Every woman has experienced some form of harassment or power dynamic
0:44:07 > 0:44:14shift. It is not just women like Meryl Streep. It is them, it is
0:44:14 > 0:44:18women who are veterinarians or nurses or teachers or actresses or
0:44:18 > 0:44:23producers. It is all women, we have all experienced it. My mother is a
0:44:23 > 0:44:27school teacher and she has experienced it. I am sure everybody
0:44:27 > 0:44:31in the UK, everybody in the whole world. This isn't just about... You
0:44:31 > 0:44:34know, it you think of these actresses and this moment in this
0:44:34 > 0:44:38movement as the face of it, at that doesn't mean we are necessarily all
0:44:38 > 0:44:43of it or at -- or that we are claiming all of it. All we want to
0:44:43 > 0:44:48do is support and rise up and puts a safety nets under women who have
0:44:48 > 0:44:51shared their stories and come forward and done the hard work so
0:44:51 > 0:44:58far.You talk about that safety net. There is a practical mission in this
0:44:58 > 0:45:01campaign, isn't there? To support women and indeed men who have in
0:45:01 > 0:45:04victims of sexual harassment, to fight in any legal cases they might
0:45:04 > 0:45:11want to bring?Yeah, so, several months ago, the women of the
0:45:11 > 0:45:15farmworkers' union here in the US, over 700,000 of them signed a letter
0:45:15 > 0:45:18of solidarity, standing with the women of the entertainment business.
0:45:18 > 0:45:23It was a really beautiful letter and we decided to craft something that
0:45:23 > 0:45:27was a response letter to them. But it isn't just a response saying that
0:45:27 > 0:45:32we stand in solidarity with them. It is also a call to arms. It is also
0:45:32 > 0:45:36saying, we will not tolerate this behaviour any more. This is not just
0:45:36 > 0:45:39about sexual harassment, sexual assault. This is also about
0:45:39 > 0:45:43representation in all businesses and the fact that women are not
0:45:43 > 0:45:47represented in positions of power in a lot of different industries in the
0:45:47 > 0:45:53United States. So with that letter, with that response letter, we found
0:45:53 > 0:45:56that -- we founded the Time's Up legal defence fund, which at this
0:45:56 > 0:46:00point has raised over $15 million. It is our hope that defence fund
0:46:00 > 0:46:04will continue to get bigger and we will have many more events coming up
0:46:04 > 0:46:08this year and in the coming years to support that. And the funds of that
0:46:08 > 0:46:13legal defence fund go to supporting the legal fees of people who have
0:46:13 > 0:46:16been sexually harassed or assaulted in the workplace.Thank you very
0:46:16 > 0:46:20much for your time today, we really appreciated.Thank you so much.
0:46:24 > 0:46:37It is very cold in the US. Not as cold here, but very cold.
0:46:37 > 0:46:40It is very cold in the US. Not as cold here, but very cold. Watch out
0:46:40 > 0:46:53for ice as well. It will be a very sunny one for the majority of the
0:46:53 > 0:46:57country. Cloud in the south-east. The odd shower. Cloud in the
0:46:57 > 0:47:04Northern Isles, especially Shetland. Wind and outbreaks of rain at times.
0:47:04 > 0:47:13Five Celsius. Cold and frosty in Northern Ireland. Cold for the whole
0:47:13 > 0:47:19day. At least sunshine. The south-east corner, breezy. A bit
0:47:19 > 0:47:25more cloud. Not as cold. With the wind, it will feel really raw on the
0:47:25 > 0:47:30south coast. The wind will be strong. Elsewhere, light winds. In
0:47:30 > 0:47:35the sunshine, it will be nice, despite temperatures in Glasgow not
0:47:35 > 0:47:41getting above freezing to be further south, 5-6. High pressure is still
0:47:41 > 0:47:46with us this evening and overnight. A similar picture to last night.
0:47:46 > 0:47:51Central and northern areas seeing the lowest temperatures. The south,
0:47:51 > 0:47:55more cloud around, even as far as the West Country and south Wales.
0:47:55 > 0:48:02Monday, cold and frosty. Further south, breezy, cloudier. That will
0:48:02 > 0:48:08go further north through the day. The odd light snow and drizzle in
0:48:08 > 0:48:13that cloud as it goes north. For the north and west of the country, it
0:48:13 > 0:48:19should be dry but cold. The weather front will go to the west through
0:48:19 > 0:48:26Wednesday. We pick up a southerly wind. More cloud is brought to more
0:48:26 > 0:48:30areas. Sunshine in western Scotland. Quite cold because of the strength
0:48:30 > 0:48:36of the wind. Then this weather front will arrive. A messy picture. More
0:48:36 > 0:48:38miles across the south. Thank you.
0:48:38 > 0:48:40will arrive. A messy picture. More miles across the south. Thank you.
0:48:40 > 0:48:50We have seen some messy weather.
0:48:50 > 0:48:54We'll be back with the headlines at 7am. Now, it's time for Click.
0:48:54 > 0:48:54Welcome.
0:48:54 > 0:48:55Hello, welcome.
0:48:55 > 0:48:56Welcome, how are you?
0:48:56 > 0:48:57Hello...?
0:48:57 > 0:49:01Welcome, welcome...
0:49:01 > 0:49:03Second script - "How are you?
0:49:03 > 0:49:05How are you?"
0:49:05 > 0:49:05Hello, everybody!
0:49:05 > 0:49:08I am literally being built from the skin out, currently,
0:49:08 > 0:49:14by these two lovely ladies who are going to try to make
0:49:14 > 0:49:30me look different...
0:49:30 > 0:49:30All right, then.
0:49:30 > 0:49:33We are all good to go, Brendan, you happy?
0:49:33 > 0:49:36So what we're going to do is go to silence, please,
0:49:36 > 0:49:42and go to black.
0:49:42 > 0:49:43Lose the house lights.
0:49:43 > 0:49:54VT10 next.
0:49:54 > 0:49:56ANNOUNCER:This is BBC Click Live.
0:49:56 > 0:49:58Please welcome your host, Spencer Kelly!
0:49:58 > 0:50:08CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Erm...right!
0:50:08 > 0:50:08There.
0:50:08 > 0:50:08Hello!
0:50:08 > 0:50:08Welcome.
0:50:08 > 0:50:09My own floor!
0:50:09 > 0:50:10Welcome to Click Live!
0:50:10 > 0:50:12And have we got a show for you...!
0:50:12 > 0:50:15Have we got a show for them?
0:50:15 > 0:50:17We have, we're ready to go.
0:50:17 > 0:50:19LAUGHTER We have some really amazing things for you tonight.
0:50:19 > 0:50:23We've got some things that noise, we've got some things that fly,
0:50:23 > 0:50:25we have some things for you to taste.
0:50:25 > 0:50:27Some of it won't work, OK?
0:50:27 > 0:50:29LAUGHTER Bear with us, because hopefully the stuff that
0:50:29 > 0:50:33does work - fingers crossed, and a lot of it has in rehearsals -
0:50:33 > 0:50:36it is a world-first, and you won't see this anywhere
0:50:36 > 0:50:39else, and no-one has seen this before you.
0:50:39 > 0:50:42Before any of that, I have to introduce you to the other half
0:50:42 > 0:50:43of the show.
0:50:43 > 0:50:46Please welcome to the stage Kate Russell.
0:50:46 > 0:50:58APPLAUSE Brilliant, isn't it?
0:50:58 > 0:51:01When they said I'd have my name in lights, I was expecting more
0:51:01 > 0:51:04Broadway than boardwalk - but it's a start!
0:51:04 > 0:51:06It's going to be a really, really crammed show.
0:51:06 > 0:51:09And I don't want you getting too comfortable, because there's a lot
0:51:09 > 0:51:10of audience participation.
0:51:10 > 0:51:15So I hope you're ready to take part.
0:51:15 > 0:51:17Do you want to see some tech?
0:51:17 > 0:51:17CROWD:Yes!
0:51:17 > 0:51:18Good stuff.
0:51:18 > 0:51:19I don't believe you.
0:51:19 > 0:51:21Do you want to see some tech?
0:51:21 > 0:51:22CROWD:Yes!
0:51:22 > 0:51:22I think so.
0:51:22 > 0:51:26All right, so first of all, we need you to settle down,
0:51:26 > 0:51:28because our first guest tonight is very mysterious.
0:51:28 > 0:51:30His name is Psychic Joe, and I'm told things
0:51:30 > 0:51:39are about to get very strange...
0:51:39 > 0:51:47EERIE MUSIC PLAYING Hello.
0:51:47 > 0:51:50Computers are a wonderful thing, but we're going to put them to one
0:51:50 > 0:51:52side just for the moment.
0:51:52 > 0:51:55I'd like to introduce you to the power of your own mind.
0:51:55 > 0:51:58Breathe slowly and gently, and I'll discover more about you,
0:51:58 > 0:52:01with just a candle.
0:52:01 > 0:52:09Now, I sometimes get some powers and signals through,
0:52:09 > 0:52:11and sometimes I get things wrong.
0:52:11 > 0:52:13But most of the time, it's right.
0:52:13 > 0:52:20So stay with me.
0:52:20 > 0:52:22I might just get pieces of information that come...
0:52:22 > 0:52:23I'm starting with a "G".
0:52:23 > 0:52:26Let me just put this down for a moment.
0:52:26 > 0:52:29There's a "G" - so I'm going to start to pull something out
0:52:29 > 0:52:30of the audience.
0:52:30 > 0:52:32Hopefully it's one of you.
0:52:32 > 0:52:33I'm getting a "G".
0:52:33 > 0:52:34Let's start with "G" - Gareth?
0:52:34 > 0:52:36I think this is him.
0:52:36 > 0:52:37Because those are two different sites.
0:52:37 > 0:52:38Hello, Gareth.
0:52:38 > 0:52:42How are you?
0:52:42 > 0:52:45We have Joe, and he's going to identify some people
0:52:45 > 0:52:48in the audience, and he's going to pretend to read their mind
0:52:48 > 0:52:51by telling them things about them, by reading information from them.
0:52:51 > 0:52:54It's actually us researching these people online and feeding that
0:52:54 > 0:52:55to him through a hidden earpiece.
0:52:55 > 0:52:56Les?
0:52:56 > 0:52:58Les...?
0:52:58 > 0:53:01It could have been a man, but I won't make wild assertions.
0:53:01 > 0:53:02Is there a Les?
0:53:02 > 0:53:02Leslie?
0:53:02 > 0:53:04Welcome to the show.
0:53:04 > 0:53:07Glad you've got a microphone with you now.
0:53:07 > 0:53:09So we're researching some of the people in
0:53:09 > 0:53:10the audience right now.
0:53:10 > 0:53:13The gentleman who's just sat down in front of us -
0:53:13 > 0:53:16I've just found the address details of somebody who sat down
0:53:16 > 0:53:18at the front with her partner as well.
0:53:18 > 0:53:21So we're researching as much as we can about the people that
0:53:21 > 0:53:23are in front of us.
0:53:23 > 0:53:25Do you have children called Jack and Sasha?
0:53:25 > 0:53:27Um...we have cats called Jack and Sasha.
0:53:27 > 0:53:28Oh, it's close!
0:53:28 > 0:53:29It's close, isn't it?
0:53:29 > 0:53:31I've set up a free Wi-Fi network.
0:53:31 > 0:53:32Most people quite happily click "free Wi-Fi".
0:53:32 > 0:53:35It says please type in their name, click "connect",
0:53:35 > 0:53:36and that is how we start.
0:53:36 > 0:53:38We then have their name.
0:53:38 > 0:53:40It's the first thing to work from.
0:53:40 > 0:53:42Fortunately, as well, because it's quite a big event,
0:53:42 > 0:53:44people will like the Facebook page.
0:53:44 > 0:53:46People will say, "I'm at BBC Click."
0:53:46 > 0:53:51We can see that publicly and openly.
0:53:51 > 0:53:52Is this legal?
0:53:52 > 0:53:52Completely legal, yes.
0:53:52 > 0:53:55That's a question we get asked a lot.
0:53:55 > 0:53:56We're just looking at information people have
0:53:56 > 0:54:02made available themselves.
0:54:02 > 0:54:04But congratulations on your four-year anniversary.
0:54:04 > 0:54:05A round of applause please.
0:54:05 > 0:54:08APPLAUSEThere's two main lessons - be careful what you're
0:54:08 > 0:54:09signing up for.
0:54:09 > 0:54:12The biggest thing that's helping us the most right now -
0:54:12 > 0:54:14people's social media profiles are open and public.
0:54:14 > 0:54:18We're not saying not to use it, just check that your profile is private.
0:54:18 > 0:54:20I'm a complete stranger to everybody in this audience,
0:54:20 > 0:54:24but so far I've been able to go onto all of their profiles and look
0:54:24 > 0:54:27at where they were born, their pictures, their statuses.
0:54:27 > 0:54:29As a total stranger, you probably don't want me
0:54:29 > 0:54:30reading that information.
0:54:30 > 0:54:40So just - we're not saying don't use it -
0:54:40 > 0:54:42just make it private so only your friends can see.
0:54:42 > 0:54:46That would protect you from all of the things we've found out
0:54:46 > 0:54:47so far, actually.
0:54:47 > 0:54:50We listen to radio, to TV, to music, to podcasts, using speakers.
0:54:50 > 0:54:54Big speakers in your house and small speakers that you wear in your ears
0:54:54 > 0:54:56or that are built into your smartphones.
0:54:56 > 0:54:59So I'm just choosing the perfect bit of coffee for the levitation.
0:54:59 > 0:55:03It has to be both kind of small, but also regular, and I don't think
0:55:03 > 0:55:05they normally make coffee beans with levitation in mind.
0:55:05 > 0:55:12One of the things that Steve has been working
0:55:12 > 0:55:13on is ultrasounds, OK?
0:55:13 > 0:55:15And we've got a few ultrasound demos here.
0:55:15 > 0:55:18So I'll tell you what - rather than explain more about it,
0:55:18 > 0:55:20shall we, uh...just give it a whirl?
0:55:20 > 0:55:23So I'll tell you what - who's getting something there?
0:55:23 > 0:55:27Raise your hand if you can hear this, then drop your hand as soon
0:55:27 > 0:55:28as you can't hear it again.
0:55:28 > 0:55:32So this is unusual for a speaker, because usually when you switch
0:55:32 > 0:55:33a speaker on, everyone can hear it.
0:55:33 > 0:55:37Right now, we're getting a really narrow beam.
0:55:37 > 0:55:38Really focused beam of sound.
0:55:38 > 0:55:41Imagine this is a lot like a flashlight.
0:55:41 > 0:55:43Imagine I'm pointing a torch around the room.
0:55:43 > 0:55:51You'd only see certain parts of it.
0:55:51 > 0:55:53This is the same idea, except with sound.
0:55:53 > 0:55:58So we're focusing the sound and we can focus all that energy,
0:55:58 > 0:56:00all that sound energy, in a specific place.
0:56:00 > 0:56:00Wow!
0:56:00 > 0:56:03This is the weirdest and slowest and most continuous Mexican wave
0:56:03 > 0:56:04I've ever seen...
0:56:04 > 0:56:07I have no idea what you're hearing, because he's never pointed it
0:56:07 > 0:56:08in my direction.
0:56:08 > 0:56:09BEEPING Whoa!
0:56:09 > 0:56:09Seriously?
0:56:09 > 0:56:11Sorry, it's quite unpleasant, isn't it?
0:56:11 > 0:56:13It can make normal sounds as well.
0:56:13 > 0:56:29So ultrasound is really high-frequency sound,
0:56:29 > 0:56:31and then you're tying other stuff into that,
0:56:31 > 0:56:33which you're then sending around the room?
0:56:33 > 0:56:43So ultrasound is out of the range of human hearing,
0:56:43 > 0:56:44is pretty much the definition.
0:56:44 > 0:56:47We can hear up to 20,000 hertz, and anything
0:56:47 > 0:56:50above that is ultrasound.
0:56:50 > 0:56:53We can't hear ultrasound, but this is an ultrasound wave
0:56:53 > 0:56:55that's been combined or modulated with an audible signal.
0:56:55 > 0:56:59I tell you what - this is not just the only ultrasound
0:56:59 > 0:57:00weirdness we've got.
0:57:00 > 0:57:01It gets even weirder.
0:57:01 > 0:57:02Pop that down, for goodness's sake.
0:57:02 > 0:57:04This looks like it's landed from another planet.
0:57:04 > 0:57:05This is incredible.
0:57:05 > 0:57:09Stephen, for the second time tonight, what on earth is going on?
0:57:09 > 0:57:12So, if we can in here, you can see there's quite a regular
0:57:12 > 0:57:14pattern on some of these.
0:57:14 > 0:57:16I can't get too close because it disrupts the sound field.
0:57:16 > 0:57:19But maybe you can see there's a few balls -
0:57:19 > 0:57:22a bit of a gap.
0:57:22 > 0:57:25So how are you using ultrasound to actually make stuff levitate?
0:57:25 > 0:57:28Well, these speakers are producing a big ultrasound signal,
0:57:28 > 0:57:29that's making a standing wave.
0:57:30 > 0:57:31Oh, wow!
0:57:31 > 0:57:32Well, that's fantastic.
0:57:32 > 0:57:33Would you mix us one?
0:57:33 > 0:57:34We rehearsed that, could you tell?
0:57:34 > 0:57:36What is this, Steve?
0:57:36 > 0:57:38We've got a lovely, lovely delight for you today.
0:57:38 > 0:57:41It's a single grain of coffee with a, uh...drop of milk,
0:57:41 > 0:57:43all levitating in the middle of the air.
0:57:43 > 0:57:44It's a latte.
0:57:44 > 0:57:46LAUGHTERYou have to have it in, though.
0:57:46 > 0:57:48You can't have it to go, unfortunately.
0:57:48 > 0:57:50Right, so I'm going to try this.
0:57:50 > 0:57:51My tongue's not long enough...
0:57:51 > 0:57:52Really slowly...
0:57:52 > 0:57:52LAUGHTER Oh!
0:57:52 > 0:57:53You got it!
0:57:53 > 0:57:54APPLAUSE That's really...coffee-y.
0:57:54 > 0:57:55That's like really, really strong.
0:57:55 > 0:58:05Is that supposed to be that strong?
0:58:05 > 0:58:06Yes, yeah.
0:58:06 > 0:58:07That's what we've found.
0:58:07 > 0:58:08Sugar tastes sweeter, and coffee's bitter.
0:58:08 > 0:58:21Fantastic.
0:58:21 > 0:58:22Sri, Steve, thank you very much.
0:58:22 > 0:58:25A round of applause for Sri, Steve and the ultrasound latte!
0:58:25 > 0:58:29APPLAUSE There were so many amazing demos and displays in the show
0:58:29 > 0:58:31that we just can't fit it into this program.
0:58:31 > 0:58:33Here's a look at some of the other highlights
0:58:33 > 0:58:37from our evening of delight.
0:58:37 > 0:58:39We transformed our tech-loving audience into musicians,
0:58:39 > 0:58:47as Kate and I conducted the biggest ever micro:bit processor orchestra.
0:58:47 > 0:58:50Let's have some more micro:bits over here in the air.
0:58:50 > 0:58:52OK, let's have a few at the back...
0:58:52 > 0:58:53Hold those up.
0:58:53 > 0:58:53Oh, great.
0:58:53 > 0:59:00I can see them all in the sky.
0:59:00 > 0:59:03We are still waiting on the Guinness Book of Records
0:59:03 > 0:59:04to get back to us, though.
0:59:04 > 0:59:08We explored the potential of AR, with our lucky audience members left
0:59:08 > 0:59:10cowering as a full-scale aircraft suddenly appeared over their heads.
0:59:10 > 0:59:11Hello, world!
0:59:11 > 0:59:14300,000 people joined us on Facebook Live during the evening
0:59:14 > 0:59:16as we asked them whether robots should feel pain.
0:59:16 > 0:59:19Edward Nemil, thank you for this question on Facebook: "Sacrificing
0:59:19 > 0:59:21a robot for the greater good might be necessary.
0:59:21 > 0:59:30Why would you want it to feel pain?"
0:59:30 > 0:59:33If we're going to keep having a servant class of robots,
0:59:33 > 0:59:35then we shouldn't go down that route.
0:59:35 > 0:59:37But the aims of increasing intelligence may make that
0:59:37 > 0:59:37impossible.
0:59:37 > 0:59:40We watched drones that study the landscape and drones that dive,
0:59:40 > 0:59:43as we looked at how they could help in the future.
0:59:43 > 0:59:44It's been absolutely amazing.
0:59:44 > 0:59:46Have you had a good time?
0:59:46 > 0:59:59CROWD: Yes!
0:59:59 > 1:00:03Thank you very much for watching, and we will see you soon.
1:00:03 > 1:00:03Bye.
1:00:03 > 1:00:04CHEERING AND APPLAUSECut it.
1:00:04 > 1:00:12Well done, well done, well done.
1:00:39 > 1:00:41Hello this is Breakfast, with Roger Johnson and Rachel
1:00:41 > 1:00:42Burden.
1:00:42 > 1:00:46Plans to give MPs a vote on fox hunting are abandoned by the Prime
1:00:46 > 1:00:46Minister.
1:00:46 > 1:00:49The Conservatives had promised an option on ending the ban
1:00:49 > 1:00:50on hunting with dogs.
1:00:50 > 1:01:04Now Teresa May says it won't happen before the next election.
1:01:04 > 1:01:04Good morning.
1:01:04 > 1:01:05First, our main story.
1:01:05 > 1:01:09Theresa May will abandon plans for MPs to get a vote on fox hunting
1:01:09 > 1:01:12before 2022, when the next general election is due to be held.
1:01:12 > 1:01:16In an interview on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, Mrs May confirmed
1:01:16 > 1:01:18she would be going back on the pledge she made
1:01:18 > 1:01:28in last year's manifesto.
1:01:28 > 1:01:31Plans are announced to plant a new Northern Forest stretching
1:01:31 > 1:01:32from Liverpool to Hull.
1:01:32 > 1:01:35And coming up in sport, you're waking up to the words
1:01:35 > 1:01:36"England" and "collapse" again, I'm afraid.
1:01:36 > 1:01:40It's day four in Sydney and needing 303 just to make Australia bat
1:01:40 > 1:01:42again, England have lost four wickets already -
1:01:42 > 1:01:44and they're heading for a 4-0 series defeat.
1:01:44 > 1:01:47Hollywood stars prepare to use tonight's Golden Globe awards
1:01:47 > 1:01:49to highlight the campaign against sexism and harassment.
1:01:49 > 1:01:50And Stav has the weather.
1:01:50 > 1:01:55Good morning. It is very cold, but a lovely, sunny Sunday for most of us.
1:01:55 > 1:01:59It will stay cold into the start of next week and then we will see
1:01:59 > 1:02:03changes. Join me later for a full weather forecast.
1:02:03 > 1:02:04Good morning.
1:02:04 > 1:02:06First, our main story.
1:02:06 > 1:02:09Theresa May will abandon plans for MPs to get a vote on fox hunting
1:02:09 > 1:02:13before 2022, when the next general election is due to be held.
1:02:13 > 1:02:16In an interview on the BBC's Andrew Marr show, Mrs May confirmed
1:02:16 > 1:02:19she would be going back on the pledge she made
1:02:19 > 1:02:20in last year's manifesto.
1:02:20 > 1:02:24Our political correspondent Eleanor Garnier reports.
1:02:24 > 1:02:28It has been illegal to set a pack of hounds on a fox for more
1:02:28 > 1:02:30than a decade in England and Wales.
1:02:30 > 1:02:33Instead, hunts have had to follow specially laid trails of scent.
1:02:33 > 1:02:34Many conservatives and campaigners
1:02:34 > 1:02:38would like the Hunting Act to be scrapped to allow horses and hounds
1:02:38 > 1:02:40to go back to the way things were.
1:02:40 > 1:02:42But having lost the Tories their parliamentary majority in last
1:02:42 > 1:02:45year's general election, Theresa May's plans to give MPs
1:02:45 > 1:02:48a vote on the issue were pushed back to 2019.
1:02:48 > 1:02:50Now, in an attempt to improve her party's fortunes,
1:02:50 > 1:02:51the Prime Minister has gone
1:02:51 > 1:03:00one step further.
1:03:00 > 1:03:04One of the clear messages we got on a number of areas was when people
1:03:04 > 1:03:14are concerned about what we were proposing.
1:03:14 > 1:03:17Just as we have looked at issues on school funding and tuition
1:03:17 > 1:03:19fees and housing, we are taking forward approaches in
1:03:19 > 1:03:20relation to that.
1:03:20 > 1:03:24On this issue of foxhunting, what I can say is that there
1:03:24 > 1:03:28will not be a vote during this parliament.
1:03:28 > 1:03:31For now, then, there is little chance the law on foxhunting
1:03:31 > 1:03:34will be changing any time soon.
1:03:34 > 1:03:36It's been confirmed the Prime Minister will carry out
1:03:36 > 1:03:38a cabinet reshuffle starting tomorrow.
1:03:38 > 1:03:41There's speculation in the papers over who will be moved or sacked.
1:03:46 > 1:03:50The front page of the Sunday Telegraph suggests the education
1:03:50 > 1:03:53Secretary, Justine Greening, could be fighting for her job. Other names
1:03:53 > 1:03:58could be vulnerable as well. Business Secretary Greg Clark,
1:03:58 > 1:04:02Patrick MacLachlan, the party chairman, and also Andrea Leadsom,
1:04:02 > 1:04:07the Leader of the House of Commons. According to the Sunday Times, those
1:04:07 > 1:04:11who are likely to stay in their posts include Boris Johnson, Philip
1:04:11 > 1:04:16Hammond, Amber Rudd, David Davis, and speculation about a possible
1:04:16 > 1:04:19promotion for Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, or Chris Grayling,
1:04:19 > 1:04:24who could step into the job vacated by Damian Green.
1:04:24 > 1:04:26Our political correspondent Susana Mendonca is in our London
1:04:26 > 1:04:29newsroom this morning, what could we expect to happen over
1:04:29 > 1:04:30the coming days?
1:04:30 > 1:04:34I suppose at this stage, Susanna, it is all speculation?Very much so. If
1:04:34 > 1:04:38you speak to Downing Street, which we have, they have said it is all
1:04:38 > 1:04:42guesswork. But we know that there is going to be a reshuffle, said people
1:04:42 > 1:04:46are going to move about. We understand the cabinet posts will be
1:04:46 > 1:04:50reshuffled tomorrow, and on Tuesday, we will have the more junior roles.
1:04:50 > 1:04:54What we understand is that Theresa May is under lots of pressure to
1:04:54 > 1:04:57bring up new rising stars, as it were, within the Conservative Party.
1:04:57 > 1:05:01She has not had enough people coming from the 2015 in take, for example,
1:05:01 > 1:05:05into the Cabinet. That is something we would expect to see tomorrow, and
1:05:05 > 1:05:09certainly on Tuesday. In terms of the names, you know, you mentioned a
1:05:09 > 1:05:13few of names there, people who might be moved around. It is speculation
1:05:13 > 1:05:17at this stage. Justine Greening, there has been lots of speculation
1:05:17 > 1:05:21about whether or not she is moved out. Damian Green's job is up for
1:05:21 > 1:05:25grabs. It could have Jeremy Hunt or Chris Grayling. Jeremy Hunt is of
1:05:25 > 1:05:29course in the midst of the NHS winter crisis, so it might be a
1:05:29 > 1:05:33difficult time for him to move. For Theresa May, moving people about is
1:05:33 > 1:05:36risky. It upsets people, and she cannot afford any more rebels on the
1:05:36 > 1:05:40back edge. -- backbench.
1:05:40 > 1:05:43Some of the UK's largest retailers have voluntarily agreed to stop
1:05:43 > 1:05:45selling acids and corrosive substances to customers under
1:05:45 > 1:05:4618 years old.
1:05:46 > 1:05:49Ministers hope the measure will help stop the rise in attacks
1:05:49 > 1:05:51until new laws are considered by Parliament.
1:05:51 > 1:05:59Here's our Home Affairs correspondent, Dominic Casciani.
1:05:59 > 1:06:01The human cost of an acid attack.
1:06:01 > 1:06:03Where's it hurting, mate, your eyes?
1:06:03 > 1:06:06Police officers pour water over the victim last July.
1:06:06 > 1:06:07Thieves wanted the London delivery driver's
1:06:07 > 1:06:07moped.
1:06:07 > 1:06:09His helmet saved him from serious injury.
1:06:09 > 1:06:11Police recorded more than 500 attacks involving corrosive
1:06:11 > 1:06:14substances in England and Wales in the year to last April.
1:06:14 > 1:06:17Officials think the true figure could be twice
1:06:17 > 1:06:17as high.
1:06:17 > 1:06:20Ministers have launched an acid action plan to cut attacks.
1:06:20 > 1:06:21Today the first part of that plan, a voluntary ban by DIY chains,
1:06:23 > 1:06:26A growing number of men are being targetted by stalkers,
1:06:26 > 1:06:28according to new research by Five Live Investigates.
1:06:28 > 1:06:31Crime figures suggest around 450,000 men in England
1:06:31 > 1:06:33and Wales experience stalking over the course of a year.
1:06:33 > 1:06:35But, according to data from 41 police forces,
1:06:35 > 1:06:38only 1,800 stalking offences against men have been recorded
1:06:38 > 1:06:40by officers over the past three years.
1:06:40 > 1:06:42Germany's Christian Democrats, led by the Chancellor,
1:06:42 > 1:06:44Angela Merkel, will begin five days of exploratory talks today
1:06:44 > 1:06:48President Macron of France is due to lay wreaths at the offices in Paris
1:06:48 > 1:06:52of the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, to remember the victims of an
1:06:52 > 1:06:54Islamist attack there three years ago today. 12 people, including
1:06:54 > 1:06:57several cartoonists, died when two gunmen burst into an editorial
1:06:57 > 1:07:00meeting. A policeman was shot dead outside. The president will also
1:07:00 > 1:07:03visit a Jewish supermarket in the city where four hostages were killed
1:07:03 > 1:07:05by another Islamist two days later.
1:07:05 > 1:07:07Nasa's longest serving astronaut, John Young, has died
1:07:07 > 1:07:08at the age of 87.
1:07:08 > 1:07:12He was one of just 12 men who have walked on the moon -
1:07:12 > 1:07:14and he flew the first space shuttle mission.
1:07:14 > 1:07:16Former Commander of the International Space Station,
1:07:16 > 1:07:18Chris Hadfield has described him as an inspiration.
1:07:18 > 1:07:20John was a fascinating, devoted and passionate
1:07:20 > 1:07:21and really fearless man.
1:07:21 > 1:07:25Just a role model to so many astronauts, including the six people
1:07:25 > 1:07:27who are up on the space station right now.
1:07:27 > 1:07:31A life really well lived and a good friend of mine.
1:07:31 > 1:07:35Plans to create a new and all forest stretching from Liverpool to Hull
1:07:35 > 1:07:40have been announced by the government. It is providing £5.7
1:07:40 > 1:07:44million to increase tree cover long adults spanning Manchester, Leeds
1:07:44 > 1:07:48and Bradford. The Woodland Trust will run the project, costing £500
1:07:48 > 1:07:54million over 25 years. Most of that money will need to be raised by the
1:07:54 > 1:08:00charity itself. Roger Hayden has more.
1:08:00 > 1:08:02The bare hills of the north.
1:08:02 > 1:08:04One of the most denuded parts of a country
1:08:04 > 1:08:07which itself has less woodland than almost anywhere in Europe.
1:08:07 > 1:08:09The land stripped over centuries for timber and farming,
1:08:09 > 1:08:11scarred by industry, overgrazed by sheep farming.
1:08:11 > 1:08:13At Smithils near Manchester, things will be different.
1:08:13 > 1:08:21Planting has begun for what will be known as the Northern Forest.
1:08:21 > 1:08:24We think the Northern Forest will be a pathfinder for extending forest
1:08:24 > 1:08:26and woodland right across country.
1:08:26 > 1:08:28We think trees and woods can add value
1:08:28 > 1:08:29in many different landscapes.
1:08:29 > 1:08:32We just want to do it here first and do
1:08:32 > 1:08:36it big.
1:08:36 > 1:08:37It isn't really a forest.
1:08:37 > 1:08:39The project will create new woods near towns,
1:08:39 > 1:08:41and plants for river valleys
1:08:41 > 1:08:42liable to flooding.
1:08:42 > 1:08:45But money is tight, and many of these hills will look
1:08:45 > 1:08:46just as bleak and 35 years.
1:08:46 > 1:08:50What's more, the Woodland Trust expects some of their cash to come
1:08:50 > 1:08:54from environmental funds linked to the HS2 rail line.
1:08:54 > 1:09:00The supreme irony is that the government
1:09:00 > 1:09:03is giving with one hand and taking with the other,
1:09:03 > 1:09:05and I'm referring to the route of HS2.
1:09:05 > 1:09:08Why can't the government give with both hands and stop threatening
1:09:08 > 1:09:13ancient forests?
1:09:13 > 1:09:16Here is what some ambitious planting can do.
1:09:16 > 1:09:18This is the National Forest in the Midlands.
1:09:18 > 1:09:29Begun in the 1990s, now delighting local people.
1:09:32 > 1:09:34The east coast of North America is shivering in a record-breaking
1:09:34 > 1:09:35freeze.
1:09:35 > 1:09:38It comes after a massive snow storm that reached as far south
1:09:38 > 1:09:40as Florida.
1:09:40 > 1:09:42Temperatures there are forecast to fall below minus 29 degrees
1:09:42 > 1:09:45Celsius.
1:09:45 > 1:09:48In parts of the US temperatures are forecast to fall below
1:09:48 > 1:09:49minus 29 degrees Celsius.
1:09:49 > 1:09:52The extreme weather has so far been linked to 19 deaths.
1:09:52 > 1:09:55Earlier, we spoke to New York cab driver Peter Franklin,
1:09:55 > 1:10:07who told us it's the coldest weather he's ever experienced.
1:10:07 > 1:10:12Send me a sweater, I'm freezing! It is the middle of the 90, I'm
1:10:12 > 1:10:16unbelievably cold. When you walk outside a New York City right now
1:10:16 > 1:10:20your eyes are tearing up. It is the worst cold I can remember. New York
1:10:20 > 1:10:24is a residual place where people work with this kind of problem and
1:10:24 > 1:10:28all that, but baby, it's cold outside!
1:10:28 > 1:10:31Pub opening hours could be extended for the weekend of Prince Harry
1:10:31 > 1:10:32and Meghan Markle's wedding.
1:10:32 > 1:10:35Their marriage falls on the same day as the English and Scottish FA
1:10:35 > 1:10:37Cup finals, Saturday May 19th.
1:10:37 > 1:10:40Licensing hours were previously extended for the wedding of the Duke
1:10:40 > 1:10:43and Duchess of Cambridge in 2011, and for the Queen's 90th birthday
1:10:43 > 1:10:50in 2016.
1:10:50 > 1:10:53Do you know, we were having a conversation earlier, talking about
1:10:53 > 1:11:00Pablo Binning times. I am doing Dry January, I do it every year. But now
1:11:00 > 1:11:07we are talking about V-January, where people obedient for the month
1:11:07 > 1:11:13of January. That would you find it harder to give up, alcohol or meet?
1:11:13 > 1:11:16Or should it? Sugar is one of those things we don't necessarily know
1:11:16 > 1:11:24when you are having it.I maintain it would be sugar. I have no problem
1:11:24 > 1:11:28going about meat and alcohol, I would find it hard to go without
1:11:28 > 1:11:31chocolate. As we've been hearing, high street giants have thrown their
1:11:31 > 1:11:34weight behind a Government plan to ban sales of acid and other
1:11:34 > 1:11:50corrosive substances to under-18s. It is part of a voluntary scheme to
1:11:50 > 1:11:53curb the number of attacks while new laws are that being considered by
1:11:53 > 1:12:02Parliament. How much of a problem is this? We have seen the figures, the
1:12:02 > 1:12:05horrific rise in the number of cases. Very often in London, it
1:12:05 > 1:12:10seems to have been a London problem for some time, but now it is
1:12:10 > 1:12:14spreading?Staggering. 500 attacks in the year to April last year. That
1:12:14 > 1:12:18is an underestimate, because the Home Office estimates about double
1:12:18 > 1:12:22that, some people don't report the attacks because they didn't suffer
1:12:22 > 1:12:27any life changing injuries. It is a significant problem. London is the
1:12:27 > 1:12:30largest city and there are more organised gangs there than anywhere
1:12:30 > 1:12:33else, which I think is why London suffered more than anybody else
1:12:33 > 1:12:39anywhere in the country. But as you'd pointed out, it is now
1:12:39 > 1:12:43widespread. This is one way of tackling it. We need legislation,
1:12:43 > 1:12:47but legislation, as you know, takes a long time. The Prime Minister has
1:12:47 > 1:12:52indicated, you know, we have Brexit and everything else to deal with.
1:12:52 > 1:12:57The voluntary code is good news. It means that some people will not have
1:12:57 > 1:13:01access to this material. But it certainly impacts young people. One
1:13:01 > 1:13:05in five attacks are by young people. Four in five.That was going to be
1:13:05 > 1:13:10the next question, is there any evidence to suggest it is teenagers,
1:13:10 > 1:13:15under 18s to carry this out? Because you talk about organised gangs...It
1:13:15 > 1:13:19is organised gangs, and also, ex- partners. A lot of the things our
1:13:19 > 1:13:25domestic abuse related. One in five attacks are by young people.
1:13:25 > 1:13:29Additionally, it is voluntary. Until the get legislation in, there are no
1:13:29 > 1:13:34stations. There are no consequences, if the hardware chain or whatever
1:13:34 > 1:13:37wants to sell it, they can still do so. Hopefully they will abide by
1:13:37 > 1:13:41their code. The other issue is online. I checked on the way in. I
1:13:41 > 1:13:46can buy 99% sulphuric acid to £10, plus postage and packaging, and
1:13:46 > 1:13:52nextday delivery.What is the legitimate... I mean, excuse my
1:13:52 > 1:13:56ignorance, but what is the legitimate use of that?Exactly.I
1:13:56 > 1:14:02am sure there is, but...When you are talking about serious drain
1:14:02 > 1:14:05blockages, maybe some of those industrial usages, you can imagine
1:14:05 > 1:14:10that. But for most of us, we do not need 96%. We don't need more than
1:14:10 > 1:14:1510%. There is an issue for manufacturers, too. They need to
1:14:15 > 1:14:19look at why we need 96%, because we don't.Is this the sort of thing you
1:14:19 > 1:14:24would find in the cupboard under the sink?Not 96%, hopefully, but you
1:14:24 > 1:14:28would still find significant damage being caused by the stuff you can
1:14:28 > 1:14:31find under your sink. The other issue, the bigger issue, is
1:14:31 > 1:14:38education. The way we tackle this, Manchester used to be called
1:14:38 > 1:14:43Gunchester, but we had a 95% reduction in firearms use amongst
1:14:43 > 1:14:47young people, to make sure they didn't take a gun or have a gun with
1:14:47 > 1:14:51their mid-on in time. There was a similar impact on knife crime. We
1:14:51 > 1:14:55can do the same thing with acid. What about the sentencing? The
1:14:55 > 1:14:58consequences of these attacks are devastating, life changing.The
1:14:58 > 1:15:01government is consulting on whether new criminal laws are required in
1:15:01 > 1:15:05relation to that. Crown Prosecution Service issued guidelines place last
1:15:05 > 1:15:09year which said that it should start with imprisonment, we should be
1:15:09 > 1:15:13encouraged to send people to prison if they are found in possession of
1:15:13 > 1:15:16these items. Unless the law changes to enable that to happen
1:15:16 > 1:15:19consistently, and again, raises awareness of it, it will not have
1:15:19 > 1:15:22any impact.
1:15:26 > 1:15:32You can destroy a life in a second. I mean destroy. I met someone with
1:15:32 > 1:15:39300 operations afterward. Just to get her face back. She set up a
1:15:39 > 1:15:47charity to tackle this issue and raise awareness. It is... You can
1:15:47 > 1:15:51cause so much damage without even thinking about it.Thank you so
1:15:51 > 1:15:59much. We appreciate it. The weather. Good morning.
1:15:59 > 1:16:03much. We appreciate it. The weather. Good morning. A cold start.
1:16:03 > 1:16:11Absolutely. Not as cold as north America. My goodness. A lot of
1:16:11 > 1:16:28frost. Icy. Shetland has patchy rain. Less cold because of the rain.
1:16:28 > 1:16:35On the mainland, very cold to start the day. Sunshine. Scotland,
1:16:35 > 1:16:40Northern Ireland, the Midlands, Wales. A few showers in East Anglia
1:16:40 > 1:16:46and the south-east. Mostly dry. The breeze will take the edge off the
1:16:46 > 1:16:51temperatures. Further north, light winds. With sunshine, feeling
1:16:51 > 1:16:56pleasant. That is despite the fact temperatures will not get above
1:16:56 > 1:17:01freezing in Scotland. 3-6 further south. High pressure with us again
1:17:01 > 1:17:06tonight. Another cold one. Light winds further north. Gaps between
1:17:06 > 1:17:13the isobars. Quite breezy in the south. It will go south-east. That
1:17:13 > 1:17:17will bring in more cloud across southern areas. Further north, clear
1:17:17 > 1:17:23skies and widespread frost. Monday, frosty and sunny in central and
1:17:23 > 1:17:26northern areas. The cloud in the south will go further north during
1:17:26 > 1:17:30the day. Thick enough for the odd spot of light rain and the odd
1:17:30 > 1:17:37snowflake. Temperatures, 3-6. The best of the sunshine in the north.
1:17:37 > 1:17:41To the west of the next area of low pressure which is going to bring a
1:17:41 > 1:17:50change to the weather on Wednesday. A largely dry day on Wednesday. More
1:17:50 > 1:17:55cloud in many areas. The best of the sunshine in the north-west of
1:17:55 > 1:18:01Scotland. Then the weather front goes through on Wednesday. A messy
1:18:01 > 1:18:08picture. Slightly milder in the south. 10 degrees. Feeling cold and
1:18:08 > 1:18:13the north. More unsettled as we go through the latter part of the week.
1:18:13 > 1:18:15Back to you. Thank you.
1:18:15 > 1:18:18It was one of the most significant scientific breakthroughs
1:18:18 > 1:18:19of modern times.
1:18:19 > 1:18:21In 2003, the complete genetic code of a human being,
1:18:21 > 1:18:23the genome, was published.
1:18:23 > 1:18:25By the end of this year, it's hoped this code will help
1:18:25 > 1:18:26By the end of this year, it's hoped this code will help
1:18:26 > 1:18:28thousands of NHS patients who have rare diseases
1:18:28 > 1:18:29and unexplained conditions.
1:18:29 > 1:18:31This wouldn't have been possible without families taking part
1:18:31 > 1:18:32in the "Genome Project."
1:18:32 > 1:18:42Ben Schofield went to meet one of them.
1:18:42 > 1:18:50This is you in your incubator.For 19 years, doctors treated Alex's
1:18:50 > 1:18:54symptoms without knowing exactly what was causing them. Medics
1:18:54 > 1:19:02thought it was a rare condition, but genetic testing proved otherwise.He
1:19:02 > 1:19:07had 28 operations. There was always something else that was wrong
1:19:07 > 1:19:12whenever we checked. He had a skin condition, issues with his vision
1:19:12 > 1:19:16and hearing. You just need to know the answer. And as a parent, you
1:19:16 > 1:19:22want to know what is wrong with your child. This is the letter that I got
1:19:22 > 1:19:27in March telling me about your diagnosis.Was only by reading and
1:19:27 > 1:19:39dig -- decoding his genome that gave a diagnosis last March.I remember
1:19:39 > 1:19:43reading it and actually crying knowing that they actually go to the
1:19:43 > 1:19:47diagnosis. And I just could not believe that this letter appeared in
1:19:47 > 1:19:55the post.For his mum, relief, and some certainty. From Alex, a more
1:19:55 > 1:20:01modest response, it has been a great relief. I don't think about it
1:20:01 > 1:20:06mostly. You may not think about it much, but Alex has helped lead the
1:20:06 > 1:20:11way for potentially thousands of other patients to find the answers
1:20:11 > 1:20:16to their symptoms. And this is where those mysteries are being solved, a
1:20:16 > 1:20:22laboratory in Cambridge where they discovered his genome. It is more
1:20:22 > 1:20:27than 3 billion letters long, and showed his condition called leopards
1:20:27 > 1:20:37in turn. -- leapord syndrome. It is hoped that thousands of other
1:20:37 > 1:20:42patients with red diseases will get the diagnosis they have been looking
1:20:42 > 1:20:54for. -- rare diseases.It could hold the answers to He ring...It is 15
1:20:54 > 1:20:59years since the first human gene and was discovered. This man helped
1:20:59 > 1:21:04crack that first code which helps lead the 100 thousand genomes
1:21:04 > 1:21:11project.It is a really exciting field right now. 15 years since
1:21:11 > 1:21:15sequencing the first genome, we can apply it to the NHS.As well as
1:21:15 > 1:21:20diagnosing diseases, it also develops personalised treatment,
1:21:20 > 1:21:25treatment personalised to patients rather than diseases.We are all
1:21:25 > 1:21:30slightly different. A lot of the information is encoded in the genes.
1:21:30 > 1:21:35Looking at your genome, in the future, we will be able to work out
1:21:35 > 1:21:38what is the most appropriate treatment for you.Alex has
1:21:38 > 1:21:47tell-tale freckles for his symptoms. Diagnosis does not mean a cure for
1:21:47 > 1:21:52him, but he starts better equipped than ever in 2018 to manage his
1:21:52 > 1:21:56condition. BBC News, in Cambridge.
1:21:56 > 1:21:58Coming up on BBC One at 9am is Andrew Marr.
1:21:58 > 1:22:01What's in store today, Andrew?
1:22:01 > 1:22:05You have been talking to the Prime Minister. It sounds like a
1:22:05 > 1:22:10fascinating conversation.I cannot talk about everything, but we talked
1:22:10 > 1:22:18about the NHS, Donald Trump, to be young, and much more. -- Toby.
1:22:18 > 1:22:23Theresa May is the first of a set of interviews we will be doing. I will
1:22:23 > 1:22:27also talk to Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health Secretary, about the
1:22:27 > 1:22:34NHS crisis. Many stars, including Scott Thomas. The Churchill film,
1:22:34 > 1:22:46and we also have Franz Ferdinand.A star-studded start to the new year.
1:22:46 > 1:22:51You're watching Breakfast from BBC News. Time now for a look at the
1:22:51 > 1:22:51newspapers.
1:22:51 > 1:22:54The writer and broadcaster, Robert Meakin, is here to tell us
1:22:54 > 1:22:56what's caught his eye.
1:22:56 > 1:23:00We'll speak to him in a minute.
1:23:00 > 1:23:04Actually, we will go straight to you. We do not want to keep you
1:23:04 > 1:23:11waiting. This was in The Sun. For Tories to be succeeding, they need
1:23:11 > 1:23:17to unite. Specifically, these two, Theresa May and for the payment.It
1:23:17 > 1:23:23was written by Jacob Rees-Mogg, who, as of today, has become the
1:23:23 > 1:23:27favourite to become the next Conservative leader. Much to the
1:23:27 > 1:23:33consternation and excitement of everyone. He is high-profile. I
1:23:33 > 1:23:37doubt this is normally his paper of choice, but he has a big column in
1:23:37 > 1:23:44their today. He denies all the talk he is interested in the top job, as
1:23:44 > 1:23:48they always do. He feels Philip Hammond and Theresa May need to
1:23:48 > 1:23:54unite.They should all sing from the same sheet, to be honest.One of the
1:23:54 > 1:23:59worst kept secrets in the last election was if she had done better,
1:23:59 > 1:24:04Philip Hammond would have been moved out, but she did not have the clout.
1:24:04 > 1:24:09That is extraordinary, Jacob Rees-Mogg, you would think you would
1:24:09 > 1:24:17be the antithesis of the Sun profile. It is amazing they are
1:24:17 > 1:24:23going to him he is almost beginning to take over the Boris Johnson
1:24:23 > 1:24:28title, the maverick right-wing voice in the Conservative Party.Jacob
1:24:28 > 1:24:32Rees-Mogg has the role now.Theresa May and Philip Hammond and possibly
1:24:32 > 1:24:39all three with him. The Mail on Sunday. An indication of what it is
1:24:39 > 1:24:43like to be, well, one step removed from the royal family. This is the
1:24:43 > 1:24:55half brother of Meghan Markle. Another embarrassing story. A boozy
1:24:55 > 1:24:58row with his fiance. How many stories will there be about Meghan
1:24:58 > 1:25:01Markle and potentially embarrassing relatives? We all have them and we
1:25:01 > 1:25:12will continue digging them up. Everyone has it. Old school friends
1:25:12 > 1:25:19with grudges. You will hear all of it.Longer if they had a massive
1:25:19 > 1:25:24clear out of her accounts before the announcement was made. It is
1:25:24 > 1:25:31interesting, he says it is not interesting being in the public eye.
1:25:31 > 1:25:39You have issues and then you are related to royalty.They probably
1:25:39 > 1:25:50have a few exclusives in there as well.The Russian embassy complained
1:25:50 > 1:25:58about... I missed it. They are complaining about the portrayal of
1:25:58 > 1:26:12Russia in the BBC's new programme. The crime rate of Russians in the UK
1:26:12 > 1:26:19is well below average. They resent the idea London is a playground for
1:26:19 > 1:26:41Russian mafia members. Television is always more dramatic. Before it was
1:26:41 > 1:26:47KGB. Now it is supposedly sinister Russian billionaires.I did not get
1:26:47 > 1:26:53the whole show.It is not a Scottish mafia, as far as I understand.The
1:26:53 > 1:27:04Sunday Times. The injury woes of Andy Murray. We were talking about
1:27:04 > 1:27:16whether he would need hip surgery. Pat Cash has spoken to him and it
1:27:16 > 1:27:20may be both hips. That looks like a big blow for him. He has not played
1:27:20 > 1:27:24competitively since Wimbledon when he was injured. It is a real worry.
1:27:24 > 1:27:31We should not write him off yet. We hope he can come back.I was saying
1:27:31 > 1:27:37a few weeks ago he was laying the groundwork for his career beyond
1:27:37 > 1:27:40tennis, setting up a sport agency, hoping to represent other sports
1:27:40 > 1:27:44people, not just in tennis. Clearly, his mind is going beyond the
1:27:44 > 1:27:51competition at this stage. And he has a family at this stage as well.
1:27:51 > 1:27:57It is incredible the collar takes on your body.If you are 30 as a tennis
1:27:57 > 1:28:01player, it is old age.Jimmy Anderson was saying, the England
1:28:01 > 1:28:05cricketer, he says he cannot even raise his arm to brush his teeth
1:28:05 > 1:28:09without discomfort echoes of the toll cricket has taken and the pain.
1:28:09 > 1:28:14It is the price of being a professional athlete. It has come at
1:28:14 > 1:28:20a cost.We will not talk about this one because we have run out of time,
1:28:20 > 1:28:33we will do it next time. When you return in an hour, tell us about Tom
1:28:33 > 1:28:37Jones, giving up LA and coming back to the UK. Coming back to Swansea.I
1:28:37 > 1:28:43will give him a call and ask about it.We are on until nine o'clock.
1:28:43 > 1:28:47Coming up, going vegan in January. Will it become the latest new year
1:28:47 > 1:28:55trend? How easy is it to embrace the lifestyle?Hollywood stars will wear
1:28:55 > 1:29:01black to protest sexual harassment. We will speak to the women behind
1:29:01 > 1:29:04the protest.This is where we say goodbye on BBC